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Self Harm as a Sign of Hope

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Title: Self Harm as a Sign of Hope


1
Self Harm as a Sign of Hope
  • Anna Motz
  • Consultant Clinical and Forensic
    Psychologist, Past President IAFP

2
Self Harm as a Sign of Hope
  • Anna Motz
  • Consultant Clinical and Forensic Psychologist,
    Past President IAFP
  • October 2009

3
Self Harm as a Sign of Hope
  • In the hopeful moment...the environment must be
    tested and re-tested in its capacity to stand the
    aggression, to prevent or repair the destruction,
    to tolerate the nuisance, to recognise the
    positive element in the antisocial tendency
    (Winnicott, 1956.)

4
Self Harm as Violence against the Self
  • In self harm, rage is split off and projected
    onto the body
  • The body as an object to be written on, tortured,
    and at times, mutilated
  • The mind is preserved as a safe place, as psychic
    pain is discharged onto body, and the body
    withstands this.

5
Self Harm as Hidden Violence
  • Typically female expression of violence
  • Often directed at hidden parts of the body
  • Woman are using one part of themselves as an
    object onto which to target rage
  • Releases tension, pain, feeling, and replaces
    thought

6
Development of Violence
  • Failure to mentalise (Fonagy and Target 1999.)
  • Violence, aggression directed against the body,
    may be closely linked to failures of
    mentalisation, as the lack of capacity to think
    about mental states may force individuals to
    manage thoughts, beliefs, and desires in the
    physical domain, primarily in the realm of body
    states and processes. (Fonagy and Target 1999
    53)
  • Objectification of oneself and othersno real
    sense of subjectivity.

7
Cycle of Violence
  • Cycle of violence develop violent fantasies as
    release, escape (Welldon, 1988)---failure of
    fantasies to comfort, discharge tension.
  • Addiction to violent actionagainst the self or
    others
  • Compulsion to act-brings short-lived sense of
    euphoria
  • Release only temporary toxic affect returns

8
A Psychological Model of Female Violence (Motz,
2001)
  • Violence seen primarily as communication
  • As a response to powerlessness
  • Solution (however maladaptive it seems)to
    underlying psychological difficulties
  • For women often hidden, in the home, against the
    self, in secret, private places

9
Self-harm as an Act of Hope
  • Assault the environment (the body) to see what it
    can withstand, and provide
  • Allows the mind to be freed temporarily of toxic
    material, painful memories
  • Expression of unarticulated feelings
  • Ultimately an attempt to reach out to others in
    the hope of a response attempt at relating

10
Self Harm as Communication
  • Self harm is distinct from suicide or suicide
    attempts
  • paradoxically, self-injury is usually a life
    sustaining act
  • It is communication through the use of violence
    against the self, and its impact

11
Clinical Illustration
  • Self Harm as Life Preservative Violence

12
Scalding, Blood-letting and Cutting Miss Y
  • Miss Y was a 34 year old resident of a
    therapeutic community on a forensic unit
  • She had a history of physical abuse and
    emotional neglect, suspected sexual abuse
  • At times of great distress she poured pouring
    water on herself, cut herself and meticulously
    drained blood from wounds

13
A Platform for Performance
  • Miss Y described being in the TC ward unhelpful
    it encouraged histrionic and public expressions
    of distress
  • She preferred to hurt herself in private and then
    present herself to the staff much later, once her
    wounds or burns had healed
  • She admitted to enjoying taking care of her own
    injuries, but then showing them to others, and
    seeing the scars heal over time

14
Bodily Countertransference Initial
  • My eyes were drawn to her dramatic, visible
    scars, forming criss cross pattern all over her
    arms--I felt sick and compelled to stare
  • I had a powerful urge to interrupt the session to
    leave being in the room was almost unbearable
  • Sight of naked arms with scars, mottled flesh
    compelling and alarming

15
Therapy Stages and Themes
  • Introduction Creativity and Seduction
  • Poetry-presenting me with realms of written work
  • Images-verbal, visual, visceral
  • Dream diaries-filled to the brim
  • Developing trust and hinting at untold and
    unbearable secrets

