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Crying through their cuts
The stark reality of physical self-abuse
© CPYU, from The Center for Parent/Youth Understanding newsletter, winter 1997, Contact CPYU
Kevin sits alone in his dark dorm room on a
Tuesday night. To his professors and friends,
this 20 year-old college sophomore is a
"regular guy." But tonight, Kevin's academic
and relational pressures combine with ongoing
family difficulties in a mix that leaves him
feeling angry and out of control. He's not
crazy. He's not suicidal. But something is
definitely wrong.
Kevin responds to his roller-coaster emotional
state through a distressing and regular ritual
that's become his secret coping mechanism. He
removes his shirt and runs a razor blade
across his stomach and chest. When finished,
he's covered with a mess of bleeding cuts.
Amazingly, he says he "feels better."
What Kevin says about this habit seems absurd;
"I feel like there's something terrible inside
me that I have to get out any way that I can.
I think that's part of the reason why I have
to bleed. Afterwards, I feel cleansed. I feel
like whatever was crushing me before has been
removed. I feel calm and in control." Beneath
his shirt, unbeknownst to even his closest
friends, Kevin wears the cries of his heart
and soul on his chest. Because these marks are
usually outward manifestations of inward pain,
one researcher has called self-mutilation "the
voice on the skin."
You're in the majority if you're not aware of
the alarming and growing number of children
and teens who vent inner frustration through
self-inflicted cuts, bruises, scars, and
breaks. If we care at all about kids we should
learn to recognize, understand, and answer
these visual cries of a generation longing for
spiritual truth, relational healing, and
answers.
Self-mutilation has been around for a long
time. It just hasn't been talked about until
recently. Nor was it as prevalent as it's
become today. But in the last few months, the
curtain has been opened on this once private
behavior as it's become more acceptable for
kids to share their own stories about
self-abuse. One reason for this new openness
is that this generation of teens and young
adults has experienced a greater lack of
direction and more turmoil than previous
generations. Consequently, they're more open
about venting their individual and collective
frustrations. In addition, this is a
generation that has accepted piercing,
tattooing, and other types of body
modification as fashionable forms of
self-expression. And then there are trend
setters like Marilyn Manson, whose highly
publicized aversion to scraping broken glass
across his body during concerts has introduced
self-mutilation to mainstream pop culture and
a worldwide audience being raised by MTV.
Self-injurious behavior (SIB) or
self-inflicted violence (SIV) has been defined
as "the commission of deliberate harm to one's
own body. The injury is done to oneself,
without the aid of another person, and the
injury is severe enough for tissue damage
(such as scarring) to result. Acts that are
committed with conscious suicidal intent or
are associated with sexual arousal are
excluded."
Experts who study SIB classify the anomaly
according to three types:
Major self-mutilation is the most extreme and
rare form of SIB. It consists of acts like
castration or limb amputation and most often
occurs where an individual is psychotic or
intoxicated.
Stereotypic self-mutilation consists of
regular and rhythmic acts such as head
banging, eyeball pressing and arm biting and
is most commonly seen in institutionalized
mentally retarded individuals or those
suffering with obsessive-compulsive disorders.
The type of SIB most common among children and
teens is superficial or moderate
self-mutilation. Kids caught in this cycle of
behavior cut their skin, carve their skin,
burn themselves, interfere with the healing
process, stick themselves with needles, or
utilize other methods of inflicting physical
damage on themselves.
Since SIB is stigmatized, accurate statistics
on its prevalence are difficult to find. What
is known is that the average self-mutilator
begins at age 14 and continues the practice,
usually with increasing severity, into his/her
late 20's. Among adolescents, the ratio of
boys to girls who mutilate themselves is
equal. Most teens and young adults who exhibit
SIB are sometimes the ones who you'd least
suspect. For the most part, they are bright,
intelligent, and generally "normal".
For most self-mutilators, the act is a
personalized ritual with individualized
styles. They will often describe a favorite
room, preferred lighting, background music,
and a list of objects regularly used. In
addition, there are certain ways in which they
abuse themselves. Among those that cut, some
slash themselves with long shallow strokes,
making numerous marks per session. Others
focus on making one or two very deep cuts.
