Teenage Cutting
Alcohol is the Drug of Choice Among Adolescents:
Injuring yourself on purpose by making scratches
or cuts on your body with a sharp object — enough
to break the skin and make it bleed — is called
cutting. Cutting is a type of self-injury,
or SI. Most people who cut are girls, but guys self-injure,
too. People who cut usually start cutting in their young
teens. Some continue to cut into adulthood.
People may cut themselves on their wrists, arms, legs,
or bellies. Some people self-injure by burning their
skin with the end of a cigarette or lighted match.
When cuts or burns heal, they often leave scars or
marks. People who injure themselves usually hide the
cuts and marks and sometimes no one else knows.
Why Do People Cut Themselves?
It can be hard to understand why people cut themselves
on purpose. Cutting is
youth mental health disorder.
and it is a way some teens
try to cope with the pain of strong emotions, intense
pressure, or upsetting relationship problems.
They may be suffering from other issues such as
teen eating disorder
or be dealing with feelings that seem too difficult to
bear like
teenage depression
or bad situations they think can't change which the combination of
teens and drug abuse
can be a good example of that.
Some people cut because they feel desperate for relief
from bad feelings. People who cut may not know better
ways to get relief from emotional pain or pressure.
Some people cut to express strong feelings of rage,
sorrow, rejection, desperation, longing, or emptiness.
There are other ways to cope with difficulties, even
big problems and terrible emotional pain. The help of
a mental health professional might be needed for major
life troubles or overwhelming emotions. For other tough
situations or strong emotions, it can help put things
in perspective to talk problems over with parents, other
adults, or friends. Getting plenty of exercise can also
help put problems in perspective and help balance emotions.
But people who cut may not have developed
ways to cope. Or their coping skills may be overpowered
by emotions that are too intense. When emotions don't
get expressed in a healthy way, tension can build up
— sometimes to a point where it seems almost unbearable.
Cutting may be an attempt to relieve that extreme tension.
For some, it seems like a way of feeling in control.
The urge to cut might be triggered
by strong feelings the person can't express —
such as anger, hurt, shame, frustration, or alienation.
People who cut sometimes say they feel they don't fit
in or that no one understands them. A person might cut
because of losing someone close or to escape a sense
of emptiness. Cutting might seem like the only way to
find relief or express personal pain over relationships
or rejection.
People who cut or self-injure sometimes have other
mental health problems that contribute to their emotional
tension. Cutting is sometimes (but not always) associated
with depression, bipolar disorder, eating disorders,
obsessive thinking, or compulsive behaviors. It can
also be a sign of mental health problems that cause
people to have trouble controlling their impulses or
to take unnecessary risks. Some people who cut themselves
have problems with drug or alcohol abuse.
Some people who cut have had a traumatic experience,
such as living through abuse, violence, or a disaster.
Self-injury may feel like a way of "waking up"
from a sense of numbness after a traumatic experience.
Or it may be a way of re-inflicting the pain they went
through, expressing anger over it, or trying to get
control of it.
What Can Happen to People Who
Cut?
Although cutting may provide some temporary relief from
a terrible feeling, even people who cut agree that it
isn't a good way to get that relief. For one thing,
the relief doesn't last. The troubles that triggered
the cutting remain — they're just masked over.
People don't usually intend to hurt themselves permanently
when they cut. And they don't usually mean to keep cutting
once they start. But both can happen. It's possible
to misjudge the depth of a cut, making it so deep that
it requires stitches (or, in extreme cases, hospitalization).
Cuts can become infected if a person uses non-sterile
or dirty cutting instruments — razors, scissors,
pins, or even the sharp edge of the tab on a can of
soda.
Most people who cut aren't attempting suicide. Cutting
is usually a person's attempt at feeling better, not
ending it all. Although some people who cut do attempt
suicide, it's usually because of the emotional problems
and pain that lie behind their desire to self-harm,
not the cutting itself.
Cutting can be habit forming. It can become a compulsive
behavior — meaning that the more a person does
it, the more he or she feels the need to do it. The
brain starts to connect the false sense of relief from
bad feelings to the act of cutting, and it craves this
relief the next time tension builds. When cutting
becomes a compulsive behavior,
it can seem impossible to stop. So cutting can
seem almost like an addiction, where the urge
to cut can seem too hard to resist. A behavior that
starts as an attempt to feel more in control can end
up controlling you.
How Does Cutting Start?
