What We Wish Parents Understood

I’m sure many of you have seen this article floating around. I’ve even linked to it on our Facebook page, but I wanted to ensure everyone saw it here as well.
What We Wish Our Parents Understood About Our Sexual Abuse

In it, many survivors share how their parents reacted to finding out their children had been sexually abused and how they wish they had done so differently. As I read it, I realized a couple of things that stood out to me. One was that so many of these kids had no actual grown-ups in their lives. Their parents couldn’t deal with what happened and either ignored it or forced the children to figure out how to cope with it on their own. To me, this proves that even in situations where it’s not a parent who was sexually abusing a child, their lack of parenting certainly made their kids targets. They hold some responsibility for raising kids who were vulnerable to being abused and unable to start healing early because of the lack of support from their parents.

The second thing was that so many of the things your kids need when you find out they’ve been abused are the same things that adult survivors need as well. We need to be believed, we need to feel safe, we need to know that we are worthy of protection, and we need to be heard. Those things are a significant part of healing, regardless of our age. If you have a loved one of any age who is trying to heal from sexual abuse, these are good things to remember, and you should read the whole thing!

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2 Comments

  1. You are so right! and the hurt will lasst a life time without help. I had a father who absolutely to this day, refuses to believe my step mother ever abused me. She did it for 15 years, over a 100 trips to the hosp (including 3 in 1 day!) a severe case of epilepsy on and on but he recently toold my therapis (56 years old and their 20 some yrs divorced because she married the man she was having an affair with) Her step-mom is a Saint Annmarie made this all up. I don’t know which it is harder to heal from. the abuse itself, or not being heard. Annmarie

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