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==Depersonalization is bad?==
== depersonalization (feeling disconnected from oneself) vs. depersonalization (turning others into group members) ==
Why is Depersonalization always bad?
Is this a Western Eurocentric bias? Isn't depersonalization what meditators spend their lives trying to achieve? I have some depersonalization gained from my meditation - and I want more of it.


There has been some [http://en.wikipedia.org/enwiki/w/index.php?title=Depersonalization&action=historysubmit&diff=424029107&oldid=423133357 back and forth] on the pop culture section. I removed several bullets containing minor mentions of the disorder in movies (Girl, Interrupted; Limitless; Numb), and some unsourced text (Existentialism; ''American Psycho''; R.D. Laing) and some non-notable mentions (Suzanne Vega's song ''Tom's Diner''; a self-diagnosis by Sal Governale and the one probably most contested by [[User:Vanlegg|Vanlegg]], the ''Collision with the Infinite'' book, [http://en.wikipedia.org/enwiki/w/index.php?title=Depersonalization&diff=417691068&oldid=417293216]).
I'm a psychologist and a psych prof, and I'm a little flabbergasted by the way these two totally different uses of the terms are mixed in together in a couple spots in this entry.


The unsourced material can be removed without incident per [[WP:PROVEIT]]; if it is replaced, it should have a source.
Most of the entry is about ''feeling disconnected'', with this thrown in at the bottom of the first section


The mentions in movies and books is always a source of tension; I'm not a fan, but [[WP:IPC]] isn't explicit. In any case, the pop culture item should be ''explicit'', and involve a ''substantial part of the plot''. Brief appearances, short mentions and single incidents are not good choices for IPC sections.
::In social psychology (including social identity theory and self-categorization theory), the term depersonalization has a different meaning. In this area of research, depersonalization refers to a switch to a group level of self-categorization in which self and others are seen in terms of their group identities.


As far as ''Collision with the Infinite'' goes - it was published by a now-defunct [http://www.bluedove.com Blue Dove Press], which had less than 20 books published, and focussed on New Age topics. It was not a medical publisher, nor was it scholarly. The page for the book's author was [[Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Suzanne Segal|deleted]]. The actual content [http://en.wikipedia.org/enwiki/w/index.php?title=Depersonalization&diff=prev&oldid=423945227 added] was essentially a quote from the book in which it is not specified if Segal (the book's author and apparent sufferer from a depersonalization experience) was actually diagnosed (possible [[WP:OR|original research]] issue), and the book itself does not appear to be notable. I can't find any reviews on google news or anything meaningful in google itself. Accordingly, I support the material being removed. [[User:WLU|WLU]] <small>[[User talk:WLU|(t)]] [[Special:Contributions/WLU|(c)]] Wikipedia's rules:</small>[[WP:SIMPLE|<sup><span style='color:#FFA500'>simple</span></sup>]]/[[WP:POL|<sub><span style='color:#008080'>complex</span></sub>]] 15:51, 14 April 2011 (UTC)
I really think this belongs in its own "disambiguation" category.
:Note that I've referred the discussion at [[Talk:Depersonalization disorder]] here to centralize discussion. [[User:WLU|WLU]] <small>[[User talk:WLU|(t)]] [[Special:Contributions/WLU|(c)]] Wikipedia's rules:</small>[[WP:SIMPLE|<sup><span style='color:#FFA500'>simple</span></sup>]]/[[WP:POL|<sub><span style='color:#008080'>complex</span></sub>]] 15:53, 14 April 2011 (UTC)


SUZANNE SEGAL and her book "COLLISION WITH THE INFINITE" are reputable and just because this is being call new age (biased), does NOT mean that this information is not important to those folks that suffer from these problems. She was diagnosed to have these problems and she was also educated, which makes her "scholary" and makes her "notable". She has her Psy.D. degree from The Wright Institute and obtained licensure as a psychologist. See the link to her school.
The same thing happens in the Pop Culture examples, where ''turning others into group members'' (ie in ''American Psycho'') is mixed in with ''feeling disconnected'' in the film ''Numb''
http://www.wi.edu/program.html
I have asked WLU to present his "credentials" (he says this is not needed). Suzanne Segal's link was deleted at the request of WLU who seems to have a personal problem (ie biased) with this information. By the way, how many "hits" did the page that Suzanne Segal get; before WLU asked for its deletion. This would show "what" the "public interest is" and not what WLU's interests are or are not. And if WLU can't find any good links on google then he obviously is not interested in this. There ARE plenty of links to Suzanne and also references to her. How else did I find out about her, and how else do I tell other people to "find out" about her. Due to WLU desire to delete "valuable information" by defaming it (based on his lack of information) there is now even less info available (ie Wikipedia no longer is a source). This is sad.[[User:Vanlegg|Vanlegg]] ([[User talk:Vanlegg|talk]]) 16:25, 14 April 2011 (UTC)


: A few things. One, better to be discussing this than editing back and forth over it. Two, WLU has policy grounds to remove unsourced info and request sources. Three, I'm particularly sympathetic to Vanlegg's desire to include literature and notable individuals who might be able to shed some accessible real-world insight to this type of problem. Although this track of thinking is bordering on [[WP:USEFUL]], if we can we make decent references for books and celebrities who have suffered with this rare and confusing condition, it will help sufferers feel less alienated and often provides valuable next steps to research. Although rarely scientific, this kind of writing and trivia about health, especially psychological health, has a history of being extremely important for the growth in understanding of uncommon conditions (which often become much more common after people have a nonthreatening way to learn about them). In short, better sources, but don't underestimate the importance of popular culture when it comes to disorders such as these. [[User talk:Ocaasi|Ocaasi]] <sup>[[Special:Contributions/Ocaasi|c]]</sup> 16:33, 14 April 2011 (UTC)
And ''then'' someone else threw in


:::Vanlegg, please only post comments on ''one'' page, the point of centralizing to a single location is so we don't have to [[cross post]] or reply to the same commentary multiple times.
::R. D. Laing used depersonalization to mean a fear of the loss of autonomy in interpersonal relationships by the ontologically insecure.[citation needed]"
:::Please [[WP:NPA|comment on the content, not the commentator]]. Credentials are not important on wikipedia, it does not matter if I have a PhD in psychology or never passed grade school - pages are edited based on [[WP:NPOV|neutral]] summaries of what is [[WP:V|verifiable]] in [[WP:RS|reliable sources]], and the overall framework of the [[WP:P&G|policies and guidelines]].
:::Segal's page was deleted as part of a routine [[WP:AFD|article for deletion]] process which I initiated when I noted the subject of the page did not appear to be [[WP:N|notable]]. You are free to bring this up at [[WP:DRV|deletion review]] if you'd like, but I initiated the process, it was the community at large who determined whether the page was worth keeping or not. [[WP:GHITS|Google hits]] are meaningless for notability by the way. I have nothing personal against Suzanne Segal, but I dislike unreliable sources being used on wikipedia.
:::If a publisher focusses on [[New Age]] books, then they are unlikely to be [[WP:RS|reliable sources]] which are primarily the product of scholarly press or well-known mainstream publishers. If it focusses on personal experience, it is not likely to be a [[WP:MEDRS|medically reliable source]]. If Segal published scholarly works on depersonalization, we should cite them, not her autobiography. [[WP:N|Notability]] has a specific meaning on wikipedia, see my previous point.
:::I see no arguments indicating ''Collision with the Infinite'' should be included on the page.
:::Ocaasi, I don't think Segal was a celebrity (indeed, her page went through an AFD and was deleted). If you're talking about other celebrities whom I removed from the page, then per [[WP:BLP]] sourcing would be important, and must be explicit. [[User:WLU|WLU]] <small>[[User talk:WLU|(t)]] [[Special:Contributions/WLU|(c)]] Wikipedia's rules:</small>[[WP:SIMPLE|<sup><span style='color:#FFA500'>simple</span></sup>]]/[[WP:POL|<sub><span style='color:#008080'>complex</span></sub>]] 16:46, 14 April 2011 (UTC)
::::I didn't follow the Segal AFD, but I'll look at it. I was not talking about her, just celebrities and media in general. It appeared that several had been removed. I agree they all need sources under BLP, especially since this identifies them as having a medical condition. My main goal was to get Vanlegg to realize you had policy reasons for objecting to him, and to get you to realize that since he's 29 edits deep into WP, that he has no clue what they mean and we should try and make that process easier for him, provided he's willing to stop edit-warring. [[User talk:Ocaasi|Ocaasi]] <sup>[[Special:Contributions/Ocaasi|c]]</sup> 17:09, 14 April 2011 (UTC)
:::::The AFD is [[Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Suzanne Segal|here]] if you wanted to look. Agree regarding celebrities, but since this is a page about a ''symptom'' rather than a disorder, that adds a wrinkle. Presumably the people listed at [[depersonalization disorder]] should be clearer since it's a diagnosis. [[User:WLU|WLU]] <small>[[User talk:WLU|(t)]] [[Special:Contributions/WLU|(c)]] Wikipedia's rules:</small>[[WP:SIMPLE|<sup><span style='color:#FFA500'>simple</span></sup>]]/[[WP:POL|<sub><span style='color:#008080'>complex</span></sub>]] 17:26, 14 April 2011 (UTC)


:::::Note that the statement that [[Adam Duritz]] suffered from depersonalization disorder was unsourced. It appears to be from [http://www.menshealth.com/health/mental-illness this] interview in [[Men's Health (magazine)|Men's Health]], where he discusses an unnamed ''dissociative'' disorder. It doesn't specify depersonalization, and to interpret his symptoms as such would be [[WP:OR|original research]]. [[User:WLU|WLU]] <small>[[User talk:WLU|(t)]] [[Special:Contributions/WLU|(c)]] Wikipedia's rules:</small>[[WP:SIMPLE|<sup><span style='color:#FFA500'>simple</span></sup>]]/[[WP:POL|<sub><span style='color:#008080'>complex</span></sub>]] 17:57, 14 April 2011 (UTC)
This is a totally different definition that confuses the issue even more.


::::::About here versus the disorder page, I think that could go either way. It's much more inclusive to find people who are known for having the symptom than those who were formally diagnosed with the disorder, though I understand your point that the symptom is in a kind-of no-man's land regarding individuals. Sources needed either way.
Hope I'm making sense! [[User:Katsesama|Katsesama]] ([[User talk:Katsesama|talk]]) 03:24, 10 September 2010 (UTC)


::::::I did some research on Segal [[User_talk:Ocaasi/Segal|here]] and it's very borderline--by that I mean marginal. Google, Google News Archives, and Google Scholar turn up 7 RS mentions ''total'' including her own book, a graduate dissertation, and 5 other mentions, the most notable being a Journal of the American Psychological Association book review about the book ''Feeling Unreal'' by Simeon and Abugel. It does appear that Segal has notability for popularizing this condition, though not otherwise. Her popular book Collision with the Infinite has quite a following in various forums, but it has very little RS support. In sum, I couldn't give my vote to a Segal bio page, though, I think she could perhaps have a section or paragraph in one of these two articles. [[User talk:Ocaasi|Ocaasi]] <sup>[[Special:Contributions/Ocaasi|c]]</sup> 18:06, 14 April 2011 (UTC)
== rare? ==


{{collapsetop|Comments focused on editor not content, full of caps, needs to start with basic policies}}
From the article:
FROM VANLEGG: This is a good page to work from. I still think that you are being biased and you can prove that this is not true.
:::Your comment on "new age" books showed bias (they are not likely??? to be unreliable). So this argument as to the publisher is NOT VALID. The publisher is valid!!!
PLEASE be very specific in your next answer. On what premises do you "CLAIM" she is not notable? Don't use the words "not appear to be".
It is not good style to delete INFORMATION because she does "not appear to be notable"; which was cause for request of deletion of her "page".
:::So what was the "specific meaning" of [[WP:N|Notability]] or "lack of" that you ARE refering too?


CREDENTIALS are important when it comes to "defaming" others. I already told you she has her Psy.D. and this gives her AUTHORITY in the " [[WP:MEDRS|medically reliable source]] " sense about a "case". She was writing about a "case" (and what better information than her own account of "her case" from a professional point of view). What do YOU say about this?
:The disorder has in the past been thought to be rare. However, within the last decade research has shown that as many as 2.5% of the population suffers from this [[Dissociation (psychology)|dissociative disorder]]. Also, as many as 50% of [[College#Universities_and_Colleges|college]] students have reported feelings related to this disorder. The majority of the population will experience this sometime in their lifetime but it only develops as a disorder in a select few. No one specific [[book]] has yet been dedicated to the topic of Depersonalization. However as of recently more knowledge and awareness of this family of disorders is coming to light. For example [[Marlene Steinberg]] and [[Maxine Schnall]]'s [[The Stranger in the Mirror]] covers in depth research on; advice on how to work with; and people who have suffered from dissociative disorders.


