Real Stories

How Not To Save A Life

Today I saw another one of those social media that purports to offer alternatives to self-harm. This time the post also claimed that sharing this information would save lives.

I’m just going to be completely honest, this bull isn’t saving any lives. These are not credible alternatives to self-harm. They will not stop an ill person from hurting themselves. They don’t solve the problem of why a person might feel the need to hurt themselves; they don’t even address it. In fact, in some cases they reaffirm the idea that hurting yourself is a good coping mechanism (just so long as you do it in a socially acceptable manner).

I’ve talked and written about why these suggestions are insulting until i’m blue in the face. I see others giving excellent arguments against such advice, and yet this sort of thing is still the only information disseminated in the mainstream. So, I thought I’d try to talk about what actually can help one refrain from hurting oneself.

My suggestions are more complicated, time consuming and bloody hard. They don’t lend themselves to becoming a jaunty list to share on Twitter. The grim reality is that self-harm is a grind, and so is quitting.

For me, the first step in getting anywhere close to stopping was understanding why I started in the first place. I truly believe understanding why a person self harms is crucial to recovery. Self-harm isn’t the illness; it’s a symptom of it. From the outside, identifying what is distressing you might seem simple, but trust me, it isn’t. There can be layers of trauma and hurt. A person may have a lifetime of issues woven into a complex fabric of pathologies. Picking that apart is intensely painful. Having pulled on that dangerous thread, you’re going to have to find ways address those underlying problems. They don’t simply disappear under a bright light. It takes time, professional guidance and huge bravery.

And that’s just the beginning.

Next, you have discern what you get from self harm, how it is helping you cope, and what function inflicting pain is serving. Again, this is no simple puzzle to solve. My self harm had many roles. I was punishing myself, I hated the body that had failed me, I was avoiding emotions I couldn’t cope with, the blood was cathartic, I became addicted and a multitude of other reasons. Predictably tallying up all the pay-offs doesn’t negate them. There is more work to be done. One must weigh how healthy each function is and decide if it enhances one’s life. For instance, it’s probably not a great idea to be continually forcing myself to do penance, however it is a good idea to not be completely overwhelmed by sadness. You must find away to live without the unhealthy whilst also establishing new mechanisms to maintain essential uses. Of course all the time you are working away at your inner self you are dealing with addiction. Self-harm is habit forming. So, your journey of self discovery/healing/madness has a background of overwhelming urges and powerful compulsions. To begin with, you have to fight the full force of addiction every single moment of every single day. Plus, of course, everyone has their own additional problems to throw into the mix. Maybe you have co-morbidities or financial problems or a family you’re trying not mess up with your illness. Life doesn’t stop when crazy calls.

None of this easy. It does not and cannot happen over night. It involves breaking down long held beliefs and opening yourself up to being scared and vulnerable. This post is just a simplified version of a process that takes years. It involves psychiatric professionals, medical intervention, medication, therapy, a support network, emergency room visits, and most of all trying to be honest. I understand why it’s easier to pretend you can draw on your skin or scream at a wall until you’re better. It is terrifying to begin trying access the kind of intensive help needed and exposing yourself to pain you’ve been desperately trying to suppress. Believe me, selling yourself and others a lie is not the answer.

The truth is there are no tips and tricks for beating self-harm. There is no magic fix or complete cure. I look at it like any other addiction. I will probably always want to cut, but I have to do whatever I can not to. No amount of extremely cold water will ever change that harsh fact. When it comes right down to it, for me, the driving force in abstaining is knowing that I want other things more than I want to pick up that scalpel. Oh, and sheer will power. I couldn’t have come to that realization without more than a decade of therapy. I absolutely could never have exercised this level of control over the voice in my own head without putting in all that work.

I’m not going to say everyone’s story is the same as mine. I can’t guarantee that you can ever get completely better. I’m not. I can only offer you the hard truth of my experience, and my certainty that there aren’t any shortcuts. Don’t share false hope. Let’s be honest with people who really need it. Trying to quit self harm is a nightmare, but there is hope that you’ll wake up.

 

Author: ly h Kerr
Email: somethinginthewayshemoves.blog@gmail.com
Author Bio: ly h Kerr is a freelance writer and blogger based in Glasgow. She writes on a variety of topics, but specializes in in body liberation, and mental and chronic illness, all with a feminist slant. She writes with passion from experience.
Link to social media or website: http://www.somethinginthewayshemoves.me

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by ly h Kerr

ly is a freelance writer & blogger based in Glasgow. She writes on a variety of topics, but specialises in body liberation, mental & chronic illness, all with a feminist slant. She writes with passion from experience.


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