[Help] i cut my self and i wanna stop Updates to this post /post/223637-i-cut-my-self-and-i-wanna-stop Mon, 07 Dec 2009 15:45:08 +0100 Reply from dimentieva /post/223637-i-cut-my-self-and-i-wanna-stop#reply-4557647 to release the negative energy that entered you you are trying to release by cuting there id this awsome new revolutionary holistic treatment called NAET. go to naet.com find a practitioner near you and they will treat your addiction to cutting. Naet is the answer. After the treatment the energyh will be gone. Trust me. Please.

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dimentieva Wed, 03 Dec 2008 00:58:07 +0100
Reply from alcara /post/223637-i-cut-my-self-and-i-wanna-stop#reply-4557606 Self-injury is not something people talk about very often, but for an estimated 2 to 3 million Americans it is a serious problem. The majority of people who self-injure are women between the ages of 13 and 30, but there are “cutters” of every age, gender, and economic group.

People who “self-injure” are not usually suicidal. They do however, intentionally inflict injuries upon themselves, usually in response to stress or trauma. Their injuries may vary from minor cuts that heal quickly to very serious wounds that leave permanent scars. This is also known as “Deliberate Self-Harm Syndrome”.

If you or someone you know self-injures, please get professional help right away. This is just an overview of a very complex myriad of syndromes.

Self-injury usually indicates that somewhere during development that person didn’t learn good ways of coping with overwhelming feelings or stress. They’re not sick or insane; they just never learned positive ways to deal with feelings and emotions for various reasons. Positive coping skills can be learned at any point in life. People who self-injure can learn to use new and healthier coping mechanisms. This process may take years to develop with the help of a skilled therapist familiar with this condition.

arms b&w The late Princess Diana’s word’s shocked the world when she admitted in a television interview that she intentionally cut her arms and legs and had thrown herself down a flight of stairs on more than one occasion. FINALLY, self-injury — the practice of deliberately cutting, scratching, burning, or otherwise injuring one’s own body — was about to come out of the closet. After that interview thousands of self-injury survivors called or wrote the media in response to that interview in just the United States alone.

bladeCutting seems to be the most common type of self-injury. “Cutters” often use razors, utility knives, scissors, needles, broken glass, or whatever they find to make repetitive slices on their arms, legs or other body parts. Some people burn themselves with cigarettes or lighters, others pull out their own hair. Many people who self-injure say they do it because they normally feel “numb” and cutting helps them to “feel alive.” Others talk about the “sense of control” they may get from self-injury. This may be the first time or thing that they have felt a sense of control in their lives. Most agree that incidents of self-injury are triggered by stress and anxiety.

Self-injury is usually kept secret, and the “cutter” often feels deep shame and guilt from this ritual. People who self-injure are at risk for infections if their wounds are not treated properly. Permanent scarring can also result from self-injury and often does. Many people who self-injure wear long pants, long-sleeved shirts, and turtlenecks even in warm weather to conceal the marks they’ve left on their own bodies.

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alcara Wed, 03 Dec 2008 00:40:44 +0100
Reply from Andi Leigh /post/223637-i-cut-my-self-and-i-wanna-stop#reply-4557563 For me its music. The right song in the right moment. That’s really the only rush I need.

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Andi Leigh Wed, 03 Dec 2008 00:26:14 +0100