See also the Discovering Your& Internal Landscape, InternalLandscapeFAQ and Internal Landscaping. There's also an online course that adds to these materials, and walks students through with exercises.
Most simply put, an internal landscape is a shared mental refuge for DID systems. An internal reality. An internal world. Inner worlds are not limited to specific types of plural systems; the author is speaking from personal and community experience as a DID system.
In some cases an inner world is a literal copy of external places, an internal adaptation of a known location in which the plural or multiple's system members can interact. There are some common models for an internal landscape's form: perhaps a room, a house, a vacant lot, a spaceship, another planet, a castle, etc. There can be furniture, and various props, areas with specific purposes, and much more.
This happens to be a very common trait for multiples. The persons who are not in Front tend to interact in their head as though their head is an actual location. The individuals can be walking around, doing stuff in the corner by oneself, or interacting with one another.
Popular sayings like "a corner of my mind" can be taken much more literally when it comes to DID. We really can have a corner of our mind, an "in our head".
Subjectively speaking, the internal landscape can be as real as (or even more real than) external reality. The internal landscape or internal reality can be used as a metaphor and is usually fairly easily adapted and modified. It can be a world all its own, open for exploration.
To find your internal landscape, one might ask "Where do I go when someone else comes out?" or even "Where are those other voices coming from?" Some headmaps describe the internal landscape rather than an organizational diagram of the relationships, the internal landscape can describe those relationships between those on the inside by where they live in what looks like a building diagram or a map.
More complicated systems can have entirely separated communities within their internal landscape, representing sub-systems. They may have emissaries, ambassadors between these distinct communities in order to communicate and negotiate agreements.
By residents, in many ways we're talking about those who reside in your system's internal landscape.
Internal landscaping is the act of deliberately influencing or crafting your internal landscape for any reason. Sometimes in therapy, you'll be asked to create a meeting space in your internal landscape, so that you can invite other residents to a meeting. Or you may want to use or modify your internal landscape on your own as part of self-help, such as mentioned in these self-help articles on internal landscaping.
There are internal landscape "boundaries". These are structures that serve to segregate people &/or information in a system. These translate to fixed hard boundaries (for example walls), permeable boundaries (doors, windows, gates, fences, etc.), and broken boundaries (a demolished wall, broken door, etc.). These can be seen as metaphors, but working with them can be very effective in changing the relationships in the system.
Some things in an internal landscape are just "there" and have no function. They're cosmetic. Like wallpaper — it looks pretty, but it doesn't do anything. It's simply an ornamental fixture.
Other things have a purpose. A telephone. There's some corner of a multiple's psyche that is activated when they interact with these items, so we consider them functional fragments.
Then there are programmed constructs (think "appliances"), which serve to actually process and change something, or detect input and execute a reaction (see Implementation Intentions for research into temporary constructs).
It is probably good to deal with inner world devices in a respectful manner. They may or may not be covert future headmates.
Many features of inner worlds are metaphors for mental mechanisms, internal communication, self-comfort, thinking, processing, handling information or memories, etc.
It can be very helpful to simply deal with the inner world as having many of the same interactions and mechanisms of the external world. Systems are systems, whether it's a school system, a belief system, or a plural or DID system. Resources (information, commodities, people) are moved around, interactions happen, resources are transformed, transferred or transmitted between systems, both internal and external.
What the inner world is — whether the inner world is a pocket dimension or an elaborate mental metaphor — doesn't really matter (in a material sense) so much as recognizing that what happens in the inner world matters. And that y'all can be deliberate about how you& interact with the inner world, shape it to work for your system members and ease suffering, or help you& recover from issues faster.
The inner world could be the place where many mythical journeys took place in times of lore. There are many ways that inner worlds can be used for selves-help and selves-improvement, therapeutic work, and working with both trauma and trauma-holders.
First keep in mind that plurals & folk with what is now called DID have been around much longer than therapists, and drawing inner worlds, dealing with our internal denizens in internal landscapes, existed far longer than therapists have. Indigenous cultures undoubtedly leverage the inner world in healing journeys and recognize the value and importance of these natural tools of humanity.
As an adjunct, therapists also have come to recognize the importance of self-maps, inner world landscapes, and the selves-help potential of embracing these features of plurality and leveraging them towards health rather than suppressing them or vilifying them.
When using the inner world involves changing or altering it, that's is explained under the internal landscaping article. It's an art unto itself to actually change the inner world itself to create a healthier internal environment, or foster skills and healing.
Here are some ways to use what is there already. If you need to add in these features or change features in order to attempt any ideas here, see internal landscaping.
!Stub - to be continued. Sorry
See Also