Self-Destruction

Self-destructive behaviours | Self-defeating behaviours | Self-handicapping | Self-sabotage | Self-harm

self-destruction

SELF-DESTRUCTION is one of seven basic character flaws or “dark” personality traits. We all have the potential for self-destructive tendencies, but in people with a strong fear of losing self-control, Self-Destruction can become a dominant pattern.

What Is Self-Destruction?

Self destruction is usually defined as “The voluntary destruction of something by itself.”

In human personality terms, we are really talking about counter-productive and self-defeating habits which deny oneself happiness but can instead cause pain, either deliberately or inadvertently. Self-destruction in the literal sense of suicide is the most extreme form. Mostly, however, it is more subtle, such as repeatedly committing “professional suicide”. It’s an umbrella term for a variety of self-damaging patterns, from doing things that always seem to backfire, to habitual self-harm, to crazy recklessness.

Despicable Me

As with the opposite trait of greed, self-destruction represents a dysfunction in a person’s fundamental relationship with life. A person with greed fears that something vital is lacking or missing from life, and so constantly needs to have more. A person with self-destruction, in contrast, feels that something fundamentally bad or toxic is consuming their life, and needs to keep this under strict control.

For example, there may be part of oneself that once suffered unbearable abuse or damage, perhaps way back in childhood. To revisit this part of the self is just too painful and scary.

Moreover, an anxious young person may think to themselves: “There must be something about me that provoked or attracted or deserved such treatment, for why else would it have happened?”  To give expression to this part of oneself once more could simply cause the same traumatic experiences to happen again. For example, Being pretty is what caused this, so I must never look pretty again.

Another good name for self-destruction could be self-denial. There is a splitting of the personality in which this “thing in me” is to be ignored and suppressed by any means possible, at whatever cost. The person feels that their very being must be kept under strict control.

Varieties of Self-Destruction

Again, the urge to “self-destruct” need not be literal or physical. In fact, there is a spectrum of self-destructive behaviours, from mild to risky to fatal.

The most widespread forms of self-destructive behaviour are eating disorders, alcohol abuse, drug abuse and compulsive gambling. Self-destruction can also take the form of self-sabotage or self-defeating behaviours—continually doing things which are bound to lead to one’s own failure or downfall.

Deliberate self-injury is surprisingly common in young people worldwide. It has also been linked with borderline personality disorder in adulthood, a chronic and difficult to treat condition characterized by impulsive behaviours, unstable mood swings and a tendency towards suicide. In fact, self-injurers are about 75 times more likely to kill themselves.

self-harm

Researchers have discovered a common pattern in such behaviour (see the diagram Precursors to Self Injury, below). The trigger (or “final straw”) is often a threat of separation, rejection or disappointment in life. This adds to feelings of overwhelming tension, isolation, self-hatred, and apprehension about being unable to control one’s own emotions. The increasing anxiety culminates in a frightening sense of unreality and emptiness that ultimately produces an emotional numbness or depersonalization.

Self-injury

Self-injury is usually a primitive way of coping with the emotional numbness. It is as if, by replacing one’s emotional pain with a physical one, life becomes more bearable. It is also easier to demonstrate that one is in pain when the injury is visible and physical rather than “just psychological”.

Famous Examples

Fiona AppleFiona Apple (b. 1977) is a Grammy-winning American singer-songwriter. At the age of twelve, Fiona was raped on her way home from school.

For years she continued to have nightmares. She would also check her closets to make sure no one was hiding in the house, and would be nervous around older men.

During her teens and the months she spent making her album, Tidal, she suffered with an eating disorder. In a 1998 Rolling Stone interview, she reflected on what this was like:

For me, it wasn’t about being thin, it was about getting rid of the bait attached to my body. A lot of it came from the self-loathing that came from being raped at the point of developing my voluptuousness. I just thought that if you had a body and if you had anything on you that would be grabbed, it would be grabbed. So I did purposely get rid of it.