True, she was not a celebrity, but she was an authority and a "case".
Cites, please?
Like Ocaasi very kindly noted, this information is useful. Under the [[WP:USEFUL]] link it is clear that.....
::: There are some times when "usefulness" can be the basis of a valid argument for inclusion. An encyclopedia should, by definition, be informative and useful to its readers. Try to exercise common sense, and consider how a non-trivial number of people will consider the information "useful".
::: —so usefulness is the basis of their inclusion; for these types of pages, usefulness is a valid argument.


HOLY CRAP...WLU...you are on the WAR PATH to destruction. I just looked at how you are deleting whole sections of the DEPRSONALIZATION page. I really hope somebody is going to block your "destructive path" (is this "fun and recreation" for you?)
:You didn't even sign your post here and you're asking for cites? Depersonalization is a well known phenomenon. Do a Google search for specific information you need. What kind of "cites" do you require? The information you cut and pasted above lists the name of a book and author. You're being unclear on what you need, why you need it, and even what your user name is. [[User:Moncrief|Moncrief]] 17:22, Apr 16, 2004 (UTC)
::::(cur | prev) 17:42, 14 April 2011 WLU (talk | contribs) (15,741 bytes) (→Popular culture: removed cap) (undo)
You took out the WHOLE "Popular culture" section. I believe this is "vandalism".
Please be correct and kind to those that SEEK information. Don't destroy it.[[User:Vanlegg|Vanlegg]] ([[User talk:Vanlegg|talk]]) 18:08, 14 April 2011 (UTC)


{{collapsebottom}}
----
:Vanlegg, I collapsed your comment, since its tone and lack of familiarity with policies is going to be more detrimental than you realize. The notability guideline is about coverage in [[WP:reliable sources]]. It's not about whether someone's life was important or if they were popular in certain circles. It's just about sources. I looked. Pretty hard. I found 7 that remotely fit our sourcing guidelines (forums and self-published webpages don't count). I linked to the sources above. It doesn't matter that Segal had a Psy d, what matters is that the publishing was peer-reviewed or fact-checked. Otherwise, her autobiography is only notable if it received coverage in reliable sources (you ''must'' read the RS guideline to understand what this is about). I didn't find much coverage of her book in the press either. So maybe it's an important book and maybe it was very important to you, but that doesn't mean it meets the criteria for inclusion in this encyclopedia. That discussion is not final, but slow down before you accuse good editors of being baseless content-deletionists. Chances are you mean very well but don't know what you're talking about with regards to our policies. Let me help you translate some of that in a way that makes sense. I'm not against ''New Age'' but I also find Segal to not meet notability ''guidelines'' for a separate article. I do think her book warrants brief mention here or at the P.disorder page. [[User talk:Ocaasi|Ocaasi]] <sup>[[Special:Contributions/Ocaasi|c]]</sup> 18:17, 14 April 2011 (UTC)
::I still would prefer not to include the book; it's non-notable, non-scholarly, and the biggest issue I have is that it invites people to add more books, trivia, movies and other unreliable cruft that mention depersonalization the symptom or depersonalization the disorder. Does the book even focus on depersonalization as a symptom, or as a disorder? From the summary [http://books.google.ca/books?id=qf1rk3SHYLwC&pg=PA251#v=onepage&q&f=false here] it looks more like a religious experience, not a pathological symptom. Though the brain tumour that appears to have caused it may make it a biological event. The book didn't appear to be a description by a psychologist of a person experiencing depersonalization (a la [[Jill Bolte Taylor]]), it appears to be a person having a religious experience before becoming a Buddhist (or something similar). Without a solid secondary source actually linking it to this page, this topic (depersonalization or depersonalization disorder) I don't know if it's a good inclusion because I simply don't think it applies without a good deal of shoehorning. [[User:WLU|WLU]] <small>[[User talk:WLU|(t)]] [[Special:Contributions/WLU|(c)]] Wikipedia's rules:</small>[[WP:SIMPLE|<sup><span style='color:#FFA500'>simple</span></sup>]]/[[WP:POL|<sub><span style='color:#008080'>complex</span></sub>]] 18:39, 14 April 2011 (UTC)
:::I agree with Ocaasi that this should be included, and I would like to argue again that I believe WLU has a bias against this publisher (new age) which was already shown to be a bias. It is also evident that his person has not "READ" about this. I (however) have read both books "Feeling Unreal" and her book and other books about "loss of self". It is also being argued "falsely" that this was brought on by a brain tumour (not true...read the book). All this points to a biased opinion related to taking away information from the public. And the "biggest issue" WLU has is that this .... "invites people to add"..... (more information? excuse me ! but this is the whole point of education and Wikipedia). This is not in line with Wikipedia.
{{collapsetop|Several personal opinions}}
:::JUST FOR YOUR INFO: Now if you would like to understand some of the reasons for this "disorder" from a point of view of psychology. People have experiences that cause them to shut off the mechanism that "takes things personally" to avoid the dramatic. This is what is refered to as "loss of ego". Whether it happens due to violence, extreme drama, drug experiences, or spontaneously, it will be a "surprise" to the person. It has been noted that these people often "function better" than previously (due to less personal mental clutter) and may still feel uneasy as with a disorder. (I personally have a friend who is going through this. I also have another firend who functions this way and is doing just fine in this state.)This is "sought after" by eastern masters, and should only occur after years of training towards "detachment, compassion and devotion". Buddhism and many of these other studies are not religions in the general sense, but in the specific sense (reunion with the source).
:::WLU is calling this a religious experience, as if this was "wrong" and used the words "didn't appear" (biased) to be written by a psychlogist. (I didn't know that there is a specific way to be a psychologist). My mother is a Jungian therapist and Buddhist and Shamanist and Jewish....is there somthing wrong with being "many things". I am again making note that WLU is not being "correct" and "biased deletion" of information that was added on "good faith" and in the name of "broadening the understanding of a multifaceted field of health" should be curbed. I further think that "deletionist" as WLU "likes" to refer to himself, should "have to" follow stricter rules before "deleting anything due to biased opinions". The person who put this information on the web "in good faith" should not have to "defend it to the bone". HOWEVER the "deletionist" should be "obliged" to defend their ACTS "to the bone" before "wasting other people's precious time". The deletionist can easily take away "graffiti style" junk...(thank you WLU if you do this)...and take away "TOTALY ABSOLUTLY nonrelevant information" (stuff a 10 year old would "see"..ie "obvious stuff)....(again thank you WLU if you do this dirty work). HOWEVER in cases like this...he/she/it/them should NOT BE ALLOWED to "destroy" information. ALTERATIONS and improvements can be argued...but NOT DELETION (especially of whole sections...like WLU did yesterday). This should be STOPPED and I will soon find out how to end this "vandalism". FURTHERMORE a deletionist should be "well aquainted" with a subject before making such "destructive (not instructive) deletions". I hope you WLU will back off this "road to biased destruction".
:::I am sorry my words are TO THE POINT. I am angry at WLU's ACTIONS...and not at WLU as a person. I understand you are a big help to Wikipedia and I too wish to thank you for your cleaning up and you should get an AWARD for this...however we may tend to take our personal religious biases too far and criticise "new age" and "religious experiences" as if this is not good for others. If your religion is good for you then be happy and let others find thier "WAY" back to the heart-of-life. I wish you well on this quest and I am helping many others on thier quest. By the way, I was "saved" in a little church at the age of 16 and I experienced the infusion of the Holy Ghost (it lasted 2 weeks and went away) and I also meditate regulary and I have a wonderful "athiest" wife and "born again athiest" father (both ABUSED by the religious schooling forced upon them). In our family we have many religious bigots and it is obvious when they are refer to factual events and when they get biased. It is obvious when anyone is biased. So you can see I love the Jesus guy and my family doesn't, but "biased" thoughts are not helpful. So please be the good person that "I know you are" and allow information to prosper even if it goes against your "personal ideas" as you have "shown" in your counter arguments. I am trying to be kind and warm hearted, but "your actions" got me all riled up and I am very capable of going right to the top of the chain of command if I have too. I am defending "information availability"...not deletion "of INFORMATION". I hope my kindness made it through. I feel like a good dad, slapping the hand of my daughter (done in good faith).
{{collapsebottom}} [[User:Vanlegg|Vanlegg]] ([[User talk:Vanlegg|talk]]) 14:52, 15 April 2011 (UTC)
::::Anything over a paragraph or two is often ignored. Capitalized letters read as screaming, literally, which is not appreciated... Deletionists are miserable people and I'd get rid of them all if it wouldn't be ''terribly hypocritical''. Being a deletionist in the realm of science is often called for, since science prizes refutation and falsifiability and facts and often lives are at stake. That said, science is also about people, and depersonalization is not just about science. I've made my point and will continue to flesh out why Segal's role with regard to this disorder--in a sociological, spiritual, and exemplar-of-a-scientific-phenomenon way--warrants some mention. Inclusionists and deletionists are both better if they don't rush, so I'll keep presenting the sources and see.


::::WLU, the more I read about Segal, the more it appears she is one of a few canonical examples of this phenomenon/disorder. The popularity of her book among the New Age community, the attention it received by cross-over writers describing religious/scientific phenomena, and the endorsements at least one of those books received by the APA, for me puts her well in the serious sociological and scientific discussion of depersonalization, as well as the broader spiritualist milieu. To the extent that depersonalization is a religious phenomenon, the more notable spiritualist authors (e.g. Deepak Chopra) who mention Segal also confer notability. [[User talk:Ocaasi|Ocaasi]] <sup>[[Special:Contributions/Ocaasi|c]]</sup> 16:08, 15 April 2011 (UTC)
'Killology' is hard to accept in the form of a "known science" per se or whatever, when it's a word that come from just one friggin' book.
:::::Is there any issue with the other edits I made to that section? Is this section now solely about Segal and her book?
:::::Given the tangentiality of her diagnosis to the book, if it is going to be mentioned I would suggest it be kept short for the most part, much of the information would be placed on her page rather than on the depersonalization or depersonalization disorder pages proper. I'll have to read up a bit more on google books, but it still looks like the depersonalization aspects are tangential to Segal's overall intent. [[User:WLU|WLU]] <small>[[User talk:WLU|(t)]] [[Special:Contributions/WLU|(c)]] Wikipedia's rules:</small>[[WP:SIMPLE|<sup><span style='color:#FFA500'>simple</span></sup>]]/[[WP:POL|<sub><span style='color:#008080'>complex</span></sub>]] 22:18, 15 April 2011 (UTC)
::::::I've been busy working on [[Suzanne Segal]] and haven't checked over here since. I'd like to see a reference to her book and a link to her bio, at least. One or two of her quotes on depersonalization would be a great asset to either page. The diagnosis of depersonalization disorder is somewhat tangential to her book (although it's explicitly mentioned), but the discussion of depersonalization in general is throughout. Although DPD is a DSM disorder, I don't think these articles should not include notable individuals who contribute understanding of the conditions through their own detailed experience. Often these people act as 'clinical anecdotes' and are very important to growth of more sophisticated models, as well as more social familiarity with them. I pulled this from [[Oliver Sacks]]: "His descriptions of people coping with and adapting to neurological conditions or injuries often illuminate the ways in which the normal brain deals with perception, memory and individuality. Sacks considers that his literary style grows out of the tradition of 19th-century "clinical anecdotes," a literary style that included detailed narrative case histories..." If you read on, that style is criticized for being weak on clinical rigor and long on literary flourishes, but--Wikipedia articles are not clinical summaries--and I reject the notion that (well-sourced) cultural, artistic, sociological, and literary details are not primary pieces in the ranging, comprehensive, colorful pictures we paint of these subjects. [[User talk:Ocaasi|Ocaasi]] <sup>[[Special:Contributions/Ocaasi|c]]</sup> 22:42, 15 April 2011 (UTC)
==Popular culture==
== Merge? ==


Totally unrelated, why isn't this merged with Depersonalization disorder. That's a great article and this is start-class. Is this one that much different, or headed in a different direction (or is the diagnostic classification of the other exclusive enough that less clinical aspects cannot be included there). [[User talk:Ocaasi|Ocaasi]] <sup>[[Special:Contributions/Ocaasi|c]]</sup> 16:35, 14 April 2011 (UTC)
As a result, I altered this article to, rather than saying 'Killology suggests' which seems like som vast branch of science suggests it (and which I feel violated NPOV), to refer to the book itself.
:I don't know enough about either to say, but it looks like one is about a symptom, the other a full disorder. That leans to two separate pages in my mind, provided the symptom has enough sources about it that the page can be expanded. [[User:WLU|WLU]] <small>[[User talk:WLU|(t)]] [[Special:Contributions/WLU|(c)]] Wikipedia's rules:</small>[[WP:SIMPLE|<sup><span style='color:#FFA500'>simple</span></sup>]]/[[WP:POL|<sub><span style='color:#008080'>complex</span></sub>]] 16:46, 14 April 2011 (UTC)
::Yes, the symptoms are also a part of different disorders and illnesses. So the disorder and the mere symptoms are not the same. [[Special:Contributions/92.225.145.141|92.225.145.141]] ([[User talk:92.225.145.141|talk]]) 19:24, 29 June 2011 (UTC)


== Mixed with Derealization? ==
If 'killology' is a viable and acceptable field of study despite it's hokey name, it's up to that article to verify it -- and not to gain some sort of ''en passe'' support by being mentioned in a way that gives the impression that it's a known and accepted thing.
Some of the descriptions are rather like the description of [[derealization]]. This may be because in literature these are often treated as connected, or even the same. Still, when I'm not me, the world usually still stays real, there are two arms right next to me, just that these are ''not mine'', although I can control them. [[Special:Contributions/92.225.145.141|92.225.145.141]] ([[User talk:92.225.145.141|talk]]) 19:24, 29 June 2011 (UTC)
[[User:Dodger|Dodger]] 05:52, 6 Mar 2005 (UTC)


== Isn't the military training thing somthing else? ==
== derealization ==


Isn't the stuff about how military training makes it easier for the soldiers to kill people about how it makes them not think of their targets as persons, instead about how they perceive themselves? --[[User:TiagoTiago|TiagoTiago]] ([[User talk:TiagoTiago|talk]]) 07:56, 12 November 2011 (UTC)
"In psychiatry, depersonalization (or derealization) is the experience of feelings of loss of a sense of reality."


