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A Mother's Rage

I recently viewed Lady Gaga's new video, Till It Happens to You. I have stifled my rage for a number of years now, because it wasn't my trauma and the healing process is about meeting someone where they are. But, I am a mother. It is my trauma. It is my rage. It is my guilt. According to the White House's Web Site, 1 is 2 Many, " Over 11% of high school girls report having been physically forced to have sexual intercourse." Much focus has been on college students, rightfully so, however; the epidemic of sexual assault is not confined to college campuses. The epidemic is in middle school, high school, college, and beyond.

 

While living in Miami, Florida, my oldest daughter, 15 years old at the time, (her last name is different than mine, which I will not share) went to spend the night at a friend's house. I did not know she had other plans. She was invited to a party, which she attended instead. At the party she was given alcohol spiked with drugs. Apparently it was a gang initiation, and her blonde hair and blue eyes had made her a target. She was gang-raped and tattooed. Those words haunt me. I choke on them. I've been a practicing pacifist for a long time, but this rage made me question my core.

 

I didn't learn about what had happened until I received a phone call from her high school counselor two weeks after the attack. A student who had witnessed it had come forward and was worried about my daughter harming herself. The school police officer told me there was nothing he could do, because it occurred off campus. Some of the boys apparently were in her school, but I was told I was not allowed to know who they were. No accommodations were offered my daughter. I was told by the school counselor my daughter was seen flirting with one of the boys before it happened, so she thought it was possible the first attack wasn't an attack. Apparently, the friend who had come forward had cell phone video of the attack, which the counselor and school officer watched. I was told I wasn't allowed to talk to the friend or see the video.

 

We were told no disciplinary action would be taken, because there was no real proof, apparently the cell phone video and words of her friend were not enough. My daughter refused to talk about it. I contacted the city police department, since it occurred in city limits. I had to pull strings to get a detective from the special victims unit to respond. My daughter still refused to make a statement. The detective's first question of me was to ask me her sexual history. I told him that wasn't relevant. He then told me without a statement from her there was no investigation. I told him there was cell phone video and a willing witness. He reiterated that without a statement from my daughter there was no investigation.

 

I quit my job. A job I loved. I moved 1,600 miles back to Northern Michigan where she was born, and we had previously lived. I took a 60% pay cut. I gave her resources for counseling. But still, my daughter went off the deep end...she left home. I didn't give up on her. I didn't always know where she was, but I texted her every morning and every night that I loved her. I received word she was being suspended from her school in Michigan due to lack of attendance. I cried. It was my rage. It was my trauma. It was my guilt.

 

For six months she lived apart from me, mostly couch surfing. She got a job for the summer. Then, she called me and told me she had re-enrolled in school. She had found support with a local counselor. She asked me to give her rides to and from school. I did. She graduated. She now has a boyfriend. They live together and are expecting their first child, my grandchild. 

 

My rage still haunts me. My grandson will arrive soon. I love him already. I will love him and protect him and teach him to love, with my daughter and her boyfriend. I now vow to replace my rage with efforts to bring change. I will continue to fight for those not heard, not believed. My rage, my trauma, my guilt will no longer haunt me, but maybe it will bring change. I encourage you to join me. Let us be the voice to end sexual abuse and trauma at all ages. Let the shock of college campus sexual assaults move us to open our eyes and see what is happening in our middle schools and high schools. Let us hold middle schools and high schools accountable as we have higher education.

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Cathy,

As a Pediatrician who took my responsibility seriously over twenty years, I, too, am angry, enraged, by the lack of moral integrity in our society. You came forward to get help in addressing the victimization of your daughter, a 15 year old girl. Her making a 'statement' should have had nothing to do with societal leaders at many levels doing something about the victimization, preventing it from happening to the next girl or boy, if not for your daughter. The apathy of our population leaders is appalling, embarrassing, and, it seems for far too few of us, unacceptable. Were the primary care providers for your daughter not brought into the situation, along with the school nurse? Making a statement, short of filing a lawsuit, is not required to do the right thing for the client, a child and her parents, and the collective neighborhood within an "Accountable Care Organization (ACO)." That said, I know why my 'colleagues' didn't/don't react - lack of support from leadership. All are defensive, protecting their own (job) security. When I came to the aid of 'my kids' in clinic I grew so weary of co-worker's and supposed medical management's lack of concern and failed assistance to root out the core cause for these kinds of situations, sexual assault being only one of many. After twenty years of clinical work as a paramedic on the street and then Pediatrician, I migrated to healthcare administration and advocacy, providing research and training rather than committing what I considered was unethical malpractice day after day. I am truly sorry for what your daughter (and you) went through, but I also know my saying this to you is "adequate, but not sufficient!" I have formed a non-profit (Serendipity Alliance) to band together passionate professionals who will step out of the shadows to help victims address these kinds of issues for those "without a voice." I am heartened that both of us are turning our anger and energy towards advocacy and transformation of our culture. Consider me on your team (and vice versa?).

