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Healthcare Training Institute - Quality Education since 1979CE for Psychologist, Social Worker, Counselor, & MFT!!

Section
10
Characterizing Self-Injurious Cognitions
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In
the last section, we discussed the various mental disorders with which adolescent
self-mutilators are diagnosed. These include Axis I disorders such as depression,
thought disorders, anxiety disorders, and post traumatic stress disorder, and
the Axis II disorder of borderline personality disorder. As
you know, many times clients do not recognize that they have a problem with
self-mutilation. They delude themselves with assertions such as the injury
is not serious, that it doesn't affect them, and that it heals them.
In this section,
we will examine various arguments that clients use to persuade themselves that
they do not have a problem with self-mutilation. These include arguments of a
personal event, of necessary emotional cleansing, and of communication. We will
also include ways to address these arguments via the exploration of ramifications and analogies.
3 Arguments Clients Use to Justify their Self-Injury
♦ # 1 - Personal Event
The first category of delusional arguments
stems from the fact that much self-injuring is viewed as a private and personal
event. These arguments include: "Self-injury doesn't hurt anyone"
and "It's my body and I can do whatever I want". These two statements
sum up how little self-injurers value their bodies and how little they understand
the effect it has on their surrounding family. Elsa, age 17, gave me both of these
arguments during one of our sessions to justify her self-mutilating behavior.
For her first claim, that of "Self-injury doesn't hurt anyone", I asked
Elsa how her mother and father felt about her self-injury. I then pointed out
to Elsa how her older brother had not spoken to her since she told her immediate
family about the self-injury. Even though she was not physically hurting anyone,
her behavior was destroying her very valuable familial relationships.
For Elsa's
second statement, that of "It's my body and I can do whatever I want,"
I told her that yes, she could do whatever she wanted to do, but I then put these
questions to her. I asked her, "Is it really what you want to do? Do you
honestly understand why you want to do it? What are some the ramifications of
the behavior?" In this way, I was able to help Elsa break down her illusions
about self-injury and aid her in her recovery.
With the first
category of delusional arguments, I used exploration of ramifications.
♦ # 2 - Necessary Emotional Cleansing
With the
second category of delusional arguments, emotional cleansing associated with
self-injury; I used an analogy to diffuse the client's justification. One
example of this type of justification is, "Giving up self-injury will only
make me hurt more". Fifteen year old Lindsey was one such client of mine
who used this validation regularly. Lindsey had always been afraid to try and
quit due to the emotions that she felt would soon accumulate and overwhelm her.
I posed this analogy to Lindsey in order to point out the flaw in her argument.
"Suppose you are diagnosed with a cancerous tumor and your doctor recommends
chemotherapy. You don't feel sick, you're still functioning, but the symptoms
of the tumor are interfering with daily routines.
"Then you start your chemotherapy,
and you feel worse than you did on the first day you entered the doctor's office.
The pain is so great that you feel you want to give up. At this point, you have
to recognize that you're in the middle of an unfortunate process in which you're
going to feel worse before you get better. After the treatment defeats the disease,
you feel healthier and more productive than you did when you first sought help."
This analogy demonstrated to Lindsey the errors inherent in her argument, that
although the recovery process is more painful than the self-mutilation itself,
the reward of good mental health is far greater.
♦ # 3 - Inability to Communicate
The third
category of excuses that clients use to justify self-injury is produced by
their inability to communicate with others.
Some examples of this type of argument
are:
-- "It's the best way for others to see how much emotional pain I'm in;"
--
"It's
the only way to know if people really care about me;" and
-- "Negativeattention is better than none."
As you can see, each of these statements
stems from an inability to convey any kind of desire for contact and affection.
Kara, age 17, used the argument of "It's the only way to know if people really
care about me" to justify her self-mutilation. Kara had been sexually abused when she was 6 by her uncle. When Kara reported the abuse, her parents denied
it, labeling Kara a liar and an attention seeker. Since then, Kara has had trouble
relaying any emotional distress to close friends because she feels that nothing
will come of it.
