|

Yes, You Do Know Victims of Sexual Abuse

From a highly recommended article on Slate, How what happened in State College forced me to confront my own abuse.

Several of my friends, for example, were shocked when Rick Reilly reported that, according to a 1998 study on child sexual abuse by Boston University Medical School, one in six boys in America will be abused by age 16. For girls, it’s one in four by the age of 14. They were shocked, no doubt, because concrete examples of abuse are not as available to them as the statistics suggest. Most people don’t think they know any abuse victims.

But they do know victims. They just don’t realize it, because so many of us have been unable to reveal ourselves. This breeds a false sense of security, with too many adults believing abuse is someone else’s problem.

I’m sure I don’t have to remind readers of this blog that they know someone who was sexually abused as a child, but the world at large doesn’t realize just how many people around them are survivors, and how that fact impacts them, and the people closest to them. Put this in perspective, if you have a close group of friends, 6 male and 4 female, chances are that you know two survivors. If your group of friends, family, and acquaintances is much larger, at least 20% of that group are survivors of sexual abuse, statistically speaking. To say that this doesn’t impact you or anyone you know, is silly. The fact is, if you don’t know anyone who is a survivor, it’s most likely due to the fact that the survivors around you have decided not to reveal it, either to you, or at all.

Many survivors do not share their secret. Some because of the shame they still feel, others because they are not far enough along in their healing to do so safely. Still others, like myself for years, because they look around and don’t seem to see anyone else doing it. That’s why those of us who have decided to be public about our past, are here. I don’t want someone else dealing with abuse to not at the very least be able to get online and see that there are survivors out here, talking about what happened to them, and sharing with each other. I’m proud to be part of a community that works towards making sure survivors know they are not alone. I’m also proud to be part of educating the public at large about abuse, that it is not other people’s problem, but all of ours. I’m glad that Mark McKenna has taken this time to become part of that as well!

Similar Posts

  • | |

    Friendships Matter Much More than the Value We Place on Them

    It’s worth considering your friends and recognizing that we need all kinds of friends. We need loose connections, and we need tight connections. We need long-term friends, and we need friends for a season of our lives.

    In short, we need each other. I’m afraid this has gotten lost in our culture and priorities, and I consider myself as guilty as anyone.

    I also know that being guilty of not prioritizing friendships has hurt me. It’s likely hurting you. It is hurting all of society. It’s time we started valuing close friendships again.

  • Details

    It looks like everything got moved over to the new server and everything seems to running fine on the back end, if you notice a problem, please let me know! In other news. The comments left by CKD on that last post bring up an interesting thing about this site. Mainly, the fact that while…

  • History Survives When We Talk About It

    No matter what our leaders want to include or exclude from the official histories, we know these events happened. We may not be successful in getting large-scale claims of abuse into the history books of the future, though we should try, but we can all continue to talk about them. The mainstream may want us to be quiet about the abuse that happens within the family, the church, etc., but we can tell our stories. We have voices, our own online spaces, connections, and the freedom to speak.

    Most of all, we can support the people telling those stories. They are preserving our history and reminding all of us that the survivors are out here, we know what was done, and we will not accept the lies. We can ensure the truth is out there for those who want to learn and do everything we can to ensure that history is shared. 

3 Comments

  1. I like to give people the example of looking at their children’s friends their group they hang out with on the street perhaps . all these kids you are familiar with a group of ten now think two possibly more have and will be abused . It is close to home it always is people just do think the “not in my backyard ” thing .they may be aware of it but that stuff happens to other people . I also think people in general really beleive they would now when a child has been abused or at risk and be able to protect them especially when it comes to their own children . I find people have a false sense of security regarding sexual abuse when it comes to their own children .
    one other reason people do not talk of their abuse is repressed memory , many people have this .Yet often it is quite evident via behaviours & lifestyle that they were abused . also another thing people don’t realize the signs of abuse are often always there people just chose to pretend , a sort of denial , the mind has a turn off switch . quickly dismissing the signs of abuse and replacing with false excuses for the signs they’ve seen .

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

To respond on your own website, enter the URL of your response which should contain a link to this post's permalink URL. Your response will then appear (possibly after moderation) on this page. Want to update or remove your response? Update or delete your post and re-enter your post's URL again. (Find out more about Webmentions.)