Those who are bone-breakers might smash their
limbs against a hard wall or hit themselves
with a hammer or other hard object. One 16
year-old girl describes it this way: "I close
all the shades to my room, light candles on my
bed, and incense (which I burn myself with
too), rub my arm with alcohol, and cut away
while I'm listening to Enigma." Another
writes, "Once I burned myself with my curling
iron. Another time I cut lines down my face
that looked like tears and a couple of times
when I didn't have a razor I stabbed myself
with a very sharp pencil." "I slam my
hands/arms against something cement with
corners until I hear something crack and I am
convinced that I've broken a bone," says a
twenty-year-old. She continues, "These
sessions sometimes take 3-5 hours. I have
never failed to break a bone."
Even though most self-mutilators can't explain
it, they somehow know when to stop a session.
Their need to inflict damage is satisfied.
Feeling peaceful and relieved, they pick up
and move on with life until the need to damage
themselves surfaces once more.
Prior to an act of self-mutilation, most
mutilators feel a mounting range of negative
feelings and emotions. As those feelings
become more than they believe they can handle,
many self-mutilators "report feeling numb,
withdrawn, and unreal. As the negative
feelings become intolerable, the
self-mutilator engages in self-injury. . .
cutting typically occurs in the absence of
painful sensation." If there is pain, it is
usually felt minutes or even days after the
injury. Those who do report feeling pain, say
that pain is "fulfilling" - it's the sensation
they are actually seeking.
Some experts theorize that cutting and other
SIB releases beta-endorphins (aka the brain's
"feel-good" chemicals) which act as the body's
own opiates, leading to feelings of pleasure
or being high. As a result, some believe SIB
is physically addictive. As in the case of
drug addiction, the longer the habit is
practiced, the more frequent and intense the
"dosage" must be to achieve the desired
physical effect.
Whenever a young person willingly inflicts
damage on his or her own body one wonders
"Why?" The story of one grown woman who used
to practice self-mutilation sheds some light
on this bizarre ritual:
"During my late childhood and
adolescence I experienced prolonged
emotional stress. My parents went
through a messy divorce, using us
kids as pawns to hurt each other. I
was sexually abused. My mother died.
My best friend died. . . for me,
(these events) were overwhelming. At
the age of 13, I found that
self-injury temporarily relieved the
unbearable jumble of feelings. I cut
myself in the bathroom, where razor
blades were handy and I could lock
the door. The slicing through flesh
never hurt . . . it never even
occurred to me that it should. . .
the blood brought an odd sense of
well-being, or strength. . .
sometimes I rubbed the blood on my
face and arms and looked at myself
in the mirror. I did not think how
sick I must be. I did not think.
With a safe sense of detachment, I
watched myself play with my own
flowing blood. The fireball of
tension was gone and I was calm. I
learned to sooth myself this way."
This one example is similar to most stories.
Typically, the first incident occurs during
early adolescence and the self-mutilator
describes an overwhelming desire to inflict
damage that seems to come out of nowhere.
Self-mutilation is not something they've heard
about elsewhere nor is it something they
initially discuss with others. In fact, many
are surprised to learn there are others who do
the same. But further examination of those who
mutilate themselves and those who examine
self-mutilators shed light on the "whys".
Those who tell the first person stories say
they harm themselves because "it makes me feel
better." They describe periods of incredible
emotional turmoil, anger, hate, and stress
that are calmed by the cathartic act of
mutilation. "As I cut deeper, my mind began to
feel relieved of the torment," says one
self-mutilator. "My body eased of the tension,
and I began to feel comforted." While SIB is
definitely wrong and abnormal, it becomes an
effective coping strategy for individuals who
have not learned healthy and correct ways to
deal with the problems and pressures of life.
In addition to release, others say the
practice helps them feel "alive". They are
reassured by their capacity to feel physical
sensation. They describe a desire to escape
"numbness" and by feeling "something" they
know they are still alive. "There have been
times when I don't even feel like I'm alive,"
Jane says. "I'll do something to feel -
anything. And that's usually cutting. Just
seeing blood. . . I don't know why." This poem
from one self-mutilator describes the same
sensation:
Blood wounded hand bleeds
Red blood makes me feel real
I am alive I feel pain otherwise numb
I may as well be a plastic baby doll until
I cut myself and bleed and see the
blood bleeding from the body
Not plastic after all... but human
babydoll.
