DSM-5 Criterion 5
Recurrent suicidal behavior, gestures, or threats, or self-mutilating behavior — the most dangerous criterion, and the most misunderstood.
If you are currently having thoughts of self-harm or suicide, please contact the 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline — call or text 988. You matter more than any article.
Self-harm in BPD is almost never about wanting to die. And it is almost never about seeking attention. It serves a function — often multiple functions — that the person has no other way to fulfill.
For some, physical pain interrupts emotional pain. When the internal anguish reaches a level that feels unsurvivable, a cut or a burn creates a sharp, focused sensation that overrides the diffuse emotional agony. For others, self-harm releases tension — the pressure that builds when emotions have no outlet finally has somewhere to go. For still others, it makes invisible suffering visible — the wound on the outside finally matches what's happening on the inside.
Suicidal ideation in BPD exists on a spectrum. For many, it's a constant background hum — not an active plan, but an ever-present awareness that “I could end this” which paradoxically provides a sense of control. For others, it spikes during crises — abandonment, conflict, shame — and can become acutely dangerous. The rate of completed suicide in BPD is approximately 10%, making it one of the highest-risk psychiatric conditions.
Physical pain can temporarily interrupt unbearable emotional pain. It creates a focused sensation that overrides the diffuse anguish — like pressing a reset button on a system that's overloaded. The relief is real, which is what makes the behavior so hard to stop.
When dissociation makes the person feel numb, unreal, or disconnected from their body, self-harm can serve as grounding — a painful but effective way to “come back.” The person isn't trying to hurt themselves; they're trying to feel themselves.
When words can't convey the depth of internal pain, wounds become language. The person isn't being dramatic — they're showing you something their vocabulary can't express. Dismissing this as “attention-seeking” is both inaccurate and dangerous.
For those with deep self-loathing, self-harm can feel deserved. “I caused this fight. I ruined this relationship. I deserve to hurt.” The pain becomes penance — a way to atone for the perceived crime of being defective.
In DBT's treatment hierarchy, self-harm and suicidal behavior are always the first priority. Every session begins by checking the diary card for any self-harm episodes, and when they occur, the therapist conducts a chain analysis — a detailed, non-judgmental examination of what happened before, during, and after, to identify intervention points.
Distress tolerance skills provide alternatives: holding ice, dunking your face in cold water (the dive reflex), intense exercise, paced breathing. These won't feel as effective at first — but they don't create wounds, scars, or medical emergencies, and over time they become sufficient.
The critical principle is that you can't take away a coping mechanism without providing a replacement. Self-harm works — that's the problem. Treatment doesn't deny that. It provides alternatives that work without the damage.