Of course, they have the best of intentions. The producers
who recently put on a show about a teenage girl committing suicide wanted to
raise awareness of the problem. They seem not to have considered that
glamorizing and normalizing teenage suicide might just incite more girls to do
the same.
The same applies to the newly glamorous condition of being
transgendered. Precious few people seem to understand that since we are dealing
with a belief and a conviction, the public presentation of the problem in the
media might very well be producing more cases.
Raising awareness is not the panacea that it is knocked up
to be. Writing in New York Magazine, Elizabeth King recounts her own experience
with cutting herself, but then moves on to ask a researcher in the field
about how the media promotes cutting.
She describes her experience:
I cut
myself for the first time at age 18, in the closet of my freshman dorm room. It
was late afternoon, and my roommates weren’t around. I snuck into the closet,
pulled a pink disposable shaving razor from underneath my socks and underwear
in the top drawer of my dresser, took off the protective cap, and dragged the
blade in a lateral direction across the top of my left thigh. I felt hot,
nervous, exhilarated, and guilty.
It’s not so much the why as the what? What are these people
trying to accomplish by slicing up and scarring their bodies:
It’s
well-established in medical research that most people who self-harm do so with
the intention of releasing and relieving psychological pain. By
inducing physical pain, the body is triggered to release endorphins, which
creates a natural effect similar to morphine, relieving the emotional pain. But
while the pain that drives the decision to self-harm comes from the inside, the
idea to self-harm itself is very much external.
Looking back at her experience King remarks that she
suffered the influence of a television show, called 7th Heaven. But
she also recalls a discussion that she learned in middle-school. These gave her
the idea:
I was
deeply depressed when I started cutting, but in the moments leading up to the
first time I hurt myself, I wasn’t thinking about my problems so much as a
once-popular and very wholesome TV show I watched with my family: 7th Heaven. The family drama about a
pastor, his wife, and their seven kids was popular in the late 1990s, and
featured plotlines meant to address family dynamics and the low-hanging
social-issue fruit of the day. The episode I had in mind was from 1998, where the third-oldest
child in the family, Lucy, has a friend who cuts herself.
When my
mental health deteriorated during my freshman year of college, I remember
thinking that self-harm was what one did when severely depressed. It seemed
like the logical extension of what I was feeling, a connection I’d
unconsciously begun to make back when I first learned about the concept of
self-harm in my middle-school health class: The way the teacher had described
it — a way of gaining control, a brief relief of pain, and so on — sounded to
me, in hindsight, like treatment instructions for severe depression. I’ve often
wondered if I would have felt the same way about cutting had I never heard
about it in school or on television. There’s a historical precedent for
self-harm, and in each case, it’s a learned social behavior. If I’d never been
taught about self-harm, would I ever have started doing it? Would anyone?
Surely, the teacher was trying to warn children against
self-harm. And yet, to a middle school student like Elizabeth King, it sounded
like a treatment program.
King turned to Janis Whitlock, a leading researcher, for
some insight:
According
to Janis Whitlock, the director of Cornell’s Research
Program on Self-Injury and Recovery, there’s no definitive answer, but it
seems nearly certain that there is no biological imperative to self-harm. In
fact, humans naturally have the opposite impulse: to be physically safe and
healthy.
Through
her research, Whitlock has found that there are two primary ways that
individuals will begin to self-injure. The first is by accident: One young woman
that Whitlock had worked with told her that one day, she had accidentally
scraped her leg against the sharp edge of a table while she was experiencing a
lot of emotional pain. Noticing the slight relief and distraction that
came with the physical pain in her leg, the patient got the idea that she could
reproduce this sensation through intentional self-harm.
She continues:
But for
those who don’t happen upon self-harm by chance, the idea comes from peers, pop
culture, and school settings, Whitlock says: Between exposure to peers who
self-injure and depictions in the media, it is “really uncommon for a young
person not to have come across it” in some fashion. Everyone knows it’s out
there, and some people end up seeing it as an option.
Whitlock
explains that these days, young people who self-injure almost always fall into
this second camp. Whitlock observed the pop-culture effect on self-harm while
working with self-injuring teenagers in the 2000s, a time when explicit
pop-culture references to self-harm had been showing up for a couple of
decades.
The antidote,
Whitlock says, is to avoid invoking these pop-culture representations when
educating teenagers about self-harm. In fact, she adds, the best prevention
strategy may be not to dwell on it at all – focusing on self-harm in health
education, psychological settings, or peer-to-peer support scenarios can also
backfire.
Keep this all in mind when considering how the
ambient culture produces different types of mental afflictions. Or better, how
its wish to raise awareness about problems ends up causing more of the problem…
by giving people ideas.
Reminds me of the article, I believe you referenced, about anti-bullying programs leading to more sophisticated bullies.
ReplyDeleteUnintended consequences are everywhere in the rush to be first with the latest psych bullshit.
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ReplyDeleteIf you want to learn about self-harm you can go to wikipedia, but maybe information alone isn't as powerful as drama.
ReplyDeletehttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Self-harm
I recall seeing a movie "A man called horse" about an English man capture by a native American tribe, and an initiation ceremony where they hooked bones through people's chest, and tied to a post with ropes and they walked around in a circle until they'd finally fall and the bones were ripped out of the flesh.
Many would consider male circumcision as mutilation, although it's easier perhaps to do to babies who will cry regardless, and won't likely remember what happened.
The most popular form of mutilation must be tattoos and piercings, and perhaps there is a masochism in that submission to pain, even if art comes out.
All of these are largely irreversible, and of various degrees of social acceptability, while all being personally repulsive, unless Freud's death instinct has some reality that overpowers our resistance to self-harm.
And for women, child birth was the ultimate risk of self-harm, and yet perhaps surviving that ordeal is partly what creates the material instinct for protecting her offspring with her own life.
Some strength may only come by passing through pain, and it may be self-harm triggers some of those survival systems that never wake up without the pain. But obviously there's no safe way through, and less safe alone, whatever this imagined deeper strength is about.
There's no world I'd encourage self-harm, but I'm not sure if dramatizing it causes more harm than good as long as irrationality exists. If the choice is between risking death in self-mutilation, and suicide, I'll promote the first as better.