Just Off Ya Damn Self and get it over with, why don’tcha
There are some depraved, depressed and dangerous Folks today. Why Disfigure Yourself or Self-Embed Something harmful inside yourself ? why laugh at someone being hurt or robbed as though it couldn’t happen to you ?
we’re not advocating people hurting or killing themselves; we just feel that this is an issue better made clear, than left bloody unclear.
I wonder if this generation has a leader, or at least a figure who can lead them away from this kind of Sociopathic Deconstructionism.
Hey Folks – Are You Really Paying Attention to REALITY ?
Whatever…

These are some Folks who need Lifetime Emotional Care, Starting Immediately,
(From Entertainment Ave.)
The prosecutors, judges and the Mayor of Baltimore, Maryland were strongly offended by the surveillance video obtained by Baltimore Examiner, showing two girls laughing while witnessing a 46-year old man robbed and shot inside a restaurant in the area.
Cosmetic surgery addict injected cooking oil into her own face
A Korean woman addicted to plastic surgery has been left unrecognisable after her obsession led her to inject cooking oil into her face.
Hang Mioku, now 48, had her first plastic surgery procedure when she was 28; hooked from the beginning she moved to Japan where she had further operations – mostly to her face.
Following operation after operation, her face was eventually left enlarged and disfigured, but she would still look at herself in the mirror and think she was beautiful.
Eventually the surgeons she visited refused to carry out any more work on her and one suggested that her obsession could be a sign of a psychological disorder.
When she returned home to Korea the surgery meant Hang’s features had changed so much that her own parents didn’t recognise her.
After realising that the girl with the grossly swollen face was indeed their daughter her horrified parents took her to a doctor. Once again the possibility that Hang had a mental disorder was raised and she started treatment.
However, this treatment was too expensive for her to keep up and she soon fell back into old ways.
Amazingly, she found a doctor who was willing to give her silicone injects and, what’s more, he then gave her a syringe and silicone of her own so she could self-inject.
When her supply of silicone ran out Hang resorted to injecting cooking oil into her face.
Her face became so grotesquely large that she was called “standing fan” by children in her neighbourhood – due to her large face and small body.
As Hang’s notoriety spread she was featured on Korean TV. Viewers seeing the report took mercy on her and sent in enough donations to enable her to have surgery to reduce the size of her face.
During the first procedure surgeons removed 60g of foreign substance from Hang’s face and 200g from her neck.
After several other sessions her face was left greatly reduced but still scarred and disfigured.
And it would seem that even Hang can now see the damage she has done; she now says that she would simply like her original face back.
An X-ray image of a teen girl’s arm with eight self-embedded metal pieces
RSNA

At a recent medical conference in Chicago, a team of radiologists from Nationwide Children’s Hospital presented intriguing X-ray evidence of a psychological phenomenon — what they believed was a new form of self-injury among teens and adolescents. Eleven out of 505 patients whom the team had treated in more than a decade had inserted objects — from chunks of crayons to unfolded paper clips — under their skin in a behavior the Nationwide team labeled “self-embedding.”
All of Nationwide’s patients were young females, but when the researchers, including Dr. William Shiels II, the hospital’s chief of radiology, turned to medical literature for other examples of self-embedding, they found very few — and those were among adults, primarily males. Shiels and his colleagues asked around at the hospital, but not even mental-health specialists had heard of it, nor had many of their colleagues outside the hospital. “As a profession in general, psychologists were not aware that this was happening,” Shiels says. (See pictures of self-injury in Japan.)
At the time of the conference, however, a Chicago Tribune reporter uncovered two more instances of self-embedding in an Illinois town — two teen girls had deliberately inserted pencils into their skin and broken off the tips — lending credence to the possibility that self-embedding was a growing trend, albeit off the radar. “We know it’s elsewhere,” says Shiels, who is creating a protected database for medical professionals worldwide to track the behavior. “It just hasn’t been discussed and it hasn’t been studied.”
Shiels’ team stumbled on the peculiar practice largely by chance. In 2007, a premed student named Adam Young, then 21, was compiling data during his summer internship at Nationwide. Part of his responsibilities included maintaining a database of patients who had been treated by the hospital’s radiology department using Image Guided Foreign Body Removal, a technique that was developed by Shiels during his Army days to help remove foreign objects like shrapnel from soft tissue. Shiels’ method was less invasive than surgery, which often requires an incision of 2 to 3 inches and can lead to damage in surrounding tissues or organs; the new method requires a quarter-inch incision and uses a combination of ultrasound and fluoroscopy — live X-ray — to carefully guide forceps to the object, steering clear of the body’s vital structures during extraction. The scar is also much smaller, “about the size of a freckle,” Shiels says. (See pictures from an X-ray studio.)
