Strategies to Help you Stop
Self-Help Organized and otherwise
This section contains a variety of ways that you can stop yourself
from making that cut or burn or bruise right now.
How do I know if I'm ready to stop?
Deciding to stop self-injury is a very personal decision. You may have
to consider it for a long time before you decide that you're ready
to commit to a life without scars and bruises. Don't be discouraged if
you conclude the time isn't right for you to stop yet; you can still
exert more control over your self-injury by choosing when and how much
you harm yourself, by setting limits for your self-harm, and by taking
responsibility for it. If you choose to do this, you should take care
to remain safe when harming yourself: don't share cutting implements
and know basic first aid for treating your
injuries.
Alderman (1997) suggests this useful checklist of things to ask
yourself before you begin walking away from self-harm. It isn't
necessary that you be able to answer all of the questions "yes," but
the more of these things you can set up for yourself, the easier it
will be to stop hurting yourself.
While it is not necessary that you meet all of these
criteria before stopping SIV, the more of these statements that are
true for you before you decide to stop this behavior, the better.
- I have a solid emotional support system of friends, family,
and/or professionals that I can use if I feel like hurting myself.
- There are at least two people in my life that I can call if I
want to hurt myself.
- I feel at least somewhat comfortable talking about SIV with three
different people.
- I have a list of at least ten things I can do instead of hurting
myself.
- I have a place to go if I need to leave my house so as not to
hurt myself.
- I feel confident that I could get rid of all the things that I
might be likely to use to hurt myself.
- I have told at least two other people that I am going to stop
hurting myself.
- I am willing to feel uncomfortable, scared, and frustrated.
- I feel confident that I can endure thinking about hurting myself
without having to actually do so.
- I want to stop hurting myself.
[Alderman (1997) p. 132]
How do I stop? And anyway, aren't some of these
techniques just as "bad" as SI?
There are several different flat-out-crisis-in-the-moment strategies
typically suggested. My favorite is doing anything that isn't
SI and produces intense sensation: squeezing ice, taking a cold bath
or hot or cold shower, biting into something strongly flavored (hot
peppers, ginger root, unpeeled lemon/lime/grapefruit), rubbing
Ben-Gay® or Icy-Hot® or Vap-O-Rub® under your nose, sex,
etc. Matching reactions and feelings is extremely
useful.
These strategies work because the intense emotions that provoke SI are
transient; they come and go like waves, and if you can stay upright
through one, you get some breathing room before the next (and you
strengthen your muscles). The more waves you tolerate without
falling over, the stronger you become.
But, the question arises, aren't these things equivalent to punishing
yourself by cutting or burning or hitting or whatever? The key
difference is that they don't produce lasting results. If you squeeze
a handful of ice until it melts or stick a couple of fingers into some
ice cream for a few minutes, it'll hurt like (to quote someone I
respect) "a cast-iron bitch" but it won't leave scars. It won't leave
anything you'll have to explain away later. You most likely won't feel
guilty after -- a little foolish, maybe, and kinda proud that you
weathered a crisis without SI, but not guilty.
This kind of distraction isn't intended to cure the roots of your
self-injury; you can't run a marathon when you're too tired to cross
the room. These techniques serve, rather, to help you get through an
intense moment of badness without making things worse for yourself in
the long run. They're training wheels, and they teach you that you
can get through a crisis without hurting yourself. You will
refine them, even devise more productive coping mechanisms, later, as
the urge to self-injure lessens and loses the hold it has on your
life. Use these interim methods to demonstrate to yourself that you
can cope with distress without permanently injuring your body. Every
time you do you score another point and you make SI that much less
likely next time you're in crisis.
Your first task when you've decided to stop is to break the cycle, to
force yourself to try new coping mechanisms. And you do have to
force yourself to do this; it doesn't just come. You can't theorize
about new coping techniques until one day they're all in place and
your life is changed. You have to work, to struggle, to make
yourself do different things. When you pick up that knife or that
lighter or get ready to hit that wall, you have to make a conscious
decision to do something else. At first, the something else will be a
gut-level primitive, maybe even punishing thing, and that's okay --
the important thing is that you made the decision, you chose to do
something else. Even if you don't make that decision the next time,
nothing can take away that moment of mastery, of having decided that
you were not going to do it that time. If you choose to hurt yourself
in the next crisis time, you will know that it is a choice, which
implies the existence of alternative choices. It takes the
helplessness out of the equation.
