Gender |
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Both men and women hurt themselves. More often women are seen with this behavior in a
therapist's office, a psychiatric hospital, etc. Wheras more men are seen with SI in prisons.
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Age |
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SI behavior usually begins when a person is a teenager, escalates in a person's twenties,
and disappears by their thirties.
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Substance abuse |
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Many people who SI have histories of drug and alcohol abuse. Often this is because drugs
are another method of coping because they can temporarily ease internal pain. But rarely
are people under the influence when they SI.
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Eating disorders |
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Eating disorders, such as anorexia or bulimia, are common in people who hurt themselves.
Like SI, eating disorders often have the same psychological effects. Sometimes SI and
eating disorders occur simultaneously.
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History of abuse |
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The majority of people who hurt themselves have suffered physical, sexual, or emotional
abuse. But this doesn't mean that everyone who SI's has been abused. Or that
everybody who has been abused will start hurting themselves.
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History of psychological treatment |
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Often SI-ers seek therapy to discover answers for their behavior. But for most people
who hurt themselves psychological treatment does not work out because of several reasons.
First, is because psychologists sometimes ignore SI out of inexperience, ignorance,
or feelings of digust. The topic of SI is rarely adressed. Also, mental health
professionals rarely ask about SI behavior. These reasons usually make it the SI-ers
job to mention their behavior. And because the shame and secrecy people feel because
of their behavior they rarely reveal the fact that they SI.
Second, the reactions and strategies for SI by psychologists are often distasteful to
the SI-er. They may demand that the SI-er stop hurting themselves or risk being sent to
a psychiatric ward or hospital. (Let me interrupt here, this happened to me! I was sent
twice to College Hospital (a psychiatric hospital) because of this!)
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Cutting |
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Cutting, also known as slicing or slashing, is the most common way people hurt themselves.
It is typically done with a knife, razor blade, piece of glass, or other sharp objects.
Most of the cuts are done on the arms, legs, wrists, and chest; but other people cut on
other parts of the body such as the stomache, face, neck, breasts, and genitals. But cutting
on the arms and wrist is the most common because excuses can be made more easily (for example
people can say that they had an accident while cooking).
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Burning |
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Burning is another common way people hurt themselves. Usually done with cigarettes, lighters,
matches, kitchen-stove burners, heated objects (branding irons or hot skillets), and burning
objects. Sometimes people even use flammable substances such as gasoline, propane, alocohol,
and lighter fluid. Similar to cutting, most people burn themselves on their arms, wrists,
legs, and chest.
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Interference with wound healing |
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Most people have unconsciously interfered with the healing of a wound but it is considered
SI when it is done deliberately. Some people remove stitches prematurely, stick objects
such as needles, pins, etc. into the wound, or do other things to reopen the wound.
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Hitting |
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Hitting themselves with their fists is another way that people hurt themselves that is
most commonly done on the head or thighs. Although it may not seem as serious as cutting
or burning it is done for the same reasons and results.
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Extreme nail biting |
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It is common for most people to bite their nails. But when it is used as a form of SI it
is more severe and frequent than normal. It can result in the injury and damage of the
fingernails or cuticles. People can bite their fingernails so much that they draw blood.
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Scratching |
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Another common thing amongst most people scratching can become a form of SI. People who
use it as a method of SI make it more extreme in frequency, intensity, and duration.
Area's of skin can become raw or sometimes even bloody. Usually the scratching is done
with the fingernails but sometimes it is done with a sharp or semisharp object such as
a knife, comb, or pencil. Sometimes it is done unconsciously.
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Hair-pulling |
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Trichotillomania, 'the excessive and recurrent removal of your own hair resulting in a
noticeable loss of hair,' is the only form of SI recognized as a psychological disorder
by the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-IV). Usually
the hair is removed from the scalp, eyebrows, or beard, but can be from any part of the
body. The bald spots that result from Trichotillomania are usually covered with a hat,
bandage, or sunglasses.
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Breaking of bones |
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A form of SI that is more rare than the others, the breaking of bones is a serious and
severe form of SI. Usually, people break their bones with an instrument such as a hammer,
brick, or other heavy objects. But sometimes people throw themselves into walls or doors.
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Other |
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There are other ways people hurt themselves that are not listed here. The above are just
the most commonly known.
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