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Self Inflicted Pain VS Pain Inflicted By Others - 3/16/2007 5:28:38 AM   
MadRabbit


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A post in the health and safety forum as well as one I made got my mind working which led me to post this topic of discussion. There is many different ways to inflict pain, so for the purposes of an example, I am going to use cutting since its the most commonly known form of self infliction.

Typically, we view people who cut themselves as being "unhealthy", but after some thought, I cant seem to draw the line between unhealthy self infliction and healthy SM play.

If I were to take a blade and cut myself so I can experience an endorphin rush, how is this any different than going to a sadist and being cut to experience the same endorphin rush?

What is it that makes self inflicted pain such an "unhealthy behavior"?

People talk about having "urges" to cut themselves. I also hear people talk about their need or urges to be beaten by their sadist. In my observations, both seem to come from an addiction or craving for endorphins. Is the urge to hurt yourself any different than the urge to have someone else hurt you?

If self inflicted pain is an "unhealthy behavior", then how is pain inflicted by another person not an "unhealthy behavior"?

If I were to cut myself under a relatively safe and sane mindset, out of the desire to experience endorphins and not out of a feeling of self loathing or depression, would you consider this to be a "healthy behavior"?

Hypothetically, if someone with a history of self inflicted hurt, were to stop this behavioral pattern by discovering SM and having other people inflict the injury, would the SM be viewed as just as "unhealthy" as the self inflicted hurt?

An example would be the movie, The Secretary. The protagonist was able to give up self cutting by finding her dominant and SM. The movie portrayed her self inflicted pain in an unhealthy light, but the SM and the dominant as the savior that made it stop. In reality, isn't this merely replacing one addiction with another? Much like someone who goes from crack to cocaine..

Personally, I have never cut myself or self inflicted any injury, nor am I a masochist so I cant speak from any experience. I am curious to hear what others have to say on these questions.

We talk constantly about pain on these forums, but its always pain inflicted by others. I am curious as to how self inflicted pain is so different.

< Message edited by MadRabbit -- 3/16/2007 5:32:53 AM >


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RE: Self Inflicted Pain VS Pain Inflicted By Others - 3/16/2007 6:02:18 AM   
sleazybutterfly


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Really to be honest, I don't see much of a difference either, its more the label things are given; if you do it this way, you are sick, if you do it that way, you aren't.

Cutting can be dangerous whether done by me or done by someone to me.  I think the reason mine was more dangerous than the pain I get from Master as a masochist, is that when I would cut, it wasn't controlled at all.  I would go into a zone of being numb or something and just keep slashing the blade across, before I would realize it there would be 30 or 40 cuts in a row.  To me, because it was something I sort of detached myself from a times, it was more unhealthy than anything.


I wouldn't say I have transferred my need for pain into s/m...but I do know it does give me somewhat of the same release when it's pretty intense.  I think that some are masochists for the same reason, while some aren't at all.  I don't see anything unhealthy about the way I crave pain now.

When I was with a Dom before I craved pain in a "bad" way.  What I mean is, I thought I deserved the pain because of how worthless I felt at the time.  To me, that is an unhealthy way to live, just like the men I slept with after my rape.  I slept with men before it, and it was good because my mind was in a good place...the men I slept with after, I regret because I wasn't where I should have been and gave my "worthless" self up to someone else.

I guess what I am trying to say, is that it's very possible to cut and it still be healthy, but there are ways to cut that aren't.  It all depends on where you draw the line.  Only the person cutting knows where deep inside of them the urge is coming from, and they need to examine if it's someplace healthy, or someplace that isn't.

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RE: Self Inflicted Pain VS Pain Inflicted By Others - 3/16/2007 6:29:51 AM   
Driver1961


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He dips His lid to all,

Good question Madrabbit!  This wasn't something I'd given alot of thought in past to but  recently I was talking with a cutter who had literally just 'self cut and so 'tested' my beliefs upon them. 