16
Retreat from Therapy
  • After this initial outpouring of thoughts,
    feelings (first three months of therapy)Miss Y
    began to retreat into a non verbal state
  • I can think only in images, and flashes, not
    words
  • Intensification in self harm--internal and
    external
  • Lying down in the sessions, curling up,
  • Despair at thought of stopping self harm I feel
    I will have lost my best friend

17
Violence to Self as Displacement
  • Miss Y became terrified that as she gradually
    gave up her self-harm activities she would become
    more likely to attack others, or set fires (as
    she once had)
  • She revealed that blood letting had followed her
    own experience of a life-threatening operation
    -sense of power, control and omniscience-knew
    what was inside

18
Cutting up and Cutting out
  • Afer initial reduction in self harm, Miss Y
    became very scared, and then a period followed
    where self harm intensified, and then periods of
    time when she was silent, rocking, and
    dissociated.
  • Cutting internally, a letter to tell me she is
    storing up weapons to use against herself.
  • Loss of focus in powerful and unreachable states
    of pure dissociation--I am cut out and words are
    lost--she has withdrawn.

19
Bodily Countertransference-Intensified
  • As the self harm becomes more evident my mind is
    assaulted more powerfully and my body is
    hyper-responsive to her communications.
  • I respond with intense visceral, physical
    feelings to the projections that are put into me.
  • Primitive defences are expressed in this way and
    the violence is enacted in part through my
    responses--my thinking is attacked and my body
    brought increasingly into play.

20
Amnesty and Recovery
  • After this crisis period of several weeks, where
    she returned to self-harming, Miss Y, gradually
    became less preoccupied with it, and focussed on
    words, on art materials and on engaging in
    therapy and with the team
  • She handed in her secret supplies of razors,
    safety pins and broken cd cases sense of trust
    in the capacity of staff to keep her weapons
    from her, and hold her in mind

21
Meaning of Miss Ys self harm
  • Body as text
  • Physical mode of expressing psychic pain
  • Making private experiences public
  • Showing not saying, in dramatic and tangible form

22
The Signficance of Self Injury Understanding
its Symbols
  • The significance of the body parts that are
    harmed
  • Arms evoke mothers--that are intended to hold
    and comfort, but in this case, have not.
  • Arms that could reach out, but instead, fold in,
    keeping away.
  • Arms that held her down and beat her.
  • Scars all over, keep people away, no touch, no
    holding
  • Public expression of private pain (Adshead) and
    concrete symbol of this secret trauma.

23
Lace-making in the Dark
  • Slow and gradual engagement-profound difficulties
    in trusting me
  • Inevitable moments of regression, and worsening
    of violent fantasies and behaviour.
  • Danger of my recreating neglectful or perverse
    parenting, potential to re-enact earlier
    abuse,/abandonment or intrusion

24
Powerful Functions of Self Harm
  • Miss Y used it to ward off thoughts of suicide,
    or other forms of emotional disorganisation life
    sustaining coping mechanism
  • Released tension
  • Communication through her use of her body
    (sometimes directly in the form of viscerally
    felt projections) of her mental state

25
Choosing Physical over Psychic Pain
  • Elements of control, self-regulation of the
    physical, secrecy, risk taking and privacy
    demonstrate the degree of conscious choice when
    and how to self harm
  • This does not preclude the possiblity of
    unconscious motivations that take the form of
    compulsionsthe violent thought cannot be kept in
    the mind

26
Self harm as Affective Communication
  • Idea of signing with a scar (Straker, 2006)
  • Using the marks on the body to signify ones
    state of mind to another
  • Language of the body seen as more primitive,
    direct form of communication than words
  • Primacy and directness of bodily states and the
    immediacy/violence of their voice

27
Psychological Motivations(self-directed)
  • Feeling real
  • Distraction
  • Expression of anger
  • Get out of intolerable state
  • Affect regulation
  • Assert sense of control
  • Create sense of ownership of own body

28
Self Harm and Life Preservation
  • Reflects a choice between chaos, gray submersion
    in depression and articulated, delineated
    feeling-focusses the mind
  • Self harm creates a boundary between feeling and
    not feeling, gives shape, time, colour and
    substance to sense of total deadness or
    fear-creates a dimension
  • Brings back the feeling of being real (alive),
    contact with external world when numb