== Depersonalization have another meaning ==
DP and DR aren't equivalent terms, even though they often occur together, so the "or derealization" isn't acceptable IMO. My take is that DP is behaving appropriately but feeling like you're an observer or like there's no "self" which is generating that behaviour, while DR is perceiving the world correctly but feeling like there's something wrong with it. In both cases the sufferer is rational but disturbed and disconnected. I also think "experience of feelings of" is redundant because you always experience feelings when you have them. I think it should read something like:
This article is about a psychological disorder, of how to view yourself, but depersonalization have a much more important meaning, that stop seeing someone else, an alien group you are not a member of, and that you hate, as persons. It is an important an necessary step towards genocide, so frankly I find that phenomenon to be way more important then some rare psychological disorder.
: I have never seen the term 'depersonalization' used in this way - you may be thinking of 'dehumanization'. <!-- Template:Unsigned IP --><small class="autosigned">—&nbsp;Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/2601:1C0:CB02:5320:5D66:FDEB:DE85:72B1|2601:1C0:CB02:5320:5D66:FDEB:DE85:72B1]] ([[User talk:2601:1C0:CB02:5320:5D66:FDEB:DE85:72B1#top|talk]]) 06:14, 19 November 2016 (UTC)</small> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->


"In psychiatry, depersonalization is a feeling of absense of (or disconnection from) self".


A third meaning of depersonalization, is when YOU feel that others, primarily government institutions, stop seeing you as a person.
I think this definition from www.schizophrenicpen.com is quite nicely worded:
In either case the subject of depersonalization is much more diverse then this article makes it seem.[[User:Rphb|Rphb]] ([[User talk:Rphb|talk]]) 14:41, 15 December 2013 (UTC)


== 'proper' psychotherapy? ==
"An alteration in the perception or experience of one's self, so that the self is felt to be unreal, detached from reality or one's own body or mental processes." - snaxalotl


this phrase needs sharpening as it sounds colloquial. <!-- Template:Unsigned IP --><small class="autosigned">—&nbsp;Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/207.37.196.254|207.37.196.254]] ([[User talk:207.37.196.254#top|talk]]) 08:55, 26 May 2017 (UTC)</small> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->
: Yes, they are two different things. Can't emphasize this enough.


== Depersonalization ==
:: ''Depersonalization'', defined in the DSM-IV as "persistent or recurrent experiences of feeling detached from, and as if one is an outside observer of, onces mental processes or body (e.g., feeling like one is in a dream)."
:: ''Derealization'', defined by Merriam-Webster as " feeling of altered reality [....] in which one's surroundings appear unreal or unfamiliar."


: While the two terms are often lumped together in discussion of various forms of dissociation, it's important to make clear that they are two different things. -- MakersDozn (gathering-place.org)


I find [[objectification]] to be a lousy synonym for one of the common senses of "depersonalization" as found in the professions of health care, policing, border control, armed combat, and armchair politics where the individuality of the patients, perpetrators, or politicians often needs to be set aside as a basic human coping mechanism.


Surgeons definitely "objectify" patients as they focus in on the surgical field, but this is ''far'' from objectifying the person as a whole, to the degree that I find the word "objectification" irritating and unproductive; in the prison system, it ''might'' be full-on objectification (while two wrongs don't make a right, a state-sanctioned crime against a criminal elicits a sweet, easy feeling in the likes of Joe Arpaio).
As a previous sufferer of DP and current psych. student I would HIGHLY suggest making Derealization and Depersonalization TWO SEPERATE items. They are NOT the same. Derealization has a tendency to be co-morbid with Depersonalization; but, it's also co-morbid with non-DP anxiety, co-morbid with PTSD, co-morbid with stress, etc. The point is Derealization is a stand alone variable that is co-morbid with other disorders, while Depersonalization can be either a stand-alone symptom or a disorder. Seriously...take it from a guy who's been there....
-FX


I really wish this page was titled '''Depersonalization (psychology)''' so that objectification could be positioned as an extreme end of a common scale, but I just don't see how that could work, as the accepted language ball lies. &mdash; [[user:MaxEnt|MaxEnt]] 21:42, 14 January 2018 (UTC)
11/15/06 Ok, to everyone who says things like : "Man you guys are idiots. Marijuana does not cause depersonalization." Eff you, ok? look, I have been "Dp'ing" for years. yes. years. and yes, i occasionally smoke pot. but it all began way before that. so personally, I know that MY Depersonalization issues do not stem from that but I do know that pot makes me feel very much the same as my disorder. but you know what? all i know for sure is MY experience, no one elses. stop effing acting like you have the right to speak for every other person in the world. because you don't. now, i happen to believe (and i can see i'm supported in this by some other people's comments) that alot of people (with or without the disorder) feel depersonalized or disconnected from reality when high on marijuana. maybe not everyone, but it's pretty common in people I know personally. in fact, when trying to describe my disorder to others, i frequently say "it's kinda like when you're really high and you feel unreal" to which i usually get an "OOOOOOHHH....ok.. yeah." now, whether smoking pot or doing any kind of drugs can actually give someone Depersonalization Disorder (meaning they feel that way when NOT high, frequently) I don't know. Because I'm not them. but neither are you, most likely, so please don't think so highly of yourself that you start running off at the mouth like you know anyone else's life experience other than your own. and chances are, if you have DD, you don't even fully understand or accept your own feelings and experiences so that should really tell you something. like maybe: SHUT UP. - '''Sway'''


The description about depersonalisation seems to describe derealization: depersonalisation is more about distorted feelings of self, not surroundings. Feeling as if the world is distorted is actually derealization <!-- Template:Unsigned --><small class="autosigned">—&nbsp;Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[User:Brightfoliage|Brightfoliage]] ([[User talk:Brightfoliage#top|talk]] • [[Special:Contributions/Brightfoliage|contribs]]) 19:36, 21 November 2024 (UTC)</small> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->
ps: If you want people to put any kind of value on what you say, you might want to sign your posts. It's just polite and it shows you fully believe in and support your own theories and thoughts. look into it.


== Depersonalization feelings after VR (Virtual Reality) use ==
*ok everybody, please, use an additional ":" to the number of ":" used in the comment to which you respond and sign your post with <nowiki>--~~~~</nowiki>. this way, i cant make anything much out of what is said here and by how many people etc. also this last bit is more ranting then stating an opinion which isnt endorsed in teh talkpages. moving on, i dont think anybody claimed that smoking pot can cause any dissociative disorder (which it cannot), but it is extensively counterargued for some unpercievable reason. what is stated in the article, is that smoking pot can create dissociative symptoms, which is correct. also if you do suffer depersonalisation i would strongly disadvise smoking pot for that very reason, but do what ever you like to yourself. also i very much agree with what is originally said in this section, that depers and dere are two seperate things that often but not necessarily coincide. i do not agree with the discriptions of them that same person gave though. depersonalisation is somewhat of a broad concept of percieving the world as if you are not part of it, or percieving yourself as not part of the world, or percieving yourself as unreal or not yourself (not recognising yourself), and derealisation is much more simply feeling like the world you exist in (and/or the persons in it) is unreal. and i think you can also feel disconnected from reality in some way, as if there is some kind of nonmaterial barrier, which i think may be in the overlap-zone between depers and dere, possibly being a part of both, but i do think its officially considered a part of derealisation. at any rate, they may be used interchangably by some, but they would in fact be incorrect in doing so, especially since quite some milder cases have only one or the other, and they even have two different labels (disorders) to give to these individuals if they have it reoccurantly. and in no case should the article read that thay are in whatever way interchangably usable. [[user:lygophile|a dissociation veteran]] 00:11, 13 March 2007 (UTC)


Some VR users have reported feelings of depersonalization after stopping use of VR headsets, such as their hands feeling unreal, or LCD screens/displays being linked to various visual illusions, possibly related to depth perception.
== Caused by Marijuana? ==
Perhaps this should be added in the future (I say in the future because I didn't find any sources other than Reddit posts, and I don't know if they're as good as articles on news websites).


[https://www.reddit.com/r/oculus/comments/7mbsh3/played_vr_for_like_3_hours_straight_now_i_feel/drt6lrd?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x&context=3 Inspired by this comment].
Can somebody provide a source for that? I'd hate to think we're just reciting urban legend here. - Nargmage


See also, a handful of reddit posts: [https://www.reddit.com/r/PSVR/comments/582yoj/anyone_find_looking_at_your_phone_after_vr_is/ 1], [https://www.reddit.com/r/oculus/comments/7q4sy4/does_the_weird_feeling_of_disassociation_go_away/ 2], [https://www.reddit.com/r/ValveIndex/comments/idv0eu/does_anyone_else_get_weird_sensations_outside_of/ 3], [https://www.reddit.com/r/oculus/comments/e4mt73/weird_feeling_after_playing_vr_is_this_normal/ 4], [https://www.reddit.com/r/oculus/comments/fgv6se/weird_feeling_after_playing_vr/ 5], [https://www.reddit.com/r/PSVR/comments/7kmmqm/does_anyone_ever_feel_their_depth_perception_get/ 6].


--[[User:Ciderpoem|Ciderpoem]] ([[User talk:Ciderpoem|talk]]) 08:58, 14 October 2020 (UTC)
Definitely not urban legend (as is known from personal experience) - but I'm finding it very hard to find references. - Shane T


Here are some articles about it (case studies), could they be used as sources in any way?
*[http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=pubmed&dopt=Abstract&list_uids=14628973&query_hl=11&itool=pubmed_docsum marijuana ingestion is one of the most common precipitants of the disorder in a study of 117 cases of depersonalization disorder]
*[http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=pubmed&dopt=Abstract&list_uids=6969998&query_hl=11&itool=pubmed_docsum case study of four cases of prolonged depersonalization that occurred months after marijuana use]
I'm not sure how best to add it - [[Wikipedia:Citations]] mostly just confused me. --[[User:Tifego|Tifego]] 05:21, 10 March 2006 (UTC)

disagree these should be used as sources as things stand. an encyclopedia is not the place for speculation by non-experts. "engendered by use of marijuana" is basically a claim of "caused by", which is very different from "precipitated by" as it is used in the context of the first article. I would very much support changing "engendered" to "precipitated" and citing the article. The second article is a 25 year old study of four cases. This is the sort of fossicking normally seen by creationist authors, who never tire of quoting some scientist whose 1937 opinion supports their claim. This is probably a better reference, but you'll need to read more than the abstract because it covers drug abuse in general: http://pt.wkhealth.com/pt/re/addi/abstract.00008514-200312000-00016.htm
I have access to Addiction online, but they don't seem to have any 2003 articles up - snaxalotl

Man you guys are idiots. Marijuana does not cause depersonalization. According to the diagnositc manual, used by thousands of doctors natinowide, depersonalization disorder cannot be caused by a substance. Extending marijuana to that is a joke. Now, marijuana can cause panic attacks, and can raise one's anxiety. This can be very stressful, and often times, the user will dwell on the after-effects of marijuana. Depersonalization is a disaccociative disorder, and cannot be present with any other disorders. Depersonalization is a common symptom of OCD, Anxiety and PTSD. I personally had to find out the hard way. I was anxious and dp'd for a good 4 months. After constant research, I decided that I WAS RIGHT. I smoked again, and had the new, correct perception that marijuana didn't change me at all. It was all psychosomatic. Have you seen the so-called cures for DPD? Vitamin Bs, anxiety medications, and all other ANXIETY relievers. Man, www.panic-anxiety.com, that guy is making millions off of you misguided fools. Sorry, but this is coming from a recovered sufferer of depersonalization, you are all wrong.