I think most self cutters will agree there is a psychological release from self infliction, same as someone inflicting pain/cutting or submitting generally to another.
However the psychological release in self infliction appears to be interspersed with some guilt or misgiving of control to hurt oneself.  (I think the word guilt is applicable)  However if someone else does the cutting- there is consentualness, shared action and a deeper release/renewal of self.   (Hopefully some cutters can give some comments with possibly more clarity than I)

I could reduce it to a bondage fanatic roping themselves doesnt have the same release as when roped by a 'Trusted' other but that's not 'on the mark' as cutters have explained to me.   However, masturbating oneself compared to another holding their hand /finger over yours whilst masturbating and mirroring/assisting your masturbatory movements  has significantly different psychological release yet both are extremely enjoyable.   The cutter (and others I spoke with) put the differing releases in the masturbatory type category and have also stressed the psychological state is a big determinant.  It appears that rarely will a cutter self-inflict in the same psychological state that we may masturbate.

I trust this has some meaning and look forward to other comments. 


Regards  Driver.

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RE: Self Inflicted Pain VS Pain Inflicted By Others - 3/16/2007 6:33:48 AM   
Vendaval


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quote:

ORIGINAL: MadRabbit

A post in the health and safety forum as well as one I made got my mind working which led me to post this topic of discussion. There is many different ways to inflict pain, so for the purposes of an example, I am going to use cutting since its the most commonly known form of self infliction.

Typically, we view people who cut themselves as being "unhealthy", but after some thought, I cant seem to draw the line between unhealthy self infliction and healthy SM play.

Self-cutting and burning behaviors are common in victims of sexual abuse.

If I were to take a blade and cut myself so I can experience an endorphin rush, how is this any different than going to a sadist and being cut to experience the same endorphin rush?

What is it that makes self inflicted pain such an "unhealthy behavior"?

I think that is largely a matter of both motivation and degree.
Is the pain done in a fit of anger or self-hatred?  Or just
for the endorphin rush?  Will there be potential long-term
consequences to your health?

People talk about having "urges" to cut themselves. I also hear people talk about their need or urges to be beaten by their sadist. In my observations, both seem to come from an addiction or craving for endorphins. Is the urge to hurt yourself any different than the urge to have someone else hurt you?

I think that it is largely a matter of control.  If self-inflicted, then
you are the one in control.  If you give control to another they
call the shots.

If self inflicted pain is an "unhealthy behavior", then how is pain inflicted by another person not an "unhealthy behavior"?

Playing Devil's Advocate?

If I were to cut myself under a relatively safe and sane mindset, out of the desire to experience endorphins and not out of a feeling of self loathing or depression, would you consider this to be a "healthy behavior"?

If you took care to not cause permanent damage, yes.

Hypothetically, if someone with a history of self inflicted hurt, were to stop this behavioral pattern by discovering SM and having other people inflict the injury, would the SM be viewed as just as "unhealthy" as the self inflicted hurt?

I think this would go back to the motivation behind wanting
the pain.

An example would be the movie, The Secretary. The protagonist was able to give up self cutting by finding her dominant and SM. The movie portrayed her self inflicted pain in an unhealthy light, but the SM and the dominant as the savior that made it stop. In reality, isn't this merely replacing one addiction with another? Much like someone who goes from crack to cocaine..

Her self-cutting was obsessive. Her Dom was obsessive about her.
You could argue that he was her new addiction.

Personally, I have never cut myself or self inflicted any injury, nor am I a masochist so I cant speak from any experience. I am curious to hear what others have to say on these questions.

We talk constantly about pain on these forums, but its always pain inflicted by others. I am curious as to how self inflicted pain is so different.

You ask very provocative questions, the responses should be
quite revealing, Mad Rabbit. 



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RE: Self Inflicted Pain VS Pain Inflicted By Others - 3/16/2007 6:39:51 AM   
Elegant


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When one cannot stop self-cutting
When one does not even remember self-cutting
When one searches high and low for cutting implements to self-cut
When one will not admit to self-cutting

That's when it has become unhealthy

(and yes, I am a 'cutter'..of sorts)


< Message edited by Elegant -- 3/16/2007 6:41:03 AM >


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RE: Self Inflicted Pain VS Pain Inflicted By Others - 3/16/2007 8:08:47 AM   
LuckyAlbatross


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quote:

ORIGINAL: MadRabbit
What is it that makes self inflicted pain such an "unhealthy behavior"?

In general, it's not the behavior in itself which is the problem- it's the lack of control over the behavior, the motivation for the behavior and the inability to stop the behavior to the point that it inteferes with having a healthy functioning life.

