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  2. Overview. Cutting is when a person deliberately hurts themselves by scratching or cutting their body with a sharp object. The reasons someone might do this are complicated. People who cut ...

  3. Takeaway. The term “enabler” generally describes someone whose behavior allows a loved one to continue self-destructive patterns of behavior. This term can be stigmatizing since there’s ...

  4. Why Do People Cut Themselves? Reasons, What to Do, and More

    www.healthline.com/.../why-do-people-cut-themselves

    Self-harm can be a way for a person to feel something when experiencing numbness or to distract themselves from depression or anxiety. Some people cut to create a wound that can symbolize their ...

  5. Cutting & Self-Harm: Warning Signs and Treatment - WebMD

    www.webmd.com/.../cutting-self-harm-signs-treatment

    This leads to hopelessness.”. Other emotional signs of self-harm include: Overwhelmed by feelings. Inability to function or decline in functioning at school or home. Inability to maintain stable ...

  6. Enabling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enabling

    Paying off another person's debts. Refusing to confront or protect oneself when exposed to physical, emotional or verbal assault. Regurgitating the abuser's 'facts' / version of reality to a third party without seeking evidence. Revictimising the abuser's other victims with behaviour such as gaslighting, denial, or scapegoating.

  7. Self-sustainability - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Self-sustainability

    The system self-sustainability is: the degree at which the system can sustain itself without external support. the fraction of time in which the system is self-sustaining. Self-sustainability is considered one of the "ilities" and is closely related to sustainability and availability. In the economics literature, a system that has the quality ...

  8. Self-embedding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Self-embedding

    Self-embedding. Self-embedding is the insertion of foreign objects either into soft tissues under the skin or into muscle. [1] Self-embedding is typically considered deliberate self-harm, also known as nonsuicidal self-injury, which is defined as "deliberate, direct destruction of tissues without suicidal intent." [2]

  9. The main types are: Drug-drug interaction. This is when a medication reacts with one or more other drugs. For example, taking a cough medicine ( antitussive) and a drug to help you sleep (sedative ...