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Cutting and Self-Mutilation
© Jason Black
What is cutting? Am I a cutter?
Sadly, it is fairly common for survivors of sexual abuse (and other types of power abuse) to
indulge in self-destructive behaviors such as cutting. Cutting is willful
injury to one's self using something sharp. Obviously, the motivations for cutting
can lead to other forms of self-mutilation (I used to pull out eyelashes and locks of
hair, for instance) besides actual bloodletting. The key point is that all of them hurt,
and all of them cause some sort of damage to one's body. On ASAR, the
phenomenon has become known in general as "cutting" because more people seem to
have specifically cut themselves than hurt themselves in other ways. This is not
to invalidate anyone else's experiences, it's just that "cutting" has become a convenient label.
Why do I do it?
There are several theories as to why people indulge in self-mutilation.
One is that it's a control issue. When children are abused, they are in a
situation of no control. Their abuser(s) can hurt them any time, and the
children are largely (if not completely) powerless to stop it. When the child
grows older and is faced with stressful situations, there is often a strong
desire/expectation for some sort of pain, since pain is associated with stress in
that person's mind. People who have had these associations forced on them
frequently cut themselves because this is a pain that satisfies the psycho-
logical desire for pain, and is *also* a pain that the victim can stop. At last
the person is in control. And while the cutting itself is harmful and can cause
shame and guilt later, I can tell you that the control feels good.
Another theory is that people who were abused as children often have been
taught (by their abusers, or by others who have denied the child's experiences as
being valid) that they are bad people, who should by all rights be punished.
Sometimes people like this turn to behaviors like sado-masochism, or
bondage-and-dominance in order to get the punishment that they want. Others can't
ask others to punish them, so they punish themselves with cutting.
A third theory is that cutting is a manifestation of a desire to become
physically unattractive. This is often true of girls who are constantly
bombarded with messages (overt and subtle) that they are beautiful and
therefore desirable. They naturally reason that if they make themselves
unattractive, no one will rape them because they will be undesirable. This
chain of reasoning can also lead to compulsive eating behaviors that leave the
abuse victim overweight and thus outside of what this society calls attractive.
Of course, every person is different, and there are many less common
theories as to why people are cutters. If you are a cutter and don't fit any of
the above models, so what? That doesn't mean your situation is fundamentally
different or less valid. Also, it is common for more than one of these thought
patterns acting in concert to produce some very complicated rationales for
self-mutilation. These desires can be quite strong, and often a cutter will not
know why s/he indulges in such behavior. I didn't know why I cut myself for a
long time; all I knew was that it hurt but I really couldn't stop myself. I liked
the pain, because it meant that I was strong. Strong enough to overcome my own
natural instinct to avoid pain, and strong enough to endure the pain without
crying out. For me, there was something about seeing real red blood coming out of
lines in my skin that made me feel very alive (a powerful thing during a time in
my life when I felt/wished otherwise that I was dead).
What are the Results of Cutting?
Cutting is a mixed bag, but most people agree that in the balance it's a bad
thing. Cutting can make you feel powerful. It can make you feel in control. It
hurts, and that can make you feel alive. But it also can make you feel guilty for
"being some kind of a sicko," and feel shame for having done it. Those are the
sort of things that take away from one's self-esteem. And of course, a lack of
self-esteem can lead people into bad relationships and other non-healthy
situations. Mental concerns aside, cutting causes real physical damage to your
body. There is also the possibility for infection and/or tetanus (especially if
unclean steel implements are used for the cutting).
How do I stop?
If you are a cutter, you probably want to stop. The following are some
of the arguments against cutting. Reading them should give you some good
clues as to how to stop. At the end of this section is my story of cutting
and how I stopped.
Cutting is damage. By cutting you injure your body. This is not a good
thing. Your body is important. It's the only one you've got and it should be
taken care of. It would be harder to live a fully happy life with a damaged body,
especially if part of that damage you did yourself.
Cutting is abuse. As a sexual abuse survivor, you've already been
subjected to more abuse than anyone should be. Your abusers hurt you, why
should you heap more abuse on yourself? You don't deserve that kind of crap.
By cutting yourself, you're buying into an unhealthy behavior pattern
that was taught to you when you were a child. What happened to you then was
wrong, and perpetuating that behavior pattern now isn't healthy for you either.
There may be some security in familiarity, but most people agree that it's not
worth the heartache.
Cutting often stems from a desire for control. Take real control of your
life and yourself and stop.
I was a cutter. Here is what made me stop. First, I *wanted* to stop.
That's important, because I believe that you can't change your own behavior
unless you want to. I knew that it wasn't healthy. I would get stressed out, cut
myself, feel better, and then feel shameful and guilty. Finally, a good friend of
mine talked some sense into me and made me realize that I was just giving myself
more abuse. Until then, I hadn't realized that's what I was doing. I decided
that I would just not let myself do it any more. I simply and stubbornly refused.
I've always had problems with self control, and breaking promises to myself, so
this was a good test for me, one which I'm proud to say I passed. One thing that
helped me not relapse into cutting was finding alternate methods of releasing
stress. Running up and down the stairs in my dorm worked pretty well for me.
There were times after I decided to stop when I wanted to cut myself, and had I
not had established alternate things to do to relieve stress, I probably would
have given in. Don't get the idea that merely deciding not to cut myself anymore
was all it took to remove the impulses and desire to do so; far from it. It took
a few months of doing other things when faced with that impulse to change my
behavior pattern.
That's my story. I hope this and the other information helps you or
someone you know to become a healthier and happier person.
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