This can be equally true of needing pain from others- both can be done just fine and healthy and both can become very damaging and unhealthy. 

If you're doing it because you feel you are in despair and it is your only way to deal with your emotional pain, if you cannot freely stop without having withdrawal symptoms or increased anxiety, and if the behavior interferes with your physical health or prevents you from leading a positive life- then it's a bad behavior.

Doesn't matter if we're talking bulimia, cutting, hair pulling, spanking, alcohol, the internet or religion.

IMO the Secretary didn't give up cutting because she found her dominant and SM- she gave up cutting because she found a secure sense of self- which just happened to be through S&M.

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RE: Self Inflicted Pain VS Pain Inflicted By Others - 3/16/2007 8:57:23 AM   
IrishMist


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For as long as I can remember, I have always identified myself as a hard core masochist. Through the years, it got to the point that the craving for the rush of pain became quite unhealthy and dangerous for myself. Like LA said, when it gets out of control, it ceases to be healthy and becomes unhealthy.
In the past year I have come to realization that my need for more and more pain was covering up the emotional void that was within. Instead of being an outlet, it became a crutch. I started relying on it more and more. When a person reaches a stage that they need something in this way, it’s time to step back and reassess some things.
For some who enter into S&M, such activates can actually be therapeutic for them; a way to come to terms with past issues. That’s when the reverse happens. Something that was once unhealthy becomes instead healthy.


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RE: Self Inflicted Pain VS Pain Inflicted By Others - 3/16/2007 9:09:37 AM   
mixielicous


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quote:

ORIGINAL: LuckyAlbatross

quote:

ORIGINAL: MadRabbit
What is it that makes self inflicted pain such an "unhealthy behavior"?


In general, it's not the behavior in itself which is the problem- it's the lack of control over the behavior, the motivation for the behavior and the inability to stop the behavior to the point that it inteferes with having a healthy functioning life.



IMO the Secretary didn't give up cutting because she found her dominant and SM- she gave up cutting because she found a secure sense of self- which just happened to be through S&M.

i agree. as a cutter in my teen years [for the record cutting isnt included in play] i would crave cutting the same way i crave my spankings, but for different reasons and with [not so] different outcomes.

When i would cut it was to remember i am still alive [seeing the blood] and to make my uncontrollable crying cease [worked like a charm]. In the end i felt calm, satisfied, reassured and there was no confusion. i crave spankings when i feel confused about myself or even my place in the household [rarely] and i ask sometimes for a spanking because it leaves me in the same state of mind as cutting would. it is a great sense of relief to know who i am, just by one simple act. it might sound unstable to you, but its what works for me


side note- i stopped cutting many years before i was into BDSM, but my first s&m experience was shortly before my first cutting. connected? maybe.


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RE: Self Inflicted Pain VS Pain Inflicted By Others - 3/16/2007 9:13:24 AM   
charismagirrl


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Great topic MadRabbit...

i have been, sometimes still am a cutter and the diffeence for me is night and day...to me it's all in the mindset.

When i cut it is usually in desperation, the need to purge something, whether it be anger that i cannot vent, pain that i'm trying to stuff, self loathing...it has nothing to do with an endorphin rush, like sleazybutterfly said, it's a numb thing, and like elegant said, sometimes not even remembered at all (disociating entirely from the activity)....It is way unhealthy.

As for BDSM impact play or anything like tht that involves pain... for me it isn't just about the endorphin rush...it's deeper psychologically than just a rush. It takes me to a very sweet and wonderful place inside and gives me more connectedness with my Dominant (Master/Daddy).

You mentioned the Secretary, and recently i had a Secretary moment with my Daddy. Hers was an unhealthy urge and James Spader took that and made it into something beautiful... my Secretary moment came last week, when i was feeling very yucky inside and was really wanting, needing to cut. i restrained myself and asked my Daddy for some impact stuff...maybe it was me, maybe it was how it was done, but it just didn't "scratch the itch" so to speak. Which leads me to wonder if there is truly a vast difference between the two.

You mentioned someone cutting soley for the rush, and in that way the mindset would, i guess, be similar, in some instances. In those instances and with those ppl who engage in BDSM play stuff for the rush. Then the comparission would be apples and apples and not oranges and apples.