29
Psychological Motivations(other directed)
  • Generate response in others, including medical
    treatment, suturing, cutting of ligature.
    nursing
  • Attack carers who fail to protect
  • Communicate rage and distress
  • Defence against intimacy (regulate distance)
  • Keep people at bay-warped skin as barrier
  • Enlist help, support or concern

30
Self Harm as Truth-telling
  • Attack on beauty
  • Through mutilation the self-harmer wants to
    reveal underlying internal damage
  • She is demonstrating that there is something
    real, hurt and ugly underneath the surface
  • The brutality of self-harm is felt to mirror the
    violence of being seen (only) as a thing of beauty

31
Hurting as a kind of healing
  • Paradoxical nature of self-harm
  • Fantasy of toxic elimination
  • Reality of release of intolerable feeling
  • Distraction from psychic pain
  • At times some pleasure in the pain
  • Driven by the hope of healing

32
Talisman
  • Significance of scar is profound
  • How deep is your damage?
  • Marking on the flesh invisible wounds
  • Mapping memories
  • Physical, tangible evidence of wound
  • Symbol of passing through initiation of sorts
    (anthropological evidence of significance of
    scarification)

33
Dialectical Movements in Self Harm
  • The split self graphically articulated
  • The self plays different roles in relation to
    itself
  • It is both aggressor, harmer
  • And the target of the violence
  • And finally, the Nurse part of the self who can
    tend the wounds, soothe the injuries and act as
    witness to these.

34
The Divided SelfVictim/Perpetrator
  • Identification with the aggressor (Anna Freud,
    1936)
  • Here body represents the victim, the mind that
    chooses to attack it is in identification with
    the aggressor, as it inflicts pain on the body

35
Childhood Sexual and Physical Abuse and its Link
to Self Harm
  • Links with shame, guilt, secrets, taboo
  • Use of the body as site of shame, trauma and
    memory
  • Repeats violations of the skin
  • Dissociation associated with severe abuse and
    with self harm

36
Self harm as Affect Regulation
  • Way of escaping intolerable states of mind
  • Releasing high levels of anxiety, depression and
    anger
  • Controlled method of managing emotions at times
    of increased and unbearable stress
  • Use of violence against the self to distract from
    guilt of fantasies of violence against others

37
Female Perversion
  • Womens anger turned against the self
  • Defence against intimacy
  • Secret and powerful expression of rage
  • Cycle of behaviour, thoughts, feelings and
    fantasies that has an addictive, compulsive
    quality--with euphoric sense of release
  • Symbolic attack on mothers body
  • Enjoyment (at some level) of secrecy, rituals,
    risk-taking and damage

38
Self Harm as Violence to Others
  • The witnesses to self harm, carers who failed to
    protect, are indirect targets of rage
  • Tremendous symbolic hostility and
    violence--murderous attack on the mothers body
  • Generates feelings of pain, disgust, horror and
    guilt in carers

39
Reciprocal Violence

Consultant psychiatrist Tim Kendall, the
co-director of Royal College of Psychiatrists
said that in extreme cases doctors and nurses had
stitched up patients' self-inflicted injuries
without giving them an anaesthetic. (seen as
undeserving of care or treatment as legitimate
injuries) The view some staff take is 'well you
cut yourself without anaesthetic so you don't
need one now'," said Dr Kendall.
40
Finding Unconscious Hope
  • Patients are trying to live with overwhelming
    emotional pain and project this into staff
    through various communications such as self
    injury, very direct sexualised communications,
    physical assaults and vicious personalised
    attacksthe unconscious hope is that the nursing
    staff can do something positive with the
    communication.,. (Aiyegbusi, 2004)

41
Managing Self Harm and its Impact
  • Supporting staff teams through Reflective
    Practice
  • Supervision
  • Retaining neutrality
  • Working under fire
  • Acknowledging countertransference
  • Understanding underlying meaning

42
Self Harm as a Sign of Hope
  • It is essential to understand the underlying
    meaning of self harm
  • Self harm to be viewed as communication
  • Person who self-harms should be offered help to
    de-code their bodily language, and put into
    words, what needs to be articulated
  • It is also crucial that the affective content of
    communication can be borne, and contained
  • Through responding to the request for contact
    change becomes possible.

43
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