“…Precisely, the influence of distal risk factors (including traumatic childhood experiences/TCEs, personality traits, cultural pressures and the attachment style arising from a specific family environment) contributed to the emergence of proximal risk factors (such as impulsivity, self-critical cognitive styles or low self-esteem, a strong need for control, tendencies towards obsessive–compulsive behaviors, emotional dysregulation, and dissociative symptoms) [ 2 , 12 ]. Within these risk factors, in individuals with EDs emotional dysregulation had been found to mediate the relationship between attachment difficulties and NSSI [ 13 – 15 ], whereas dissociation, as a sense of bodily detachment, mediated the relationship between TCEs and NSSI, resulting to be a crucial factor in explaining individual differences in NSSI among the ED population [ 16 ]. Moreover, individuals with EDs who engaged in NSSI demonstrated more severe emotional dysregulation and dissociative symptoms than those who did not engage in NSSI [ 13 ], indicating the intimate connection between emotional distress and self-destructive behaviors towards the body.…”