Self Injury
Experience
online conference
transcript
Janay is 18 years old and has been
engaging in self-injurious
behaviors since she was 13. She keeps her
online self injury journal in the
HealthyPlace.com Self-Injury
Community.
Here, she talks about why she first
started self
injuring, how she became suicidally depressed and later developed an
eating
disorder.
17, is the number of hospitalizations for
cutting and
suicidal ideation that Janay has been through. She has
since stopped self-injuring, but continues to struggle with an eating
disorder.
Janay also related her version of what it's like
to tell your parents about the self injury, her experiences with
treatment for self-injury, and
her battle to not si. We also talked a bit about being a black woman who
self-injures.
Audience members also shared their experiences
with cutting, ranging from how to handle it to what made them realize they
needed to stop harming
themselves.
David
Roberts is the HealthyPlace.com moderator.
The people in green are audience members.
David: Good Evening. I'm David Roberts. I'm the
moderator for tonight's conference. I want to welcome everyone to
HealthyPlace.com.
Our topic tonight is "Self Injury Experience." Our guest is
Janay, one of the journalers in the
HealthyPlace.com Self-Injury
Community. Her
online self injury journal is here.
Our plan for tonight was to
have 2 guests, but one of the guests had an emergency and had to cancel at the
last minute. So, I'm going to interview Janay for about 20 minutes, then open
the floor to audience questions. Also, tonight, I would be interested in
hearing from audience members who have received any type of
treatment for self-injury. I'd
like to know what kind of treatment it was (weekly therapy, out or inpatient
hospitalization) and if you thought it was effective or not and why. I'm hoping
that sharing this information will be helpful to everyone here.
Now onto our guest. Janay is
18 years old. She had been engaging in
self-injurious
behaviors for about 5 years. She says "my most recent therapist
terminated treatment because I am 'cured,' meaning I am no longer an active
self injurer and I'm not
suicidally depressed." Janay also has an
eating
disorder which she finds is growing worse because, as she says, "I no
longer have
razor relief."
Good evening, Janay, and
welcome to HealthyPlace.com. You started self injuring when you were
13 years old. Do you remember why and what that was like for you at that young
age?
Janay: Hi. I don't really know why I started. It was
just a test of endurance at first.
David: Can you explain that further, please?
Janay: I think I read a
book about a cutter and wanted to see how strong I was.
David: And why did you continue after that?
Janay: I cut with a piece of broken lightbulb, so
light it barely broke the skin. I did that when I was 12 and didn't do it again
for another year. I remember being late to school one day and, as I was
crossing the grass, just for no reason turned around and went to a corner of
the school campus and
cut myself with an exacto knife.
David: What is it that you got out of doing that?
Janay: I was really kind of upset from the night
before and that morning over a fight with my mom. I was angry and upset and
felt like I'd freak out at school if I went. I had the exacto knife on me
because I used to help my mom with various crafts. I also kept it with me as a
"just in case" type thing;
security for cutting, though
I'd never used it for that before that day.
David: From previous guests, we have learned that
many people start self-injuring possibly as a way to handle certain
feelings stemming from sexual abuse. Is that the case with
you?
Janay: ummm... Yeah, I guess you could say that, but
I'm reluctant to blame my self injury on that.
David: In the letter you sent me, you said: "I
(used to) self injure because it was the only way I knew to
relieve extreme stress or
emotion, i.e pain. The more extreme the pain or confusion, the less I felt,
so the deeper I cut." Since this was going on for 5 years, I'm wondering
if your parents knew about it and if so, how they reacted to it?
Janay: Actually, my mom didn't find out about it
until I was about 15, and that happened during my sophomore year of high
school. A few of my friends knew I cut. They told teacher and the teacher
called my mom. Everything went crazy after that. She called me names, yelled,
hit me, and threatened repeatedly to send me to the hospital (though she'd been
threatening that for about a year because she said my behavior was out of
control).
David: So, to put it mildly, she didn't take it too
well. I'm wondering if that was because she heard it through a third party,
your teacher, rather than through you. It must have been a shock for her.
