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What I Wish I Had Known About Recovery from Childhood Sexual Abuse

A recent blog post from my blog speak4change.com that has reach quite a few people and lots of people are emailing me back that can relate.

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They say the hardest part of the healing journey after childhood sexual abuse is the beginning, when you muster up the courage to tell someone that you have been sexually abused. I used to agree but from what I have learned through my own healing journey and from supporting countless other victims, I believe that the hardest part is in the middle. The messy part, the crisis, the unraveling of your world as you know it.

It felt like I intentionally abandoned all that I knew about my world.  No matter how dysfunctional or self-harming, I knew what to expect, I knew how to cope with my vicious internal dialog, and how to defend myself against the invisible enemy that I expected daily, sometimes hourly, to attack me. Even though I was no longer living under the same roof as the perpetrator, I was still living my life, with my fears, thoughts, and beliefs as if I was still living with him.

“One does not discover new lands without consenting to lose sight of the shore for a very long time.” –André Gide.

Growing up in an abusive home, we denied our truth, what we “saw” and felt. We ignored our fear and numbed and repressed our feelings. We thought we could trust our caretakers but they hurt us, ignored us, and made it clear by their actions that we should stay silent.

Accepting this daunting reality as a part of the healing process can be and is overwhelming, especially if you try to go at it alone. I tried for many years to get validation about the abuse I suffered from the family that had ignored it.  It did not work. I was called crazy and asked to get over it. Told that I was just causing trouble for everyone else.

What I learned eventually and I want to share with you, is that the sooner you stop seeking validation from the wrong people, the people that make you feel wrong about speaking the truth, the better off you are and the faster you will recover. Unfortunately for most of us, the wrong people are the people in the families that we are born into.  You have to stop going back to them.

I am not saying that you can never be a part of their world; you can eventually. But it serves you, right now, for your healing, to divorce from them or separate for a while.  At least while you are healing yourself, going through the messy part of healing.

The middle part, the messy part, takes the longest time.  It is the part we tend to resist the most.  It is the deep work of identifying our negative beliefs and exchanging them for new positive, empowering beliefs.  Going back to the people that will not validate your truth will only re-enforce the negative beliefs.

You cannot heal your life if you keep giving your power to the people that hurt you then and are hurting you now. Find and share your story with those that can support you, that can and will validate your pain, your struggle, and most importantly can and will encourage you to move forward.

Find others like you, those that are on the journey and have been through it.  Learn to listen to your heart and intuition. You know what your truth is. Listen to it, honor it, and follow it.

I could have saved myself lot of grief and heartache if someone had told me in the beginning of the journey that the people that I thought loved me, would not be the people walking alongside me and supporting me on the healing journey. It was a painful realization but one that we have to make peace with.

My greatest support came from other fellow survivors that were just a little further down the road than I was, that I could see had made peace with the fact that they could not change their families or make them listen and understand them.

I am glad you are here, that you are reading this.  I want you to know that you can heal and restore yourself.  You can connect through your healing with complete strangers that are survivors and thrivers like you. They have been there, they understand your struggle and they do believe in you.

Your fellow survivors are the people to go to when you feel that hope is lost and the abuse was your fault.  The people that know that you need to hear this, over and over and over.  It was not your fault. We can remind you of what is possible. That healing is possible.

I believe in you. I believe your story and your truth. I know that you can heal and I will remind you of that as often as you need to hear it. You are not alone my friend. It may not seem like it but we are all in this together.

We are stronger together.

Svava Brooks is a survivor thriver of childhood sexual trauma.  Svava is a certified childhood sexual abuse prevention educator passionate about educating adults, especially parents, on how to keep their kids safe from child sexual abuse.  To sign up for her prevention webinars please follow this link. educate4change.com Svava also works as a facilitator, and life coach helping adult survivors recover from sexual trauma through online life coaching and support groups.  You can connect with Svava and other survivors supporting each other, online in the OneHealth community, at cst.onehealth.com

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Svava,

It's so rewarding to hear how your family has reached out to YOU (after 15 years)!  It gives me hope that one day, my family may chose ME over their silence.  I'm happy for YOU! :)

Thank you all for your comments, feedback and sharing.  Our families are truly the people we get to practice setting boundaries with.  I agree Jane and I am happy to report that in the last couple of years my half siblings that did not want to have anything todo with me for 15 years, are now coming back into my life.    I knew then, even though it was painful 15 years ago that I could not make them see or understand, but I needed to choose me, and trust that one day, on their time there might be a chance that they would want to talk about what was going on in that home that we all grew up in.  Yes there is hope, always. 

This is a wonderful essay, Svava. Oh, yes, that messy middle part! You describe it so well. I think that survivors of child sex abuse -- or for that matter, any other type of abuse that the survivor's family does not want to acknowledge -- must come to grips with the fact that their family may never believe or support them, especially if family members continue their abusive ways or feel they need to stay locked in denial for their own survival. And I think it's part of healing to be open to the potential that some of the family members may, decades later, be willing to talk about the family members' experiences. 

Wonderful post, Svava. I like how you acknowledge the difficult and messy "middle part" of healing while also promoting hope. I especially appreciate your discussion of how it can be hard to walk away from, or distance, toxic family relationships. Yet as you point out, doing so is often necessary for full recovery from the effects of early life trauma. Thank you.

Terrific Svava!  And so true for me. The messy part of your healing journey is disentangling from those you love who deny your trauma, who won't listen or try to understand what happen to you, and who can't allow you to share that pain -- it's too much for them.  You need to seek and find the people who are either survivors themselves, or those with a tremendous amount of empathy and can sense your pain and have compassion for your trauma, and be there for you when you need them.  These people will become your new family and the bond you share with them will overtake any pain you endure when you let go of your loved ones to take care of yourself. Thanks for sharing.

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