In our particular system, when alters are discovered, we know their name and age. We have a sense of why they arrived in the body (role, purpose, initiating trauma) and at what age. We know their gender and can identify, if not immediately, that they're a distinct alter. This feels lucky for us because it doesn't happen like this for everyone with DID. But the clarity of hosting, that's gone from "not a problem, we have one host" even a year ago to who the heck is the host, how many of "us" are there, and where did John, me, come from, at what age did I arrive, and what was the cause?
More confusing than that, I have had some doubts about my gender or maybe my original gender. We haven't yet identified any female alters, even though having both male and female alters is way more common in DID than just one gender. Given our abuse from a DID mother who had one or more alters who hated little boys (or all males), having a female alter would seem almost a given. What we suspect now is that there are one or more hidden female alters who have or have had a strong feminine influence -- motherly or grandmotherly to be more specific -- on at least me.
Nondescript wrote:One of the therapists I interviewed, I asked her about this problem, and she encouraged me to define myself based on my life roles and relationships, external things, rather than internal qualities or subtle existential issues. I liked this therapist, but we were a bit skeeved by the idea of defining ourselves as what we are on the surface.
I think my T has brought up this line of thinking as a way of grounding me when I feel like a small nameless rowboat with a slow leak floating adrift in unknown waters in a dense fog. I just made up that analogy but it feels like that sometimes. She reminds that I do have identity, I still know how to function in many areas of life, so who "I" am is being discovered, which is different from there is no "I" or questioning whether I am even real. It seems your T may be saying something like that?
The fluidity that MultipleMinds talks about is very confusing for us. Too much of it going on too long is unsettling. It's much more comfortable being able to identify specifics like "hey, that's Brody who just switched in" or "oh, this Is Carter out right now and he's triggered so he's not acting like he usually does." Oddly, I'm much more secure in identifying who we are as a collective (my homage to TheCollective for starting this thread), rather than who I am as an individual alter or host.