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Cathy, 

     I believe you have expressed your justified outrage quite eloquently, as a mother, fellow citizen, and human being. Thank you for sharing your feelings, and doing so in such an understandable manner. I found myself asking whether I could have distinguished between the sense of helplessness that lack of police follow-up (which should not have been dependent on a 15 year old minor child's willingness to file a police report, when a parent should have had legal standing to assert a complaint on behalf of a minor child), and the guilt you report having felt about that. I wonder why the detective didn't suggest that a victim/witness advocate meet with both you and your daughter, together-before the detective insisted that the report was a pre-requisite for any police action. That may or may not have been police department policy. I also found myself wondering why just one detective, from a Special Victims unit, responded alone, rather than with a partner [preferably of the opposite gender]. I too, would have been quite incensed. I don't know if what guilt you felt about this sequence of events, was yours to bear alone. I think you made every reasonable effort an assertive [single?] parent could, in such circumstances. I also believe your story is a passionate plea for justice, that did not occur at the time of the events you described, and still has not yet occurred. I read portions of a book Janice Harris Lord wrote, some time after attending a trauma-informed training conference she did, which was sponsored by our NH Attorney General's Victim/Witness office, and the book noted some tasks for victims, and if it involved a minor child, [some of] the tasks may be relevant for a victim's parents too. 

Cathy,
I'm so sorry for what happened to your daughter. And then what didn't happen after at the school. And horrified too. Thank you for sharing the story from your mother perspective. I am so sorry for the pain but glad you are finding ways to channel it for yourself and your daughter and coming grand child.
cissy

Mem Lang,

 

Thank you for your kind comments. I now am better educated in regards to Title IX and know many things done were not appropriate. At the time, I was reeling and could have benefited with an advocate who knew what my daughter's rights were and mine. Love is a powerful healing agent, and we know a positive, stable relationship with an adult can heal a brain, building resilience.

How brave to tell your story and of course your daughter's.  

It seems very strange you were not allowed to talk to the friend or view the video.  That sounds illegal - she was still under your care.  Very odd.

Your daughter and family will be fine, because you are there for her.  In terms of resilience, this will help pull her through and her being a mother and you a grandmother will create a further bond.  I can feel the maternal strength and determination from your writing!  Although things haven't gone well for her in the past, she has your positive influence of you always being there for her.

All the best to your daughter and to you: make sure you give yourself some TLC as well!

That is such a high figure of sexual abuse:  are there campaigns happening about it in the USA?  That attitude of somehow it's not completely condoned or however it's justified by the perpetrators seems to be inherent in our culture too - tackling domestic violence is also a good place to start.  Children copy/receive confirmation what they see is ok from their family, community and especially media re women or anyone deemed as prey where the perpetrators can't 'lose'.  Is not Donald Trump a classic example of chauvinistic attitudes firmly entrenched, STILL?! 

 

 

Thank you for posting this story. I have experienced the vicarious (I think) trauma surrounding substance abuse in a family member--it too almost broke my heart, but with help I was able to hang on to the love and be present. I wonder if there could be a sort of Abuse Anonymous Program, if there isn't already. I wonder if anyone would attend. Trauma is awful, but the shame around it is horrific.  Again, thank you. 

As a mother, I can imagine what you have been through. In fact, I've been through similar experiences with my son. I cannot tell his story because it is his to tell, which leaves me without a voice and a way to process the pain and the guilt. 

 

I admire you for putting this in writing. I admire the mother love that has kept you connected all this time. I am outraged by what happened to your daughter. The world sometimes seems an uncaring and ignorant place... and yet here we all are, working to change that. Thank you for being in the trenches and thank you for sharing your story.

 

Janice, Tina and Luanne,

 

Thank you to each of you for your kind words of support. It was rage that wrote this, but love that will move if forward toward change! 

 

Tina, I hope you know I feel the same way about you! You, too, are awesome. I am so glad we have connected. We are a force to be reckoned with and together we will get our state moving!

Wow Cathy,

 

Very powerful. You are awesome!!!!!! I am so glad we are colleagues and are working together on helping all kids and adults who have experienced trauma. 

 

(Wondered though -- you write such great stuff and this is a powerful piece/I am a terrible writer.  Could you post this and some of your other writings in Northern Michigan ACEs? --- I will promise to write something this weekend and post it too.  Thanks so much!!!!   Tina)

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