So what do I do instead?
Many people try substitute activities as described above and report
that sometimes they work, sometimes not. One way to increase the
chances of a distraction/substitution helping calm the urge to harm is
to match what you do to how you are feeling at the moment.
First, take a few moments and look behind the urge. What are you
feeling? Are you angry? Frustrated? Restless? Sad? Craving the
feeling of SI? Depersonalized and unreal or numb? Unfocused?
Next, match the activity to the feeling. A few examples:
-
angry, frustrated, restless
- Try something physical and violent, something not directed at a
living thing:
-
Slash an empty plastic soda bottle or a piece of heavy cardboard
or an old shirt or sock.
- Make a soft cloth doll to represent the things you are angry
at. Cut and tear it instead of yourself.
- Flatten aluminum cans for recycling, seeing how fast you can go.
- Hit a punching bag.
- Use a pillow to hit a wall, pillow-fight style.
- Rip up an old newspaper or phone book.
- On a sketch or photo of yourself, mark in red ink what you want to
do. Cut and tear the picture.
- Make Play-Doh or Sculpey or other clay models and cut or smash
them.
- Throw ice into the bathtub or against a brick wall hard enough to
shatter it.
- Break sticks.
-
I've found that these things work even better if I rant at the thing I
am cutting/tearing/hitting. I start out slowly, explaining why I am
hurt and angry, but sometimes end up swearing and crying and
yelling. It helps a lot to vent like that.
-
Crank up the music and dance.
- Clean your room (or your whole house).
- Go for a walk/jog/run.
- Stomp around in heavy shoes.
- Play handball or tennis.
sad, soft, melancholy, depressed, unhappy
- Do something slow and soothing,
- like taking a hot bath with bath
oil or bubbles,
- curling up under a comforter with hot cocoa and a good
book,
- babying yourself somehow
- Do whatever makes you feel taken care
of and comforted.
- Light sweet-smelling incense.
- Listen to soothing
music.
- Smooth nice body lotion into the parts or yourself you want to
hurt.
- Call a friend and just talk about things that you like.
- Make a
tray of special treats and tuck yourself into bed with it and watch TV
or read.
- Visit a friend.
craving sensation, feeling depersonalized, dissociating, feeling
unreal
- Do something that creates a sharp physical sensation:
- Squeeze ice hard (this really hurts). (Note: putting ice on
a spot you want to burn gives you a strong painful sensation and
leaves a red mark afterward, kind of like burning would.)
- Put a finger into a frozen food (like ice cream) for a minute.
- Bite into a hot pepper or chew a piece of ginger root.
- Rub liniment under your nose.
- Slap a tabletop hard.
- Snap your wrist with a rubber band.
- Take a cold bath.
- Stomp your feet on the ground.
- Focus on how it feels to breathe. Notice the way your chest and
stomach move with each breath.
- [NOTE: Some people report that being online while dissociating
increases their sense of unreality; be cautious about logging on in a
dissociative state until you know how it affects you.]
wanting focus
- Do a task (a computer game like tetris or minesweeper, writing a
computer program, needlework, etc) that is exacting and requires focus
and concentration.
- Eat a raisin mindfully. Pick it up, noticing how it feels in your
hand. Look at it carefully; see the asymmetries and think about the
changes the grape went through. Roll the raisin in your fingers and
notice the texture; try to describe it. Bring the raisin up to your
mouth, paying attention to how it feels to move your hand that
way. Smell the raisin; what does it remind you of? How does a raisin
smell? Notice that you're beginning to salivate, and see how that
feels. Open your mouth and put the raisin in, taking time to think
about how the raisin feels to your tongue. Chew slowly, noticing how
the texture and even the taste of the raisin change as you chew
it. Are there little seeds or stems? How is the inside different from
the outside? Finally, swallow.
- Choose an object in the room. Examine it carefully and then write
as detailed a description of it as you can. Include everything: size,
weight, texture, shape, color, possible uses, feel, etc.
- Choose a random object, like a paper clip, and try to list 30
different uses for it.
- Pick a subject and research it on the web.
