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Old October 26th, 2004, 02:54 PM
JWainwright JWainwright is offline
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Join Date: Oct 2004
Posts: 3
Question Self-Harm and Internet Forums

Hi, I'm a third year undergraduate looking at the positive effects of self-help internet forums/groups for people who self-harm.
If anyone has any information or research on the topic,or know any links, I would really appreciate hearing from you!
I am also looking for places (websites etc) to post a link to my research questionnaire. Again, any helpful tips with this would be great!

Email: jo.wainwright@students.ntu.ac.uk
JoeyW309@hotmail.com
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Old April 3rd, 2009, 10:55 AM
Sandra Paulsen Sandra Paulsen is offline
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Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: Bainbridge Island WA
Posts: 207
Default Re: Self-Harm and Internet Forums

How about negative effects? Why just look for positive effects?

I work with severely injured multiply traumatized survivors of chronic extreme early abuse. Many of them engage in self mutilation or self harm of some form. Some benefit from online discussion networks, but more get triggered or influenced in a negative way by the connections they make online with similarly injured people.

One of several dynamics involved is that unprocessed traumatic experience that is too horrible to allow into conscious mind tends to get projected "out there." Like a hotpotato - this is too hot, here you hold it. And people project all kinds of stuff all over other people, and the participants are off to the races.

Another is that there is a tendency for some people whose boundaries have been violated to speak in an unboundaried way, and say triggering gory details.

And some people are predatory, reenacting their original injuries but in the perpetrator role instead of the victim role. Some people unconsciously reenact the victim role. Or the rescuer role, but all three can be reenactments that put all participants at risk.

Any of the above can produce an increase in self harm.

Respectfully submitted,
__________________
www.bainbridgepsychology.com
"Looking Through the Eyes of Trauma & Dissociation"
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