Self
injury is a coping mechanism
Self-injury
can be very hard to understand, both for the people who do it
and for those who support them. The main thing to realise, and
accept about it though, is that it is a way of coping with difficulties.
It is not madness, or attention seeking, or a suicide attempt.
There are always very powerful reasons why a person chooses to
injures self and, self destructive though it may seem to be, self
injury is a usually a way of surviving usually in the face of
great emotional pain and distress.
The reasons for self-injury are complex and can vary from individual
to individual. Self-injury almost always begins in response to
painful and difficult experiences in the individual’s life.
Sometimes these stem from childhood trauma, though it can also
be part of a distress or trauma experienced in adulthood. Often
there is no single cause that can be identified for self injury,
but it comes from a number of factors combining together in life
which increase vulnerability and lead to a need to cope, or express
feelings though self injury.
One
of the ways that self-injury helps someone cope is by giving them
some way, however painful, of dealing with their feelings. Many
people who self injure feel unbearable distress, fear and tension.
Hurting self can act as a kind of safety valve and bring a sense
of great relief, which can help the individual cope better with
life.
Self-injury
can be about self-blaming and turning anger and frustration inwards.
The person may take on all the responsibility for events that
have happened in the past and so hurt self in order to punish
self. The person often believes that they really deserve to be
hurt.
Sometimes
self-injury can feel like the only way a survivor can release
feelings. The person may feel angry, sad or anguished and yet
unable to shout, cry or speak to someone about it. Injuring self
can, at the time, be the only means the survivor can think of
expressing feelings.
Self-injury
can be a way of avoiding dealing with feelings. It can be used
as a means of numbing or distracting from the distress the survivor
is feeling. Pain is used to distract away from other emotions
that the survivor is unable or unwilling to feel or deal with
at that time.
Some
individuals feel that if they do not release some of the emotional
distress through self-injury, then they would commit suicide instead.
Therefore in this case self-injury is being used to keep alive.
Self-injury
can be a way that an individual takes control over an aspect of
his or her own live. This may be the only thing that the survivor
has the power to control. Through self-harm the survivor can have
some control or power, even if it is only the power and control
to inflict wounds on self.
Self-injury
can be a way of trying to communicate with others. An individual
may need to make the pain visible to self and others. It can serve
as a way of proving that the person is hurting and in need of
care. The survivor may believe that they have no other means of
communication that can be used.
The
survivor may use self-injury to express anger or frustration or
as a protest about something. The survivor may have no other means
of registering protest or releasing feelings.
The
survivor may use self-injury because she or he cannot ask for
support in any other way. The person may never have learned to
ask for support; or comfort, and support may have always been
denied. Only through hurting self can the survivor then ask for
support - ironically, support is then often denied because people
misunderstand what the person is doing.
Self-injury
may not, to the outside world, seem like a logical thing to do,
yet, for many it serves the very practical purpose of helping
the survivor cope with life and keep alive. It has its own logic
and serves a function for the individual at the time.
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