![]() It’s possible for alter A to not remember anything alter B just did, but then alter C has a hazy recollection of what alter A did. In plurality we refer to amnesia barriers, which is what causes losing time. For a long time we didn’t realise we had amnesia because we felt like this was us “retrieving the memories if we tried hard enough to remember”. And we have reasonable internal communication most days so when we do switch and blackout, the alter that just switched out or someone who was cocon can fill the new fronter in on what they’re missing. In our system we say blanking instead of blackouts, because idk to us it suggests a period of blackness and absence but half the time we’re so dissociated overall that we don’t notice we’ve lost time. I’ve also found I guess “emotional amnesia” where I can remember events but not how I felt about them, or that the memories of what I’d seen, thought, and felt were all disconnected so I remember feeling irritated but not which specific thought or event led to the irritation. I’ve heard people use the term grey-out for when memories are hazy or dreamlike instead of completely absent. There’s repressed memories which is when you can’t remember traumatic memories. #TYPES OF AMNESIA MANUAL#According to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5), people with this disorder can. There’s autobiographical amnesia, where you forget details about your life like your address, birthday, age etc that can’t be explained by normal forgetfulness. People with dissociative amnesia disorder can experience different types of amnesia. ![]()
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