“I need to show you something.”
That’s what I heard as a friend came to sit down where I was eating. She sounded serious, but I didn’t know what might be going on.
She looked around to be sure nobody was watching. Then she held her arm close to her body to shield it from other people and then turned the arm over. I saw several small cut marks. It was shocking to see, even though there weren’t nearly as many cuts as shown in the picture above.
I knew that my friend had been having problems and needed counseling. I knew she had done minor cutting earlier in her teen-age years. I even knew she had been having more problems lately. But I didn’t know she was feeling like doing this again. I asked her why she was doing it.
“I wanted to feel something,” she said.
I’ve read a lot about cutting in an effort to understand it. I’ve encountered it before — all in teen-age girls — and everyone I’ve seen it affect has seemed to get over it in time, usually with good counseling. From everything I’ve read and the few I’ve talked with who’ve been affected by it, it seems that the people who go through this have been experiencing intense, out-of-control emotions. They seem to have repressed the intensity of the hurtful emotions they feel so much that they end up numb.

No matter who you are or what you’ve done, time is your enemy
Are your daily decisions giving you the results you want out of life?
No matter how admired you are, your work won’t make you special
Trip to Memory Lane reminds me some relationships deserve to die
In a cold and disconnected world, it’s very simple to fake happiness
Don’t trust this con man — or almost anybody else on ‘TV news’
How could a stranger at sunset possibly know what I had to say?