HC-DID

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Highly Complex Dissociative identity Disorder (HC-DID) is a term that describes (DID)systems formed due to programming.

HC-DID does not refer to the severity of the system's trauma, or how disabled the system is. Rather, HC-DID refers to the complexity of the system's structure/formation.

HC-DID commonly presents very similar to polyfragmentation, though this is not always the case.

There is only one required characteristic of HC-DID systems, and that is the presence of headmates who were forcibly formed by an outside party.

Some common characteristics of HC-DID systems are:


 * High headcount/low splitting threshold
 * Presence of many layers, subsystems, sidesystems, or other complex headspace structures
 * Presence of programming beyond what is required for headmate formation
 * high levels of dissociation and amnesia
 * having a defined or complex internal ranking or heirarchy

History
The modifier "highly complex" is likely an evolution of the descriptors "complex" and "extremely complex", which refer to polyfragmentation.

While "RAMCOA system" is another possible descriptor for HC-DID systems, RAMCOA as an umbrella includes experiences next to programming, so not every system that has RAMCOA experiences, or whose function or structure is impacted by RAMCOA, is necessarily programmed (or in turn HC-DID).

Related Terms
-uniopus

-multiopus

-unigram

-multigram

Codenaut

Internal handler

Shell

Flag Meaning
Brown - forced splitting

Orange - programming

Black - dissociation, judgement, and isolation

White - intersectionality

Blue - community

Purple - deprogramming

Pink - acceptance and self love

Flowers - growth and survival