Self-harm refers to people deliberately hurting or mutilating their bodies without necessarily wanting to die.
It often begins in teenage years, with around 10% of adolescents reporting having self-harmed at some point in their lives.
People self-harm for a range of reasons, it may be a way of telling other people about distress and asking for help, a way of coping with stress or emotional pain, or a symptom of a mental illness like depression.
But most often the behaviour goes unnoticed. It is commonly done in private and most young people who self-harm don’t get help.
Laura, now 24, struggled with self-harm for nearly 10 years, here she bravely tells her story…
The first time that I cut myself, I don’t remember what I was thinking. It was clear, however, that I had no inkling that this act would become an unrelenting and ingrained response that would begin to take over. I didn’t know that it would become something that I would later turn to at every available opportunity, or that it would lead me to deceive my friends and family, or that it would be something that I would still struggle with nearly 10 years on from that day. All I was looking for was a way to feel a little less awful, and initially, it seemed that I had found what I was looking for.
I was 15, and I was attempting to cope with what I later realised was the earlier stages of a veritable bounty of mental health problems. I was anxious, depressed and I had managed to isolate myself from everyone who cared about me. I discovered that making those marks on my skin brought my feelings from the intangible to the visible.
After all, physical pain seemed so much easier to endure than the seemingly infinite flood of crap feelings that being depressed throws at you. I could look at the lines on my legs and see my hurt reflected back at me, and I could understand this physical pain because it had such an obvious cause and I knew it would fade. Feeling those twinges of pain during the day reminded me that I was alive and surviving, despite feeling like I wanted to disappear.
Top Comments
I promise you the scars will fade, more importantly keep up the great work to help the feelings fade with them. I have just been diagnosed with borderline personality disorder, PTSD & treatment resistant depression after 14 yrs of being told I was a drama queen, attention seeker etc etc. Even though I know I have a hard road ahead of me I'm glad to have my diagnosis. Firstly I now have an action plan, secondly there is finally an explanation for how I have felt for what feels like forever & lastly I feel vindicated in the fact that I'm not crazy or selfish like many people have tried to have me believe (including those I would have hoped would have the greatest desire to believe in me) Those of us with some heart & the ability to empathise know that people don't make this shit up for the sake of it. I wish you well & congratulate you on your courage in seeking help and publishing your story.
I never self-harmed as a teen or even in my twenties. I worked with young people for several years, many of whom self-harmed, and found it difficult to understand the compulsion. And then, at the age of 34, after I had my first baby, I suffered PND. My self-harm was invisible as it involved punching myself in the head (from which I could feel the bruising for days afterwards). I started to worry that I would start to cause permanent damage if I didn't seek help, and I eventually sought help (when my baby was 14mths old).. Fortunately for me, anti-depressants worked very well indeed. Nobody knew. The first person I told was the diagnosing GP (for the PND). I eventually told my husband, about two years after the fact, and three very close girlfriends. When I had my second baby, it started happening again and I quickly went back to my GP to recommence anti-depressants, which worked again.
I was very fortunate in that I had two truly fantastic GPs, but if you get a cool response, seek the help of another practitioner.
Interesting you mention other forms of self harm because most people's minds automatically jump to cutting. I too used to punch myself in the head so the bruises would be under my hair. I'd push on them in the days that followed. I also used to find ways to physically hurt myself that would look to outsiders like I was clumsy - like I'd push my arms through a thorny bush, or I'd deliberately burn myself on the oven, or I'd repeatedly rub my knuckles against a brick wall until all the skin was gone. I didn't have to hide my injuries - I had a way of explaining them. I also used to scratch my scalp to the point where my head would bleed, and then I'd pick the scabs so they'd never heal under my hair. It sounds disgusting - it was - but nobody ever saw it but me. I also used to binge and purge as a form of self-punishment. When I finally spoke to a psychologist about it, I could only describe it as punishment - even for slight things like I said the wrong thing and created an awkward moment, I'd keep a tally in my head of how many hits or scratches I had to get to make up for it. I also discovered that my self harm started very young, when I didn't even realise it - even when I was 5 years old I used to bite the skin of my fingers until I bled. I clearly remember things happening - like I'd get bullied at school - so as a 5 year old I'd sit by myself tearing the skin off my hands with my teeth. My parents thought it was just a bad habit but now I realise it was the start of something worse. Even though I have not actually self harmed in months, not a day goes by that the thought doesn't enter my head. I still keep tallies of punishments - I just don't act on them. When I get stressed I still pick at my skin and hurt myself but it's not so aggressive - perhaps now it is more of a habit that I revert to when I'm stressed. It's not a conscious decision to hurt myself. The only conscious decisions that still affect me relate to food. I either go without meals to punish myself, of I stuff my face with junk, also because I know it is bad for me. In the end it kind of balances out, so I am a healthy weight, but my mental relationship with food is far from healthy. I'm 32 now and think these thoughts will always be in my head. It's just a matter of how long I can go without relapsing... and at the moment, I'm ok with that.