My friend Cylene, who has her problems, asked me last night why she should get a hard time from her psychologists for cutting when self-flagellation was an acceptable and even encouraged practice in certain Christian traditions. Cutting is(at least for her) equally ritualistic, she maintains, and brings a feeling of catharsis which can be seen as therapeutic even though most people are very disturbed by the practice.
I've never read very much about pain-inflicting practices within the Christian Church, nor have I spoken to anyone who's ever admitted practising them. Extreme groups like the medieval Flagellants were usually regarded as being illegitimate by Church authorities, though I'm not sure whether that was more for their bizarre practices or their tendency to slip into heretical beliefs. More mainstream instances are more mysterious. Karen Armstrong talks about it a little in Through the Narrow Gate, her narrative of leaving a pre-Reform Roman Catholic convent in the late 1960s, and of how dissatisfaction with 'the Discipline', as beating oneself with knotted cords was known, focused her issues with the religious life in general. She concluded that, at least in her case, it twisted sexual feelings in an unhealthy direction and confronted her superiors with the conclusion, but it's clear that The Discipline was intended not to deal with sexual feelings alone, but with all the other 'worldly' emotions and thoughts aroused by the intense experience of community living: resentment, anger, or just boredom. It was, I suppose, a means of processing negativity in circumstances where there was no safe way of expressing it, and converting unhelpful emotions into physical pain allowed them to be connected with the sufferings of Jesus.
Like most forms of self-harm, it seems to me (and of course I may be wrong, but Cylene agrees) that cutting is also a means of processing negative emotions. Anger and rage towards people you rationally don't want to damage can be dealt with in a very formal, ritualised way by self-damage: the feelings are psychologically so unacceptable that rather than face them they can be converted into something which, because of its ritual nature, is more contained. 'I'm frightened that if I don't cut I might hurt someone', Cylene says. The danger is that, if you happen to have suicidal feelings (which is rather likely), the ritualised, contained business of cutting may take you further than you originally intend. But, considered on its own, I think she's right: there's not much to separate it from self-harm in a religious context.
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No psychologist should give their client a hard time, but equally it is surely legit for a psychologist to work with a client to end self-harm, and to find other forms of catharsis that are effective?
ReplyDeleteThis doesn't sit easy with me, particularly. Flogging as a christian practice doesn't seem particularly christian to me. It might sit nicely with distorted religious practices but not with following christ, transforming and the message of the gospel - love. I understand that to harm onself is to protect others, but surely one has to love oneself first to love others. Love. Perhaps if more of us explored love; the love of christ and the love of onself and others a greater understanding of the fallen man, and fallen self would help?
ReplyDeleteReligion has a lot to answer for, but I don't think Christ would do anything other than sob over the whole mis interpretation.
Neither religious nor non-religious self-harm sit easily with me, and it's not amusing to sit opposite a friend and see the wounds on their arms where they've been scratching themselves with sandpaper, but I'm trying to see the connection between the phenomena and understand why people might have adopted them. The most positive thing I can think to say is that they may serve a purpose for a time which people should grow out of, though religious self-harm seems to be more deliberate than that.
ReplyDeleteI think we have both sat opposite people with scars on thier body that have healed because someone has walked the path of love, friendship, kindness and faith - faith in them, in finding peace and faith in progress and future. We all, to some extent, aim to be free - and I think in a religious context this is true too. I hope this will be true for your friend too that freedom, peace and hope will embrace her.
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