:If the article is saying that marijuana causes depersonalization ''disorder'', a long term and unpleasant psychiatric disorder, then I agree with you. Depersonalization (the symptom) can last minutes, hours, or days, and I believe it can be temporarily caused by using marijuana. While marijuana is a very safe psychoactive drug, by it's very nature it changes one's perception of the world, and of oneself. Anxiety is another symptom, which has been known to cause derpersonalization (as well as being associated with it in other contexts). I don't find it difficult to believe that marijuana use can cause temporary DP, though I would think that any drug-related sensations (including DP) would go away when the drug wore off.

:So, it seems reasonable that MJ can cause temporary DP, but not long term DP ''disorder''. I also agree that 'engendered' is far less appropriate than 'precipitated.'

:It's always difficult when dealing with correlations in studies. If studies find a correlation between drug use and depersonalization disorder, then the question to be asked is this: Did the marijuana use cause depersonalization, or did a potential anxiety disorder lead that person to self-medicate with marijuana? --[[User:CKelly|ZZYZX]] 09:45, 2 July 2006 (UTC)

This is to the person who says marijuana can't cause depersonilization. Buddy, you are totally wrong. I've smoked approx. 20 times and every single time i've gotten high I feel like I do when I have an intense depersonilization attack. It feels like I'm in a dream world, somewhere between reality and death. The higher you get, the worse you depersonilize. One time, me and a friend smoked two bowl packs out of bong. I reach the peak of my high, the intense depersonilzation part, which usually subsides in about 5-10 seconds. However, this time it it didn't. I felt like there were two seperate worlds created, the real one, and the one in which i was stoned. I freaked out, and had feelings that I would never be the same again. Two months later though, I got the courage to smoke again, and again got the same feelings. This time I got much less high, but the depersonalization was still there. My solution though is to ask myself what I was afraid of, and I learned to cope with the depersonilization, even though the expirience still made me feel uncomfortable. That's why I stopped smoking weed, and my advice to anyone out there who thinks they might have depersonilization disorder is not to smoke, as your first time smoking will be a nightmare, as mine was.

The guy above me is right, I used to smoke alot of pot and it was always fun, but due to depersonalization due to psychological trauma from ether binging and acid smoking has never been the same, I get panicky and experience exactly what he did. I am now on Risperdal(Risperidone) from Janssen. Don't do drugs


As far as I can recall I was the person who wrote "engendered by marijuana." I think precipitation is a far more fitting word for use in that sentence. As far as marijuana causing DP in some people, but not others, this is clear and obvious. What, I think, marijuana can do is, again, precipitate the feelings of DP in certain people who are already susceptible. Meaning if that if their brain is already layed out in a certain manner, marijuana can, and will, create at least a minor level of DP. What the word "engender" would enatil is that the marijuana CREATED the DP, when all the marijuana did was actually bring it about, and engendering is not the case because there would far more sufferers.
If one wants a citation, all one needs to do is go to a DP related forum, search for "marijuana" (or any other variant), and see the extensive list of results. Even though these are people's personal experiences, and are, in fact, subjective, I can't imagine social scientists, psychiatrists or any other professional getting their information differently. -R

'''Dope does not cause, but can be a catalyst to DP/DR'''

I suffer (or experience as some preffer to put it, even though i suffer everyday) from DP/DR, and I agree that it is caused by anxiety, and ''not the substance itself''.
My seperate experiences of DP and their triggers:

Dope + Panic = DP/DR

Stimulant(Ecstasy/speed) + Panic = DR/DP

Weeks after drugs + Worry about substance use = DR/DP

Stimulant(cafeine+alcohol) + worry about never getting sex again = DP/DR

Antidepressant(Cipramil) + Panic = DP/DR

I can see that my experiences contained an element of panic or anxiety (especially of being alone) EVERY TIME. I have managed to feel in control and comfortable using dope, pills, and coffee before with no DR/DP.

I believe also that ''Dope can bring out DP/DR'' but ''only because of underlying anxiety'', and unease. So many people can smoke it and not feel the same way I do, because they are more relaxed and not prone to panic attacks.
I have not smoked in over a year, have had blood tests and various scans which show no traces left in me. But I am still full of worried thoughts and that is why I feel Depersonalised

http://www.depersonalizationdisorder.net/

-Frederic Floyd-

Marijuana (APPEARS) to have an effect ON DP. For some it seems to be the triggering event. I used to have DP a long time ago, and came across a MASSIVE NUMBER of people who found that Marijuana WAS the triggering event. It would be nice to keep this in here. I hope to study the effects on marijuana on DP for my master thesis. Hopefully this article gets worked out. People NEED to know about this disorder. It robbed me of 5 years of my life. I'll be damned if it robs others too.
-FX

Well first I want to say thanks for writing this. It's never been a serious problem for me but I get DP every now and again and was worried it was going to develop into insanity or something, but now I know better. It's probably easier said than done, but I feel now I can overcome it, as the main thing which got to me about it was the fact that I thought I was turning mad. Anyway, I can't really remember when I first had it, it was no longer than a year ago, and yes I do smoke marijuana occasionally, and have been only for the last year aswell (coincidence?). I remember during the 2nd or 3rd time smoking I had a major feeling of anxiety and it almost put me off the drug for good, but then after a few times I didn't get it anymore (well I still get it a bit sometimes when I'm stoned, but it never lasts more than a few minutes). I don't suffer from anxiety at all when not under the influence, the occasional DP seems to be the only possible thing which it has left me with. I'm open to other suggestions, but just from personal experience I feel marijuana must have had at least had some input, at least triggered it.
-Nick <small>—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/80.193.56.160|80.193.56.160]] ([[User talk:80.193.56.160|talk]]) 00:20, 21 May 2008 (UTC)</small><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->
I used a lot of different drugs in my lifetime. Never as a habitual user. I occasionally experienced something akin to derealization when smoking pot but never the real thing until I had a severe auto accident. My brain was traumatically injured and I have experienced occular problems and derealization since. Is there perhaps a possible nerological problem that causes the two? (####) <small><span class="autosigned">—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[User:Lowinmo|Lowinmo]] ([[User talk:Lowinmo|talk]] • [[Special:Contributions/Lowinmo|contribs]]) 03:35, 11 December 2008 (UTC)</span></small><!-- Template:Unsigned --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->

I'm an occasional cannabis smoker myself and I can confirm that I experience very noticeable depersonalization when I'm high. Just letting you know. [[User:Dmarquard|Dmarquard]] ([[User talk:Dmarquard|talk]]) 02:57, 4 February 2009 (UTC)

Included and cited. This issue is now resolved. [[User:Dmarquard|Dmarquard]] ([[User talk:Dmarquard|talk]]) 23:48, 30 March 2009 (UTC)

== wow! to the author of the article ==

thanks for writing this! I linked here from [[Panic attack]] and I've often had feelings like this since I was a kid (especially the mirror part). I'm happy to finally realize what it actually is, thanks a lot :) Also, I dunno if it is related to marijuana (to the guy above me) but I have never smoked pot, and anyway have experienced this since I was a child, so I dont think they HAVE to be combined although maybe pot intensifies or greatens the liklihood? (I'm just throwing stuff out there, dont quote me) --[[User:Insertwackynamehere|insertwackynamehere]] 02:05, 26 October 2005 (UTC)

==Thanks and a little edit...==

Firstly thanks so much for the person who started the article, and the people who continue to edit it. This has been extremely helpful to me and my symptoms, and all you people mean the world to me! Also, I've added a paragraph which could be helpful to people who have never experienced depersonalisation before, as I feel it is these people who need a bit more of an explanation in order to relate better to loved ones who might be suffering from depersonalisation. It's the same explanation I gave my girlfriend, and she said it was a really good way of putting it and very helpful to her. So I thought it would be helpful to other non-sufferers :) although I feel it might need a bit of editing, I'll have another look at it later. --[[User:Ronius|Ronius]] 13:04, 9 March 2006 (UTC)

I'd like to add to your idea. I (again) used to suffer from DP. It would be VERY helpful to give first hand-account from a SPECIFIC SOURCE as to what DP feels like from a suffer/exsuffer. But it needs to be done in such a way that NPOV is NOT compromised. The feeling of DP ought to be relayed FACTUALLY so that the inquisitive fact-finder of the Wiki-World can fully grasp the FACTS of DP rather than be confused by personal opinion. Remember, quoted personal opinion is a PART of fact.
-FX

== Possible Sideeffects of Depersonalization? ==

I suffer from Depersonalization, as a disorder. In the recent 3 years, it has gotten more intence, and has started to enduce vomiting, and disiculty to breath. At first I thought it was asthsma, but as it started to happen more commenly,and only during the sensation .. I am starting to believe that is it a cause of Depersonalization. -Erica

Erica, what' you're desribing is propably the psychosomatic effects from the anxiety itself. I used to have DPD and am currently a Psychology student. Please, seek help from a therapist that actually knows what DP is. There is a lot of help out there for this thing, it's just kinda scattered at the moment. You'll make it, trust me; I made it.
-FX

== Proposed Merge ==

(Never done this before, but) I feel pretty strongly that [[Depersonalization disorder]] covers the exact same material as this article, and should be merged into this one. So, Diagnostic Criteria would be moved into the part that links to it, whichever general introduction to the concept of depersonalization is better should be kept, and the examples can probably coexist. --[[User:Tifego|Tifego]] 04:25, 10 March 2006 (UTC)
:Some headings should probably be added too; both the articles look a little disorganized already so it'd only get worse when combining them without some extra section delineation. --[[User:Tifego|Tifego]] 04:29, 10 March 2006 (UTC)

:Totally disagree that the pages should merge. By far the most important and complex topic is depersonalization, with endless perspectives and connections to different theories of neuroscience and psychology. Depersonalization disorder, however, is NOT the condition of suffering depersonalization. It is one of several DSM categories (e.g. delusional disorder v. schizophrenia) where essentially you only have that symptom, otherwise you have a different (not additional) diagnosis. The bulk of information should be under depersonalization, but DD definitely earns its own entry because it is a distinct DSM category. I just think the entry should be rather small, with a definition of the criteria and a brief description, a description of any ways in which having DD is a different experience to DR within other contexts, and description of any treatments (especially those which are specific to DD, as opposed to generic treatments which apply to DR within other contexts). -- nonuser snaxalotl

::'''Merge'''. [[WP:BOLD]] and do it urself, if you want. --[[User:M1ss1ontomars2k4|M1ss1ontomars2k4]] 05:26, 7 May 2006 (UTC)


I strongly '''disagree''' that the pages should be merged, for the following reason:

''Depersonalization'' is a symptom that most people experience at some point in their lives, and is short-lived. It is also a symptom of psychiatric conditions such as anxiety. By itself, it is not considered a problem by psychiatrists. Ordinary people, who may experience it when under extreme stress, often describe it as a positive and stress-relieving sensation.

''Depersonalization disorder'' (DPD) is a disorder/disease, and is a collection of symptoms. The primary symptom is depersonalization, but differs sharply in that it doesn't go away (as with 'normal' people). The sensation of depersonalization is always perceived very negatively by those who are afflicted with DPD, so much so that it is common for them to believe that they are 'going crazy.' Depersonalization is also listed in the [[DSM-IV]] as both a symptom and (separately) as a disease.

To merge these two articles would be akin to merging 'headache' with 'stroke' - one is a symptom (possibly of a disease), the other is the disease or disorder. The DPD page does, and should, contain current and experimental treatments for the disease, the prognosis, etiology, how many people are effected, etc. There is quite a bit of information that an article about a disease should include. Since DP the symptom is much more common than DPD the disease, perhaps that should contain more information, but these subjects should definitely stay separate.
--[[User:CKelly|ZZYZX]] 09:13, 2 July 2006 (UTC)



So, have we come to a consensus about whether or not the articles should be merged? It looks to me like there were more noes than yeas. So, can we remove the "merge" tags from both of the articles? If I don't hear from anyone I'm gonna take that as a "Yeah, go right ahead!" and just remove them - unless someone beats me to it... --[[User:CKelly|ZZYZX]] 09:39, 6 August 2006 (UTC)


To add very little, I feel that ZZYZX is correct in that the two are distinct and should not be merged. -R

I agree that they should NOT (I REPEAT NOT) be merged. I think a STRONG line needs to be drawn between DP as a sympotom and DPD as a disorder. THEY ARE HEAVILY related, but they need to be kept seperate (JUST LIKE Derealization).
Depersonalization: An experience that is Co-morbid with things
Derealization : An experience that is Co-morbid with things
DP Disorder : A stand-alone disorder with DP as the main symptom
These are three seperate items and they really need to be written more clearly. Also While I'm at it Depersonalization Disorder REALLY REALLY needs to be renamed to Dissociative Depersonalization Disorder (IT'S TRUE NAME). *Sigh* where will it ever end???
-FX

== suffering? ==

personally, i don't think that the subjects mentioned should be considered "sufferers".
if we're discussing depersonalization disorder, i could understand that, but there are some people who seek to become depersonalized. specifically through the use of recreational drugs, religious or non-religious meditation and also hypnosis.
it would probably be better to refer to them as the "person experiencing" or some such thing.

