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Home > Cutting Self Mutilation

Cutting, self-mutilation and self-harm behaviors – should piercing be included?

January 19, 2005
By:  Bob Whitehead

Recently, modern psychology had turned its eye to the growing prevalence of self-abusing behaviors. Most common among young women, cutting, self-mutilation, and other self-harm behaviors such as intentional burning are on the rise.

This begs the question of where body modifications fit within the self-injury construct. How are ritualistic cuts and burns different from those that are inflicted by “cutters,” as people who engage in self-mutilation are called? Some people may even view piercing as a form of self-abuse. It can be addictive, after all, and it does involve levels of pain and adrenaline that can be exhilarating.

The deceptively simple answer is intent. People who engage in self-harming behaviors by stubbing cigarettes out on their bodies or using a knife to create incisions along a limb have usually done so with a different intent than someone who gets lots of body piercings. Piercing is about celebrating the body, adorning it, and personalizing it. Self-abuse involves inflicting physical pain as a means of escape.

People cut as a means of dealing with emotional pain. The physical pain of the cut overshadows anything else and is a form of release. It’s also a means of control, much like anorexia nervosa can be. For those who feel like their lives are slipping out of their grasp, mutilation presents a tantalizing modicum of control. A cutter can control the amount of pain she’s in with her knife.

Piercing isn’t included in these behaviors because it generally has a more positive intent behind it. In fact, for some people recovering from self-abuse behaviors, piercing can be a way to help learn to celebrate the body rather than harm it. However, if someone does get a piercing with the intent of inflicting pain on the body, piercing would then be included in self-abusing practices.

If you are, or know someone who is, a cutter, please talk to a professional or a trusted friend, or visit SAFE.

About the Author:
Bob Whitehead is a successful freelance writer and publisher of http://www.body-jewelry-useek.com.  Body jewelry, piercing and tattooing information you seek to perfectly adorn your body.

Also See:  [ An overview of the practice of body suspension ]
[ What scarification is and how it is performed? ]
[ Some facts about body branding ]

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