Janay: I think it was more that she was ashamed of
me - having a crazy daughter. When I was younger I was "so smart, so
pretty, I could be whatever I wanted," and then they found out about my
cousin (sexual abuse) from
someone else. She was mad that I didn't tell her, and since that happened I
sorta stopped talking to her; like being rude, withdrawn, disrespectful, to say
the least. She was just dissapointed in me, that I turned out the way I am.
David: We have a lot of audience questions for you,
Janay. I want to get to a few, then we'll talk about what kind of
treatment for self injury
you received and whether it helped or not. I'm also going to post the audience
responses to that later.
David: Here's the first question:
shylacious: Did you feel
betrayed by your friends?
Janay: Oh, very much so! I was furious, but at the
same time it made me feel good that they even cared enough to tell. I didn't
talk to them for a long time though.
David: Here are a couple of audience comments on
what's been said so far:
BelleAngel:I don't understand
why I do this!
loonee: I started self injuring when I was 15. Now I
am 22 and stopped doing it at the end of last year. I wanted to stop because I
knew it was getting out of hand - cuts were reaching muscle. I was getting
nerve damage. I saw
a therapist, told my mum, and stopped lying to myself. Every day is a battle to
not SI but, so far, I am getting there.
jess_d: The best thing to do is to
be honest with your
friends and don't take what they say too seriously because they probably
don't fully understand the problem.
space715: I just wanted to say that my therapist is
insisting that if I cut again, she will have to tell my parents about my SI. I
am very concerned that my parents will have a reaction similar to your mom's.
Any suggestion on how to handle that?
Janay: I don't think anything I'd suggest would be
helpful, space. If it were me, I wouldn't tell my therapist if I cut. I hate
being threatened with anything. It wouldn't serve an actual purpose for the
therapist to tell your parents. It would only cause more problems. Try to
explain that to her.
To loonee: I know it's hard
not to cut; I'm there myself. Congratulations on not cutting for so long
:-)
David: space715, I also want to mention that we've
had several experts on to talk about
how to address your
parents on this issue. You can
read the transcripts
here.
I want to add, too, that
hopefully not all parents will react the same way as Janay's mom did in this
instance. From everything I've read and heard, it's difficult to recover from
any psychological disorder without
support.
Janay, I want to get into the
treatment issues now. Can you tell us about that? When was the first time you
received professional treatment and what were the circumstances?
Janay: The first time I was hospitalized, I was 14,
but it wasn't for anything real. My mom said I was a smart ass, so she put me
in the hospital to scare me.
Hospitalizations for cutting and
suicide attempts: I've been in about
17 times since I was 14, not counting a 6-month stay in a (crappy) residential
treatment center. Most of my stays were only 3-5 days because of insurance. A
lot were just for "suicidal ideation," 2 for overdoses. And the cops put
me in a few times because my mom told them I was suicidal. I've been through so
many therapists, I've lost count. There were only two that I ever
"cooperated" with. I don't like therapists.
David: So, in combination with the
self-injury, you were
suffering
from depression. That's not unusual. Did you get anything positive out of
treatment/therapy?
Janay: Yeah, I am diagnosed with
depression,
and
anorexia/bulimia, and
OCD, and a billion other things. Out of hospitalizations?
Not particularly, no. I learned to hide what I was doing, better. I got sicker
in the hospital. Whenever I was in, I wouldn't eat anything. It caused a lot of
problems, mainly pissing off the staff, and when I got out, I'd continue that.
And I'd always take razors into the unit. They never checked me good enough. I
think they were incompetent, and I was sneaky and didn't want help. I hated
them. I see no point in hospitalization, because if I want to hurt myself, I
can do it in the hospital or at home. They can't stop me.
David: You still sound very angry and like
you are still dealing with a lot of issues, including depression and the eating
disorder. How did you manage to stop self-injuring? How long ago was that? And how did that
come about?
