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For Faculty & Staff Self-Help Resources Campus Resources Center for Counseling & Psychological Services at University Park |
SELF-INJURY
Beyond the Myth
Many people have
misconceptions about what self-injury is, how many people self-injure,
and what self-injuries are like. Here are a few facts:
Recent studies estimate that 1% of the
U. S. population self-injure. That's 2 million people in this
country alone.
Self-injurers can be any age, race,
gender, or class. Many people who self-harm are high achieving
students and professionals.
Not everyone who self harms was abused
as a child. Chronic invalidation - constantly being told that your
ideas and feelings are wrong or bad - can be enough to trigger
self-injury.
Self-injurers are generally not
psychotic and present little danger to others. Most suffer from a
mood, anxiety, or personality disorder.
Self-injury is not a failed suicide
attempt. It is done to hold off suicidal feelings and relieve
psychological and physiological tension.
Medication may help , but in order to
end self-injurious behavior, a person must learn other ways to cope
with distressing feelings.
Pressuring someone to stop self-harming
is counterproductive. Ultimatums don't work. To stop self-injury, a
person must be ready to endure the discomfort that comes with losing
their major coping method and have some kind of support network set up
for the times things get really rough.
People who self-harm are usually not
trying to manipulate or upset others. Hurting themselves has become
their way of coping with life's stress. As Louise Pembroke of the UK
National Self-Harm Network has said, "If I wanted attention, I'd walk
out in the street naked."
If you believe someone you love is
self-injuring, ask about it directly. If he/she is evasive or
unresponsive, tell him/her you're concerned and willing to talk when
they are ready. Then back off. Get counseling to help you deal with
the situation if necessary.
WHY SELF-INJURE?
Self-injury is often a means of coping
to soothe an emotional need of some kind.
When a person self-injures, they are
using physical pain to ward off emotional pain.
Self-injurers often feel inadequate or
unable to trust anyone with their emotions.
Self-injurers have trouble forming
personal attachments, whether it's to have fun or accept comfort from
another.
Self-injurers typically have low
self-esteem and may form attachments with abusive or needier persons.
Cutting is an act of self-medication.
When the body is injured, hormones called endorphins are released to
fight anxiety, agitation, and depression. The chemical interplay can
produce an addiction to the "drug" manufactured by one's own body.
CUT IT OUT! HOW DO I QUIT?
Decide to stop hurting yourself Things to do:
Things to say:
How others can help:
For more information on self-injury and National
Self-Injury Awareness Day, please contact the NSAID committee chair at
(206)223-9657 or via Internet, Email:
llama@drizzle.com Other resources: Personal Counseling
Office - 898-6504 Health & Wellness
Center -
898-6217 1-800-DON'T CUT
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