- Try some of the games and distractions at digibeet's
page; she's assembled a lot of distractions.
wanting to see blood
- Draw on yourself with a red felt-tip pen.
- Take a small bottle of liquid red food coloring and warm it
slightly by dropping it into a cup of hot water for a few
minutes. Uncap the bottle and press its tip against the place you want
to cut. Draw the bottle in a cutting motion while squeezing it
slightly to let the food color trickle out.
- Draw on the areas you want to cut using ice that you've made by
dropping six or seven drops of red food color into each of the
ice-cube tray wells.
- Paint yourself with red tempera paint.
wanting to see scars or pick scabs
- Get a henna tattoo kit. You put the henna on as a paste and leave
it overnight; the next day you can pick it off as you would a scab and
it leaves an orange-red mark behind.
Another thing that helps sometimes is the fifteen-minute game. Tell
yourself that if you still want to harm yourself in 15 minutes, you
can. When the time is up, see if you can go another 15. I've been able
to get through a whole night that way before.
I tried all of that. I still want to hurt myself.
Sometimes you will make a good-faith effort to keep from harming
yourself but nothing seems to work. You've slashed a bottle, your hand
is numb from the ice, and the urge is still twisting you into knots.
You feel that if you don't harm yourself, you'll explode. What now?
Get out the questions Kharre asks. It's a
good idea to have several copies of these printed out and ready to
use.
Answer these as honestly and in as much detail as you are able to
right now. No one is going to see the answers except you, and lying to
yourself is pretty pointless. If, in all honesty, you see no other
answer to #8 but yes, then give yourself permission, but set definite
limits. Do not allow the urge to control you; if you choose to give in
to it, then choose it. Decide beforehand exactly what you will allow
yourself to do and how much is enough, and stick to those limits. Keep
yourself as safe as you can while injuring yourself, and take
responsibility for the injury.
The questions (for more explanation, see kharre's post on the subject):
- Why do I feel I need to hurt myself? What has brought me to
this point?
- Have I been here before? What did I do to deal with it? How did I
feel then?
- What I have done to ease this discomfort so far? What else can I
do that
won't hurt me?
- How do I feel right now?
- How will I feel when I am hurting myself?
- How will I feel after hurting myself? How will I feel tomorrow
morning?
- Can I avoid this stressor, or deal with it better in the future?
- Do I need to hurt myself?
Staying safe while hurting yourself
A few things to keep in mind should you decide that you do need to
hurt yourself:
- Don't share cutting implements with anyone; you can get the same
diseases (hepatitis, AIDS, etc) addicts get from sharing needles.
- Try to keep cuts shallow. Keep first aid supplies on hand and know
what to do in the case of emergencies.
- Do only the minimum required to ease your distress. Set
limits. Decide how much you are going to allow yourself to do (how
many cuts/burns/bruises, how deep/severe, how long you will allow
yourself to engage in SI), keep within those boundaries, and clean up
and bandage yourself later. If you can manage that much, then at least
you will be exerting some control over your SI.
What is "fake pain" and why does it matter?
The concept of "fake pain" helps to explain why distress-tolerance
skills are so crucial.
Observation of myself and interviews with others have convinced me
that one of the reasons people self-injure is to deflect unknown,
frightening pain into understandable, sort-of-controllable "pseudo" or
"fake" pain. Calling this phenomenon "fake pain" is in no way intended
to suggest that it doesn't hurt; it hurts like hell.
When memories or thoughts or beliefs or events are excessively
painful, instead of facing them directly and feeling "genuine" pain,
we sometimes deflect distress into pain that seems understandable and
controllable, like that of self-injury. The real feelings associated
with the event you're avoiding get overridden by those of the
situation you create to distract yourself. It still hurts like hell,
but it's a controllable familiar hell, whereas the real pain you're
avoiding seems scary and poised to take over your world like the
monster who ate Detroit.
It's easy to revert to "fake" pain. Trying to find the source of your
distress can be scary as hell, because you often don't know what
you're going to unleash. Fake pain, although very painful and
traumatic, is something that you understand and can control and can
handle. It's familiar, not mysterious and scary like the real pain
behind it. You might feel that if you ever exposed yourself to the
real pain you'd lose control: "If I ever start crying, I'll never
stop" or "If I let myself get mad about that, I'll never stop
screaming."