Janay: No, I'm not quite so depressed anymore. As
for stopping - it caused a lot of problems with my "sorta girlfriend"
Sarah. On new year's day,
I cut myself at her
house and she cried for a long time. I felt awful because I realized that it
was my fault. I was screwing things up. I was hurting her. She made me promise
not to do it again two weeks prior to that night. I broke that promise once. I
won't ever again. I love(d) her so much, and I lost her. The cutting was only
one of many things, but I'll never lose another person I love over something
that I can control, over something so completely stupid and useless. So I
haven't cut since that night, though I've had
urges to cut and I've come
really close.
David:
Janay's online self injury journal is here. We have a lot
of questions and a lot of comments. I'm going to post the audience comments
first, then we will get right to the questions. Here are the comments about
things we've talked about so far:
jjjamms: My current therapist allows me to talk
about all the aspects
of self-injuring, unlike other therapists I have seen. It has helped me to
realize just what I am doing to myself and why.
Journaling is a great way to head off self injury. I make
myself journal a whole page about how I am feeling before I self injure. That
either lessens the severity of the SI or stops it most times now. At first, it
was hard to "make" myself journal about feelings at all.
shylacious: I think you look beautiful now (from
your picture in your diary), and thanks for talking to us!!
jess_d: I had the same problem. When I was in the
hospital, I'd be put in isolation for messing up and when I'd get out, I'd be
so pissed I'd slam my
head against walls and want to hurt myself even more.
loonee: I think that most mothers are very concerned
to learn that their daughter/son is doing this. My mother overreacted (my
opinion at the time at least), but I understand how it must feel to be
presented with the news that the daughter you thought you knew thinks that she
must physically injure herself to handle the pain going on inside her. I
actually found that my mum was very relieved to find out why I was
depressed.
jess_d: Sometimes, it does help to
tell your parents about
the self injury.
space715: I have thought about stopping seeing my
therapist because of her threats to tell.
Myst15ical: Don't be afraid about what others have
to say. This is something that I have dealt with a long time and people don't
understand, so they say dumb things. Get help!! Don't be afraid to get help
because we all need help. You can't do this on your own.
lonelyhearted: I haven't cut in almost a year and I
know how hard it is. I pray that you can continue on the same path.
KarinAnne: Is anyone a parent that SI's? I have two
children and sometimes they are the only thing (next to my therapist) that
keeps me from hurting myself.
David: Janay, here is the next question:
MansonNails: I'd like to know what it was about the
therapists Janay didn't like and how could they have acted differently that
perhaps may have gotten Janay to be helped more by them?
Janay: Well, basically they would tell my mom the
majority of the things I said and they would tell me how I felt when no one but
me knows how I feel. I resented that. I had (still have?) a bad ass attitude
and if I decided I didn't like someone initially, that was just it. They were
too condecending towards me. I didn't want to be treated like a two year old.
Marquea: What things are you doing now to
keep you from Self
Injury?
Janay: I work and I go to ROP. It's like job
training. It's in a daycare. I can't be around the kids with fresh wounds. As
it is, they see my scars. They finger them. They say "Miss Janay, what
happened?" They say "Miss Janay has a lot of owies." It makes me
want to cry. If only for them, I can't do it. They don't need to be exposed to
that.
I'm determined to be
functional - work. I have scars, deep ones, all over my left arm that will
never go away. Employers don't want to hire someone with
tons of scars. I have enough; I don't need to make new
ones. People talk, anyway. People ask, they're nosy.
cassiana1975: Have you taken meds in order to stop
SI-ing?
Janay: I used to. Not for the SI though, for
depression and stuff. I stopped because they made me either incredibly nervous
to where I was shaking constantly or they made me gain weight and worsened my
eating habits. I don't take meds anymore, and I'm fine.
David: A few site notes here and then we'll continue
with more questions:
We have several excellent
sites that deal with many aspects of self-injury:
A Healing Touch and Vanessa's "Blood Red" site. Also, if you haven't been to any of
our Self Injury support
groups, I encourage you to join in. We have trained hosts who run each
group. They do a great job and we get lots of email from our visitors talking
about what a great experience it is.
Here is the schedule for the Self Injury support groups. Of
course, we have hosted support groups on our site for many other mental health
topics. For more details and the schedule of all support groups at
HealthyPlace.com,
click here.
