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SUPPORTING A SELF-INJURER<\/h2>\n

Someone you care about has honored you by trusting you with information about their self-injury, or maybe you’ve inadvertently discovered it. Regardless of how you found out, you know about it now, and you can’t pretend it away — you have to respond in some way. Here are some guidelines for dealing with SI in a friend or family member.<\/p>\n

Don’t take it personally.<\/p>\n

Self-injurious behavior is more about the person who does it than about the people around him\/her. The person you’re concerned about is not cutting, burning, hitting, or whatever just to make you feel bad or guilty. Even if it feels like a manipulation, it probably isn’t intended as one. People generally do not SI to be dramatic, to annoy others, or to make a point.<\/p>\n

Educate yourself.<\/p>\n

Get as much information as you can about self-injury in general. This page is a good start; there are also some very informative books out there (in particular, Bodies Under Siege by Favazza, The Scarred Soul by Alderman, and A Bright Red Scream by Strong). The Favazza book is more scholarly in tone, the Alderman book is oriented toward self-help, and Strong’s book presents the voice of self-injurers talking about what they do and why — it lets you inside the mind of people who SI. All contain much valuable information and advice.<\/p>\n

Understand your feelings.<\/p>\n

Be honest with yourself about how this self-injury makes you feel. Don’t pretend to yourself that it’s okay if it’s not — many people find self-injury repulsive, frightening, or provoking (Favazza, 1996; Alderman, 1997). If you need help dealing with the feelings aroused in you by self-injury, find a good therapist. Be careful, though, that you not try to get “surrogate therapy” for your family member\/friend — what goes on in your therapy sessions should remain between you and your therapist. Don’t ask your therapist to try to diagnose or treat the person you’re concerned about, and if the self-injurer seeks treatment, be sure that s\/he is seeing a different therapist than you are. Don’t discuss the content of your therapy sessions in any but the most general terms, and never say anything like “My therapist says you should…” Therapy is a tool for self-understanding, not for getting others to change.<\/p>\n

Be supportive without reinforcing the behavior.<\/p>\n

It’s important that your friend, lover, child, sibling know that you can separate who they are from what they do, and that you love them independently of whether they self-injure. Be available as much as you can be. Set aside your personal feelings of fear or revulsion about the behavior and focus on what’s going on with the person.<\/p>\n

Some good ways of showing support include:<\/p>\n