Self-Harm and Fatigue: Understanding Exhaustion in Mental Health

The relationship between Self-Harm and chronic fatigue — causes, overlap, and management.

Fatigue is one of the most common and debilitating aspects of self-harm. Understanding its causes enables better management.

Why Self-Harm Causes Fatigue

  • Neurological: The constant vigilance of self-harm is neurologically expensive
  • Sleep disruption: Even subtle self-harm-related sleep interference causes significant fatigue
  • HPA axis dysregulation: Chronic stress hormones deplete physical energy
  • Inflammation: Elevated inflammatory markers in self-harm cause fatigue directly
  • Emotional labor: Processing self-harm throughout the day is exhausting

Fatigue vs. Laziness in Self-Harm

Self-Harm fatigue is physiological, not motivational. Pushing through it without addressing self-harm makes both worse.

Managing Self-Harm Fatigue

  • Prioritize sleep: First-line intervention
  • Pacing: Strategic energy management — activity balanced with recovery
  • Treat self-harm directly: Addressing self-harm typically improves fatigue
  • Light exercise: Counter-intuitively, gentle movement often reduces self-harm fatigue

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