I just found this and its made me itchy inside my head.
I was wondering what anyone else thought-
Self-injury is often a coping mechanism, particularly with the feeling of being rejected. This is a particular problem for anyone who has difficulty in understanding non-verbal communication, for example those with Asperger’s Syndrome, a form of autism, possibly affecting about 1 person in 200.
For most people, understanding facial expressions, body language, etc is instinctive, starting as babies before language acquisition. But just as some people having hearing difficulties or are short-sighted or colour-blind, others have difficulty with interpreting the non-verbal signs which most people use continuously and which are essential part of how small groups work: tiny cues tell us when to speak and when to stop, and whether people agree or disagree with us, or whether others find us amusing or dull, etc. These cues are not understood by aspies (as people with Asperger’s often call themselves). Research is continuing into why this is: for example, some recent research has found that while most people use a special bit of the brain for looking at faces, those with autism use the same bit as for looking at inanimate objects.
This disability is not immediately obvious but it is a handicap. However most aspies can learn how to cope. Indeed many teach themselves without realising that they are not getting all the information available. But it gets more difficult in adolescence when fitting in with friends becomes more important. The give and take of a group requires a skill in picking up non-verbal messages that aspies just do not have, even though their understanding of what’s being discussed will be as good as anyone’s. As a result, aspies get isolated and often bullied.
By the time they reach adolescence, most aspies will realise they are fundamentally different to others at school but, unless diagnosed, will not understand why. Many autistic people are unaware of other people - but not aspies. Being rejected, repeatedly, by their contemporaries really hurts aspies. Not surprisingly, many become severely depressed – and may resort to self-injury. This leads me to suspect (but I have not found any research on this) that more than 1 in 200 of those who SI may be aspies.
Aspies have most difficulty when things are new or strange. They find unpredictability really stressful. So they hate change and uncertainty. Rather aspies are creatures of habit: liking always to go the same way to school, always to sit in the same place, and preferring old clothes.
Aspies are very rational people – they are wonderfully resistant to those who manipulate emotions. Talking about what’s making them depressed or why they self-injure is really stressful for an aspie. An aspie would find it more useful to have guidance on how to cope with irrational – ie ordinary – people. But most of all, aspies just want to be accepted as they are: people who, unlike most others, actually mean what they say.
Last edited by craola on 13 Sep 2008, 10:23 am, edited 1 time in total.