Other self-destructive figures include:

  • Vincent Van Gogh
  • Sid Vicious
  • Kurt Cobain
  • Diana, Princess of Wales
  • Michael Jackson
  • Marilyn Manson
  • Christina Ricci
  • Amy Winehouse
  • Lindsay Lohan

Note that there is an added complication for self-destructive celebrities. The more they self-harm or take unhealthy risks with their lives, the more attention, controversy, and publicity they generate. As a result, the more successful they become (selling more records or whatever). This merely adds to the vicious circle of self-destruction. It’s as if the entire world wants to know all about the inner demons they are trying to suppress.

Development of Self-Destruction

Like all negative personality traits, self-destruction typically develops through the following sequence:

  1. Early negative experiences
  2. Misconceptions about the nature of self, life or others
  3. A constant fear and sense of insecurity
  4. A maladaptive strategy to protect the self
  5. A persona to hide all of the above in adulthood

Early Negative Experiences

In the case of self-destruction, the early negative experiences typically consist of a childhood abuse or trauma over which the child had no control. This kicks off the self-destructive behaviour, while lack of secure parental attachment helps maintain it.

Perhaps the father was a drunk who came home every night in a violent rage. Perhaps the mother was mentally unstable and would attack her children for no apparent reason. Or perhaps school teachers imposed a severe regime involving random punishments. The key factor leading to a self-destructive pattern is the child’s inability to control the onslaught of harm.

In addition, one or both parents may have been unable or unwilling to give the love, care and attention that were naturally craved by the child. So the child would have felt fundamentally alone in this terror, as well as feeling helpless to do anything about it.

Misconceptions

From such experiences of life as harsh, unpredictable and beyond control, the child comes to perceive ‘life’ as a horrible place and ‘self’ as a magnet for pain. Hence:

If life is so cruel then it is not worth living.
I wish I had never been born.

Being hurt so much means that I must be bad. Perhaps I don’t deserve to live.

Fear

Along on such ideas, the child becomes gripped by a complex fear — the fear of losing control. There are all sorts of ways in which this fear manifests —

  • losing control of one’s boundaries in intimate relationships;
  • losing control of the memory of trauma;
  • losing control of whichever part of oneself “attracts” trauma;
  • losing control of the urge to destroy that part of oneself once and for all.

In other words, the child is terrified of —

  1. repeating an earlier trauma,
  2. expressing whatever part of himself might attract such trauma, and
  3. unleashing his own desire to punish or eliminate that part of himself.

Those caught in self-destruction are thus embroiled in inner conflict.

Strategy

There are various strategies for coping with this complex issue, but the key is to maintain control of something.

My survival depends upon me taking back control of my life.

One increasingly common route, particularly among adolescent girls, is to take control of eating as a way to “suppress” the physical self. This is the basis of the condition known as anorexia nervosa.

Anxiety compels us to find some sort of self-protection, to feel that there is some way we can control what happens to us. But in many families, especially those with a stifling or oppressive atmosphere, there is simply no room for an anxious child undergoing puberty to exercise control over anything around them. Their very anxiety may be seen as an embarrassment, something to be hidden and never discussed.

So “substitute controls” start to appear, like obsessive-compulsive habits and superstitions. In effect, the need for control turns inwards. It’s like saying, “If I can’t do anything to this family, at least I can do something to myself.”

In many cases, mostly female, a sense of freedom and control is found in the act of eating — or rather, the choice to not eat. The ideal of being stick-thin, free from the desire to eat, seems to tick several boxes at once: “I get to be super-attractive, I feel a sense of personal power, I get a lot of attention from the rest of my family, and they have no way to take back control over my refusing to eat what they give me.”

In a metaphorical way, it’s like saying to the family, “I can’t stomach this any longer.”

Because they actually enjoy feeling some sense of control over their own lives, some self-destructive types will keep testing and pushing their degree of control—How much alcohol can I drink at once? Can I drink even more than the last time? How many drugs can I take and not die? How fast can I drive a motorbike and get away with it?

Every time they survive such an experience, it merely bolsters their belief that control in the face of danger is a necessary strategy. It’s like a superstition — So long as I’m wearing a yellow hat, no bears will eat me. But this false sense of control merely begs the question, prompted by the same fear: Is that the limit of my control? Or can I take an even bigger risk?

