Structural Dissociation: How Trauma Splits Personality — van der Hart's ANP/EP Model

Structural Dissociation: How Trauma Splits Personality — van der Hart's ANP/EP Model

Structural dissociation is not the sensational 'multiple personalities' narrative but a trauma theory beginning with 19th-century Pierre Janet and elaborated in van der Hart, Nijenhuis, and Steele's 2006 *The Haunted Self*. Its core: trauma splits personality into an Apparently Normal Part (ANP) handling daily life and an Emotional Part (EP) frozen in trauma. We map the primary, secondary, and tertiary levels and phase-oriented treatment.

TL;DR

Structural dissociation = failed integration of ANP (daily) and EP (trauma). Primary (single-incident PTSD), secondary (CPTSD/BPD), tertiary (DID). Treatment follows Janet's three phases — stabilization → trauma memory processing → reintegration (van der Hart 2006). Distinct from IFS 'parts.' Self-diagnosis discouraged.

A Forgotten Frenchman, Read Again

To understand structural dissociation you must first learn a 19th-century name: Pierre Janet (1859–1947). He systematized trauma and dissociation before Freud, but the 20th century's psychoanalytic 'repression' model so dominated that Janet was buried for nearly a century.

Janet's insight was simple. Overwhelming events fail to integrate into memory and split off as separately living fragments — what he called désagrégation. As trauma neurobiology matured in the 2000s, Onno van der Hart, Ellert Nijenhuis, and Kathy Steele rebuilt Janet's frame for modern clinics in The Haunted Self: Structural Dissociation and the Treatment of Chronic Traumatization (W.W. Norton, 2006).

A preface: this is not the 'multiple personalities look cool' SNS genre. Diagnosis belongs to trained clinicians; self-diagnosis is unhelpful.

ANP and EP — Why Personality Splits

The two key terms:

  • ANP (Apparently Normal Part): the 'me' that goes to work, cooks, speaks in meetings. Maintains daily function by avoiding access to trauma memory. Avoidance, dissociation, normalization are its defenses.
  • EP (Emotional Part): the part 'frozen' in the trauma moment. Holds the sensations, affects, and defense responses (terror, rage, paralysis) of the original event. Mostly subliminal until triggers (a smell, sound, relational pattern) intrude.

van der Hart et al. trace the split's evolutionary roots to Stephen Porges's polyvagal theory and the animal defense cascade: flight → fight → freeze → submit → cry for help → total submission. After trauma ends, one defense often 'crystallizes' as the core of an EP. Some EPs flee forever, some fight forever, some stay numb forever.

Primary, Secondary, Tertiary — Depth of Split

Level ANPs EPs Typical diagnosis Treatment phase emphasis
Primary 1 1 Single-incident PTSD Brief stabilization, larger memory-work share
Secondary 1 many CPTSD, some BPD, some eating/somatoform Substantial stabilization, iterative phases
Tertiary many many Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID) Long stabilization, alliance with every part

Primary is classic PTSD after a single event (a crash, an assault, a disaster). Secondary often arises from chronic childhood trauma: one ANP coexists with many EPs (fear-EP, anger-EP, shame-EP, submission-EP). Much of CPTSD and a meaningful portion of BPD live here. Tertiary holds multiple ANPs (e.g., 'work self' and 'parent self' mutually amnestic) alongside multiple EPs — the deepest split, the DSM-5 diagnosis of DID.

This is not a severity label but a treatment branch point. Applying EMDR or exposure — fine for primary PTSD — to a tertiary patient without stabilization risks retraumatization.

Janet's Three Phases — Order is Safety

van der Hart et al. modernize Janet's 19th-century phase-oriented treatment into:

  1. Stabilization & symptom reduction: keep the patient within Siegel's 'window of tolerance' via affect regulation, grounding, relational safety, daily structure; manage self-harm/suicide risk; build communication channels with EPs.
  2. Treatment of traumatic memories: turn EP-held fragments into integrable narrative the ANP can own as personal past — EMDR, written exposure, somatic approaches (Levine, Ogden).
  3. Integration and rehabilitation: softened boundaries between parts; rebuilding work, relationships, life purpose.

van der Hart et al.'s 2005 Journal of Traumatic Stress paper catalogues what happens when the order is broken. Skipping phase 1 with secondary/tertiary patients floods the ANP with intrusion, spiking self-harm, dissociative crises, and dropout. Brand's 2009 review of DID outcomes and the ISSTD 2011 Adult DID Treatment Guidelines both anchor on phase-oriented care.

