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Self-Destructive Behaviours: Using ‘CARESS’

When clients have the impulse to self-harm, what helps them stop? Not safety contracts, argues Lisa Ferentz, but help finding alternative ways to cope, self-soothe and communicate. To mark Self-Injury Awareness Day, the specialist in trauma and self-destructive behaviours shares her empowering alternative intervention, ‘CARESS’.

Many adolescent and adult clients with histories of trauma, abuse, neglect and other pain narratives are vulnerable to using self-destructive behaviours to self-soothe or dissociate from unresolved pain. Physical or sexual abuse survivors gravitate towards self-harm because their perpetrators have already modelled and normalised that it’s okay for their bodies to be harmed. They are picking up where their abuser left off. In addition, if a traumatised person feels ‘responsible’ for their abuse, engaging in self-harm becomes a way to punish their own body.

Survivors of childhood abuse are not given healthy tools for comfort and coping. In the short-term, self-harm provides temporary relief from overwhelming thoughts and negative feelings. Turning to drugs, alcohol, acts of self-mutilation, eating disorders, gambling, or Internet addictions can serve as a distraction and a form of self-medication. Unfortunately, in the long-term these behaviours add more trauma and leave survivors with an increased sense of guilt, shame, and disempowerment.

Like most therapists, at the start of my career I was taught to make a self-harming client sign a safety contract. But I discovered these contracts actually created power struggles and re-enacted a victim-perpetrator dynamic by forcing client acquiescence in order to keep the therapeutic relationship. When a client discloses an act of self-harm rather than aggressively attempting to extinguish the behaviour, it’s our job to add to their repertoire of coping. This helps them to organically let go of destructive choices and begin to incorporate strategies that don’t lead to an endgame of shame or further emotional and physical pain.

I’ve come to believe that safety contracts are really designed to reduce the therapist’s anxiety and are not effective in treating self-harm. It’s unreasonable to ask clients to give up their destructive behaviours unless and until you give them alternative ways to cope, self-soothe, and communicate. Otherwise, treatment simply becomes a game of ‘whack a mole’: you may repress cutting but they will turn to drinking or over-eating instead.

CARESS: Communicate Alternatively, Release Endorphins, Self-Soothe

In response to the realisation that safety contracts don’t work I created an alternative called CARESS which stands for Communicate Alternatively, Release Endorphins, and Self-Soothe. When clients get the impulse to engage in a destructive behaviour, they are encouraged to first do something under each of these three categories, setting a timer for 10-15 minutes per activity.

For the CA section they can draw, journal or write a poem about their feelings. For the RE section they can engage in a safe physical activity, watch a funny video to evoke laughter, or hug a pillow or stuffed animal to release endorphins. The endpoint is always something self-soothing (SS) including: reading positive affirmations; breathwork; listening to music; using aromatherapy; or colouring a mandala.

By incorporating CARESS you’ve given clients meaningful things to do when they get an impulse to self-harm, rather than telling them they can’t act on their impulse. You’ve also eliminated the victim-perpetrator dynamic of telling clients they must be compliant in order to stay in treatment. Rather than ‘white knuckling’ the impulse to self-harm, they actively engage in behaviours that accomplish what self-harming seeks to achieve. This dramatically reduces the need to engage in self-harm once they’ve completed CARESS.

Moving through three activities in 10-15 minute increments also buys clients 30-45 minutes of time to get past the initial ‘craving’. Additionally, the CA part of CARESS generates useful information that can be processed in therapy about the meta-communication and deeper feelings connected to their self-harm.

You will also see an increase in self-compassion and empowerment when clients feel productive, gain new insights, feel more in control and have more agency about their choices. And most importantly, you will be offering clients healthier new ways to genuinely engage in self-care.

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Lisa Ferentz

Lisa Ferentz, LCSW-C, DAPA, is a recognized expert in the strengths-based, de-pathologized treatment of trauma and has been in private practice for over 35 years. She presents workshops and keynote addresses nationally and internationally, and is a clinical consultant to practitioners and mental health agencies in the United States, Canada, the UK, and Ireland.

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