Attacks on the body: How can we understand self-harm?
- 1 October 1996
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Psychodynamic Counselling
- Vol. 2 (4) , 463-475
- https://doi.org/10.1080/13533339608402471
Abstract
Self-harm is about communication. It is like a scream without sound: painful, distraught, frightening and perplexing. It can be confusing and terrifying for those who witness it and for those who do it. In this paper, I shall attempt to explore some thoughts about how we can begin to understand acts of self-injury and their implications for clinical work. My hypothesis is that self-injury is a symptom. This symptom may take the place of words, and functions as a means of communication. In particular, I will be suggesting that self-injury is a specific consequence of childhood abuse. Recent statistics from research at ‘Hackney Off Centre’ indicate that for those young people that self-injure, 75 per cent have been sexually abused in childhood. (These statistics bear close resemblance to Bristol Crisis Service for Women and 42nd Street 1995 among others.)Keywords
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