The constant need to push the edge of control, plus the fear of losing control and thereby experiencing both powerlessness and pain inside oneself, creates inner conflict and a rising tension which demands to be relieved. Being successful in life in whatever way will only serve to increase the tension, since there is even more need to keep everything bottled up and under control.

The self-destructive person may be therefore caught in a cycle between periods of grim self-control and explosive episodes in which a valve blows and some component of the conflict is set free.

The person is also likely to become addicted to these brief moments of relief, however destructive they may be in the long run.

For example, relief may be found in episodes of binge drinking. A massive dose of alcohol serves as an anaesthetic, eliminating the state of conflict, tension and terror for a while. It does nothing to resolve the basic underlying conflict or pain, however. In fact, the awful consequences of binge drinking merely serve to reinforce the fear of losing control at another level. And yet the brief relief it provides is irresistible to the point of becoming addictive.

All people are capable of this kind of behaviour. When it dominates the personality, however, one is said to have a chief feature of self-destruction.

Persona

Emerging into adulthood, a self-destructive young person probably does not want go around being overtly fearful, conflicted and self-destructive. Hence, the chief feature puts on a public mask which says to the world something like, “Everything’s under control. I only act this way because I want to.” “It’s just a bit of fun.” “I am naturally wild and reckless.” “I’m such a fearless rebel.” In other words, he or she tries to make the behaviour seem positive or cool, rather than a reaction to inner terror.

I think that self-destructiveness can also mean self-reflection, can mean poetic sensibility, it can mean empathy, it can mean a hedonism and a libertarianism and a lack of judgement.

Courtney Love

Like all chief features of false personality, self-destruction is a vicious circle—only in this case, the end result tends to be fatal. Early intervention is therefore crucial. The real danger is when the person with self-destruction starts to believe their own lie. At that point, the chief feature has won and the most likely outcome is an early death.

Positive and Negative Poles

In the case of self-destruction, the positive pole is termed SACRIFICE and the negative pole is termed IMMOLATION or SUICIDE.

Self-destruction poles

Sacrifice brings the habit of self-destruction under conscious control. It is a willingness to deliberately give up or lose something for a good reason, or for a good cause, rather than out of pure fear.

Sacrifice literally means “make sacred”, in the sense of making an offering to the gods. For example, virtually every primitive society in history has included animal sacrifice as part of its religion. A sacrificial offering can be as cheap and as simple as a flower or a stick of incense. Or it can be as valuable as one’s own life. The more valuable the offering, the greater the sacrifice and the more highly it is regarded.

Today we use sacrifice more generically to describe giving something up, doing without, accepting a minor loss as a way to avoid a greater loss, or in anticipation of later gain. For example, when playing chess we might sacrifice a pawn as a way to avoid losing the game.

A person with a chief feature of self-destruction can at least feel good every now and then about giving something up for the best. For example, instead of automatically sabotaging a new relationship, as is their habit, they can be open about it and offer to drop the relationship from the start, and thereby spare the other person later misery. An honest offering to another is more powerful than insidious self-sabotage.

Immolation also means sacrifice, especially ritual sacrifice by fire, but in this context we are talking about self-sacrifice or suicide.

In the early 1960s, many Vietnamese Buddhist monks set fire to themselves in protest at the then ruling regime. Western news media referred to these suicides as acts of “self-immolation”. In these cases, however, the manner of death is closer to martyrdom (suicide as a protest) than self-destruction (suicide as a relief).

In terms of the chief feature of self-destruction, immolation implies physical loss of life, either slowly or quickly, as a way to eliminate the conflict. For example, one person might drink himself to death over the course of a decade, while another might simply slash his wrists.

According to World Health Organization (WHO) estimates, in the year 2000, approximately one million people died from suicide, and 10 to 20 times more people attempted suicide worldwide. This represents one death every 40 seconds and one attempt every 3 seconds, on average. Suicide is now one of the three leading causes of death among young people. More people around the world are now dying from suicide than from armed conflict.

