This is an article I have written in hopes that it will open your eyes.
Cutting is an addiction that many choose to ignore. Some do not even know that their children do it, or even some adults. It is an addiction that is hidden by long shirts and pants. Hidden behind lies such as "Oh, I scrapped myself trying to find something under my bed". Which is an excuse I once used. Many people do not understand the logistics of it, nor do they find how it helps at all. The question to from those who do not understand is, "How can a cutter replace mental pain with physical pain?" They ask questions like "Doesn't it hurt?" or "What do you use?" The answer which seems to be the same from many cutters I have met (as well as myself) is, that it hurts the first few times and then after that just watching the blood flow is like a release. What people use depends on how much pain they are in. For anger and aggression many use glass, pocket knives, razor blades, and anything with a dangerous sharp edge. For pain that is minimal such as bad grades or failure in something dull is used, such as paper clips, safety pins and staples. My tools were razor blades, paper clips, safety pins, and staples. These objects even as small as a paper clips or staples are dangerous. This is not an addiction to be ignored. It is time the world come to realize the dangers of this addiction. One cut too deep can mean death, and just because one does not cut deep at all does not mean it is O.K.
Some people start by stumbling upon it, hearing that someone else does it or they found physical pain such as scraping a knee on concrete actually felt good. For me, I became so nervous that I would scratch myself repetitively in the same area of my arm and would not notice until my finger was wet with blood. I found that it felt good and i no longer felt nervous. After that i still scratch but found that the scabs were too big and had to find something "better" to use. I switched to paper clips. They were easy access from my moms desk at home or even teachers desks at school. Between classes I would go into the bathroom, find a stall, prop my foot on the toilet seat lid, pull down my sock and attack my ankle with what ever object I had that day. Rather than cutting up and down following the vein, I did right to left, minimizing the risk. I thought I was fine, that I wasn't doing anything dangerous because I wasn't cutting too deep. Watching the blood gave reason for my pain as often times I felt mental pain so strong and it seemed to come from no where. It made me feel alone. I didn't know anyone else who cut so I thought I was weird and thus, I began to hate myself for doing it. I thought I was smart. I cut the same areas over again. Lies were becoming harder and harder to make. Pretty soon I was wearing long sleeves and pants. My family had no idea and neither did some of my friends. A couple times I was caught in my friends house on the bathroom floor, crying because I did it again.
Between all my agony from failing math test after math test and science test after science test, being teased and humiliated, yelled at, etc. I had had enough. One day, while no one was home I had attempted my first suicide. I hung a belt on the rod of my closet, looped it around my neck, put my red childhood stool beneath my feet, and razor in hand. I made a cut on each wrist that bled heavily, kicked the stool away, and hung there. I realized in the few second I was hanging between life and death that a) I didn't want to die and b) that while cutting felt good I shouldn't do it. I somehow untangled the belt from my neck and was free. No one in my family knows of this attempt. While i came to the conclusion that day that cutting wasn't the way to go, after a while i realized it was "all i had". My mother found out that i cut myself my junior year of High School. We were on vacation visiting my cousins for their birthday party. I was changing in front of my mother because I had no other choice, when she spotted squares carved into my hip area, which i had completely forgotten I did. Her face was shocked with horror, she said, "I don't understand this at all. I just don't but when we get home you are seeing a doctor about this." So there I started my long journey through therapy. I started going once every week, then it trickled to once every month, the two months, and now three. I was diagnosed as anxious, then obsessive compulsive, then depressed, manic depressed, and now bi-polar. I put on drug after drug to see what would help balance my moods. It was supposed to help me stop cutting. But I have learned that an addiction cannot be stopped by drugs, because sometimes they too become addicting and the person with the addiction has to want to stop. I did not want to stop until just last year, two years after i graduated from high school and four grueling years of being addicted to cutting, Vicodin, pot, Ambien, sleep aids, and numerous suicide attempts. My wake up call came when i took a co-worker, who was also a friend who cut, to the hospital for overdosing on his medication. They took his shirt off and i saw that his whole body was covered in long up and down scars. I realized then that I had to stop because eventually I would be just like him. This did not mean i changed over night. I have had many relapses since then and many days of struggling not to cut.
I have survived my cutting and other addictions by having supportive friends and family. The drive to see past the past and on to the future living day by day was and is very hard. There will be times when your hands shake and your mind become restless. Your hands want to keep busy because you want to cut. What helps is talking about it to someone. Most responses to that is, "How does that help?" It is a healthy way of voicing your feelings. It lets out what you see bleed out. Take up an activity that keeps your hands and body busy such as writing, playing cards, or playing sports. I have been down this road. Playing soccer game after soccer game and exercising. Many times I have relapsed but at those times I did not have anyone to talk some sense into me. It helps to call someone and just let them know how you feel at that moment. It does help and you can get through it.
There is hope and you have it in you. This website is for you. You are not alone. In this website you will read about my experiences and can ask questions and talk about your life.
There is a slice of hope, it about opening your wounded heart and sharing and talking about how you feel.
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