Healing My Parts: Real Talk on Dissociative Identity Disorder and Complex Trauma Podcast By Healing My Parts cover art

Healing My Parts: Real Talk on Dissociative Identity Disorder and Complex Trauma

Healing My Parts: Real Talk on Dissociative Identity Disorder and Complex Trauma

By: Healing My Parts
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Real talk on Dissociative Identity Disorder and complex trauma—grounded in lived experience and clinical insight. Hosted by a therapist who lives with DID, Healing My Parts explores the complexities of life as a system, from trauma recovery to everyday realities. Through raw conversations, practical tools, and powerful guest interviews, this podcast empowers those living with DID, OSDD, and other dissociative disorders—as well as the professionals, friends, and family who support them. Together, we break stigma, celebrate system strengths, and shed light on one of the most misunderstood areas of mental health.

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Episodes
  • Polyfragmentation and Coming Back to the Body
    Apr 2 2026

    Episode Show Notes

    Healing My Parts Podcast — with Body Wise: Many Selves, One Body

    This episode sits inside the lived reality of DID—specifically polyfragmentation—and what healing looks like when the body becomes part of the work, not just the story.

    We’re joined by Body Wise: Many Selves, One Body, a polyfragmented system and somatic trauma therapist, who shares openly about system discovery, co-consciousness, and the slow, often non-linear process of building safety in the body.

    There’s honesty here about how hard this work is.And also… a grounded kind of hope.

    In This Episode

    * What polyfragmentation can actually look like from the inside

    * Discovering DID suddenly—and skipping denial

    * Living as a co-conscious system (and holding a lot of memory)

    * Why somatic work can feel terrifying—and still be essential

    * How healing often happens in very small, tolerable steps

    * Trusting the internal intelligence of the system

    * What helps (and what doesn’t) in therapy for complex systems

    Timestamps

    00:00 — Opening + podcast intention

    01:18 — Meet the guest (polyfragmented system + therapist)

    02:29 — Sudden DID discovery

    05:01 — Understanding polyfragmentation + subsystems

    07:28 — Co-consciousness and holding memory

    11:33 — Why somatic work changed everything

    17:22 — Healing slowly: building safety in the body

    21:02 — Trusting your system’s internal guidance

    33:04 — Somatic flashbacks + coping tools

    43:49 — Rewriting trauma through the body

    For Listeners

    If your experience doesn’t match what you’ve seen elsewhere, remember:

    There isn’t one way to be a system.There isn’t one way to heal.

    Resources

    Connect with Body Wise Many Selves One Body on their Instagram: bodywise.manyselves.onebody

    Connect with them at their Natural Holistics Practice website.

    For more resources visit: healingmyparts.org

    Healing My Parts Substack

    @healingmyparts on Instagram

    Thank you for listening! 🩷🫶💜



    Get full access to Healing My Parts at healingmyparts.substack.com/subscribe
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    1 hr and 23 mins
  • The Biology of Survival with Dr. Frank Putnam
    Mar 19 2026

    What happens when trauma doesn’t just shape memories — but reshapes the body itself?

    In this episode, we sit down with Dr. Frank Putnam, one of the most influential researchers in the field of childhood trauma and dissociation. For more than four decades, Dr. Putnam has studied how early maltreatment affects development, health, and survival across the lifespan.

    His groundbreaking Female Growth and Development Study has followed survivors of childhood abuse for more than 35 years, revealing something profound: trauma doesn’t only affect the mind. It changes biology, aging, health, and even the next generation.

    Together we explore how dissociation develops in childhood, why trauma survivors often experience earlier physical illness, and what the science actually tells us about healing.

    This conversation bridges research, clinical care, and lived experience — offering a rare look at the long arc of trauma and the resilience of those who survive it.

    Key Moments

    03:20 — How childhood trauma can accelerate biological aging09:45 — Dissociation as a survival strategy, not a disorder18:10 — The origins of the Female Growth and Development Study32:40 — The “tentacles” of trauma across physical health and development46:15 — What clinicians often misunderstand about dissociation58:30 — Why stabilizing daily life must come before trauma processing

    About Our Guest

    Frank W. Putnam, MD is a professor of clinical psychiatry at the University of North Carolina School of Medicine and one of the leading researchers on childhood trauma and dissociation.

    His newest book, Old Before Their Time: A Scientific Life Investigating How Maltreatment Harms Children and the Adults They Become, brings together decades of research on the lifelong impact of childhood abuse.

    Who This Episode Is For

    • Survivors navigating dissociation, DID, or complex trauma• Clinicians working with trauma and dissociative systems• Anyone interested in the intersection of science, trauma, and healing

    Resources

    📘 Old Before Their Time — Dr. Frank Putnam 📩Contact Dr. Frank Putnam 🌀About Dr. Putnam 🌐 healingmyparts.org



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    59 mins
  • 🎙️ DID Is a Brilliant Adaptation-With Sally Maslansky, LMFT — author of A Brilliant Adaptation
    Mar 5 2026

    What if dissociative identity disorder is a brilliant, life-saving strategy?

    In this moving and grounded conversation, therapist and author Sally Maslansky shares her lived experience of DID and the therapeutic relationship that changed everything.

    Diagnosed in the 1990s (when it was still called MPD), Sally entered treatment during a cultural moment steeped in fear and shame. But her therapist, Dr. Dan Siegel, offered something radically different:

    Not “What’s wrong with you?”But “What did your mind do to survive?”

    From disorganized attachment to learned secure attachment.From fragmentation to fluidity.From terror without context to memory with meaning.

    ⏱ Timestamps

    00:04 – Romania, terror, and the shock of not remembering childhoodAdoption awakens something she can’t ignore.

    08:58 – The diagnosis in the 90sFrom “Am I crazy?” to “This is a brilliant adaptation.”

    11:33 – Disorganized attachment: fear without solutionHow the brain fragments to survive.

    14:37 – Parts as verbs, not nounsWhy dissociated states are processes — not separate people.

    21:46 – What healing actually feels likeMemory intact. Suffering over.

    33:55 – Implicit vs. explicit memory“If I’m hysterical, it’s historical.”

    If you’ve ever feared that healing means losing your parts, this episode offers another picture.

    Memory intact.Suffering over.Safety carried securely from the inside.

    Links & Resources

    Sally’s Website

    Sally’s Book A Brilliant Adaptation

    Sally at the Psychotherapy Networker Symposium March 20th

    Sally & Dr Dan Siegel Speaking March 11th

    The Wheel of Awareness

    Dr Dan Siegel’s Website

    Dr Ruth Lanius Website

    Dr. Bethany Brand’s Website

    HealingMyParts.org



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    1 hr and 11 mins
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