heavensqueen: (Default)
heavensqueen ([personal profile] heavensqueen) wrote in [community profile] yuletide_coal2016-12-17 08:08 pm

Rudolph the red-nosed dentist

Writing post : http://yuletide-coal.dreamwidth.org/6728.html


Other useful links:
2016 Timeline : https://yuletide-admin.dreamwidth.org/28822.html
Collection: http://archiveofourown.org/collections/yuletide2016
 

Letters post: http://yuletide.livejournal.com/1274815.html
Letters DB: http://www.dennis-sellers.com/yuletide/index.html
Treat spreadsheet: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/10Bv9vJXykH9BUgn6q5DIBliBgMWzlVpXiB9d1lNoub4/edit?usp=sharing

Yuleporn: http://yuletide.livejournal.com/1276881.html
Crueltide: http://yuletide.livejournal.com/1274987.html
Two for One
: http://yuletide.livejournal.com/1278973.html

Re: Describe the fic(s) you wrote in one sentence

(Anonymous) 2016-12-18 05:21 am (UTC)(link)
What's a DID fandom? Googling it was pretty impossible :\

Re: Describe the fic(s) you wrote in one sentence

(Anonymous) 2016-12-18 05:22 am (UTC)(link)
na

disassociative identity disorder. you may know it as mpd/multiple personality disorder which is what it used to be called.

Re: Describe the fic(s) you wrote in one sentence

(Anonymous) 2016-12-18 05:35 am (UTC)(link)
AYRT

Thanks for explaining! English isn't my first language, so I had no clue that it was no longer referred to as MPD. That's good to know.

Re: Describe the fic(s) you wrote in one sentence

(Anonymous) 2016-12-18 07:29 am (UTC)(link)
It's hard, because there's no real set diagnostic criteria for DID, and while the DSM-IV and DSM-V have Dissociative Identity Disorder there, it's basically a diagnosis for 'when enough of these things happen with these possible root triggers' and it can be comorbid with depression and PTSD (among other things), while the ICD-10 calls it Dissociative (conversion) Disorder and lists different criteria. It's not called MPD any more basically because some people have partial identities, and the aim is now to work with the person until their identities can coexist to a point where that person can function in society, rather than aiming to reintegrate to a single identity, because that's more likely to break someone than it is to help.

/has read way too much