Bike - Cathy's amnesia

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Something which has been buzzing round my head for a little while is what happens to us if we suffer Alzheimer's, dementia or some major head injury - would we still retain our new gender or revert back? I don't know the answer and hope never to find out personally, but hence the recent theme in Bike.

Angharad.

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If I remember correctly...

...Trish went through something similar after an injury, reverting to Patrick for a short time.

I think the threat of Alzheimer's, dementia or head injury that is going to cause us to lose control of our lives is a worry for all of us as we age.

Psychic Spirit


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Bike - Cathy's amnesia

Well, made for some fun reading.

    Stanman
May Your Light Forever Shine
    Stanman
May Your Light Forever Shine

Perhaps ask your therapist?

That is, for those who are seeing one? There's probably been something in the literature about gender differentiation upon traumatic injury.


I'll get a life when it's proven and substantiated to be better than what I'm currently experiencing.

let me google that for you ...

amyzing's picture

... except that it doesn't do much good.

Results are a little interesting. If you google "gender dysphoria amnesia" or "gender identity amnesia", you'll find a raft of links to dissociative identity disorder (what used to be called MPD, multiple personality disorder).

It sort of follows, especially considering the diagnostic criteria that the gate-keepers enforce. To get the letters for surgery, often even to get the 'script for hormones, you have to show the pshrink evidence of long-standing issues, preferably back to childhood. Which Charlie had, after all. By the time Stella knocked him off a bike in a storm, he'd already taken a number of steps. So the Charlie in hospital would presumably be one from some time in the deep denial period, when as a matter of self-defense he utterly rejected all thoughts and feelings that didn't match the male role to which he was assigned, a period in which he also attempted to suppress older memories.

That's not quite a dissociated personality, but an argument could be made for it, perhaps.

One would think that the shock of learning of his (her) parents' deaths would tend to undermine that return-to-denial, though. For this particular case, presumably the amnesia is a return to a state of stark, unbending denial (based on the story outline so far). Under those circumstances, one would also imagine that Cathy's current physicality would be deeply distressing. It might even be that, as a coping mechanism, Charlie-in-denial would insist that this was 'all a dream' (or nightmare). Gonna wake up, and be back just starting university, with everything locked down and tidy. Just a bad dream ....

Amy!

Now i have to really try

Now i have to really try reading your story :p I've often thought about that, since I have a really bad memory already at the age of 23. I wouldn't be surprised if I ended up with dementia or alzheimer when I'm older... though that may be because I'm spending most of the time with my mind in "my own little world"

anyway I really do wonder what that would do, so I have to start reading again, but i've never been able to read further than about chapter 40-50 ^_^' shame on me.

grtz & hugs,

Sarah xxx