The woman with 20 personalities in one body and a case that's baffled experts

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Split personalities: Kim Noble has Dissociative Identity Disorder which means she switches from one character to another without warning

Split personalities: Kim Noble has Dissociative Identity Disorder which means she switches from one character to another without warning

The entire class fell silent as the teacher, Mrs Baldwin, marched across the room. Kim Noble, stand up! she barked, grabbing the bewildered five-year-olds arm. What did you do that for?

The little girl looked down at her blouse and skirt. They were covered in splodges of black paint.

Of course, the teacher was exasperated when I denied doing it, recalls Kim, now 51 and with a daughter of her own, because shed seen me smear it over myself. But as far as I was concerned, it was somebody else whod done it.

What Kim couldnt have known then was that she was suffering from a rare condition called Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID) more commonly known as split personality disorder and that over the next four decades, her mind would regularly switch from one character to another without warning.

The most consistent of Kims personalities is called Patricia, and she is the narrator of an intriguing new book called All Of Me, which attempts to piece together Kims extraordinary, chaotic life.

In fact, Kim Noble no longer really exists. She explains: To most of the outside world I am Kim Noble, and Ill answer to that name. But the truth is her mind shattered into fragments before she could even talk, leaving numerous alter egos to take over.

Today, there are more than 20 alter egos who can appear at any given moment. Alongside the s! ensible, no-nonsense Patricia, theres Abi, whos single and desperately looking for love, Bonny, a mother with a young daughter, and Salome, a devout Roman Catholic. Theres a little boy called Diabalus who only writes in Latin, and a depressed twenty-something called Ken.

Truly, this is a story that stretches credulity to its limit. But Kims extraordinary case has been studied closely by therapists and doctors, who are convinced she is not a fantasist and is genuinely in the grip of forces beyond her conscious control.

'Normal for me is driving to the shops and returning home with my boot full of groceries I didnt want... It's opening my wardrobe and discovering clothes I hadn't bought, or taking delivery of pizzas I didnt order.'

An alter ego called Patricia has been her dominant personality now for more than six years. Patricia runs the household, takes primary care of daughter Aimee, now 14, and does her best to make sure mother and daughter live a normal family life.

But even on a good day, two or three other personas will take over completely and do whatever they want while in control of Kims body.

When a switch happens, its literally as though someone else slides into Kims skin. Her face twitches as the eloquent, rational Patricia gives way to mischievous Judy, a self-conscious 15-year-old who often appears at mealtimes. Judy is always bemused by the frumpy clothes she is wearing and immediately wants to get changed.

Sometimes, I can end up wearing five different outfits in one morning, explains Patricia.

Normal for me is driving to the shops and returning home with my boot full of groceries I didnt want, she writes. Its opening my wardrobe and discovering clothes I hadnt bought, or taking delivery of pizzas I didnt order.

Coming back after a personality switch is like waking up from a nap. It takes a few seconds of blinking and looking around to get my bearings, to work out who Im with, where I am, and what Im in the midd! le of do ing, she says.

I could disappear from my sofa and wake up at a pub, or a supermarket, or even driving a car without a clue where Im heading.

Adoring: Kim Noble with her daughter Aimee, whom she claims she has no memory of giving birth too. Aimee even has her own favourites for her mother's different personalities

Adoring: Kim Noble with her daughter Aimee, whom she claims she has no memory of giving birth too. Aimee even has her own favourites for her mother's different personalities

Usually, in those suffering from DID, the dominant personalities have some awareness of the other characters: maybe they hear voices or they can see what is going in even when theyre not in control.

But with Kims condition, there is no seepage between the personalities. They operate independently of each other sharing the same body but none of the same experiences.

Hence the incident with the paint at school. Patricia believes that another more mischievous character threw the paint, and she was left to pick up the pieces with no knowledge of what had gone on just seconds before.

Most experts agree that DID is triggered by severe trauma, and it seems as though Kims mind constantly compartmentalises itself to cope with painful life experiences.

Some of the characters seemed to be inextricably linked to episodes in Kims life even though she has no memory of them. Take Dawn, who is looking for her baby an echo, surely, of the traumatic moment in Kims life when her baby was taken away at birth by social services because of her history of mental health problems.

Most experts agree that DID is triggered by severe trauma, and it seems as though Kims mind constantlycompartmentalises itself to cope with painful life experiences.

Others are arrested in time. Like the teenage Judy, who has an eating disord! er just as Noble did when she was a young woman.

But it is Ria, a 12-year-old girl, who probably holds the key to what triggered this bizarre disorder in the first place. Ria continually paints disturbing pictures showing children being bullied and abused.

Kim, who has no recollection of any abuse, may never know the truth. It may be just too painful for her to comprehend. But it seems certain that she suffered great trauma in very early childhood.

Kim undergoes intense therapy sessions in order to face up to what has happened in her life, and to reintegrate the personalities so that she can finally live as one person.

But for now, it is Kims rational self, Patricia, who is running the show, and she copes by viewing the other personalities as permanent house guests. She leaves notes for them, and several have email accounts so she can contact them that way.

She has even managed to draw some positives from her disorder, for today she is a successful artist, exhibiting the (very different) works produced by a number of her alter egos.

Her daughter Aimee, meanwhile, in the way of children, has grown up to regard her mothers various personalities as entirely normal. So much so, she even has her favourites.

Aimee was taken into care for six months when she was a baby, but the psychotherapists treating Kim helped her to appeal against this decision on the grounds that none of the personalities was a threat to the child. Since then, Kim has been able to raise her daughter with the support of therapists and social workers.