Still others resort to SIB as a way to gain
control of a chaotic existence. "Sometimes I
just feel out of control," says a 19 year old
college student. "All the hurt and confusion,
the loss and emotional pain, is transferred
into something I can control and feel." This
is especially true for kids who have
experienced abuse. They see SIB as a way to
exert their own power in the midst of feeling
powerless. "What better way (at least that's
the way the thinking goes) to gain control
than to do something to myself. I'll beat you
to it. You won't hurt me anymore. I'll do it
to myself."
Researchers who study the phenomenon of SIB
have discovered that there are several factors
common to the backgrounds of those who
self-mutilate repetitively. Not surprisingly,
most of those factors relate to the breakdown
of family. Chaotic family conditions during
childhood, physical and emotional neglect, and
exposure to physical or sexual abuse have all
been found reliable predictors of SIB. Those
who cannot remember ever feeling "special" or
"loved" by anyone as children were least able
to control their SIB.
One self-mutilator's journal includes this
entry: "Tonight I've done everything to
distract myself from thoughts of cutting. . .
I feel angry and I'm not very good at that
feeling. They say that behind anger is always
fear. So I ask myself: 'What are you afraid
of?' Well, what do you think?! I'm afraid my
father will jump right through my skin and
scare the silence right out of me. When I put
down this pen, who'll get me first? My daddy
or me? I'd rather get there first. This
belongs to me! Cut, cut, cut." To this woman,
her body is no one's but her own and the marks
on her skin are there to prove it as she
struggles to "reclaim stolen territory."
What should we make of this disturbing
practice? First, we must come to an
understanding of the path this trend looks to
take. We can be sure that the stigma
associated will SIB will continue to disappear
as this generation's bloody cry of confusion
and self-hate appears on individual bodies and
collective soul. Consequently, SIB will become
more pervasive as a "normal" coping mechanism.
If that happens, chances are good that SIB
might move so far into the mainstream of youth
culture that kids who exhibit none of the
classic SIB precipitating factors will cut
themselves simply because it's fashionable. In
addition, we can expect that increased
"publicity" for cutting will plant the idea in
younger and younger minds. Eventually, we
might expect SIB experimentation among curious
and impressionable young elementary school
aged children.
Second, we must consider how to respond in a
Christlike manner. We could shake our heads in
disgust, right it off as another link in the
chain of "typically bizarre adolescent
behavior", then walk away hoping that the next
generation of children and teens will somehow
get their act together and make more out of
their lives. But if that's our approach, we
haven't truly heard "the voice on the skin"
for what it is. Rather, we will have added
another ugly link into the chain of ignorant
and inappropriate responses of the church to
young people today. Our ignorance will only
serve to remove opportunities for kids who cut
to hear the liberating Truth about Christ's
shed blood and redeeming love.
Third, we must institute preventive measures
that will keep kids from getting to the point
where their problems are so intense that SIB
becomes a coping option. Simply stated, the
key is a Godly home where kids grow in an
atmosphere full of parental time, affection,
attention, love, discipline, grace, and open
discussion about the deepest issues of life.
In addition, the church (not just the youth
ministry) must be a place that not only
reinforces what kids learn in these homes, but
aggressively reaches out to kids who have no
foundation of healthy home life.
Finally, we must diligently work to exert a
redemptive influence on those who resort to
self-mutilation. Their cries must be answered
through Christ-centered counseling and
long-term relationships with mentors who speak
and live the redeeming love of Christ. For
many, it will be the first time someone really
cares.
Judged by appearances, 19 year old Renee is
your typical college freshman. What nobody
knows is that she's been damaging herself
since she was 11 years old. "I use a needle,"
she says. "I jam the needle down as far as I
can, and then move it back and forth until I
have a long cut on my finger. I repeat this
until I've slashed up both my hands. I almost
want someone to notice, to ask me what
happened. But I'm so much of a loner that no
one's ever even noticed. I wonder if people
DID notice, if they would care."
Do we?
What they're doing to themselves
Here are the injurious acts self-mutilators
say they've done to themselves:
- Cutting: 72 %
- Burning: 35 %
- Self-hitting: 30 %
- Interference with wound healing: 22 %
- Hair pulling: 10 %
- Bone breaking: 8 %
Source: Study conducted by A.R. Favazza and K.
Conterio as reported in "The plight of chronic
self-mutilators," Community Mental Health
Journal, Vol. 24, 1988, 22-30.
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