The Split: Are Multiple Identities Separate People — or Symptoms to Be Cured? (The Experiment, Book 1)
What if the person sitting across from a therapist isn't just one person?
The Split takes you inside one of psychology's most debated and misunderstood conditions — Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID) — and asks a question that doesn't have an easy answer: are the multiple identities living in a single body separate people who deserve rights of their own, or are they symptoms of trauma that medicine should work to eliminate?
Written in an engaging, factual-fun style for curious non-technical readers, this bilingual book (English + Spanish) walks you through the science, the controversy, and the deeply human stories that make DID one of the most fascinating frontiers in modern psychology.
Inside, you'll explore:
- How trauma literally rewires a developing brain — and why splitting may be an act of survival
- The fierce professional debate between those who seek integration and those who argue each identity deserves autonomy
- What the latest neuroscience reveals about identity, memory, and the self
- The ethical stakes when a clinician decides who inside a patient gets to disappear
- Real-world perspectives from people living with DID and the clinicians who treat them
From The First Session to Integration Day, each chapter builds a richer picture of what it means to be a self — and whether the line between disorder and diversity is as clear as we think.
The Split doesn't just explain DID. It challenges you to reconsider the very nature of identity, consciousness, and what we call a person. Because if identity is a spectrum, where exactly does treatment end and erasure begin?
Available as PDF + EPUB. Part of The Experiment series — non-fiction psychology for minds that refuse easy answers.