Instead, you unconsciously deflect the distress away from the memories
or feelings that generated it and into self-injury. SI is seductive:
you control it. You know the boundaries, even when you feel out of
control. It makes sense and it makes the distress go away, at least
for a while. It's a clever mechanism -- it takes what seems unbearable
and transforms it into something you can control. The only problem is
that when you deflect pain, you never face up directly to what it is
that has caused this much tumult in your life. So long as you channel
distress into fake pain, you never deal with the real pain and it
never lessens in intensity. It keeps coming back and you have to keep
cutting.
You have to deal with the unbearable if you ever want to make
it lose its power over you. Every time you can meet the real pain
head-on and feel it and tolerate the distress, it loses a little of
its ability to wipe you out and eventually it becomes just a
memory. The process is like building tolerance to a drug. Narcotics
users take a little bit more of their drug every day as tolerance
builds, until eventually they're routinely taking amounts of drug that
would kill an ordinary person. The poisonous events in your past work
in a similar way. Exposure (with the help of a trained therapist)
over time will build your tolerance to these events and enable you to
lay them to rest. The key is learning to tolerate distress.
DBT-related skills
Marsha Linehan's Skills Training Manual has several helpful
worksheets for getting through crisis situations. Though they are best
used as part of a DBT program with a trained therapist, you might find
some of them helpful.
- Accepting Reality
This concept focuses on learning to accept reality as it
is. Accepting it doesn't mean you like it or are willing to allow it
to continue unchanged; it means realizing that the basic facts of the
situation are even if they aren't what you'd like them to be.
Without this kind of radical acceptance, change isn't possible.
- Letting Go of Emotional Suffering
In this worksheet, you learn ways to observe and describe your
emotion, separate yourself from it, and let go of it. One of Linehan's
basic principles is that emotion loves emotion, and this worksheet is
designed to help you experience your emotions with amplifying them or
get caught in a feedback loop.
- Distraction
Distraction is simply doing other things to keep yourself from
self-harming. Most of the techniques mentioned above are distraction
techniques; you bring something else in to change the feeling. Using
ice, rubber bands, etc, is substituting other intense feelings for the
self-injury. Other things Linehan suggest substituting include
experiences that change your current feelings, tasks (like counting
the colors you can see in your immediate environment) that don't
require much effort but do take a great deal of concentration, and
volunteer work.
- Improve the Moment
This worksheet focuses on ways to make the present moment more
bearable. It differs from distraction in that it's not just a
diverting of the mind but a complete change of attitude in the moment.
- Evaluating the Pros and Cons of Tolerating Distress
As the name implies, this worksheet leads you through an
evaluation: what are the benefits of doing this self-harming thing?
What are the benefits of not doing it? What are the bad things about
doing it? About not doing it? Sometimes writing this down can help you
make a decision not to harm.
- Self-Soothing
This, like improving the moment and distracting, is a distress
tolerance technique. It's pretty straightforward: use things that are
pleasing to your senses to soothe yourself. Some people find that active
distraction works better for violent angry feelings and soothing is
more effective for soft, sad ones.
- Reducing Vulnerability to Negative Emotion
Prevention of states in which you are likely to self-harm is
covered in this worksheet, which suggests ways of taking care of
yourself in order to minimize the times when you feel the urge to hurt
yourself. If you're balancing eating, sleeping, and self-care, you're
less likely to be overwhelmed by emotion.
- Interpersonal Effectiveness
Being clear about what you want and about your priorities in an
interaction are crucial to good communication, and this worksheet
offers a series of questions and steps to follow to help you determine
how to approach a difficult interpersonal interaction. It is truly
amazing how much going through these steps can help.
More information about Dialectical Behavioral Therapy can be found at
DBT-Seattle.
Individuals' suggestions for self help
Kharre, a subscriber to the bodies-under-siege list, compiled an excellent
list of ways to cope with si. She covers topics such as:
Questions to ask before you hurt yourself
Realistic acceptance
A letter to my SI
Things to help you through the bad times
Important tips for those who interact with someone
who SI's
Kirsti, who has assembled an incredible page on self-injury,
dissociation, and abuse, has some very useful coping
ideas.