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RE: Self Inflicted Pain VS Pain Inflicted By Others - 3/16/2007 9:25:57 AM   
MasterFireMaam


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It's all about intent. If I'm enduring pain, no matter from who, because I am looking to replace a healthy display of emotions or repress that I feel these emotions (the major reasons a cutter cuts), then that's unhealthy. If I'm enduring pain because I enjoy it or I want to use it as a tool for something spiritual or, in my opinion, even if I'm using the endorphins to get me out of a small funk, I find that's ok.

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RE: Self Inflicted Pain VS Pain Inflicted By Others - 3/16/2007 11:14:01 AM   
WhiplashSmile


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I'm going to make a brutally honest post here!

I have a high pain tolerence, in the past I have done things to show off to people, I used to do this when I was younger however.

Second, I will try new things out on myself, so that I get a feel for what I am doing and amount of pain that I am inflicting.

Third, there are times when I felt I needed to have a good endorphine rush, be it to keep me awake or refocus my concentration upon something.  I do not get carried away with cutting or causing myself wounds.  I might indulge in a little self impact play.. or feel out pressure points to relieve muscle tension or some crap.  Yes, I will exert pain to loosen my body up at times.

Fourth, this is a rare case!  However, I will admit to doing this and having done this.  In times of immense stress, where the stress is close to exceeding my coping skills.  I have taken a cigerettee and simply fucking burned myself on the leg or arm.  Where the pain exerted was intended to overload my brain, and also snap me back into a better frame of mind.  I have not done this, save in rare moments. However, I have done this. 

Now, there it's out in the open for all to read.  Perhaps some of you relate perhaps some of you can't.



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RE: Self Inflicted Pain VS Pain Inflicted By Others - 3/16/2007 11:28:17 AM   
MasterFireMaam


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I can relate...and have the scars to prove it. Lucky for me in this instance, I don't keyloid well. That fact is damned annoying when I WANT to scar though. *grumble about brands*

Master Fire


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RE: Self Inflicted Pain VS Pain Inflicted By Others - 3/16/2007 2:12:33 PM   
MadRabbit


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quote:

ORIGINAL: LuckyAlbatross

IMO the Secretary didn't give up cutting because she found her dominant and SM- she gave up cutting because she found a secure sense of self- which just happened to be through S&M.


Very nice.

Thats actually my interuptation after watching the movie, but I posted an alternate perspective to help with the topic.

Thanks so far for all the informative answers and replies. This has been as intertesting as a topic as I hoped it would be.

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RE: Self Inflicted Pain VS Pain Inflicted By Others - 3/16/2007 5:30:06 PM   
Missokyst


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When I tell people about cutting, or any other of the things I have done in my life, I have heard a range of reactions.  When the movie Secretary came out and all my friends were saying how terrible it was that they showed "us" to be mental cases.  I had to sit on my hands in embarrassment for being among those psychologically damaged souls, so they wouldn't view me in horror.
And really, sometimes I view me in horror, so I can understand their desire to distance themselves from even more deviant behavior.

I enjoy pain.  Even self inflicted pain, when there is no other way for me to reset myself.  Even accidental pain is fine, once I refocus it into a useful direction.  I am a masochist, and for me, it does not have to be sensual for me to get something from it.  But you right, people do find it more acceptable for me to get a masochistic fix at someone else's hands.  As if my need was somehow made pure by adding sensuality to it. 

It disturbs me, but what can you do? 
Kyst

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RE: Self Inflicted Pain VS Pain Inflicted By Others - 3/16/2007 5:58:40 PM   
lonlyrossInNeed


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I use to cut all the time
Was the only typ of stress releass that i knew of at the time when i was younger
The difrence is
when i would cut myself
I would somtimes not stop and it would be realy unheathy then becouse you somtimes could not stop yourself
where if someone els is cutting you then they have the power to stop it you may not want it stoped when you feel it
like what happened to me ones and i didnt want it to stop and when My Mistress at the time left the room for a little whyll i picked up the blade and started cutting agen
After that i havnt felt a nife on my skin since
I ended up in the hospital had 94 stiches in my left rist and top of my hand
and fingers
so there is definetly a difrence between it and yes it is unhealthy to cut yourself
sorry i could be more help on this i just try not to go back tofar in my old thouts and what i use to do .

ross.g

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RE: Self Inflicted Pain VS Pain Inflicted By Others - 3/16/2007 5:58:43 PM   
petdave


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quote:

ORIGINAL: LuckyAlbatross

quote:

ORIGINAL: MadRabbit
What is it that makes self inflicted pain such an "unhealthy behavior"?

