Things I need to do: lose weight, get a grip, sleep.
I need to move out so bad. I cannot live here any longer.
The thought of school makes me want to throw up. I believe this is probably unhealthy.
But really
Self-injury can become addictive. Experts theorize that it may be reinforced by the release in the brain of opioidlike endorphins that result in a natural high and emotional relief.
Dr. Whitlock, director of the Cornell Research Program on Self-Injurious Behavior in Adolescents and Young Adults, said in an interview that self-injury mainly seemed to function to “self-regulate feelings and help people cope with overwhelming negative emotions they have no other way to dispel.”
Page 1 of 494