To test her friends' loyalty, Kara would harm herself in front
of her boyfriend and judge his reaction. She told me, "I had broken a mirror
and some figurines in my room during an argument, and I cut myself with some broken
pieces, hoping he would also be shocked and would try to calm me down by holding
me." Kara's violent acts were a result of her lack of trust and a test of
her boyfriend to try and gauge how much he cared for her. Really, she was crying
out for help and needed somebody to protect her from herself as no one had sheltered
her during her sexual abuse from her uncle at age 6.
♦ "Comfortable Presence" Exercise
To aid
Kara in her realization that her actions are really driving the people who care
for her away, I found the "Comfortable Presence" exercise beneficial.
Her relationship with her boyfriend soon ended after she self-injured in front
of him, thus increasing her intense feelings of loneliness and abandonment.
To
address these feelings of solitude and to heal her destructive relational tendencies,
I had Kara complete the following questions:
1. Describe
in detail a time when you felt comfortable just being with another person.
2.
Include as many details and specific memories about that time as you can, to highlight
what the necessary ingredients are.
In her response, Kara talked
about her grandmother, who had always been understanding and kind to her. She
wrote, "Grandma and I would always watch old movies together and she would
tell me things about her childhood. Whenever I spent time with her, we made popcorn
and she fixed me sundaes. She really spoiled me. I felt really safe with her.
I never felt the urge to self-injure when I was around her.
"She gave me the care
that my parents were incapable of giving because they didn't trust me anymore.
I guess we got along well because her husband died when I was young and I didn't
have anybody either. We both became each other's companion. Right after she died,
I started cutting. It was like my lifeline was gone and I had to replace her,
but I couldn't find anyone I trusted."
Kara's grandmother
had been essential to her stability as a person. Without the warmth and comfort
of a sympathetic loved one, Kara's world collapsed and her issues with trust soon
resurfaced.
In this section, we discussed three arguments that
clients use to persuade themselves that they do not have a problem with self-mutilation
via the use of exploration of ramifications and analogies. These included arguments
of personal event, of necessary emotional cleansing, and of communication. We
also included ways exploration of ramifications and "Comfortable Presence"
to address these arguments.
In the next section, we will examine
the ways in which cultural pressures have a direct effect on the adolescent self-injurer:
the idea that pain is achievement; and the "tough guy" stereotype.
Reviewed 2023
Peer-Reviewed Journal Article References:
Glenn, J. J., Werntz, A. J., Slama, S. J. K., Steinman, S. A., Teachman, B. A., & Nock, M. K. (2017). Suicide and self-injury-related implicit cognition: A large-scale examination and replication. Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 126(2), 199–211.
Siddaway, A. P., Wood, A. M., O'Carroll, R. E., & O'Connor, R. C. (2019). Characterizing self-injurious cognitions: Development and validation of the Suicide Attempt Beliefs Scale (SABS) and the Nonsuicidal Self-Injury Beliefs Scale (NSIBS). Psychological Assessment, 31(5), 592–608.
Smith, D. M., Wang, S. B., Carter, M. L., Fox, K. R., & Hooley, J. M. (2020). Longitudinal predictors of self-injurious thoughts and behaviors in sexual and gender minority adolescents. Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 129(1), 114–121.
Snir, A., Apter, A., Barzilay, S., Feldman, D., Rafaeli, E., Carli, V., Wasserman, C., Hadlaczky, G., Hoven, C. W., Sarchiapone, M., & Wasserman, D. (2018). Explicit motives, antecedents, and consequences of direct self-injurious behaviors: A longitudinal study in a community sample of adolescents. Crisis: The Journal of Crisis Intervention and Suicide Prevention, 39(4), 255–266.
Williams, G. E., Daros, A. R., Graves, B., McMain, S. F., Links, P. S., & Ruocco, A. C. (2015). Executive functions and social cognition in highly lethal self-injuring patients with borderline personality disorder. Personality Disorders: Theory, Research, and Treatment, 6(2), 107–116.
QUESTION
10
What are three types of arguments that many self-injurers use to justify
their self-injury? To select and enter your answer go to .
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