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  2. 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 ...

  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. Enabling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enabling

    Enabling may prevent psychological growth in the person being enabled, and may contribute to negative symptoms in the enabler. Enabling may be driven by concern for retaliation, or fear of consequence to the person with the substance use disorder, such as job loss, injury or suicide. [6]

  5. Cancel culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cancel_culture

    Philosopher Slavoj Žižek states, that "Cancel culture, with its implicit paranoia, is a desperate and obviously self-defeating attempt to compensate for the very real violence and intolerance that sexual minorities have long suffered. But it is a retreat into a cultural fortress, a pseudo-"safe space" whose discursive fanaticism merely ...

  6. An infected cut can cause worsening symptoms of pain, itching, or warmth. You may also have other signs of an infection, such as pus and fever. Treatment may require antibiotics. A cut is a ...

  7. Enabling technology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enabling_technology

    An enabling technology is an invention or innovation that can be applied to drive radical change in the capabilities of a user or culture. Enabling technologies are characterized by rapid development of subsequent derivative technologies, often in diverse fields. See General purpose technology .

  8. When to Get Stitches: How to Tell If Your Cut Needs Sewing Up

    www.healthline.com/health/when-to-get-stitches

    This includes the length and depth. Your wound likely requires stitches if: it’s deeper or longer than half an inch. it’s deep enough that fatty tissue, muscle, or bone is exposed. it’s wide ...

  9. Hold the area under running water or pour clean water over it from a cup. You don't need to use stronger cleaning solutions -- such as hydrogen peroxide, iodine, or rubbing alcohol -- to treat ...