While Young was cataloging the hospital’s data on procedures involving Shiels’ technique, which Shiels first introduced to the hospital in 1995, Young realized that some of the patients hadn’t injured themselves accidentally. Unlike the majority of people who came in for treatment — for stepping on a piece of glass or being impaled by a particularly large splinter — these patients’ wounds were self-inflicted. “I started to see three or four instances where the foreign-body cases were not accidental,” he says. “I started to think it was a little strange and mentioned it to Dr. Shiels.”
Young went back to school in the fall, and two or three more patients came to Nationwide with similar wounds. For Shiels and Young, it became clear that they were on to something. The following summer, Shiels, Young (who graduated from Miami University in Ohio) and three others worked their way through the data, unearthing cases of self-embedding going back to 2005. They also discovered that the majority of patients who harmed themselves in this way did so more than once — the average recurrence was three times — and that the materials embedded under the skin varied dramatically in size, from several unfolded staples embedded into a hand to a 6.3-in. unfolded paper clip inserted into a bicep.
Once they were aware of the trend, Shiels and his colleagues analyzed the patients’ medical records, finding consistent histories of self-injury and mental-health problems. There are numerous psychological and emotional factors that drive people to self-harm, but according to Harvard psychology professor Matthew Nock, who specializes in the study of self-injurious behavior and edited a book on the subject, Understanding Non-Suicidal Self-Injury (due March 2009), many do it for two broad reasons: to regulate their emotions and to communicate with others. “Self-injurers experience greater physiological arousal in response to stress, show poor ability to tolerate distress, and have greater deficits in social problem-solving skills,” Nock explains, meaning that people self-injure to distract themselves from other emotional pain, to counter feelings of numbness or to let people know that they’re suffering.
The Nationwide team’s findings sparked a frenzy on the Internet, with stories cropping up one after the other and chatter lighting up on blogs. But as the news spread, globally even, some mental-health professionals grew wary. Without discounting the severity of the problem — particularly among adolescent girls — some experts felt the headlines declaring self-embedding a new “disorder” went too far. Characterizing it as a disorder rather than a symptom of one may miss the mark, says Dr. John Campo, chief of child and adolescent psychiatry at Nationwide Children’s and one of the specialists consulted by Shiels. “Young people with a variety of different psychiatric diagnoses may engage in this behavior,” says Campo, and proclaiming it as its own condition may deter comprehensive mental-health care to identify the true nature of the problem. (See TIME’s top 10 medical breathroughs of 2008.)
Nock believes self-embedding is a dangerous evolution, but says it is not unique. “I view this as a more severe variation of self-injury,” he says. An analysis of the data Nock has compiled in his years of research reveals that some 10% to 20% of adolescents who injure themselves have inserted objects beneath their skin. None of those patients reported leaving the objects there, however, and only two out of 12 patients who reported doing so had to seek medical treatment as a result. “The fact that kids are inserting things under their skin is not necessarily new,” Nock says, adding that those who leave the objects embedded are probably in a very small minority.
The dangers of this form of self-injury are obvious, and serious. Creating any wound in the skin can lead to infection, but when foreign objects are inserted deep into tissue, the risk is amplified. “The infections aren’t just at the site,” Shiels says. “You can get a deep muscle infection or a bone infection,” or if you hit arteries, veins, nerves or tendons while driving something into the soft tissue, you can cause tears or other damage. Beyond those risks, there is also the possibility that objects can travel once inside the body, approaching vital organs. “They pose significant risk, not only during insertion, but also if they’re not removed,” Shiels says.
The other major concern among mental-health specialists is that publicizing the behavior could exacerbate the problem. In a study of self-injury among adolescents conducted earlier this year, Nock found that 38% of teens who injured themselves learned of the practice from friends, while 13% first heard about it through the media. It’s a bit of a catch-22, says Nock. “On the one hand, it’s very helpful and useful for health professionals to communicate with each other and learn how to proceed when they see [these cases],” he says, “but we know that media coverage of self-injurious behavior influences rates of self-injurious behavior.”
As studies show a surge in self-injury in recent years, “we’ve also seen increased media reports,” Nock says. “It could be the media is catching up, but the opposite is also true: as kids hear more about it, it enters into the realm of behaviors in which they can engage.”
Tags: cosmetic surgery addict, crime, cutting, depression, self embed, self harm, self hatred, sociopaths