The majority of suicides occur in a context of psychological upheaval or crisis. In 90% of cases of actual suicide, a mental disorder prior to the event such as major depression can be identified. Studies of children and adolescents who commit suicide have found not only show a strong prevalence of stressful life events combined with mental disorder (depression, bipolar) but also a level of antisocial behaviour (unwillingness to comply with normal rules) and often an excessive consumption of alcohol or other drugs. In other words, suicide is more likely when a self-destructive tendency is reinforced or enabled through intoxication.

Handling Self-Destruction

As with every negative character feature, the key to handling self-destruction is becoming conscious of how it operates in oneself. Begin with the mask or persona:

  • Do I try to get others to perceive me as carefree, wild, crazy?
  • Do I tend to take risks and act recklessly more than others?

Try to catch yourself in the act of putting on your “devil-may-care” mask or whatever it is for you.

Then dig deeper:

  • Underneath that outer facade, am I really trying to keep everything under control?
  • It’s like I constantly need to prove that I am in total control. Why do I do this? What am I afraid of?
  • Why do I sometimes feel like I’d be better off dead? Is there some part of me that is unbeable or unacceptable?
  • What do I fear would happen if I opened up to this “other” me?
  • Do I just wish others could see, understand and accept the pain I am in?

Approaching the deepest level you may need outside help in the form of a counsellor, therapist or at least a close friend, perhaps even a psychiatrist, especially if you are tackling memories of abuse:

  • Where does this fear come from?
  • How was I hurt?

Just as you can become more aware of self-destructiveness through personal observation and self-enquiry, so too you can gain more control over it through that awareness and by exercising choice in the moment.

  • Whenever I am tempted to harm myself, I can ask myself what message I am trying to send to others. Then I can look for ways to convey that message more explicitly and skilfully.

Another way to handle a dominant negative trait (chief feature) is to “slide” to the positive pole of its opposite. When caught in the grip of immolation or suicide, the negative pole of self-destruction, balance can be found in the positive pole of greed, namely egoism, desire or appetite. In other words, you give attention to what you actually need or want, and communicate that to others.

Further Reading

Transforming Your Dragons

For an excellent book about the various negative patterns and how to handle them, see Transforming Your Dragons by José Stevens.

The 7 archetypes of fear - cover

Another great book about the seven character flaws, recently translated from the original German: The Seven Archetypes of Fear, by Varda Hasselmann and Frank Schmolke.

The Self-Sabotage Cycle For something more specifically about self-destruction, try: The Self-Sabotage Cycle (“Why we repeat behaviours that create hardships and ruin relationships”), by Stanley Rosner and Patricia Hermes.

A useful online information resource on self-destructive and self-harming behaviour is the Suicide and Mental Health Association International. It also includes a list of international hotlines.

There are also various online support groups for those affected by self-harm, self-injury, suicide or suicidal thoughts. An excellent starting point would be selfharm.org.

An informative article is Some kids like to hurt themselves at CNN Opinion by psychlogy professor Theodore Beauchaine.

For a TV item on the (pop) psychology of self-destructive celebrities, see:


The Seven Chief Features

Self-Deprecation | Self-Destruction | Martyrdom

| Stubbornness |

Greed | Arrogance | Impatience

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162 thoughts on “Self-Destruction”

  1. I get to a resolve, now what my issues are do real good for a little bit then fall back, I don’t understand.

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  2. I think you will find that the state of consciousness at the time of conception – the thoughts of the parents coupled with 9 months of incessant programming of conflict transmitted then to the embryo of it not being wanted, is enough to instill this code of self-destruct – aka virus of the soul.