Amen to that. -Squishta

--[[User:Cwiddofer|Cwiddofer]] 22:43, 3 May 2006 (UTC)

(sorry - forgot to sign earlier)

This article shouldn't be merged with Derealization. Although they tend to coexist, it is perfectly possible to have the one without the other, and when one do, they are percieved as two very different sensations

I agree that people who are experiencing Depersonalization should not be called "suffers" since some DO seek it on purpose. HOWEVER, I feel that a sub-section within the Depersonalization section needs to point out that DEPERSONALIZAIONT is a shorthand and COMMON name used for Dissociative Depersonalization Disorder (DPD). I'm often guilty of it myself.
-FX

I feel DP/DR everyday, and I hate it. I dont take any drugs, have even cut out coffee, and I do everything I can to try and feel comfortable, but Yet I still suffer.

To those who say I dont suffer can all go and get F#@^&d because you dont know what its like to try everyday to get better, and not achieve anything despite numerous efforts.

- Frederic Floyd

:yeah, anyone i know that has experienced this would more then certainly call it suffering. People that seek out "depersonalization" seek out something entirely different but just by the same name. If not, they still suffer greater insanity than any depersonalisation· [[user:lygophile|<font color="DarkRed">Lygophile</font>]] [[Special:Contributions/User:lygophile|<font color="7700CC">has</font>]] [[user talk:lygophile|<font color="DarkGreen">spoken</font>]] 00:18, 13 March 2007 (UTC)

::I think that "sufferers" is appropriate in all cases, though I see the point. Maybe the distinction needs to be made more clearly between those of us who either experience DP from natural causes or as an unwanted side-effect of other treatments, and those who experience it on purpose. After experiencing it as a side-effect of two SSRIs (Lexapro and Celexa), I think people in the second group are plagued by other mental disorders - I don't know who in their right mind would seek out the feeling that you are just watching the world from inside your body but are detached, especially emotionally, from it, like your life is an IMAX movie. My personal issues with that group aside, I think that the unwitting "experience" of it is suffering, and it would be wrong to change it to "experience" for all people, because it may give others who read this site the sense that it is just an experience, and not see how scary it really is. While I love the description that exists now (from my bouts of it at least, it's accurate), it also makes it sound "cool," perhaps, to people who seek out these things. Also, it could be argued that even people who seek it out don't realize how awful it is until they experience it? [[User:Kelelain|Kelelain]] 00:04, 29 September 2007 (UTC)

Huh?! Not suffering? Yes its a vaild point that many people in the world seek this feeling, but when it happens everyday without the person wanting or looking for it, it is indeed suffering. I've SUFFERED for years with this, and I have sought the feeling in the past, from drugs to meditation. Some may not concider it suffering, but each individual has their own perception of what they experience. end, Tito^^ 14:42, 7 October 2009 (UTC)

== Sunset Boulevard? ==
Why is this included? Should there be some indication? Like for example: "Fictional Depictions of Derealization"
[[User:Euthydemos|Euthydemos]] 19:25, 23 June 2006 (UTC)

This is to the person who says marijuana can't cause depersonilization. Buddy, you are totally wrong. I've smoked approx. 20 times and every single time i've gotten high I feel like I do when I have an intense depersonilization attack. It feels like I'm in a dream world, somewhere between reality and death. The higher you get, the worse you depersonilize. One time, me and a friend smoked two bowl packs out of bong. I reach the peak of my high, the intense depersonilzation part, which usually subsides in about 5-10 seconds. However, this time it it didn't. I felt like there were two seperate worlds created, the real one, and the one in which i was stoned. I freaked out, and had feelings that I would never be the same again. Two months later though, I got the courage to smoke again, and again got the same feelings. This time I got much less high, but the depersonalization was still there. My solution though is to ask myself what I was afraid of, and I learned to cope with the depersonilization, even though the expirience still made me feel uncomfortable. That's why I stopped smoking weed, and my advice to anyone out there who thinks they might have depersonilization disorder is not to smoke, as your first time smoking will be a nightmare, as mine was.

(AMEN!!!!) -FX

== Depersonalization / deprogramming ==

Depersonalization is another term for [[deprogramming]], so we need a disambiguation page. --[[User:HResearcher|HResearcher]] 06:52, 17 August 2006 (UTC)

Hi,
Although my interest here is of the Post Cult/Traumatic Stress Disorder, I would disagree. Please see the links provided. It would appear that various people can suffer/experience this disorder. I am also not in agreement in merging the article as this classification has some precise criteria. I think once the article is in a more orderly state it will be of more value and expanded. REGATDSTalkAbout 20:13, 27 August 2006 (UTC)

The items are and should remain seperate, however a mention on both linking to each other might be helpful.
-FX

== My experience depersonalisation ==

I experienced what I called non-reality, beginning at the age of 13. My first experience was in Oct 1986, and lasted for 15 to 20 minutes. I felt at thought I was in a dream, that nothing around me was real. The world seemed to turn hazy and colours were lost, almost black and white. I did not find the experience disturbing. In fact I enjoyed it. It gave me a sense of invenerability. I had episodes of depersonalisation a few times a week lasting ~15 to 20 min for years, but I don’t really remember them much as they were not concerning to me. My last experienced was in 1994 when I was very tired.

What I remember, that is relevant to the article, is that 6 months after my first experience of depersonalisation I began to experience increasing anxiety levels, leading eventually in March 1989 severe panic attacks that lasted for ~10 years. But I concede that my experiences maybe mild in comparison to others. Following from this, I have two points to make:

The study of the phenomena, as I read it (not just on wiki), seems biased by old-fashioned ideas e.g. fear causes a need for escape leading to depersonalisation. However, I believe that my experiences were due to a physical neurobiological disturbance - mild temporal lobe epilepsy or traces of cleaning solvents, are two examples I contemplated over the years.

In my case, depersonalisation proceeded panic attacks. The current idea that non-reality is an escape from fear seems wrong to me. Depersonalisation may signify damage to areas of the brain that evoke a senesce of external and internal reality – at times leading to decreased reality while at other times, increasing reality. If so, panic attacks maybe caused by the opposite of depersonalisation – enhanced reality overwhelming reality [[user:Diamonddavej|Diamond Dave]] 21/09/2006 14:23 UTC

DP/DR is not caused by brain damage. I have negative brain scans confirming this, because I was worried about such a possibility.

- Frederic Floyd

:I should add that I was diagnosed with Asperger's Syndrome in 2002. Also, I didn’t feel unreal during these episodes, only the external world lost its reality; I was in a waking dream. I feel that a neurological explanation better fits my experience given the visual disturbances. -[[User:Diamonddavej|Diamonddavej]] 05:55, 28 April 2007 (UTC)
::yeah, that makes a difference. [[dissociative disorder]]s (what depersonalisation is a part of) become because of traumatic experiances that the mind distentiates itself from. but you can also have depersonalisation or derealistation (what you are refering to is derealisation rather then depersonalisation) symptoms witrhout having the disorder, and tehse symptoms can come with other disorders, such as severe depression or schizofrenia, and likely also with autistiform disorders· [[user:lygophile|<font color="DarkRed">Lygophile</font>]] [[Special:Contributions/User:lygophile|<font color="7700CC">has</font>]] [[user talk:lygophile|<font color="DarkGreen">spoken</font>]] 20:35, 21 May 2007 (UTC)

== Identity Crisis and depersonalization==


My experience has been that I have been able to rationalize my feelings of depersonalization by recognising that they are linked to my feelings of confusion over my sense of identity. The concept in DP that one sees oneself as somehow absent or estranged from the person who is interpreting incoming information is bang on the money as far as I am concerned. Also the description that was used comparing it to the zooming effect sometimes used in cinematography is remarkably apt. Theres also the shot where they somehow fix a camera to a persons chest and the person is stable while his/her environment moves in a very disconcerting way.

I dont really get the point of this discussion though. The article '''Depersonalization''' has disputed neutrality? Is someone saying that the article in Wiki is too subjective? As far as I am aware there isn't really a full and proper understanding of this issue. This seems to be the consensus reading some of the contributions here. As such, I dont think it is possible yet to have a properly objective attitude toward this subject.

The question I am raising here, however, is whether people feel the question of a ''' crisis of identity''' ought to be included as a fundamental aspect of depersonalization and a way in which "people involuntarily experiencing" DP can be helped to understand the deeply unpleasant and frightening sensation?

--[[User:Chiendeguerre|Chiendeguerre]] 08:52, 12 November 2006 (UTC)

== What are people who have this disorder really afraid of? ==

I'm a sufferer of this disorder at 15 years old and about 5 months ago posted this comment.

This is to the person who says marijuana can't cause depersonilization. Buddy, you are totally wrong. I've smoked approx. 20 times and every single time i've gotten high I feel like I do when I have an intense depersonilization attack. It feels like I'm in a dream world, somewhere between reality and death. The higher you get, the worse you depersonilize. One time, me and a friend smoked two bowl packs out of bong. I reach the peak of my high, the intense depersonilzation part, which usually subsides in about 5-10 seconds. However, this time it it didn't. I felt like there were two seperate worlds created, the real one, and the one in which i was stoned. I freaked out, and had feelings that I would never be the same again. Two months later though, I got the courage to smoke again, and again got the same feelings. This time I got much less high, but the depersonalization was still there. My solution though is to ask myself what I was afraid of, and I learned to cope with the depersonilization, even though the expirience still made me feel uncomfortable. That's why I stopped smoking weed, and my advice to anyone out there who thinks they might have depersonilization disorder is not to smoke, as your first time smoking will be a nightmare, as mine was.

I have to say that now, things are worse. DP/DR is consuming my life. It's all i can think about when I'm not 100% distracted. I'm even getting bizare ideas that my food and drinks contain drugs that could mess with me. I'm even hesitant to take and kind of medication for the same reasons. What I wanted to know from people though is what exactly are you afraid of? I know that when I'm just walking around, I have a fear of escalation, like my reality will suddenly be shut off and I'll turn crazy. It also is worse when I have a lack of control. For instance, getting in a car makes me nervous, and I can't even imagine going on an airplane where there's no where to go in case of a panic attack. Even though I've never had a full-blown one, but the thought of it is completly overwhelming. I seriously hope there will be a day where my mind is free of all of this, because I don't want to live 70 more years with anxiety.


marijuana actually makes me feel the exact opposite of depersonalized. i feel this big "i have returned!" sensation and i get creative. and yet i tried mushrooms and cried for 2 hours. drugs are best enjoyed when you can leave your negative feelings alone for a while, in the company of people you trust, in an environment that you'd enjoy even if sober. those things didnt fall into place for me till i was 27. if you write this well at 15, i'll assume you're intelligent and college-bound, not some teeny-bopper glued to a cell phone. when i was 16 i thought i was going nuts. i felt like my internal and external reality were only functioning with each other because i hadnt seriously cracked yet. luckily i had parents and teachers that thought i was talented. go to college and major in something you love. be as weird as you want while the world still expects it of you. test your limits and gain some self confidence. finish school, get a job, distract yourself from perceived danger by doing those mundane things that protect you: excercise, buy good insurance, clean your house. if fear still follows you, absolutely seek professional help.
that personal message said, should the article include the often-temporary anxiety, and its symptoms, of the young? we grown-ups poopoo their experiences and get episodes like columbine ya know. a scratch will heal. a picked-at scratch will get infected. same with minds, i bet. wikipeace to all, -kb [[User:68.75.182.133|68.75.182.133]] 17:01, 18 June 2007 (UTC)

I'm now 17 and I stumbled back on the old post I wrote before when I was 15. I can't believe some of the things I wrote; my life has totally changed for the better. I have abstained from all drugs except alcohol for the past two years, and let me tell you, the DP/DR has never been better. Yeah, I question reality on occasion, but it doesn't have the prominence that I described earlier. This is really great, and gives hope to everyone out there who seems hopelessly bogged down in DP. You are not alone, and from the perspective of someone who at times would rather die than live with it, it can get better. I also discovered by research that I probably have some form of OCD, which didn't help out the issue. Check into that if you have constant aniexty, there are ways to help. <small>—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/96.237.119.148|96.237.119.148]] ([[User talk:96.237.119.148|talk]]) 22:33, 5 March 2008 (UTC)</small><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->


I have to agree with you also. For me it has been a lasting disorder every second of every day. To everyone else I seem to function perfectly. I am a honor student in college and have been very successful. But I have been suffering for 7 years. It feels like you are disconnected in some way. Like you have one foot in this world and the other somewhere else. I feel like a robot going through the motions. If the room had a taste to it then I would say now it tastes bland. Kinda like how a dream seems real when you are having it but then you wake up. And in that split second is how I feel every single second of everyday. Time also seems to be distorted. You are right it is a real disorder and it can go away. However, for some it never will. It is always there for me.

