She said, 'I'm Peggy,' and she proceeded to tell me about herself. Shirley started acting like she had a lot of people inside her." Wilbur's office and she says, 'I'm not Shirley. "Shirley feels after a short time, that she is not really getting the attention she needs from Dr. Connie Wilbur, and she knew that Wilbur had a special interest in multiple personality disorder. Mason became unusually attached to her psychiatrist, Dr. As a young woman she was emotionally unstable, and she decided to seek psychiatric help. Shirley Mason, the real Sybil, grew up in the Midwest in a strict Seventh-day Adventist family. But in a new book, Sybil Exposed, writer Debbie Nathan argues that most of the story is based on a lie. Within a few years of its publication, reported cases of multiple personality disorder - now known as dissociative identity disorder - leapt from fewer than 100 to thousands. The book was billed as the true story of a woman who suffered from multiple personality disorder. When Sybil first came out in 1973, not only did it shoot to the top of the best-seller lists - it manufactured a psychiatric phenomenon. Mason later admitted she had faked her multiple personalities. The book and subsequent film caused an enormous spike in reported cases of multiple personality disorder. Shirley Mason was the psychiatric patient whose life was portrayed in the 1973 book Sybil.
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