Oh I was going to add:
On Mon, Jan 8, 2024 at 4:52 PM Undescribed Horrific Abuse, One Victim & Survivor of Many <[email protected]> wrote: > > Draft below was unsent, meant to write more but something else was up. > Much harder to return to. Looks interesting! > > > To: [email protected] > > Subject: [ot] A Theory of Dissociation and Mind Control > > > > As I consider more having a severe dissociative psychological issue, I > > become conscious of parts more. > > > > It seems my biggest experience is a very large dissociation from mind > > control via: > > - terror > > - hypno/digital behavior modification - targeted misinformation > > - stimulated dissonance from cult members, bots, and other victims > > > > We saw that stimulated dissonance become a large thing that entered public > > discourse over the past decade. could mention targeted misinformation here too > > > > In response to this experience, I then seem to have intentionally > > dissociated further, into multiple different parts, each of which is some > > strategy of mine to resist the influence of the mind control and protect my > > true identity. The conflict persists and develops internally, with the mind > > control part still trying to change these other parts, and them still > > trying to resist it. > > > > Comparing intentional dissociation with coerced dissociation and some of > > the theory of mind control in Steve Hassan’s book, I’m thinking there’s a > > possible strong similarity that could form a theory encompassing all three. > > > > - When we dissociate, we form (logic parts in other contexts, along with > > guesses or habits around when or how to reintegrate these parts with > > existing contexts) > > - When there is deception or severe emergency involved, we end of leaving > > the context in which the dissociation was made, without reintegrating the > > concepts to update our guesses or habits > > - As this continues, the dissociated parts that have learned to resist > > engaging other parts, continue to form new knowledge and habits > > - When we then do return to our previous safer situations, the parts of our > > mind are no longer engaging what they expect, and persistent change has > > formed. > >