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  3. Actually I don’t know enough English Language, that’s why I could not read full article, but I can try to express myself. And would like to express that I felt like myself guilty for all the problems Fiona Apple faced since her preteen age. But I can’t blame myself, my family members and friends for that guilt which have done by a person whose mind and body can be similar to other men. but other men’s mind and body are not similar to his dirty man. It looks that I am suffering from this self destructive behaviour from at least since 18 years which is more than half of my life because I am 30 now. Actually I am being treated by a psychiatrist in India for Bipolar Disorder, Social Anxiety, Obsessive Compulsive disorder, Post Traumatic Stress Disorder(which is now cured up to 65%). At once an another psychiatrist pointed to some kind of complex Personality Disorder in my symptoms and behaviour. But just a few minutes before i was talking about my failures which are not leaving my path and not doing justice with my non stop hard works and sacrifices of 18 years. I have been talking with a photograph of my late GrandMother on a wall till 2.5 hours. Then i could found a name of my very annoying behaviour which is not matching with the symptoms of my other Psychological Disorders. Actually my doctors (MBBS, MD, DM – Psychiatry) could not figure out about its symptoms because I didn’t discuss about this side of darkness from a mountain of my strange behaviours. It’s common in India that Psychiatrists surrounded by huge crowd could not be able to give more than 10 minutes to any patient. Then how can they understand all problems. They believe on their idiot assistant (manly trainee girls, who show interest in only depressed youngsters who have faced a breakup in a love relationship).

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    • Thank you sooo so much for sharing, your English is not that bad…you wrote very well and expressively, I too have been diagnosed as bipolar and with PTSD after a recent rape. It is very difficult to learn to distinguish between feelings. You are strong…keep going and searching.

  4. I am in a self destructive cycle and it feels both unbearable and stuck. I feel my therapist is feeling like he can’t help and I am feeling a resistance to him helping me. Does this mean I’m committed to this horrible self destructive pattern and can’t change? That’s been my belief and yet I had some great break throughs with the therapist yet here I am. He says it’s up to me to change this: talk to the ‘devil on my shoulder, telling it to take a nap, etc”, going out of my apt for a walk, etc. I have so many overwhelming outer issues, brain tumor, lesion on pancreas, going through divorce, aging mother, mentally ill sister to name a few.

    I’m afraid my therapist will give up on me and actually don’t blame him as I’m so ‘hunkered down’. I would love to get some suggestions as my pain is horrendous. Thank you.

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    • I know it’s been some time since your post but I just read it and felt I should comment.
      It’s not you; it’s your therapist. I hope you have found someone with a bit more compassion!

    • Consider this. According to the descriptions, I’m an artisan, with passion (that disappeared because of adhd), and a sceptic, with self-destruction, and self-deprication to boot. I rejected myself when I was born, and now I have no connection to my eternal soul. What was this idiot thinking? That I will manage with this configuration?
      My guess is that the best way to go about it would be suicide. And I’m waiting for it to happen.

  5. I am self-destructing – but not via drugs or booze. In two short years, I have destroyed myself socially (this may have stemmed from further back), academically and who knows what else. It’s because growing up, I lacked control due to having a strict…parent. I was virtually kept prisoner inside 4 walls, except to go to school or tuition – both things I excelled in. If I did leave the house, it was because the strict parent said so, and I had no choice, because if I spoke back, I received a lot of verbal abuse. I wasn’t allowed to cut my hair. I wasn’t allowed to meet up with friends – around the age of 16/17 – I felt the only way to control my life was to not succeed in the subjects and life my parents had chosen to me. I stopped trying in classes. And I kind of despair, because at the end of the day – the only person I was hurting is me. Why did I do this to myself? It’s hard to get out of this place, and god – it’s all down to my flipping self-esteem/self-confidence. Due to being regularly humiliated and degraded via words (which were all sexually based) being told I was good for nothing…I started to believe it. And because I had no external forces outside to help me – (he was quite good in isolating me from an early age) – nobody could bleeding tell.

    The most poignant memory I have, is one day after Media class, my friend turned to me and said after watching a NSPCC advert, “You don’t seem like you’ve ever been abused.” And although I’d heard her perfectly, I asked her to repeat it again, just so I could it hear it one more time – nothing sounded sweeter to my ears at that time. I don’t even hate my parent. I just wish to stop self-destructing.

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  6. I totally identified with this article. I come from a long genetic predisposition for borderline personality disorder/self sabotage. I am also Hispanic, and first generation US citizen. This is one of the many topics that are considered taboo in my family. I just reached 55 yrs of age, and though I have been fairly successful, I could have been so much more. Instead I have great qualifications, but my demons as well as 40 plus yrs of daily drug abuse have crippled me. Emotionally I have no support because my immediate family and I are estranged. So articles like this help me to know there is hope yet.