I am suffering from drug induced depersonalization. I only smoked weed once when this first happened 7 years ago. It was a very high potent dose and I experienced an extremely disturbing high. Hand to the bible the next day after and since then I was never the same. It is very rare to occur from marijuana use especially one time use. But it can trigger underlying psychosis and depersonalization permanently. In 2007 and 2008 researchers in Great Britain are begining to realize the connection though further study is needed. Just google for the findings. It also concluded that in very few cases it stayed long after the drug metabolized. and/or it raises someones chance for future permanant psychodic disorders by 40% Although the margins are very low. <span style="font-size: smaller;" class="autosigned">—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/71.11.233.251|71.11.233.251]] ([[User talk:71.11.233.251|talk]]) 05:12, 30 April 2009 (UTC)</span><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->

== Military ==

"In fact, the military often purposely tries to induce depersonalization in its soldiers to make tasks easier that require tough decisions, such as using weapons."

Which military? All of them, the world over?

"Often"? What does that mean, in this context? Every day? Once a week?

Quite apart from the total absence of any reason why the reader should believe it. Cite an authority. <small>—The preceding [[Wikipedia:Sign your posts on talk pages|unsigned]] comment was added by [[Special:Contributions/134.226.1.229|134.226.1.229]] ([[User talk:134.226.1.229|talk]]) 12:29, 23 January 2007 (UTC).</small><!-- HagermanBot Auto-Unsigned -->

== Derealization ==

There used to be several articles on wikipedia regd. depersonalization and derealization. In the derealization article it was suggested to do a merge. I can not find the derealization article anymore so I assume some merging have taken place, but I can not find a merge in this articles history. I do however feel that some of the information given in the derealization article is missing in this article, but as I do not have a copy I can't specify what. I do also feel uncertain in regard to the question of wether DeRe and DePers are the same disorders. Anyone know anything about this?

[[User:80.203.65.215|80.203.65.215]] 19:17, 23 January 2007 (UTC)

:The derealization article was redirected to this article back in 2003 (see:[http://en.wikipedia.org/enwiki/w/index.php?title=Derealization&action=history]). And there is no deletion history for the article (see: [http://en.wikipedia.org/enwiki/w/index.php?title=Special%3ALog&type=delete&user=&page=Derealization]). Are you sure that is the article that was proposed for a merge? -- [[User_Talk:SiobhanHansa|Siobhan Hansa]] 02:30, 24 January 2007 (UTC)

: i have written this in the section "derealisation" atop this talk page:
:"depersonalisation is somewhat of a broad concept of percieving the world as if you are not part of it, or percieving yourself as not part of the world, or percieving yourself as unreal or not yourself (not recognising yourself), and derealisation is much more simply feeling like the world you exist in (and/or the persons in it) is unreal. and i think you can also feel disconnected from reality in some way, as if there is some kind of nonmaterial barrier, which i think may be in the overlap-zone between depers and dere, possibly being a part of both, but i do think its officially considered a part of derealisation"
:'depersonalisation disorder' is the disorder they give someone that has reoccuring depersonalisation but no amnesia or significant identity confusion, and if you have derealisation but no depersonalisation they wont give you the label 'depersonalisation disorder', but instead just give you "dissociative disorder not otherwise specified", which theyll give to anyone with such reoccuring symptoms but not falling under any of the four described disorders within the dissociative disorder group. does that answere your question?· [[user:lygophile|<font color="DarkRed">Lygophile</font>]] [[Special:Contributions/User:lygophile|<font color="7700CC">has</font>]] [[user talk:lygophile|<font color="DarkGreen">spoken</font>]] 00:23, 13 March 2007 (UTC)

==depersonalizationdisorder.net?==

Out of interest, does anyone know what has happened to this site? I have found it hugely useful, but almost a month ago I noticed it had gone offline. It's currently linked to in the article, but at the moment it seems the page does not exist. [[User:Ronius|Ronius]] 18:39, 2 April 2007 (UTC)

Well I've never heard of that one, but there is http://www.dpselfhelp.com , Just a forum for people with the actual disorder, or just suffering from occasional episodes. ¡Hay muchas preguntas y pocas respuestas! 14:35, 7 October 2009 (UTC) <small><span class="autosigned">—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[User:Maggy Tito|Maggy Tito]] ([[User talk:Maggy Tito|talk]] • [[Special:Contributions/Maggy Tito|contribs]]) </span></small><!-- Template:Unsigned --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->

==Symptoms - Video game analogy==
It reads: "Yet another analogy is comparing real life to a game, a game everyone plays, all the time......They are perpetual, and almost all the time, involuntary, cynics of our reality."

This is an excellent analogy, and I feel it truly captures the essence of a prolonged experience of depersonalization. However, I feel this would be best suited to be in the article on [[Depersonalization disorder]], since this speaks to a longer experience than transient depersonalization. (Anyone know how to move text like that without stepping on anyone's toes?) [[User:Absentis|Absentis]] 11:42, 29 June 2007 (UTC)

: Well, I was [[WP:BOLD|bold]] and moved this text into the new 'Symptoms' heading in the [[depersonalization disorder]] article. Somebody tell me if this was horribly wrong. [[User:Absentis|Absentis]] 17:52, 10 August 2007 (UTC)

== Work that needs to be done ==

The article as it stands confuses depersonalization (DP) with [[Derealization]] (DR) and [[depersonalization disorder]] (DPD). Simply put, DP is a symptom, and when it becomes a chronic experience it turns into DPD. However, DPD has more symptoms than just DP (such as DR). As for the DP article, it needs the following work:

*Change 'symptoms' section to 'description' - alter contents accordingly. There are no symptoms of DP, since it is itself a symptom. However, a good explanation of the subjective experience is essential to explaning the difference between DP, DR, and DPD. (This is the most important task)
*Causes - needs cleanup (better sources and flow)
*<s>Connection to psychological trauma - belongs in the DPD article.</s>
*Treatment - Not bad, it just needs to be very clear that treatment depends on the actual condition.

I'm going to start working on these changes. If anyone wants to help, feel free to pitch in! [[User:Absentis|Absentis]] 15:43, 21 August 2007 (UTC)

== Difference between Depersonalization and Psychosis ==

Can someone elaborate on this? It seems that the overall description of these two conditions are very similar (as with many other disorders or conditions). I know that there are some obvious differences but any big ones? I'm mainly looking for differences in symptoms (or just description if you think that DP is just a symptom and nothing more) and description but anything is fine. Causes are fairly similar and some other things. There seems to be enough differences in the two conditions to constitute a seperate listing in the DSM but just looking for a bit more. <small>—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/71.191.51.145|71.191.51.145]] ([[User talk:71.191.51.145|talk]]) 00:09, 10 December 2007 (UTC)</small><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->

:With depersonalization, individuals are always in contact with reality. At all times they can say what is, and what isn't real. Psychosis, at its core, is a break from reality; they can't differentiate reality from fantasy. So, although people who experience depersonalization report they feel less real, or detached from their body (or any number of similar symptoms) they know its only a feeling. They don't believe they actually have ceased to exist (such is the case of a nihilistic delusion, which is indicative of psychosis.) [[Special:Contributions/70.51.244.154|70.51.244.154]] ([[User talk:70.51.244.154|talk]]) 01:04, 10 December 2007 (UTC)

== Phenylephrine causing depersonalization as a side effect? ==

I recently took some sinus medication that uses Phenylephrine, and feel kind of odd. Not like I have to call 911 and go to the emergency room odd. Kind of out of it. I wonder if you think perhaps how Caffeine can cause some people who use it to feel depersonalization, that Phenylephrine might have the same effect in the sense that they're both mild stimulants. Cause if I drink something with Caffeine in it, I feel strange too. I'm just wondering if you should mention this in the article for both Penylephrine and Psuedophedrine, since they're very similar drugs.

On another note, I probably should call my psychatrist before I take this medicine again, you think? [[User:Violet yoshi|Violet yoshi]] ([[User talk:Violet yoshi|talk]]) 04:15, 28 March 2008 (UTC)

== World Trade Center/Pentagon Attack prevalence of depersonalization ==

In so many interviews from on the ground observers of the 9/11 attacks, and so many while seeing it on the media, the attacks "seemed like a movie", which is a way, I think, of depersonalizing the horror of what is taking place before their eyes.

I know I did, when I saw the second plane hit the tower, when I thought almost that I was watching a horrible vision (I live near the Towers), and felt a kind of leaving of my senses completely (not to get too personal about this, but this is the case).

Can this fact (for that is what it is) of truly widespread depersonalization ("Oh my God, it's like a movie"), although brief, be inserted and commented on somewhere?

In addition, for a medical cite, which admits it is based on two tests with small sample sizes, I have this, from Psychiatry 69(2): Summer 2006:

Lawyer, Sten R. et. al. ''Predictors of Peritraumatic Reaction and PTSD Following the September 11th Terrorist Attacts''

It can be read online at:
http://docs.google.com/viewer?a=v&q=cache:F5HLtQPwZJsJ:www.isu.edu/~lawystev/pubs/lawyeretalWTC2006.pdf+depersonalization+World+Trade+attack&hl=en&gl=us&pid=bl&srcid=ADGEESjmxn9GTHB5qVSzzgTqaoaJSZL0X1u-PMHB4R4Vovc8T8g6PyRNNXgwPP8jcjtwx6T6uWE3GbTamjM1cI2HIfszn7lZZedlQ4atj8rLBPQeloPzBDwDOQ3QoXLB-dSuxK7p7-vv&sig=AHIEtbQwnCE46V21KhztIxzym2tZdRQapg

I don't even have the Wiki chops to insert the cite correctly.

I think the example would be excellent as an example for the wide audience reading the entry.

Best,

[[User:Shlishke|Shlishke]] ([[User talk:Shlishke|talk]]) 06:33, 31 January 2010 (UTC)

== Fiction Depersonalization Syndrome ==

I removed the following text from the article, which was put back in by SecondGuess: <br />
::<nowiki>"A recent hypothesis, Fiction Depersonalization Syndrome, first posited in the 2009 novel ''Swimming Inside the Sun'', (and presented at the [[Media ecology|Media Ecology]] Association's 2010 Annual Convention) suggests that people's immersion in the "observational" reality of the modern world (rather than the historically dominant "experiential" reality) can lead to depersonalization.<ref>http://fictiondepersonalizationsyndrome.com</ref>"</nowiki><br />
I removed this text again. According to [[WP:MEDRS]] there are high demands on sources for medicine-related articles. The source that is given is ''fiction'', it is not even a [[tertiary source]]. The fact that it is presented at a convention does not mean that it is recognized as an important development in depersonalization.<br />
Maybe, if the book is notable (which I don't know) an article can be made about the book instead... [[User:Lova_Falk|<font size="2"><span style="font-family:Segoe Print;color:#e75e03">'''Lova Falk'''</span></font>]] [[User talk:Lova Falk|<font size="2"><span style="font-family:Segoe Print;color:#336699">talk</span></font>]] 14:57, 15 June 2010 (UTC)

Lova Falk I appreciate your rigor in wanting to keep content well-sourced and accurate. I disagree with your assessment here, though. The fact that the hypothesis was first posited in a novel is largely irrelevant to its importance in the field. (We can remove the text referencing the novel if that makes a difference to you.) Fiction DP Syndrome is a ''hypothesis'', and was listed as such; it is not claiming to be medical fact, or even at the level of medical theory, therefore it doesn't necessitate the same type of sourcing. Hypotheses generally (though not in all instances) will not be able to have the level of sourcing required of facts or even theories. Once it has double blind studies, med journals, etc. reporting on it or supporting it then it bumps up from being merely a hypothesis. By your rationale, hypotheses would never be included in any medically-related entries, and that is a disservice to readers. Hypotheses are an important component in growing medical knowledge on any given topic. I think the issue is whether the hypothesis is recognized enough by the academy (or other substantial group) to warrant inclusion in an entry. The fact that this was selected to be presented at an international convention of scholars (from a highly respected organization) from a variety of fields, including psychology, indicates that it has enough support and academic interest around it that it's valuable to the overall discussion of DP, and worthy of inclusion. I don't want to go back and forth undoing each other's edits so I'll wait for a response from you which hopefully will be a re-insertion of the text. I think I've made a reasonable case for its inclusion and hope you understand where I'm coming from.
--[[User:SecondGuess|SecondGuess]] ([[User talk:SecondGuess|talk]]) 17:08, 15 June 2010 (UTC)

