Building community, bearing witness
October 21st, 2008My thanks to those who have posted comments to this blog. It is beginning to come alive to me, this new way of creating a community of people who live with SIV and our allies. I am still new to this format, but the posts I have read remind me of The Cutting Edge, the newsletter that will soon be coming to a close. Many of your words touched places in my heart. Historically, the topics of repulsion/revulsion towards those who live with SIV, the idea that SIV has no purpose and must be stopped at all costs, and the link between deep and profound trauma and the need for SIV have arisen repeatedly in the history of The Cutting Edge. To see these topics addressed in your posts made me think that we are beginning to create our own community where we can discuss our lives with SIV without fear of repercussion or judgment.
Rae questioned if many people are repulsed by or afraid of those who live with SIV. People often have intense, judgmental and negative reactions to SIV. It takes courage and effort for others to deal with their own intense reactions and assumptions about self-injury and learn to understand the purpose SIV serves and what helps us heal. These allies are wonderful. While some of them do exist in the world of mental health care providers, they are not easy to find. Therefore, much of the time when we turn to help from the worlds of psychiatry and psychology we tend to find more trauma, little understanding, and urgent demands that we stop what, to us, feels necessary. As Shade and others wrote, many of us fear the ending of SIV in our lives. Of course this makes sense as it has helped us get through incredibly difficult times. Drugs won’t help us learn how to let our feelings flow through us, help us understand how profoundly trauma effects us, nor give us the hope, community and wisdom we need to heal and live lives we never dreamed possible.
Diane, your writing about your childhood touched my heart deeply. I do not know of anyone who has lived with SIV who didn’t have some form of trauma in their history. Often, but not always, this has included surviving childhood abuses. The SIV we turn to helps us manage many of the repercussions of our histories. That is why I do not believe that attempting to simplistically make SIV “go away,” whether through drugs or any other means, is useful. While SIV has its consequences, it also has its assets. The drugs that are used to “stop” SIV do much of what you described - they change thinking and they change feelings. While some people find the use of psychotropic drugs helpful in their healing, most say that being “slammed” with intense dosages of psychiatric drugs, especially the antipsychotics, leaves them feeling numb, “dead” inside, and inhuman.
Finding help from people who understand trauma is often difficult, but worth the effort. There are some professionals who understand and are helpful (Sidran’s help desk might be a useful place to begin a search), but there are also other supports available. People who live with or have healed from needing SIV can offer enormous wisdom and compassion. The Cutting Edge newsletter was begun nearly 18 years ago to create a community of survivors, people living with SIV, and their allies. It is my intention that this blog and the Healing Self-Injury web site do the same. I think our community has begun to create itself. Thanks to all for writing.