Painting her thoughts: Kim has drawn some positives from her disorder and is now a successful artist, exhibiting the works produced by a number of her alter egos

Painting her thoughts: Kim has drawn some positives from her disorder and is now a successful artist, exhibiting the works produced by a num! ber of h er alter egos

When Kim was a child growing up in Croydon, South London, life was confusing and frightening as she was constantly switching between different personalities. Her parents James and Dorothy Noble, who worked in the computer industry, seemed to have largely ignored her bizarre behaviour, putting it down to naughtiness.

But when Kim hit puberty, other far more disturbed alter egos starting making regular appearances such as Rebecca, who was suicidal, Sonia, who was anorexic, and Judy the bulimic teenager who binged on shredded paper.

Kim was first referred to a psychiatrist at 14, and spent much of her late teens in various homes for troubled teenagers until she was mistakenly diagnosed with schizophrenia in her early 20s.

'Aimee is not just my number one priority. All the personalities love her - which is why Christmas and birthdays are such fun. Its not unusual for Aimee to get presents from adozen of us.'

Kim was sectioned, put on strong antipsychotic drugs and told she was likely to remain in a mental hospital for at least the next six years.

But she instinctively knew it wasnt the right diagnosis and, sure enough, her mind came to the rescue by allowing another alter ego, a bolshie young woman called Hayley, to become dominant. Hayley appealed against the ward of court order and won.

Once out of hospital, Kims problems were far from over, however. For the next few years, three dominant characters were competing for control of her body Hayley, the feisty one, Bonny, the maternal one, and Patricia, the sensible one and depending on which alter ego was in control, Kim found herself living in totally different parts of London.

This part of her life sounds almost too far-fetched to be true. But Noble claims she has since found letters addressed to Hayley and Bonny, and that at one point she was dividing her life between three different homes.

It sounds implausible, and even Noble cannot convincingly explain! the log istics; but then we are not talking about an ordinary life.

Some may struggle to believe that Kims personalities have no awareness of one another, but Graeme Galton, a consultant psychotherapist at the Clinic for Dissociative Studies in London, says it is perfectly possible.

He has never treated Kim but has encountered patients with her condition. He says: Dissociative identity disorder is a complex post-traumatic stress disorder. The purpose, psychologically, is to protect the mind when a traumatic event has taken place.

To do this, the mind splits off the memory of the trauma into a separate identity. That means that, in its most original and true form, there is an amnesiac (memory) barrier between different personality states, although some people can develop flashbacks or nightmares.

People may just have two or three personalities, but I work with some individuals who have an enormous number. Sometimes people who have experienced multiple trauma, especially as children, have separate identities for every traumatic incident.

Nobles personal life became even more complicated when she fell pregnant. She believes the father was Patricias on-off boyfriend but insists she has no memory of the pregnancy, or the birth in 1997.

'Trying to tell this story when, for a lot of my life, I was only around for a fraction of a day at a time, has been hard.'

Again, it seems that her inbuilt defence mechanism kicked in this time in order to protect her from the pain of her child being removed from her care within hours of the birth. This traumatic event is remembered by only one personality, a troubled woman called Dawn.

Another personality, Bonny, then took over, and Bonny considered herself to be Aimees mother when the child was small. Kim was only able to piece all this together years later, with the help of therapists, when she was finally diagnosed with Dissociative Identity Disorder in the mid 1990s.

From the moment I (Patricia) became the domi! nant per sonality, I promised I would discover as much as possible about the life or lives of Kim Noble. After so much confusion, I needed to have the facts, however unpalatable.

But trying to tell this story when, for a lot of my life, I was only around for a fraction of a day at a time, has been hard. She began to put together the pieces of the puzzle with the help of trauma therapist Dr Evelyn Laine.

It was Dr Laine who told me about a woman called Hayley and another called Bonny, two personalities that had previously been dominant and whom shed met in therapy sessions.

I recognised both names instantly. Id seen letters addressed to both at my house, and had wondered who they were. She also helped me to face up to another truth that Aimee was my own daughter.

Healing powers: Kim has Aimee to thank for her paintings, as the pair used to do it together. Now 13 of her alter egos paint

Healing powers: Kim has Aimee to thank for her paintings, as the pair used to do it together. Now 13 of her alter egos paint

The little girl was returned to Kim Nobles care at six months, and has, with close monitoring from social workers, remained with her since.

Aimee saw from a very early age all the different personalities coming out of Mama, says Kim. She learnt, almost subliminally, to accept each and every one of them as a person in their own right.

Confusing though it may be at times, Kim stresses that there are unexpected benefits too. Aimee is not just my number one priority. All the personalities love her which is why Christmas and birthdays are such fun. Its not unusual for Aimee to get presents from a dozen of us.

They all shop for gifts themselves. I cant complain, even when I see my money disappearing. After all, its Kim Nobles name on the credit cards, not mine. Theyve as much right as anyone to spend it.

It was thanks to Aimee that Kim discovered the healing powers of painting. What started as a fun thing to do with her daughter proved to be a powerful way for many of her personas to express themselves.

Thirteen of Kims alter egos now paint, and Kim often wakes up in the morning to discover a new work she has no recollection of creating.

By introducing painting into our lives, Ive actively helped to steady the ship, she says.

According to Dr Laine, our lives have never been less chaotic. Painting seems to provide an alternative outlet for some of those with suicidal thoughts, and in other cases has just made the rest of us strong enough to resist.

And Dr Laine says Aimee couldnt be in better hands. She was even voted Head Girl at her school.

Kim, meanwhile, is winning plaudits for her art. Our first exhibition at a gallery in Hampstead was such an emotional experience. Seeing all our paintings hanging side by side took my breath away.

I realised that part of every personality was up there. It was the nearest thing to integration we will get.

  • ALL OF ME by Kim Noble will be published by Piatkus on October 6 at 12.99. 2011 Kim Noble. To order a copy for 10.99 (incl p&p), call 0843 382 0000.

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