When I started writing this blog I truly felt like I had
finally identified the reason(s) why self-harm had reared its ugly head in my
life again, and I understood how self-harm was functioning as a coping
mechanism for me. This identification is, in my mind, the first step to
recovery. I have always been a very self-aware individual and I have always
wanted to understand why I think the way I think and behave in the ways in
which I behave. To begin with, using the
blog to channel my urges to cut myself into something creative was an extremely
successful way of relieving the anxiety and intense emotion that goes hand in
hand with self-harm and also significantly reduced how frequently I was
cutting, and how severe the cuts were. Some of my more realistic images, where
I used red nail varnish to resemble blood, almost achieved the same sense of
satisfaction (for want of a better word) and relief that are reached when you
cut yourself.
Unfortunately, over the past 5 months, despite having kept
up work on the blog, I have been less successful at preventing myself from
self-harming and there have been numerous occasions where I have been unable to
fight off the voices inside my head that encourage me to hurt myself. Having
said that, I am not suggesting that the blog has not been a source of comfort,
because it has, in many ways, but I think that I have come to understand that the
reasons why people self-harm are very changeable, from person to person, and even within
individuals. I still believe that at the end of last year self-harm was
functioning as a way of me visually representing the distress that I was
feeling inside, which is why the blog was so helpful. However, I believe that over time it is
inevitable that self-harm will become a habitual behaviour, an addiction,
making it so much more difficult to fight. For self-harm to be considered an
addiction, like any other addiction, there needs to be an element of satisfaction
or gain that is achieved when you engage in the behaviour whether that is a
physiological gain or psychological gain.
When asked the question ‘What do I get from self-harming?’ I
have not known the answer, and I have really struggled to think of any gain
that I have acquired from cutting myself. The association I make with cutting
myself is a strong sense of shame, guilt, embarrassment and anger, and
certainly no sense of gain. Or so I thought…
Seeing as I was making very little progress on the self-harm
front; my cuts were getting deeper and much more serious, my trips to A & E
much more regular, I was forced to think really truthfully about why this was
happening. Recently I have known that if
I do cut myself it will be serious enough to require medical attention, and if
it hasn’t been severe enough to require stitches I have felt as though I have
failed. I am aware of how warped and unhealthy this mind-set is which is
precisely why I have tried so desperately hard to challenge it.
When explaining these feelings to a mental health
professional, whom I see on a regular basis, they made a connection that had never
even crossed my mind, that self-harm was my way of reaching out for help from
those around me, my way of saying ‘please look after me!’. By hurting myself to the point of needing immediate medical attention I was guaranteeing the delivery of care that I was so desperately longing for.
At first this
suggestion made me feel uncomfortable, as I interpreted this suggestion to mean
that I was cutting myself deliberately, conscious of its function, and that I
could stop at any point if I wanted to. I was reassured that this was not the
case, and the more we talked about it, the more it made sense. I have never
really felt looked after, by anyone. That is not because I have been treated
badly, just because there have been times in my life when I have needed to be
taken care of, and it hasn't happened. As a result of this I just stopped expecting to
be taken care of. I have never been particularly good at telling people when I
need help; I guess I have always just wished that those close to me would just
know when I am feeling vulnerable. Disappointingly, people are not mind
readers, and it is our responsibility to assert when we need help. I have invested a lot of effort into learning
how to be better at this but I frequently get told that
I need to be more transparent. Perhaps I have become trapped in this cycle of
self-harm because, actually, cutting myself has proven to be an ‘easier’ way
for me to establish that I need looking after.
So, this has been yet another
revelation for me on my journey to recovery and from this point onwards I am
going to try my very hardest not to take the ‘easy’ way out and tell people
when I need their help, and accept it when it is offered to me.
I wonder if the ' care' you received from the blog at the start ( the interest and comments and encouragement) was part - a big part- of you feeling more able to reduce the cutting. You said the blog helped initially but now maybe not so much. Are as many people reading and commenting as they did at the start? I havent been here for a while and havent read back very far to check.
ReplyDeleteIm a member of a writing forum and its certainly the case that feedback from other people is a powerful motivator. But its a double edged sword, cos when you feel people are not taking in interest, arent reading, arent commenting, then that can reinforce the feelings of being uncared for, abandoned, rejected whatever.
I have pointed a few people in this direction over recent months. i dont know if they have visited. But I think you are onto something good here and I would encourage you to keep going. Not to give up or be discouraged when things might go a bit quiet. You never now who is looking in and whos life might just be saved as a result.