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  7. I’m in love with someone who starting to swear by it that they are self distructive. And I need to know what to do what not to do. How to help. And how our situation effects it. Which I know it does. Who would I talk to for that.

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  8. I feel my son to is self destructive. He has a good job for awhile and then he does something to lose it. He then lies about losing his job and realizes he is doing this and tries to solve it. His second wife is having issues with all the lying. She said everything was going real good, everyone’s happy and then this happens again. How can he be helped. Therapists? His father and I are at a loss how we can help him.

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  9. Wow wow wow WHOA my mind is blown right now. Anf i have a question. Ok i used to be super self destructive in every area of my life until about three years ago i finally started to grow out of it and begin to regulate my behavior without some system of external reward/punishment. I never was a “cutter” but i used drugs very heavily and only engaged in risky behavior. I took pride in being “batshit crazy” and “defiant” and i didnt give a **** how my behavior affected others. My father would say i was like a tornado or the tazmanian devil, just tearing thru life with no reason or regard. Then he died and i became pregnant with my second child and i just stopped all the nonsense and decided to slow down and figure some shit out. So the past three years have been pretty good.much learning how to take care of myself, my family and my home. I find great relief in the idea of a positive side to this trait. The sacrifice thing. I vibe on that really hard. Because i feel like my whole progression along my path is very rooted in right decision making, right speech, etc (basically buddhist-like ideals) and i see the relation to sacrifice and i feel many of my undertakings are easily seen from that perspective (one example is my journey toward becoming vegan)Ok so now to the question. i had a great childhood and no upset til my parents separated when i was 13, so where else does self destructive behavior come from? because i dont think its a reaction to some horrible suppressed event from my youth…also with sacrifice being the positive of self destruction, i dont quite understand. Does that mean i have transformed my negative trait and can now benefit from it, or does even the positive side still have some kind of undesirable manifeststion? Am i to try to completely expel all facets of this trait or is the positive side of it a healthy place to remain? Thanks so much for what you are doing here, cant wait to hear your insight!

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    • Your post and this article was very profound to me.
      There is apart of me, that deep down inside, knows, I am going to kill myself if things don’t change.
      I go through cycles.
      Where I am in control, I do well.
      Then I fall back in some sorta of a relapse.

      I guess there is a lot synchronistic events that this article and your post touches me.
      1) meditation and Buddhism has bad a profound effect on me lately. The effects of “a lot” of meditation has been profound. I am much more in touch with a “inner self” or intuition that if I listen to, doesn’t lead me into self destructive cycles. It’s also calmed my mind/body. Shielding me from the impulsive whims that saves me from going really deep in a self destructive cycle. Your comment of Buddhism and self sacrifice touched a few cords with me.
      2)I just watched the matrix. I realized one thing from it. Deep down inside I know my biology/psyche is to do something great. It’s either going to be great or I am going to get swallowed in my own self destruction and kill myself at a early age.
      3) watching the matrix is a modern form of the bible. Lots of archetypal religious symbols and story lines. I wondered why I was so attracted to it. I just finished watching the last movie with the thought in my head. To do something great you must self sacrifice yourself.
      4)

      This is a bit of a ramble.
      I SHOULD organize this more.

      This article touched me and at the same time I felt like was slightly off.
      Like it was entirely hitting some points and confusing all self destruction I to one.
      I need to do work here.

  10. Thanks.
    This has got me thinking as I have been searching for answers myself. I am overwhelmed with calmness and self determination after reading this.

    I am a man with 4 kids, good partner and a decent job, my own house and a flashy car. My alcohol consumption has increased drastically over the past few years which is pretty scary.

    I tried to conceal this behaviour but my whole family have noticed. I no longer get drunk from drinking so sometimes I drink till I pass out. I have suffered amnesia on 2 or more occasions. I no longer enjoy alcohol and desperately want to stop. I keep telling myself this is the last drink and that will be it. I have DUI conviction under my belt as well. It’s all pretty frightening.