How It Differs from IFS

Richard Schwartz's Internal Family Systems (IFS) is increasingly popular. Both speak of 'parts' but assume different things.

  • IFS: everyone is natively composed of parts ('protectors', 'exiles', 'managers') — a universal structure independent of trauma. Therapy is the Self in dialogue with parts.
  • Structural dissociation (van der Hart): division is not universal but a failure of integration caused by trauma, a direct mechanism of psychopathology. The goal is not coexistence but ultimate integration.

IFS can be useful and gentle, especially in stabilization for primary/secondary cases, but ISSTD guidelines remain the standard for DID. Not all 'parts models' are the same.

Who It Applies To — and Who It Does Not

Structural dissociation appears in:

  • Complex PTSD (CPTSD)
  • DID and Other Specified Dissociative Disorder (OSDD)
  • Some borderline personality disorder, especially with trauma history
  • Some eating, somatoform, and conversion disorders

It is not:

  • Daily 'zoning out' or highway-driving automaticity
  • Mood swings or having different sides with different people
  • 'I get angry suddenly' impulsivity

Self-diagnosing 'I'm like ANP/EP' on social media is meaningless. If you have a trauma history with repeated intrusion into daily function, see a trauma-trained clinician rather than self-labeling.

Korean Clinical Context

  • Korean Society for Traumatic Stress Studies (KSTSS, founded 2002): clinician training and guidelines.
  • Korean Clinical Psychology Association dissociation section: scale standardization and case sharing.
  • DES-K (Korean Dissociative Experiences Scale): standardized by Park Joo-eon and colleagues in 2017; a self-report screener, not a standalone diagnostic tool.
  • Korean DID case reports: since Lee Soo-jung 2009, multiple cases have appeared in peer-reviewed journals, correcting the old assumption that 'DID does not occur in Korea.'
  • Public resources: community mental health centers, regional trauma centers, the National Center for Mental Health.

Conclusion: Not Pathology But Adaptation

van der Hart and colleagues repeat one line throughout The Haunted Self — the split was not a defect but an adaptation that enabled survival in overwhelming circumstances. Trouble begins when that adaptation outlives the threat.

The order of treatment is therefore not 'face the truth fast' but build safety first, then re-weave memory into integrable form, and only then let personality gather again. Holding that order is the conclusion Janet and ISSTD reached a century apart.

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Frequently asked questions

Is this the same as 'multiple personalities' in movies?

No. Film dramatizes 'completely different personalities taking the stage,' but clinical **DID (DSM-5)** is far more subtle, and patients often don't recognize it themselves for years. Tertiary structural dissociation corresponds to DID, but the parts are not 'fully separate people' — they're aspects of one personality that failed to integrate. Primary and secondary are not 'multiple personalities' at all but a split between the daily ANP and trauma-bound EPs, usually invisible from the outside.

What's the difference between IFS and structural dissociation?

Different premises and goals. Schwartz's **IFS treats 'parts' as a universal human structure** independent of trauma. **van der Hart's structural dissociation treats the split itself as trauma's consequence**, pathologized in three levels. IFS aims for 'Self in peaceful coexistence with parts'; structural dissociation aims for 'ultimate integration.' IFS-style dialogue with parts can be useful in stabilization, but for tertiary cases like DID, ISSTD 2011 phase-oriented guidelines remain the standard.

How long does treatment take?

Highly stage-dependent. **Primary (single-incident PTSD)** often needs brief stabilization and a few months of EMDR or CPT. **Secondary (CPTSD)** may need 1–2 years just for stabilization, with total treatment spanning years. **Tertiary (DID)** is explicitly framed by ISSTD 2011 guidelines as 'years to over a decade,' a cyclical stabilization → memory work → integration arc. Brand 2009's review found phase-oriented care reduces dissociation, depression, and self-harm in DID patients — but be wary of clinics advertising 'rapid trauma processing.'

Where can I receive trauma/dissociation treatment in Korea?

First contact is a psychiatrist or licensed clinical psychologist. Specialized resources: ① **KSTSS** member clinician directory, ② **community mental health centers** (free consultation in every city/district), ③ **regional trauma centers** (prioritizing disaster/major-crime victims), ④ **National Center for Mental Health** trauma clinic, ⑤ EMDR Korea Association certified therapists. Self-report scales like DES-K (Park 2017) are screening tools only — diagnosis requires clinical assessment. For self-harm/suicide crisis in Korea: ☎ 1393.

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