:Thank you SecondGuess for not starting an edit conflict with me. However, when it comes to hypotheses, there is [[WP:No original research]]. Amongst other things, it says: "To demonstrate that you are not adding original research, you must be able to cite reliable published sources that are '''directly related''' to the topic of the article, and that '''directly support''' the material as presented." <br />
:Just a week ago, I was confused by the removal of some text that I thought was perfectly referenced. I had a [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:LeadSongDog#Alzheimer.27s_disease short discussion] with the editor (who has much more experience with Wikipedia than I have), who explained to me the line of reasoning.
:So I won't put your text back in - yet. I might be wrong. I hope others than the two of us will comment on this discussion. [[User:Lova_Falk|<font size="2"><span style="font-family:Segoe Print;color:#e75e03">'''Lova Falk'''</span></font>]] [[User talk:Lova Falk|<font size="2"><span style="font-family:Segoe Print;color:#336699">talk</span></font>]] 17:46, 15 June 2010 (UTC)
:PS. I did not remove your text about this book from [[depersonalization disorder]], because it was in the section society and culture. [[User:Lova_Falk|<font size="2"><span style="font-family:Segoe Print;color:#e75e03">'''Lova Falk'''</span></font>]] [[User talk:Lova Falk|<font size="2"><span style="font-family:Segoe Print;color:#336699">talk</span></font>]] 17:48, 15 June 2010 (UTC)
::I put it back - but in the section popular culture. I hope you are satisfied with this compromise! [[User:Lova_Falk|<font size="2"><span style="font-family:Segoe Print;color:#e75e03">'''Lova Falk'''</span></font>]] [[User talk:Lova Falk|<font size="2"><span style="font-family:Segoe Print;color:#336699">talk</span></font>]] 06:29, 16 June 2010 (UTC)
This seems like a fair compromise. I think you are right - popular culture is the appropriate section for inclusion of the hypothesis at this time. (FYI - the hypothesis will soon be under consideration by a respected academic journal. Should it be published there, perhaps at that time it will appropriate to move it back to the other section.)
I see that a "citation needed" is at the end of the text you entered re the presentation at the MEA convention. The media ecology website has a link to a pdf of the convention program which lists Zweig and his presentation. I don't know how to link to a pdf (or if that's done on wikipedia) but if you know how to do it go to the MEA website, click "11th annual convention" then you will see the link for the "program". [[User:SecondGuess|SecondGuess]] ([[User talk:SecondGuess|talk]] • [[Special:Contributions/SecondGuess|contribs]]) 02:13, 22 June 2010 (UTC)</span></small><!-- Template:Unsigned --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->
:Great! Another editor put the link there. Just check how it is done, it is easy. I hope you'll edit when the article has been published. [[User:Lova_Falk|<font size="2"><span style="font-family:Segoe Print;color:#e75e03">'''Lova Falk'''</span></font>]] [[User talk:Lova Falk|<font size="2"><span style="font-family:Segoe Print;color:#336699">talk</span></font>]] 17:35, 23 June 2010 (UTC)

I am absolutely disgusted by the inclusion of this "Fiction Depersonalization" hypothesis. David Zweig is a musician/author who has identified an opportunity to gain recognition and increase book sales - at the expense of depersonalization sufferers. He is taking advantage of a general lack of knowledge of depersonalization and it upsets me intensely. He disregards all expert opinions and facts and is only interested in promoting himself. I am absolutely appalled that this nonsense is included on this page. <span style="font-size: smaller;" class="autosigned">—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/120.16.61.162|120.16.61.162]] ([[User talk:120.16.61.162|talk]]) 13:26, 5 October 2010 (UTC)</span><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->

== Depersonalization is Absence of a Sense of Agency ==

Co-authors Sierra M and Berrios GE list "loss of feelings of agency" as a symptom of depersonalization:

J Nerv Ment Dis. 2001 Sep;189(9):629-36.
The phenomenological stability of depersonalization: comparing the old with the new.
Sierra M, Berrios GE
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11580008
See Table 1, Glossary: The Components of Depersonalization

As a depersonalization sufferer, I find the description "loss of a sense of agency" to be very applicable to depersonalization.

[[User:Unreal24-7|Unreal24-7]] ([[User talk:Unreal24-7|talk]]) 09:23, 18 September 2010 (UTC)

Latest revision as of 19:37, 21 November 2024

Depersonalization is bad?

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Why is Depersonalization always bad? Is this a Western Eurocentric bias? Isn't depersonalization what meditators spend their lives trying to achieve? I have some depersonalization gained from my meditation - and I want more of it.

There has been some back and forth on the pop culture section. I removed several bullets containing minor mentions of the disorder in movies (Girl, Interrupted; Limitless; Numb), and some unsourced text (Existentialism; American Psycho; R.D. Laing) and some non-notable mentions (Suzanne Vega's song Tom's Diner; a self-diagnosis by Sal Governale and the one probably most contested by Vanlegg, the Collision with the Infinite book, [1]).

The unsourced material can be removed without incident per WP:PROVEIT; if it is replaced, it should have a source.

The mentions in movies and books is always a source of tension; I'm not a fan, but WP:IPC isn't explicit. In any case, the pop culture item should be explicit, and involve a substantial part of the plot. Brief appearances, short mentions and single incidents are not good choices for IPC sections.

As far as Collision with the Infinite goes - it was published by a now-defunct Blue Dove Press, which had less than 20 books published, and focussed on New Age topics. It was not a medical publisher, nor was it scholarly. The page for the book's author was deleted. The actual content added was essentially a quote from the book in which it is not specified if Segal (the book's author and apparent sufferer from a depersonalization experience) was actually diagnosed (possible original research issue), and the book itself does not appear to be notable. I can't find any reviews on google news or anything meaningful in google itself. Accordingly, I support the material being removed. WLU (t) (c) Wikipedia's rules:simple/complex 15:51, 14 April 2011 (UTC)[reply]

Note that I've referred the discussion at Talk:Depersonalization disorder here to centralize discussion. WLU (t) (c) Wikipedia's rules:simple/complex 15:53, 14 April 2011 (UTC)[reply]

SUZANNE SEGAL and her book "COLLISION WITH THE INFINITE" are reputable and just because this is being call new age (biased), does NOT mean that this information is not important to those folks that suffer from these problems. She was diagnosed to have these problems and she was also educated, which makes her "scholary" and makes her "notable". She has her Psy.D. degree from The Wright Institute and obtained licensure as a psychologist. See the link to her school. http://www.wi.edu/program.html I have asked WLU to present his "credentials" (he says this is not needed). Suzanne Segal's link was deleted at the request of WLU who seems to have a personal problem (ie biased) with this information. By the way, how many "hits" did the page that Suzanne Segal get; before WLU asked for its deletion. This would show "what" the "public interest is" and not what WLU's interests are or are not. And if WLU can't find any good links on google then he obviously is not interested in this. There ARE plenty of links to Suzanne and also references to her. How else did I find out about her, and how else do I tell other people to "find out" about her. Due to WLU desire to delete "valuable information" by defaming it (based on his lack of information) there is now even less info available (ie Wikipedia no longer is a source). This is sad.Vanlegg (talk) 16:25, 14 April 2011 (UTC)[reply]

A few things. One, better to be discussing this than editing back and forth over it. Two, WLU has policy grounds to remove unsourced info and request sources. Three, I'm particularly sympathetic to Vanlegg's desire to include literature and notable individuals who might be able to shed some accessible real-world insight to this type of problem. Although this track of thinking is bordering on WP:USEFUL, if we can we make decent references for books and celebrities who have suffered with this rare and confusing condition, it will help sufferers feel less alienated and often provides valuable next steps to research. Although rarely scientific, this kind of writing and trivia about health, especially psychological health, has a history of being extremely important for the growth in understanding of uncommon conditions (which often become much more common after people have a nonthreatening way to learn about them). In short, better sources, but don't underestimate the importance of popular culture when it comes to disorders such as these. Ocaasi c 16:33, 14 April 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Vanlegg, please only post comments on one page, the point of centralizing to a single location is so we don't have to cross post or reply to the same commentary multiple times.
Please comment on the content, not the commentator. Credentials are not important on wikipedia, it does not matter if I have a PhD in psychology or never passed grade school - pages are edited based on neutral summaries of what is verifiable in reliable sources, and the overall framework of the policies and guidelines.
Segal's page was deleted as part of a routine article for deletion process which I initiated when I noted the subject of the page did not appear to be notable. You are free to bring this up at deletion review if you'd like, but I initiated the process, it was the community at large who determined whether the page was worth keeping or not. Google hits are meaningless for notability by the way. I have nothing personal against Suzanne Segal, but I dislike unreliable sources being used on wikipedia.
If a publisher focusses on New Age books, then they are unlikely to be reliable sources which are primarily the product of scholarly press or well-known mainstream publishers. If it focusses on personal experience, it is not likely to be a medically reliable source. If Segal published scholarly works on depersonalization, we should cite them, not her autobiography. Notability has a specific meaning on wikipedia, see my previous point.
I see no arguments indicating Collision with the Infinite should be included on the page.
Ocaasi, I don't think Segal was a celebrity (indeed, her page went through an AFD and was deleted). If you're talking about other celebrities whom I removed from the page, then per WP:BLP sourcing would be important, and must be explicit. WLU (t) (c) Wikipedia's rules:simple/complex 16:46, 14 April 2011 (UTC)[reply]
I didn't follow the Segal AFD, but I'll look at it. I was not talking about her, just celebrities and media in general. It appeared that several had been removed. I agree they all need sources under BLP, especially since this identifies them as having a medical condition. My main goal was to get Vanlegg to realize you had policy reasons for objecting to him, and to get you to realize that since he's 29 edits deep into WP, that he has no clue what they mean and we should try and make that process easier for him, provided he's willing to stop edit-warring. Ocaasi c 17:09, 14 April 2011 (UTC)[reply]
The AFD is here if you wanted to look. Agree regarding celebrities, but since this is a page about a symptom rather than a disorder, that adds a wrinkle. Presumably the people listed at depersonalization disorder should be clearer since it's a diagnosis. WLU (t) (c) Wikipedia's rules:simple/complex 17:26, 14 April 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Note that the statement that Adam Duritz suffered from depersonalization disorder was unsourced. It appears to be from this interview in Men's Health, where he discusses an unnamed dissociative disorder. It doesn't specify depersonalization, and to interpret his symptoms as such would be original research. WLU (t) (c) Wikipedia's rules:simple/complex 17:57, 14 April 2011 (UTC)[reply]
About here versus the disorder page, I think that could go either way. It's much more inclusive to find people who are known for having the symptom than those who were formally diagnosed with the disorder, though I understand your point that the symptom is in a kind-of no-man's land regarding individuals. Sources needed either way.
I did some research on Segal here and it's very borderline--by that I mean marginal. Google, Google News Archives, and Google Scholar turn up 7 RS mentions total including her own book, a graduate dissertation, and 5 other mentions, the most notable being a Journal of the American Psychological Association book review about the book Feeling Unreal by Simeon and Abugel. It does appear that Segal has notability for popularizing this condition, though not otherwise. Her popular book Collision with the Infinite has quite a following in various forums, but it has very little RS support. In sum, I couldn't give my vote to a Segal bio page, though, I think she could perhaps have a section or paragraph in one of these two articles. Ocaasi c 18:06, 14 April 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Comments focused on editor not content, full of caps, needs to start with basic policies

FROM VANLEGG: This is a good page to work from. I still think that you are being biased and you can prove that this is not true.

Your comment on "new age" books showed bias (they are not likely??? to be unreliable). So this argument as to the publisher is NOT VALID. The publisher is valid!!!

PLEASE be very specific in your next answer. On what premises do you "CLAIM" she is not notable? Don't use the words "not appear to be". It is not good style to delete INFORMATION because she does "not appear to be notable"; which was cause for request of deletion of her "page".

So what was the "specific meaning" of Notability or "lack of" that you ARE refering too?

CREDENTIALS are important when it comes to "defaming" others. I already told you she has her Psy.D. and this gives her AUTHORITY in the " medically reliable source " sense about a "case". She was writing about a "case" (and what better information than her own account of "her case" from a professional point of view). What do YOU say about this?

True, she was not a celebrity, but she was an authority and a "case". Like Ocaasi very kindly noted, this information is useful. Under the WP:USEFUL link it is clear that.....

There are some times when "usefulness" can be the basis of a valid argument for inclusion. An encyclopedia should, by definition, be informative and useful to its readers. Try to exercise common sense, and consider how a non-trivial number of people will consider the information "useful".
—so usefulness is the basis of their inclusion; for these types of pages, usefulness is a valid argument.

HOLY CRAP...WLU...you are on the WAR PATH to destruction. I just looked at how you are deleting whole sections of the DEPRSONALIZATION page. I really hope somebody is going to block your "destructive path" (is this "fun and recreation" for you?)

