About this deal
Truddi M. Chase: Guest Book". The Washington Post. March 16, 2010. Archived from the original on October 11, 2021 . Retrieved January 24, 2023– via Legacy.com. I hope it is okay to share it here: http://dana.org/Cerebrum/2008/Coming_Apart__Trauma_and_the_Fragmentation_of_the_Self/ So, Truddi Chase survives a horrific childhood. She develops 92 personalities as a way of dealing with both the terrible things that happens to her and the subsequent memories that they leave behind-- each personality is responsible for a different set of memories, so the whole thing doesn't have to hurt or overwhelm her at once. The person known as "Truddi" is basically an empty shell that the personalities use to make themselves known.
The Gatekeeper: Determines which of the others may assume the body, or "front-run" as they call it. Also, I am thinking of watching the movie " Split". Yet, I don't want to feed my head with nonsense (so I will read the thread about that Movie as well, after creating this thread).If you're at all interested in psychology and the potential of the human psyche to both splinter and protect itself, then you should read this book.
Creepy Child: The little ones in the Troop formation are very damaged, very angry, and hungry for revenge.Rabbit is a personality that only speaks once during the story. She is the one that holds most of the childhood trauma. The howling refers to the sound she makes. It resembles the sound a rabbit makes when it is dying. Since rabbits don't have vocal cords, it is a very haunting and unique sound. There were also a number of times the writing seemed overly obtuse and convoluted, even when telling seemingly straightforward accounts. For example, the scene where Albert first visits Stanley's classroom and is waiting in the hallway. The conversation is baffling - who is speaking to whom? And who is the woman Albert is talking to? She makes no other appearance in the text... Alpha Bitch: Catherine was created to be a strong, dominant person who could force the Troops into line. Chase chose not to integrate her identities into one integrated whole, and instead chose to welcome her parts into a cooperating team. In her book, she describes giving talks to convicted child molesters to explain her abuse history and to warn them of the psychology devastation that child abuse inflicts upon its victims. [3]