What is Self-Injury?
It's called many things -- self-inflicted violence, self-injury, self-harm, parasuicide, delicate cutting, self-abuse,
self-mutilation (this last particularly seems to annoy people who self-injure).
Broadly speaking, self-injury is the act of attempting to alter a mood state by inflicting physical harm serious enough
to cause tissue damage to one's body.
Approximately 1% of the United States population uses physical self-injury as a way of dealing with overwhelming feelings
or situations, often using it to speak when no words will come.
What is Self-Injurious Behavior?
The forms and severity of self-injury can vary, although the most commonly seen behavior is cutting, burning, and head-banging.
Other forms of self-injurious behavior include:
- carving scratching
- branding marking
- burning/abrasions biting
- bruising
- hitting
- picking/pulling skin and hair
It's Not Self-Injury if the Primary Purpose Is:
- sexual gratification
- body decoration (e.g., body piercing, tattooing)
- spiritual enlightenment via ritual
- fitting in or being cool
Why Does Self-Injury Make Some People Feel Better?
It reduces physiological and psychological tension rapidly. Studies have suggested that when people who self-injure get
emotionally overwhelmed, an act of self-harm brings their levels of psychological and physiological tension and arousal back
to a bearable baseline level almost immediately. In other words, they feel a strong uncomfortable emotion, don't know how
to handle it (indeed, often do not have a name for it), and know that hurting themselves will reduce the emotional discomfort
extremely quickly. They may still feel bad (or not), but they don't have that panicky jittery trapped feeling; it's a calm
bad feeling.
Some people never get a chance to learn how to cope effectively.One factor common to most people who self-injure, whether
they were abused or not, is invalidation. They were taught at any early age that their interpretations of and feelings about
the things around them were bad and wrong. They learned that certain feelings weren't allowed. In abusive homes, they may
have been severely punished for expressing certain thoughts and feelings. At the same time, they had no good role models for
coping. You can't learn to cope effectively with distress unless you grow up around people who are coping effectively with
distress. Although a history of abuse is common about self-injurers, not everyone who self-injures was abused. Sometimes invalidation
and lack of role models for coping are enough, especially if the person's brain chemistry has already primed them for choosing
this sort of coping.
Problems with neurotransmitters may play a role. Just as it's suspected that the way the brain uses serotonin may play
a role in depression, so scientists think that problems in the serotonin system may predispose some people to self-injury
by making them tend to be more aggressive and impulsive than most people. This tendency toward impulsive aggression, combined
with a belief that their feelings are bad or wrong, can lead to the aggression being turned on the self. Of course, once this
happens, the person harming himself learns that self-injury reduces his level of distress, and the cycle begins. Some researchers
theorize that a desire to release endorphins, the body's natural painkillers, is involved.
What Kinds of People Self-Injure?
Self-injurers come from all walks of life and all economic brackets. People who harm themselves can be male or female;
straight, gay, or bisexual; Ph.D.s or high-school dropouts or high-school students; rich or poor; from any country in the
world. Some people who self-injure manage to function effectively in demanding jobs; they are teachers, therapists, medical
professionals, lawyers, professors, engineers. Some are on disability. Their ages range from early teens to early 60s.
In fact, the incidence of self-injury is about the same as that of eating disorders, but because it's so highly stigmatized,
most people hide their scars, burns, and bruises carefully. They also have excuses ready when someone asks about the scars.
Aren't People Who Would Deliberately Cut or Burn
Themselves Psychotic?
No more than people who drown their sorrows in a bottle of vodka are. It's a coping mechanism, just not one that's as understandable
to most people or as accepted by society as alcoholism, drug abuse, overeating, anorexia and bulimia , workaholism, smoking
cigarettes, and other forms of problem avoidance.
Okay, Then Isn't it Just Another Way to Describe
a Failed Suicide Attempt?
NO. Self-injury is a maladaptive coping mechanism, a way to stay alive. People who inflict physical harm on themselves
are often doing it in an attempt to maintain psychological integrity -- it's a way to keep from killing themselves. They release
unbearable feelings and pressures through self-harm, and that eases their urge toward suicide. And, although some people who
self-injure do later attempt suicide, they almost always use a method different from their preferred method of self-harm.
Can Anything Be Done for People Who Hurt Themselves?
Yes. Several websites offer self-help ideas. Many new therapeutic approaches have been and are being developed to help
self-harmers learn new coping mechanisms and teach them how to start using those techniques instead of self-injury. These
approaches reflect a growing belief among mental-health workers that once a client's patterns of self-inflicted violence stabilize,
real work can be done on the problems and issues underlying the self-injury. Also, research into medications that stabilize
mood, ease depression, and calm anxiety is being done; some of these drugs may help reduce the urge to self-harm.
This does not mean that individuals should be coerced into stopping self-injury. Any attempts to reduce or control the
amount of self-harm a person does should be based on the person's willingness to undertake the difficult work of controlling
and/or stopping self-injury. Treatment should not be based on a practitioner's personal feelings about the practice of self-harm.
What Problems May Be Encountered When Getting Professional
Help?
Self-injury brings out many uncomfortable feelings in people who don't do it: revulsion, anger, fear, and distaste, to
name a few. At A Safe Place to Heal, self-injury is understood. You will not be turned away. It is important to find a therapist
who can understand self-injury and help the individual to heal from this destructive way of coping.
People who self-injure do generally do so because of an internal dynamic, and not in order to annoy, anger or irritate
others. Their self-injury is a behavioral response to an emotional state, and is usually not done in order to frustrate caretakers.
What Problems May Be Encountered in the Emergency
Room?
In emergency rooms, people with self-inflicted wounds are often told directly and indirectly, that they are not as deserving
of care as someone who has an accidental injury. They are treated badly by the same doctors who would not hesitate to do everything
possible to preserve the life of an overweight, sedentary heart-attack patient.
Doctors in emergency rooms and urgent-care clinics should be sensitive to the needs of patients who come in to have self-inflicted
wounds treated. If the patient is calm, denies suicidal intent, and has a history of self-inflicted violence, the doctor should
treat the wounds as they would treat non-self-inflicted injuries. Refusing to give anesthesia for stitches, making disparaging
remarks, and treating the patient as an inconvenient nuisance simply further the feelings of invalidation and unworthiness
the self-injurer already feels.
Although offering mental-health follow-up services is appropriate, psychological evaluations with an eye toward hospitalization
should be avoided in the emergency room unless the person is clearly a danger to his/her own life or to others. In places
where people know that self-inflicted injuries are liable to lead to mistreatment and lengthy psychological evaluations, they
are much less likely to seek medical attention for their wounds and thus are at a higher risk for wound infections and other
complications.