We are looking for MALE
self-injurers to be journalers in the HealthyPlace.com Self Injury Community
and keep online diaries of their experiences. If you are interested in doing
that, here is the
signup link. Also, if you are a PARENT of a self-injurer
and would like to join the journaling community, please click the link above
and fill out the very short online application. You can
read the self injury journals and post your comments on the
journalers' bulletin boards.
If you haven't been on the
main HealthyPlace.com site yet, I invite you to take a look.
There are over 10,000 pages of content. And finally, here's the link to the
HealthyPlace.com Self Injury
Community. You can click on this link and sign up for the mail list at the
top of the page so you can keep up with events like this.
David: Here are some more audience comments, then
we'll get to the next question:
jjjamms: I kept my SI a
secret for over 35 years. My earliest memory of SI was at 5 years old. I think
it must be really hard on children or teenagers. I didn't even know other
people did what I was doing until about 5 years ago!
loonee: I thought therapists weren't allowed to tell
anything you said to them. Mine never did. I decided for myself to tell my mum.
My shrink had nothing to do with that.
jess_d: Being in the hospital was the worst thing in
the world for me. It did absolutely nothing. I also want to say that not all
parents have the same reaction as Janay's mom.
My parents got me help
and supported me completely in my struggle to stop and still support me
even when I have relapses.
hurtin: I changed to a therapist that I can talk to
about any aspect of my self injuring without them trying to save me. That helps
immeasurably. I am currently dealing with sporadic bouts, rather than it being
a daily ritual.
David: Here's the next question:
loonee: Janay, did you find that hearing of the
experiences and methods of others triggered you to injure more?
Janay: Not really. It makes me sad, and I want to
help them. It doesn't trigger me unless I am unstable at the time and wanting
to cut already.
rekowall: How do you
keep from
cutting when the need becomes unbearable?
Janay: I think of the kids. I'm going to be a
preschool teacher. It isn't something a teacher does. Or I cry and
hyperventilate ( a lot), but afterwards I'm exhausted and I fall asleep.
space715: Hospitalization has been suggested to me
if I can't keep from SI-ing. What do you do in the hospital?
Janay: For me, the hospital is a bunch of BS. I've
heard people say it was positive for them though. Basically, you wake up at 6
a.m., have morning group, breakfast, shower and have about a million more
groups all day; like anger management, drug and alcohol group, affirmation,
occupational therapy, etc. Things that cover the "issues" of the
majority of patients along with a 5 minute daily meeting with a psychitrist who
puts you on meds. You'll see this person maybe a total of 20-30 minutes your
whole stay.
David: Here's an audience suggestion on how to keep
from cutting when you feel the need to:
KarinAnne: I've used rubber bands (to snap on my
wrist) at times, but it's been 2 weeks and tension mounts when I don't take
things out on myself.
David: Janay, I have a question, and I want to add
here that I am not putting you down, but I'm wondering if you felt if you just
weren't ready for treatment. We had a guest recently who said, if you are not
ready for treatment,
there's nothing in the world anyone can do to help.
Janay: I wasn't ready for treatment. I had nothing
else to hold onto. They were trying to take away my coping methods without
replacing them with ones I found were adequate replacements.
MellyNCo: It sounds like past therapists were
violating Janay's confidentiality, and the resentment is understandable.
However, I'd like to ask Janay, if you stop injuring for other people, instead
of yourself, does that also stir up resentment?
Janay: It depends on the person. To be honest, I
wouldn't do it for myself. I hate myself, which is something I'm still trying
to get over. If I love a person, I'd do anything for them. It doesn't make me
resent them because I love them. I don't know - it's different. I need that
motivation from another person.
David: How has the
self injurious behavior affected your other relationships,
in terms of having friends, etc.?
Janay: I've lost a lot of them. I push people
away... I hide things... I'm tired of losing people over it.
David: What do you tell people (adults) about your
scars, if they ask?
Janay: lol, at school the counselor told me to tell
people I got bit by a dog, but the scars are obviously intentional. If a person
is nosy enough to ask, I tell the truth. "I got upset, I took a razor,
pressed it down and pulled it across my arm." Good for shock value anyway;
they leave me alone. If they don't go away and they ask more, I walk away. It
annoys me.