In general, it's not the behavior in itself which is the problem- it's the lack of control over the behavior, the motivation for the behavior and the inability to stop the behavior to the point that it inteferes with having a healthy functioning life.

This can be equally true of needing pain from others- both can be done just fine and healthy and both can become very damaging and unhealthy. 


i agree completely.

i've always thought that the term "masochism" falsely encompassed two (at least) very different states of mind. One is the deriving pleasure from pain (endorphines). The other is wanting to experience pain, as pain. i never got an endorphine rush from cutting.



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RE: Self Inflicted Pain VS Pain Inflicted By Others - 3/16/2007 6:41:35 PM   
hisannabelle


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many people, including myself, have used self-inflicted pain in negative ways. we are motivated to do it by harmful psychological experiences or neuroses. now, i'm not saying that there aren't people with that same association to sm, however, for me personally, sm is not motivated by the same harmful psychological issues that si was (i also did not give up si for sm, or consider sm as a replacement for si, in any way).

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RE: Self Inflicted Pain VS Pain Inflicted By Others - 3/16/2007 7:49:46 PM   
junecleaver


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I think it's more about the lack of control involved in most cases of SI than the injuring itself.  People damage their bodies in all sorts of ways to accomplish a goal they find worthwhile.  I damaged my ankle because I felt it was more important to play in a nationals soccer game than allow my body to recooperate.  It was a decision made because I lacked self-control and it was a once in a life-time type of thing.  People ruin their skin and run a higher risk of cancer because they think being tanned is attractive.  It goes on and on.  These things just don't come with a stigma attached to them. I stopped self-injuring a long time before I experienced S&M.  However, I was scared of going to that euphoric place it took me and losing the control I had achieved over the habit.  My first real S&M experience really shook me because he did take me to that place SI had a long time ago.  What's reassures me is that he has the control in the situation, not me.  I am not allowed to mark up or mess up his property.  I know that going into that state is not going to lead me into a relapse because he's guiding me in and out of it.   In the few situations I have experienced...when someone replaces si with sm, they relapse when their relationship is over or those sensations are readily available to them.

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RE: Self Inflicted Pain VS Pain Inflicted By Others - 3/16/2007 8:19:03 PM   
KnightofMists


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quote:

ORIGINAL: MadRabbit

If I were to take a blade and cut myself so I can experience an endorphin rush, how is this any different than going to a sadist and being cut to experience the same endorphin rush?

What is it that makes self inflicted pain such an "unhealthy behavior"?


The key is to consider the motivations! and the consequences.

IE... a unhealthy behavior such as cutting is most often an escape or supression of emotions/feelings.  Also, consequences over the course of time result a permanant harming of the body.  It also relates to addicates that are compelled into these acts or behaviors regards of the negative consequences.

IE.. a healthy behavior is filled with constructive motivations.  A person is not only feeling good in the moment..but feels good long after the effects of the "cutting" wears off.  There is emotional positive energies as compared to that negative spiral that can be associated with unhealthy behaviors.

this only a quick and dirty answer.. but I think you get the idea

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RE: Self Inflicted Pain VS Pain Inflicted By Others - 3/16/2007 9:34:23 PM   
catize


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Self-injurious behavior is an ineffective coping mechanism to deal with psychic pain.  I say ineffective because it does not address the real problem.  Much like drug or alcohol abuse, it gives only temporary relief, causes more problems and is detrimental to the quality of life. The initial rush is usually followed by self-loathing.
I am sure there are some who use BDSM as the same type of ‘quick fix’ for severe problems but there are many more who engage in WIITWD because it fulfills them in a positive way.
As a masochist, I can honestly say that pain is fun for me.  I do it because it enhances my life in a myriad of ways, but it is only one facet of my relationship with master.  In fact, there have been times when I was in a negative head space and suggested to master that it would be best to skip the s + m until I was in a better frame of mind.  I prefer to relish the pain, not use it as a means to try to solve my problems.   

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