(cur | prev) 17:42, 14 April 2011 WLU (talk | contribs) (15,741 bytes) (→Popular culture: removed cap) (undo)

You took out the WHOLE "Popular culture" section. I believe this is "vandalism". Please be correct and kind to those that SEEK information. Don't destroy it.Vanlegg (talk) 18:08, 14 April 2011 (UTC)[reply]

Vanlegg, I collapsed your comment, since its tone and lack of familiarity with policies is going to be more detrimental than you realize. The notability guideline is about coverage in WP:reliable sources. It's not about whether someone's life was important or if they were popular in certain circles. It's just about sources. I looked. Pretty hard. I found 7 that remotely fit our sourcing guidelines (forums and self-published webpages don't count). I linked to the sources above. It doesn't matter that Segal had a Psy d, what matters is that the publishing was peer-reviewed or fact-checked. Otherwise, her autobiography is only notable if it received coverage in reliable sources (you must read the RS guideline to understand what this is about). I didn't find much coverage of her book in the press either. So maybe it's an important book and maybe it was very important to you, but that doesn't mean it meets the criteria for inclusion in this encyclopedia. That discussion is not final, but slow down before you accuse good editors of being baseless content-deletionists. Chances are you mean very well but don't know what you're talking about with regards to our policies. Let me help you translate some of that in a way that makes sense. I'm not against New Age but I also find Segal to not meet notability guidelines for a separate article. I do think her book warrants brief mention here or at the P.disorder page. Ocaasi c 18:17, 14 April 2011 (UTC)[reply]
I still would prefer not to include the book; it's non-notable, non-scholarly, and the biggest issue I have is that it invites people to add more books, trivia, movies and other unreliable cruft that mention depersonalization the symptom or depersonalization the disorder. Does the book even focus on depersonalization as a symptom, or as a disorder? From the summary here it looks more like a religious experience, not a pathological symptom. Though the brain tumour that appears to have caused it may make it a biological event. The book didn't appear to be a description by a psychologist of a person experiencing depersonalization (a la Jill Bolte Taylor), it appears to be a person having a religious experience before becoming a Buddhist (or something similar). Without a solid secondary source actually linking it to this page, this topic (depersonalization or depersonalization disorder) I don't know if it's a good inclusion because I simply don't think it applies without a good deal of shoehorning. WLU (t) (c) Wikipedia's rules:simple/complex 18:39, 14 April 2011 (UTC)[reply]
I agree with Ocaasi that this should be included, and I would like to argue again that I believe WLU has a bias against this publisher (new age) which was already shown to be a bias. It is also evident that his person has not "READ" about this. I (however) have read both books "Feeling Unreal" and her book and other books about "loss of self". It is also being argued "falsely" that this was brought on by a brain tumour (not true...read the book). All this points to a biased opinion related to taking away information from the public. And the "biggest issue" WLU has is that this .... "invites people to add"..... (more information? excuse me ! but this is the whole point of education and Wikipedia). This is not in line with Wikipedia.
Several personal opinions
JUST FOR YOUR INFO: Now if you would like to understand some of the reasons for this "disorder" from a point of view of psychology. People have experiences that cause them to shut off the mechanism that "takes things personally" to avoid the dramatic. This is what is refered to as "loss of ego". Whether it happens due to violence, extreme drama, drug experiences, or spontaneously, it will be a "surprise" to the person. It has been noted that these people often "function better" than previously (due to less personal mental clutter) and may still feel uneasy as with a disorder. (I personally have a friend who is going through this. I also have another firend who functions this way and is doing just fine in this state.)This is "sought after" by eastern masters, and should only occur after years of training towards "detachment, compassion and devotion". Buddhism and many of these other studies are not religions in the general sense, but in the specific sense (reunion with the source).
WLU is calling this a religious experience, as if this was "wrong" and used the words "didn't appear" (biased) to be written by a psychlogist. (I didn't know that there is a specific way to be a psychologist). My mother is a Jungian therapist and Buddhist and Shamanist and Jewish....is there somthing wrong with being "many things". I am again making note that WLU is not being "correct" and "biased deletion" of information that was added on "good faith" and in the name of "broadening the understanding of a multifaceted field of health" should be curbed. I further think that "deletionist" as WLU "likes" to refer to himself, should "have to" follow stricter rules before "deleting anything due to biased opinions". The person who put this information on the web "in good faith" should not have to "defend it to the bone". HOWEVER the "deletionist" should be "obliged" to defend their ACTS "to the bone" before "wasting other people's precious time". The deletionist can easily take away "graffiti style" junk...(thank you WLU if you do this)...and take away "TOTALY ABSOLUTLY nonrelevant information" (stuff a 10 year old would "see"..ie "obvious stuff)....(again thank you WLU if you do this dirty work). HOWEVER in cases like this...he/she/it/them should NOT BE ALLOWED to "destroy" information. ALTERATIONS and improvements can be argued...but NOT DELETION (especially of whole sections...like WLU did yesterday). This should be STOPPED and I will soon find out how to end this "vandalism". FURTHERMORE a deletionist should be "well aquainted" with a subject before making such "destructive (not instructive) deletions". I hope you WLU will back off this "road to biased destruction".
I am sorry my words are TO THE POINT. I am angry at WLU's ACTIONS...and not at WLU as a person. I understand you are a big help to Wikipedia and I too wish to thank you for your cleaning up and you should get an AWARD for this...however we may tend to take our personal religious biases too far and criticise "new age" and "religious experiences" as if this is not good for others. If your religion is good for you then be happy and let others find thier "WAY" back to the heart-of-life. I wish you well on this quest and I am helping many others on thier quest. By the way, I was "saved" in a little church at the age of 16 and I experienced the infusion of the Holy Ghost (it lasted 2 weeks and went away) and I also meditate regulary and I have a wonderful "athiest" wife and "born again athiest" father (both ABUSED by the religious schooling forced upon them). In our family we have many religious bigots and it is obvious when they are refer to factual events and when they get biased. It is obvious when anyone is biased. So you can see I love the Jesus guy and my family doesn't, but "biased" thoughts are not helpful. So please be the good person that "I know you are" and allow information to prosper even if it goes against your "personal ideas" as you have "shown" in your counter arguments. I am trying to be kind and warm hearted, but "your actions" got me all riled up and I am very capable of going right to the top of the chain of command if I have too. I am defending "information availability"...not deletion "of INFORMATION". I hope my kindness made it through. I feel like a good dad, slapping the hand of my daughter (done in good faith).

Vanlegg (talk) 14:52, 15 April 2011 (UTC)[reply]

Anything over a paragraph or two is often ignored. Capitalized letters read as screaming, literally, which is not appreciated... Deletionists are miserable people and I'd get rid of them all if it wouldn't be terribly hypocritical. Being a deletionist in the realm of science is often called for, since science prizes refutation and falsifiability and facts and often lives are at stake. That said, science is also about people, and depersonalization is not just about science. I've made my point and will continue to flesh out why Segal's role with regard to this disorder--in a sociological, spiritual, and exemplar-of-a-scientific-phenomenon way--warrants some mention. Inclusionists and deletionists are both better if they don't rush, so I'll keep presenting the sources and see.
WLU, the more I read about Segal, the more it appears she is one of a few canonical examples of this phenomenon/disorder. The popularity of her book among the New Age community, the attention it received by cross-over writers describing religious/scientific phenomena, and the endorsements at least one of those books received by the APA, for me puts her well in the serious sociological and scientific discussion of depersonalization, as well as the broader spiritualist milieu. To the extent that depersonalization is a religious phenomenon, the more notable spiritualist authors (e.g. Deepak Chopra) who mention Segal also confer notability. Ocaasi c 16:08, 15 April 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Is there any issue with the other edits I made to that section? Is this section now solely about Segal and her book?
Given the tangentiality of her diagnosis to the book, if it is going to be mentioned I would suggest it be kept short for the most part, much of the information would be placed on her page rather than on the depersonalization or depersonalization disorder pages proper. I'll have to read up a bit more on google books, but it still looks like the depersonalization aspects are tangential to Segal's overall intent. WLU (t) (c) Wikipedia's rules:simple/complex 22:18, 15 April 2011 (UTC)[reply]
I've been busy working on Suzanne Segal and haven't checked over here since. I'd like to see a reference to her book and a link to her bio, at least. One or two of her quotes on depersonalization would be a great asset to either page. The diagnosis of depersonalization disorder is somewhat tangential to her book (although it's explicitly mentioned), but the discussion of depersonalization in general is throughout. Although DPD is a DSM disorder, I don't think these articles should not include notable individuals who contribute understanding of the conditions through their own detailed experience. Often these people act as 'clinical anecdotes' and are very important to growth of more sophisticated models, as well as more social familiarity with them. I pulled this from Oliver Sacks: "His descriptions of people coping with and adapting to neurological conditions or injuries often illuminate the ways in which the normal brain deals with perception, memory and individuality. Sacks considers that his literary style grows out of the tradition of 19th-century "clinical anecdotes," a literary style that included detailed narrative case histories..." If you read on, that style is criticized for being weak on clinical rigor and long on literary flourishes, but--Wikipedia articles are not clinical summaries--and I reject the notion that (well-sourced) cultural, artistic, sociological, and literary details are not primary pieces in the ranging, comprehensive, colorful pictures we paint of these subjects. Ocaasi c 22:42, 15 April 2011 (UTC)[reply]
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Merge?

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Totally unrelated, why isn't this merged with Depersonalization disorder. That's a great article and this is start-class. Is this one that much different, or headed in a different direction (or is the diagnostic classification of the other exclusive enough that less clinical aspects cannot be included there). Ocaasi c 16:35, 14 April 2011 (UTC)[reply]

I don't know enough about either to say, but it looks like one is about a symptom, the other a full disorder. That leans to two separate pages in my mind, provided the symptom has enough sources about it that the page can be expanded. WLU (t) (c) Wikipedia's rules:simple/complex 16:46, 14 April 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Yes, the symptoms are also a part of different disorders and illnesses. So the disorder and the mere symptoms are not the same. 92.225.145.141 (talk) 19:24, 29 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]

Mixed with Derealization?

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Some of the descriptions are rather like the description of derealization. This may be because in literature these are often treated as connected, or even the same. Still, when I'm not me, the world usually still stays real, there are two arms right next to me, just that these are not mine, although I can control them. 92.225.145.141 (talk) 19:24, 29 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]

Isn't the military training thing somthing else?

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Isn't the stuff about how military training makes it easier for the soldiers to kill people about how it makes them not think of their targets as persons, instead about how they perceive themselves? --TiagoTiago (talk) 07:56, 12 November 2011 (UTC)[reply]

Depersonalization have another meaning

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This article is about a psychological disorder, of how to view yourself, but depersonalization have a much more important meaning, that stop seeing someone else, an alien group you are not a member of, and that you hate, as persons. It is an important an necessary step towards genocide, so frankly I find that phenomenon to be way more important then some rare psychological disorder.

I have never seen the term 'depersonalization' used in this way - you may be thinking of 'dehumanization'. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 2601:1C0:CB02:5320:5D66:FDEB:DE85:72B1 (talk) 06:14, 19 November 2016 (UTC)[reply]


A third meaning of depersonalization, is when YOU feel that others, primarily government institutions, stop seeing you as a person. In either case the subject of depersonalization is much more diverse then this article makes it seem.Rphb (talk) 14:41, 15 December 2013 (UTC)[reply]

'proper' psychotherapy?

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this phrase needs sharpening as it sounds colloquial. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 207.37.196.254 (talk) 08:55, 26 May 2017 (UTC)[reply]

Depersonalization

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I find objectification to be a lousy synonym for one of the common senses of "depersonalization" as found in the professions of health care, policing, border control, armed combat, and armchair politics where the individuality of the patients, perpetrators, or politicians often needs to be set aside as a basic human coping mechanism.

Surgeons definitely "objectify" patients as they focus in on the surgical field, but this is far from objectifying the person as a whole, to the degree that I find the word "objectification" irritating and unproductive; in the prison system, it might be full-on objectification (while two wrongs don't make a right, a state-sanctioned crime against a criminal elicits a sweet, easy feeling in the likes of Joe Arpaio).

I really wish this page was titled Depersonalization (psychology) so that objectification could be positioned as an extreme end of a common scale, but I just don't see how that could work, as the accepted language ball lies. — MaxEnt 21:42, 14 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]

The description about depersonalisation seems to describe derealization: depersonalisation is more about distorted feelings of self, not surroundings. Feeling as if the world is distorted is actually derealization — Preceding unsigned comment added by Brightfoliage (talkcontribs) 19:36, 21 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Depersonalization feelings after VR (Virtual Reality) use

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Some VR users have reported feelings of depersonalization after stopping use of VR headsets, such as their hands feeling unreal, or LCD screens/displays being linked to various visual illusions, possibly related to depth perception. Perhaps this should be added in the future (I say in the future because I didn't find any sources other than Reddit posts, and I don't know if they're as good as articles on news websites).

Inspired by this comment.

See also, a handful of reddit posts: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6.

--Ciderpoem (talk) 08:58, 14 October 2020 (UTC)[reply]