my friend needs quiet si coping skills
-
- one of us
- Posts: 2
- Joined: Mon Nov 14, 2005 4:26 am
my friend needs quiet si coping skills
Hello all...my good friend is 18 and his twin brother suffers from epilepsy. As of recently, they had to relocate near a specialist, take up home-schooling, and watch his brother closely. He is very close to his brother, and every time he has a seizure, he feels so bad, that he ends up cutting. The bad thing is, is that he is having a hard time coming up with coping skills, because when his brother does seize, he has to stay in the room with his brother for a while, and thats usually is when his brother is asleep, & thats when he cuts. So, I was wondering if you guys & gals could help me help a friend and give me some good ideas for some quiet coping skills, that could help him release this anger and tension and guilt, but at the same time, wont interrupt his resting recovering brother. I would greatly appreciate, and he would too...thanks so much!
xoxo-katie
xoxo-katie
- oneWayOneLifeOneLove
- building community
- Posts: 685
- Joined: Tue Oct 11, 2005 11:26 pm
- Location: New Jersey Age: 16
- Contact:
Hi there
Some of the things that i find helpful to avoid urgers are:
Snapping a rubber band on my wrist
Writting
reading
hug a pillow
hyperfocucusing
counting to 100
squezing an ice cube
Play the 15 minute game (say you can't cut for 15 minutes, and when the time is up if you still have an urge to si, start again)
those are some of my favorite things to do to avoid SIing hope there helpfule
Some of the things that i find helpful to avoid urgers are:
Snapping a rubber band on my wrist
Writting
reading
hug a pillow
hyperfocucusing
counting to 100
squezing an ice cube
Play the 15 minute game (say you can't cut for 15 minutes, and when the time is up if you still have an urge to si, start again)
those are some of my favorite things to do to avoid SIing hope there helpfule
surprises at ever stop sign
with its share of wrong ways and dead ends
statistice dnt help you with your future
they only tell u were youve been
Hugs are always welcome
with its share of wrong ways and dead ends
statistice dnt help you with your future
they only tell u were youve been
Hugs are always welcome
- look_at_me_now
- unpacking boxes
- Posts: 48
- Joined: Fri Feb 25, 2005 7:59 pm
Hi there. I'm so sorry for your friend and his brother....that sounds like such a sad situation for them both to be in.
As for quiet coping skills that i can think of --> journaling, listening to music on head phones, drawing, ripping up paper, drawing red lines on his arm instead of cutting, reading a favorite book, meditation, creating a safe spot in the room that he is usually in with his brother where he will not SI.........
I'm sorry if these werent helpful!
Take care!
Me.
As for quiet coping skills that i can think of --> journaling, listening to music on head phones, drawing, ripping up paper, drawing red lines on his arm instead of cutting, reading a favorite book, meditation, creating a safe spot in the room that he is usually in with his brother where he will not SI.........
I'm sorry if these werent helpful!
Take care!
Me.
All that I'll ever ruin
You can always cover it with makeup
somedays he feels like dying
she gets so sick of crying
You can always cover it with makeup
somedays he feels like dying
she gets so sick of crying
Writing, reading, music, crossword puzzles are all immediate distractions that can help. Of course there is freezing you tools or otherwise making them hard to get at. While I don't do it often I have used safer alterntives rubber band, wasabi to deflect the urge long enough to have the desire to cut pass.
Has you friend thought about talking to a counselor? it sounds like he could use some longerterm coping strategies to deal with how he is feeling and get at the underlying reasons for his SI. It must be very hard for him to watch his brother go through this. I would expect that the feelings must be pretty difficult to bear on his own.
Take care...
Has you friend thought about talking to a counselor? it sounds like he could use some longerterm coping strategies to deal with how he is feeling and get at the underlying reasons for his SI. It must be very hard for him to watch his brother go through this. I would expect that the feelings must be pretty difficult to bear on his own.
Take care...
Mark
I looked for a person who most needed my kindness today and somehow found myself.
I looked for a person who most needed my kindness today and somehow found myself.
to be honest, he doesn't need to be with his brother in the immediate aftermath of a fit.... if he knows how long it is til his bro is back to normal, maybe , as long as the brother is safe, he can take a walk, get away from it for a bit til all is back to normal. as long as the brother is safe, if it is hurthing him to be with him, spend a few minutes away from eveything and come back to it better able to cope
- disastercake
- forum moderator emeritus
- Posts: 3342
- Joined: Sun Oct 02, 2005 1:12 am
- Gender: Female
- Location: USA
I think journaling in his situation might help to release his feelings, and then when he gets the chance he could rip up the pages, or burn them or something. Or, he could challenge himself to see how long he can go w/o cutting. Say, start at 15 minutes, then when that's up, go for another 15, and another, etc. Eventually the urge will pass.
you will walk the earth with your eyes turned skywards,
for there you have been,
and there you long to return..."
- Leonardo da Vinci
- steady hands
- quintessential regular
- Posts: 2245
- Joined: Fri Sep 02, 2005 2:05 am
-
- building community
- Posts: 666
- Joined: Fri Jun 24, 2005 8:01 pm
- Gender: f
- Location: washington dc
- Contact:
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 10 guests