“When you are in the best, you are in the middle of the best time yet." - Ana”
Source: Psychics Preferred: A Co-Creating Adventure for Those Who Like to Have It Their Way and Psychic Advice to Help Them
“Whether you are in business or simply want to be remembered positively, frankly consider these things: What makes you feel special and significant? What makes you unforgettable? When people see or think of you, what image do you think comes to mind?”
Source: The Art of Preparation: 8 Ways to Plan with Purpose & Intention for Positive Impact
“Psychic Source is watching you.”
Source: One More Help to Psychics: You are the Noticer
“You are the best at something and the worst at something. - Ana”
Source: Psychics Do It Better: Divine Ways of Being Together for 18 & older
“...to discount the loud and clear "no" of a group of young people with everything to lose is to misunderstand both youth and resistance.”
Source: Flowers in the Gutter
“Incestuous abuse is not necessarily related to the most severe, polyfragmented forms of MPD; however, ritual abuse, with or without incest, is the most common underlying cause of polyfragmentation for MPD [DID] or dissociative disorders NOS.”
Source: Incest-Related Syndromes of Adult Psychopathology
“The more severe and prolonged the trauma, the more severe the fragmentation.”
Source: Incest-Related Syndromes of Adult Psychopathology
“Extreme versions of DID occasionally develop in response to particularly horrific ongoing trauma (e.g., children exploited through involvement in years of forced prostitution), with so-called poly-frgamentation, encompassing dozens or even hundreds of personality states. In general, the complexity of dissociative symptoms appears to be consistent with the severity of early traumatiation. That is, less severe abuse will result in fewer dissociative symptoms, and more severe abuse will result in more complex dissociative disorders.”
Source: Rebuilding Shattered Lives: Treating Complex PTSD and Dissociative Disorders
“In principle, the number of parts of the personality in a given individual has little bearing on whether dissociation is at the secondary or tertiary level. A patient with secondary structural dissociation may have many EPs, while a patient with tertiary structural dissociation may only have two ANPs and two EPs. However, in general, more divisions relate to less mental efficiency and more likelihood that a traumatized individual will have tertiary structural dissociation.”
Source: The Haunted Self: Structural Dissociation and the Treatment of Chronic Traumatization
“Polyfragmented Dissociative Identity Disorder
A form of DID that often involves over one hundred DID personality states and is likely to be the result of cult abuse or some other form of extreme sadistic abuse that extends over a long period and often involves multiple perpetrators.”
Source: The Dissociative Identity Disorder Sourcebook