An anonymous poster, an22340@anon.penet.fi, put together a
great deal of information about self-injury. Included was this useful
list of
things to do. It contains suggestions both for self-injurers and
for their friends and loved ones. I've added a few of my own, noting
them with [brackets].
A shorter list of 12 things you can do to try to climb out of a mild
to moderate depression or urge to cut can be found here.
Another bus member, Tammy Bucklew, adapted these suggestions for families and friends of abuse
survivors from Kubetin and Mallory (1992).
You may at some point want to find professional help for this problem. I've
collected sources in the USA, UK, Canada, and Australia. If you know
of people or organizations I've left out, contact me.
There is also a DBT skills discussion list. To subscribe, send mail
to the listowner (Kieu) at busserv@u.washington.edu
explaining your background and why you'd like to be on the list. It's
intended to be a place to share experiences and get support while
using DBT skills.
Bristol Crisis Service for Women
Bristol
Crisis Service for Women is the leading UK (and as far as I know,
European) support organization for women who self-harm. They offer a
confidential help line, publications for self-harmers and for
professionals, and other services. They're empathetic, dedicated and a
valuable resource for women in the UK and Europe. Check out their Women and Self-Injury leaflet.
S.A.F.E.
In 1984 Karen Conterio (then of Hartgrove) established a
support group for self-injurers called SAFE (Self-Abuse Finally
Ends). SAFE groups were not like 12-step groups or most self-help
groups; they were short-term groups run by a professional
facilitator. SAFE no longer offers these groups, but they do have a
30-day inpatient program; more details are on the resources page. SAFE operates on the belief
that the underlying emotional conflict is the primary problem, not the
self-injury. More information about SAFE can be obtained at
1-800-DONTCUT.
First-Aid Basics
If you've already injured yourself and need to know how to
care for the wounds, this list of first-aid
basics might be helpful.
I stopped a few weeks ago, but I keep obsessing
about hurting myself. Help?
It's not uncommon for people to continue thinking obsessively about
self-injury for a while after they've made the decision to
stop. Hurting yourself has been a huge part of your life up until
recently, and you're used to dwelling on it. You might think that
you're supposed to be "cured" now and that all thoughts of SI should
magically vanish from your head, so when you catch yourself thinking
about that blade or lighter or whatever, you get angry and frustrated
and shove the thought away.
Foa and Wilson (1991) deal with intrusive thoughts by a combination of
giving yourself permission to think about it and exposure/habituation
techniques combined with ritual prevention. Exposure refers to
repeatedly presenting someone with the situation about which they
obsess, and habituation happens when, after much exposure without
resulting to usual actions, the person gets used to the situation and
it no longer distresses them.
To adapt these techniques, first make yourself safe. If you're in a
mind-set in which self-injury seems very very likely, it might be
better to use distraction techniques to get past that place. Line up a
support person whom you can call if you get overwhelmed by this
technique. Try to tolerate it for as long as you can, even if you're
uncomfortable.
First, designate two 10- or 15-minute time periods daily. Choose times
when you will be alone and able to think without being interrupted. To
begin, set a timer for the designated amount of time. Then obsess
about hurting yourself. Think about what it would feel like, how you
would feel afterwards, how much you want to do this -- all those
thoughts you've been trying to suppress. Get as distressed as you can,
and stay focused on the topic of injuring yourself. You may find,
especially after the first few times, that you get really bored toward
the end of your time period. That's a good sign -- you're becoming
habituated.
When the time is up, stop thinking about SI. If thoughts of wanting to
harm come into your mind at other times during the day, acknowledge
them and remind yourself that you will think about them later, when
it's time. Then let them go. If they come back, repeat the
process. Don't shove them away or try to ignore them; just
acknowledge, remind yourself they have their time soon, and let go.
After a week or so you will notice an improvement (maybe even after
just a few days). One crucial thing: no matter what, do not act on the
thoughts of SI. They are just thoughts, and you can use the skills
that you used to stop harming to get through these times. In order for
habituation to occur, you have to get through the exposure without
resorting to the old behavior. Use distraction and substitution for
SI (ritual) prevention.
Also:
First Aid for Self-Injury
(This material is excerpted from the Secret Shame Website)
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