Pages

Wednesday 31 October 2012

Self-injury: What's that all about?

I've been battling with an urge to cut myself the last few days, so I decided that I might as well channel it into something useful, and try to write a post explaining what self-injury is all about. The fact is - although self-injury is something that is generally associated with "emo" teenage girls, both men and women of all ages struggle with this.

Self-injury has many facets. That is part of the reason why it is so hard to understand.

The reasons why people injure themselves are often listed as the "8 Cs":
  1. Coping and Crisis intervention
  2. Calming and Comforting
  3. Control
  4. Cleansing
  5. Confirmation of existence
  6. Creating Comfortable numbness
  7. Chastisement
  8. Communication

I can identify with a number of these "Cs".

Calming and Comforting / Creating Comfortable numbness

I can remember accidentally cutting myself when I was about 13 years old - As I watched the blood dripping from the cut, I felt amazingly calm, and yet more alive than ever before. It felt as if a valve had been opened, release the pressure from all the overwhelming emotions that had been building up inside me for months. Furthermore, I instantly went into a partially dissociated state, where I didn't feel any pain whatsoever. The pain only started when I was jerked back to reality by someone walking in on me.

I started cutting soon after this experience, actively seeking these feeling of release and relief.

Note: Physical injury causes the brain to release beta-endorphins: a natural opioid painkiller that numbs pain and causes pleasant feeling. This is probably what caused these feelings.

Coping and Crisis intervention

Later, I discovered that cutting can instantly stop flashbacks or even threatening panic attacks. It became a coping mechanism that I used on an almost daily basis. I developed a habit of always carrying a razor-blade in my pocked, so that I could cut whenever I felt the need. It was a very dysfunctional, but very effective way of coping with my PTSD.

Cleansing / Chastisement

As I sank deeper into self-loathing, I started using self-injury as a way to act out my self-hatred. I believed that I deserved the pain from cutting and that I needed to "punish" myself in this way. Cutting would leave me feeling temporarily cleansed, as if my sin had left my body with my blood. It felt like temporary absolution.

The irony is that the very act of cutting myself increased my self-loathing over time, because "you have to be crazy or stupid to deliberately hurt yourself". This, in turn, increased my compulsion to "punish" myself, creating a vicious circle that proved very difficult to break.

Control

For someone who was abused as a child, control, and specifically control over your own body, is a major issue. When you have been used to having no control over pain that was inflicted on your body or your soul, being in control of pain that is inflicted on your body, is liberating. Having the power to punish yourself, the power to stop flashbacks, the power to manipulate your own emotions with a blade on your arm, sometimes feels like it is worth all the negative fallout.

Communication

I have often struggled with feeling like a fraud, because my outside appearance is healthy and happy, but inside I feel like dying. Cutting, especially in later years, have often been a way of saying hey, look at me, I'm bleeding. I'm in pain here!

People often discount cutting as attention-seeking behaviour, or a way to get sympathy from others. Those who say this are not completely wrong, but I would like to rephrase it somewhat: Cutting is a way of expressing a need for support, or for someone to listen. It is an expression of intense, emotional suffering. It is a cry for help. Self-injury is a way of saying "I'm hurting. Please help me. Please love me!"

This is why it is so important not to respond either by clamping down and trying to physically prevent the cutting, or by ignoring it because the wounds are superficial. When someone you loves self-injures, hear his cry. Love him, support him, and most of all - encourage him to get professional help.

Please check back - I will post more information on how to react to self-injury in a later post.

2 comments:

  1. My husband also had and still has control issues. It is a way of surviving abuse and the aftermath. He has chilled a little, actually a lot. When our daughters were growing up I thought he was just a strict overprotective father, little did I know at the time it was as a result of his abuse as a child/young teenager. He would never let them sleep over at a friend and it put quite a bit of strain on his relationship with them. They always thought he was not being fair, the other kids could, etc. I remember once when he dropped one of them off at a kiddies party, there was a swimming pool with no adult supervision and a bar with some guys drinking. He assessed the situation as risky and promptly told them that we had another function and that she was just dropping off the gift. Needless to say, our daughter was furious. Now that she is an adult and is aware of his sexual abuse, she understands what he was going thru. Quite honestly I may have reacted in the same way as he did.

    So control can be a good thing and may very well enable you to be a good father. I think your swim suit rule is great, I wish I had the foresight to think of that when they were younger.

    Thanks for keeping up your blog, it is informative but at the same time heartfelt.

    .

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks, I'm don't deserve the credit for the swimsuit rule... I just modified a tip I found on the web a little! Being a parent and an abuse survivor is very hard - trying to protect your children from you went through...

      Delete

Please note that all comments are moderated and may take a while to appear.