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Wokes Don't Want You to Know Dissociating is Scientifically Beneficial (The Data)
Description
In today’s episode of Based Camp, we dive deep into the controversial topic of dissociation — why it’s constantly framed as a trauma response or mental health red flag on the left, but the science shows it’s one of the most powerful tools for emotional regulation, wiser decision-making, better relationships, and long-term planning.
From third-person self-talk (talking about yourself like Elmo) to temporal distancing (identifying with your future self), the research is clear: proactively dissociating reduces stress, lowers cortisol, prevents rumination, boosts ethical behavior, and makes you a better spouse, parent, and human.
We argue that constantly “embodying” your feelings and obsessing over “me, myself, and I” is the root of modern misery, victimhood culture, and urban monoculture brain rot. True freedom comes from dropping the ego and viewing yourself as a temporary vessel for your values and future generations.
This episode is part of our Techno-Puritan religion series — dissociation as spiritual practice. Calvinism meets pragmatism.
As this was a Simone-outlined episode, we can share the episode outline below. The transcript for this episode follows. Happy New Year!
Episode Outline
Based Camp - The Case for Disassociating
* Occasionally, I’ve heard of people talk about disassociating
* ESPECIALLY when people are talking about abuse
* And invariably disassociation is framed in a negative context
* But this strikes me as add, as whenever I come across research on the effect of perspective taking, I find that what I would imagine to be disassociation—basically the equivalent of thinking of yourself in a more abstracted way, e.g. in the third person, as an outsider)—is a very POSITIVE thing
* And for a while, I have been operating under the assumption that we basically should be thinking like Elmo talks
* So I dedicated to educate myself on what people mean when they negatively talk about disassociation and also check whether my memory is deluding me and see if contextualizing oneself as a third party is not actually productive
* And ultimately, I think we should ALL disassociate
* And people who frame it as a bad thing are missing the point
This matters because a recurring theme in our discussions has been contextualization:
* How we view ourselves and consciousness
* Where we draw the definition of “self”
* Identity politics and the damage this emphasis has caused
* Victimhood mindsets and the external locus of control versus the internal locus of control
So I think we all need to think more carefully about how we play around with the word “I” and experiment with how dropping it may serve us well.
Disassociation: What are People Talking About
The Definition
People are usually describing dissociation: a mental “shut‑off” where the mind disconnects from feelings, body, or surroundings to get through something overwhelming or unsafe. It is a common, often automatic trauma response in ongoing abuse.
What dissociation is
* Clinically, dissociation is a process where thoughts, feelings, memories, or sense of identity become disconnected from one another.
* It exists on a spectrum from mild “zoning out” to more severe states where a person feels detached from reality or from themselves.
Why it happens in abuse
* Trauma and abuse can overwhelm the nervous system; when fight or flight are impossible, the brain may “check out” to reduce the emotional and physical impact.
* This can offer a kind of internal escape when there is no external way to leave, which is why it is especially common in children or adults who are trapped in abusive situations.
What it feels like subjectively
People use language like:
* “I was watching it happen from outside my body,” describing d