    I suffered sexual abuse as a child not once or twice but several times. I always thought the tragedy was behind me as I have not allowed myself to think about it. But on reflection in recent months, I have been linking my current behaviour to what I endured as a child but can’t help but to think “you are just making excuse for your behaviour Eight just justifying the need to drink”. The irony is I started as recreational drinker and have recently become increasingly aware this is getting out of hand.

    I desperately need some feedback about and tips on how to give up alcohol completely. I know something disastrous is awaiting to occur if I do not change my behaviour.

    Thanks

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  11. I will continue to self destruct slow poison suicide because I don’t care. I don’t value my life. I’m going to die and already feel like I don’t exist. I’m not real. I don’t like my circumstances pain and suffering. So I choose to slowly kill myself. So fu and f the world.

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  12. first of all, please do not give up. you were put on this earth for a reason. i have an on-going pattern of self-destructive behavior, no pills or therapy can cure me. what i do to myself is unacceptable, but i will not give up. the reason being, is that there are people and my animals that depend on me. if you are an animal person, getting a pet from a shelter will give you a whole new meaning of what it is to be needed and loved unconditionally. i hope someone out there reads this and takes my advice. <3

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  13. This article really resonated. Outwardly I am successful and relaxed but inside I am seriously stressed trying to control my life but no matter what I do every so often things or specifically people can’t be controlled and things blow up. I lost my job, I can’t always be present with my kids and for the first time in my life I crave alcohol. I am terrified as I know drinking is bad but it’s the only way I feel control and release. I don’t know why I am like this and I really don’t want to be like this.

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  14. alcohol is not good for you, but in low doses, if it helps, it sounds find.
    don’t know what kind of drinking you are referring to, but wine is good for you, especially red, and it will relax you, if you are really wound up.

    don’t know if your kids are little, but if they are, maybe a family member could help you out?

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  15. Out of all online material as well as official dialectical behavior therapy material…this has got to be the BEST and easiest yo understand. Not sure what the experiences of the author are but thankyou for this its really,really helpful.

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  16. Very good material. I was diagnosed as DID, emotionally anorexic and PTSD. After becoming a believer in Yeshua/Jesus, and putting in much, much, MUCH hard work and perseverance, am overcoming.

    Again, very good material. Totally confirmed what I have come to know to be true. Facing such abuse can be very traumatizing in itself.

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  17. Self harmer here. Have been like this since my early teenage years (went through cutting, accidentally “getting hurt” in weird ways, reckless behavior and now bulimia and bingeing).
    I found the article very interesting.
    Especially the part that explained creating for yourself a “persona” to cover up your inner turmoil as you become an adult.
    The first crisis that I had in my adulthood (when I often thought of suicide) I used to believe that my self destructive tendencies where like “a monster” in my head which suddenly broke free. I relized the “monster” has always been there, but since it has never affected me that bad before, I thought that I was the one who lost control on it and unleashed it. So, in a sense, it was my fault: it was me and “the monster” and I was letting it win, so I was weak and unworthy. I was feeling dissociated: I peceived the fake “persona” as the real me.
    Nowadays, after about three years of therapy, I realize that there is no me vs “the monster” battle. I am what I used to call “the monster”. And it’s something I will forever be. I just have to accept it and try to get the best out of it.
    The realization really did help me, especially in opening up to my emotions and feeling alive. Unworthiness disappeared and also the sense of dissociation (though it’s gonna be a long way to learn how to cope with myself).
    As for the rest, the article is coherent with my situation (strict parents who always pushed me and praised self sacrifice, high IQ, kinda nice to look at. All those things did as much good as harm to me).

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  18. I do not agree at all that there needs to be consenquences , many of these people already hate themselves and feel terrible until they die of shame etc, let them be however reward them when they DO right!

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  19. Soph, with all due respect the comment you made seems harsh to me. I believe that people sometimes need compassion especially during hard times – when someone is spinning out of control and crying out for help, they need support. Tough love is helpful in some instances but not all and can harm someone that is overly sensitive. It also causes mistrust and that is the last thing someone who already is down needs.

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