I very much doubt you're a sadist.
Just as I very much doubt that people who self-harm are masochists.
But you'd asked for help in stopping revenge-seeking behavior. Hence the quotes I shared.
If someone comes on here asking for help with stopping self-harm? (Thinking about it, fantasizing about it, intrusive thoughts about it, obsessing about it, acting on it) I'm not going to sit here and tell them what they're upset about is worth being upset about, or thinking happy thoughts about mutilating themselves isn't that bad, so don't bother doing anything. I'm going to try and give them as many resources as I can for getting their self harm under control.
***
The blog post is about a scientific study, meaning that the terminology is technical
- Sadistic/Sadism = pleasure from pain (giving) - ex - Revenge
- Masochistic/Masochism = pleasure from pain (receiving) - ex - Self harm
Both of which are worlds away from
being a sadist or masochist, who may ONLY receive pleasure from inflicting pain on others, or themselves.
BigBadScaryDisorders? Are made up of
normal human traits... Taken to the
extreme. Most people get some degree of pleasure from pain, either their own, someone else's, or both. It's just usually a very small part of their overall makeup, or expressed in really healthy ways (like competitive sports, both playing and watching, to name one of hundreds of examples). Further along on the spectrum? You have people who are using pleasure/relief/comfort from pain as a coping mechanism. Even further down the spectrum are people who are getting pathological about it. And waaaaaaaay on down at the teeny tiny end are the people who are defined by that singular trait.