David: Here are some more audience comments on what
we're talking about tonight:
loonee: I told my mum I was attacked by a dog before
I told her the truth. I still say that to anyone who asks. I wasn't ready for
treatment for about 5 years. I didn't want to stop. It was all I knew would
stop the pain, even if only temporarily. I have tried to stop for other people;
it worked for awhile but eventually I got sick of it. I just hid it better. I
wore long sleeves and withdrew from them. I had to want it for myself before I
could stop.
rotten_insides: One night, while I was having a
cigarette outside at a concert, I overheard these 12-15 year olds talking
FREELY about how they CUT themselves and how
DEPRESSED
they are. I was standing behind them, watching them and feeling ill, while
listening to them speak of slicing open their arms and how it's
"cool" watching the blood run down your arm. One says, "if you
use a razor blade, you can actually cut REALLY deep and watch your wound split
wide open." The other says, "Yeah, but I'm too scared to hurt
myself."
Janay: rotten, I see that too. I think those kids do
it because, for some reason, it's become the "cool" reject thing to
do. At school, kids would draw wounds on their arms or write things like
"insert razor here" on there wrists.
rotten_insides: I just don't understand people that
would go around showing off their scars.
shylacious: Here's what helped me.
EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing),
for dealing with
sexual abuse memories, led to a decrease in panic. Celexa
dealt with depression. It's easier to not cut. It's been one month.
tinirini2000: Do you feel better now that things
seem to be coming together?
Janay: Yea, I do. I am proud of myself for coming
this far.
tinirini2000: That's really good, Janay. I'm really
proud of you! You have come a long way! :-)
jess_d: I think it's really great that you're
talking to people about this. I know for me it makes me feel like I'm not alone
in my struggle.
David: One other thing I wanted to touch on tonight,
Janay. You are a black woman. I have been with
HealthyPlace.com for
14 months, since we opened, and have not heard of another black woman who
self-injures. Do you know of other black women who are invovled in self-injury?
Janay: I met two black girls in the hospital who
self injure, but I don't talk to them anymore. My dad is white, and I've grown
up in a white community. My mom and the rest of my family say I'm like this
because I hang around white people and I think I'm white. ::shrug:: go figure.
I know a couple of black guys that cut, though.
David: Here are a few more audience comments:
anaj2281: lol. We have a lot in common, Janay. I
cut, my father is white, my mother is black, and my name is Jana.
jess_d: My dad is white too and my mom is hispanic.
The rest of my family say I think I'm white, too, because I grew up with mostly
white kids.
loonee: rotten, I think that showing off scars is,
for some people, a way of dealing with what they do. Making a joke of the fact
that they do it may help them mask the reasons why they do it.
anaj2281: I self injure, and although I am
multiracial, I mainly consider myself black.
I want to remind everyone that
our new
Self-Injury bulletin board is up. You can reach it by
clicking on this link or by just clicking the
"forums/bulletin boards" button at our chat login page. You can't
miss it because it's hot pink. We're hoping this area will become another great
support area where you can share your stories, information, and experiences
with others. About once a month we will also be doing a special event in the
bulletin boards area, so look out for that in the newsletter.
David: I know it's getting very late. Thank you,
Janay, for being our guest tonight and for sharing this information with us.
And to those in the audience, thank you for coming and participating. I hope
you found it helpful. We have a very large and active community here at
HealthyPlace.com.
You will always find people in the chatrooms and interacting with various
sites. Also, if you found our site beneficial, I hope you'll pass our URL
around to your friends, mail list buddies, and others.
http://www.healthyplace.com
Thank you, again, Janay, for
sharing your life with us.
Janay: You're welcome. Thank you for inviting me.
David: Have a good night, everyone.
Disclaimer: We are not
recommending or endorsing any of the suggestions of our guest. In fact, we
strongly encourage you to talk over any therapies, remedies or suggestions with
your doctor BEFORE you implement them or make any changes in your
treatment.
We hold topical mental health chat conferences every Wed.
and Thurs. nights.
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