Professor Adams
Psychology-1
06 April 2015
Mystifying Cases of Dissociative Fugue Disorder
In a figure of extraordinary cases, certain individuals fail to recall their self-identity. Correspondingly, some individuals forget about whom they are, while frequently developing these inclinations to interchange and travel across the country. What symptoms could cause something like that to happen o certain individuals? Dissociative Fugue Disorder, once known as psychogenic fugue, is a precise and uncommon condition where one or more occurrences of loss of memory in which the individual lacks the ability to recollect some or all of one’s earlier period and either the loss of one’s identity or the formation of a new identity will happen unexpectedly, or one individual decisively will travel away from home. The word fugue initiated after the Latin term for the Flight or Journey. This kind of disorder infrequently remains for a few hours, days or even for months, years in an extremely rare affliction of fugue disorder. Dissociative disorders are categorized by momentary or chronic fiascos or disturbances of integration of understanding, recollection, personality or emotions. Alcohol consumptions, hallucinations or cursorily imagination, marijuana feastings, extreme head distress, causing brain swellings, dementia or unbalance incidents, hypertension modes where one individual is capable of either hurting oneself or somebody else, and schizophrenia syndrome consequences are comparable to dissociative fugue.
The whole English land was facing a troubling time when one of the first incident happened where a very renowned, enigmatic novelist Agatha Christie vanished from her mansion in Berkshire, England, on the evening of December 3, 1926. (Burton)” At that time of her life, she discovered that her husband; Colonel Archibald Christie was developing a mysterious affair with a woman's name Nancy Neele, where he met her on one of the business conference in London,