What you've described here is a very common saying on this site from recovered people, the part about, "I can't even imagine what it's like to be depersonalized." Now, if people suffering could feel what it's like to not be dissociated at all, they wouldn't have a problem. Depersonalization is considered dissociative, so you would in general be feeling much less, which is not relatable to someone who is not dissociating. This sounds like a disagreement between your former and present self, not a fugue or amnesia.
You could have a more serious dissociative disorder, but I don't see this as any indication whatsoever. An ambiguous dissociative diagnosis kind of implies that you are experiencing things beyond the realm of depersonalization-derealization, doesn't it? I think they changed it in the DSM-5 for that?
You could have a more serious dissociative disorder, but I don't see this as any indication whatsoever. An ambiguous dissociative diagnosis kind of implies that you are experiencing things beyond the realm of depersonalization-derealization, doesn't it? I think they changed it in the DSM-5 for that?