Cutting often begins on an impulse. It's not something
the person thinks about ahead of time. Shauna says,
"It starts when something's really upsetting and
you don't know how to talk about it or what to do. But
you can't get your mind off feeling upset, and your
body has this knot of emotional pain. Before you know
it, you're cutting yourself. And then somehow, you're
in another place. Then, the next time you feel awful
about something, you try it again — and slowly
it becomes a habit."
Natalie, a high-school junior who started cutting in
middle school, explains that it was a way to distract
herself from feelings of rejection and helplessness
she felt she couldn't bear. "I never looked at
it as anything that bad at first — just my way
of getting my mind off something I felt really awful
about. I guess part of me must have known it was a bad
thing to do, though, because I always hid it. Once a
friend asked me if I was cutting myself and I even lied
and said 'no.' I was embarrassed."
Sometimes self-injury affects a person's body image.
Jen says, "I actually liked how the cuts looked.
I felt kind of bad when they started to heal —
and so I would 'freshen them up' by cutting again. Now
I can see how crazy that sounds, but at the time, it
seemed perfectly reasonable to me. I was all about those
cuts — like they were something about me that
only I knew. They were like my own way of controlling
things. I don't cut myself anymore, but now I have to
deal with the scars."
You can't force someone who self-injures to stop. It
doesn't help to get mad at a friend who cuts, reject
that person, lecture her, or beg him to stop. Instead,
let your friend know that you care, that he or she deserves
to be healthy and happy, and that no one needs to bear
their troubles alone.
Pressured to Cut?
Girls and guys who self-injure are often dealing with
some heavy troubles. Many work hard to overcome difficult
problems. So they find it hard to believe that some
kids cut just because they think it's a way to seem
tough and rebellious.
Tia tried cutting because a couple of the girls at
her school were doing it. "It seemed like if I
didn't do it, they would think I was afraid or something.
So I did it once. But then I thought about how lame
it was to do something like that to myself for no good
reason. Next time they asked I just said, 'no, thanks
— it's not for me.' "
If you have a friend who suggests you try cutting,
say what you think. Why get pulled into something you
know isn't good for you? There are plenty of other ways
to express who you are.
Lindsay had been cutting herself for 3 years because
of abuse she suffered as a child. She's 16 now and hasn't
cut herself in more than a year. "I feel proud
of that," Lindsay says. "So when I hear girls
talk about it like it's the thing to do, it really gets
to me."
Getting Help
There are better ways to deal with troubles than cutting
— healthier, long-lasting ways that don't leave
a person with emotional and physical scars. The first
step is to get help with the troubles that led to the
cutting in the first place. Here are some ideas for doing
that:
Tell someone. People who have stopped cutting often
say the first step is the hardest — admitting
to or talking about cutting. But they
also say that after they open up about it, they often
feel a great sense of relief. Choose someone you trust
to talk to at first (a parent, school counselor, teacher,
coach, doctor, or nurse). If it's too difficult to bring
up the topic in person, write a note. Identify the trouble
that's triggering the cutting. Cutting is a way of reacting
to emotional tension or pain. Try to figure out what
feelings or situations are causing you to cut. Is it
anger? Pressure to be perfect? Relationship trouble?
A painful loss or trauma? Mean criticism or mistreatment?
Identify the trouble you're having, then tell someone
about it. Many people have trouble figuring this part
out on their own. This is where a mental health professional
can be helpful.
Ask for help. Tell someone that you want help
dealing with your troubles and the cutting.
If the person you ask doesn't help you get the assistance
you need, ask someone else. Sometimes adults try to
downplay the problems teens have or think they're just
a phase. If you get the feeling this is happening to
you, find another adult (such as a school counselor
or nurse) who can make your case for you.
Work on it. Most people with deep emotional pain or
distress need to work with a counselor or mental health
professional to sort through strong feelings, heal past
hurts, and to learn better ways to cope with life's
stresses. Although cutting can be a difficult pattern
to break, it is possible. Getting professional help
to overcome the problem doesn't mean that a person is
weak or crazy.
Inspirations Teen Rehab Therapists and counselors are
trained to help people discover inner strengths that
help them heal. These inner strengths can then be used
to cope with life's other problems in a healthy way.
We at Inspirations Teen Rehab understand the unique challenges of being a parent.
If you have any questions, please know that we are here to provide you with support
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substance abuse, adolescent addiction, teen
intervention, teen behavior,
teen depression or other related matters.
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