
diseasedstreetcat
Member
- Nov 8, 2023
- 26
Good time of day, yesterday i had my first intense dissociation episode and since i have been more curious to learn more about it. I spoke about it with a friend and to them, dissociation means cognitively and emotionally detaching for extended periods of time and having little to no recollection of the events after they've partaken. In my experience, dissociation is a extremely hard to describe feeling that roots in detachment to reality; the best i can come to put it in words is feeling the same way you do when you are dreaming. You can feel everything just the same, you can think as well as your mind can under a lot of distress, but despite logically knowing that everything is real, you cannot shake off the feeling of potentially waking up at any moment. definitively some cognitive and emotional impact as well, much like to being sedated.
so how would you describe dissociation? do you use it as a tool? how do you induce it? is it unpleasant to you? what else do you feel about it? i want to hear firsthand from people who go through it.
so how would you describe dissociation? do you use it as a tool? how do you induce it? is it unpleasant to you? what else do you feel about it? i want to hear firsthand from people who go through it.