What It Really Means To Survive Childhood Sexual Abuse

Stuck, I really got stuck with this one, stuck for a long time. I meant  to finish and post so much  earlier, but I was struggling to find my courage, struggling to find the right words, struggling to figure out what I actually want to say about this and now I am publishing this, I still don’t believe I’m doing the subject matter any justice. Obviously, I have written about surviving childhood abuse before and it goes without saying that any form of child abuse, any form of abuse at all is horrible and it can never be put into words, how horrible it truly is. 

Being an adult survivor of childhood sexual abuse is far from being easy, but some aspects of this may not be so obvious to others, who never had similar experiences. I can, of course, only really speak from my own perspective here, but I know that I am not alone in experiencing these things. 

A big one right off the bat,  is that talking to others about this may be much harder than they’ll ever know. This is not only due to the shame and embarrassment, we survivors feel (which really should be with the perpetrators, but it is what it is…). Talking about this often just reminds us of the fact that the people, who should have been protecting us, took our innocence and scarred us for life in an unimaginable way.  Talking about it even a little bit, can easily reopen those often barely healed wounds.  Another big issue, when it comes to opening up about being an adult survivor of childhood molestation, is that it is seemingly impossible to describe what this means for our lives.

We as survivors often suppress the heck out of this, and if we’d let those memories surface at all, we often simply don’t talk about it.  But when we do, things often get complicated. Not only does it make people extremely uncomfortable, which is hardly encouraging when it comes to being open and sharing. If they have had similar experiences, it can trigger painful memories for them as well, and if they cannot relate, they often rather ignore the topic or struggle to find the right words. In either case, most of the times it creates an uncomfortable situation, which isn’t helpful to anybody. 

So, it comes as no surprise, that this topic is not talked about enough. Acknowledging it, can tear families and communities apart, as so many refuse to accept the unthinkable. The sad thing is though, that due to this, too many survivors face disbelieve and aggression when they do try to speak out.  A line we hear (I am very familiar with is)may be:  “Why didn’t you say anything when it happened?”

To that I say, when you are a child, it is a necessity to your survival to  be able to trust the adults. Ergo, we had to believe that whatever they were doing to us was acceptable, that this was normal and something that happens everywhere and in every family.  And on top of that, those people whom we trusted by default, also told us not to say anything.  

To call this destructive is putting it mildly, an understatement, because this is the stuff that destroys a human soul. By telling us to be ‘hush hush’ and that we would be doing something wrong, if we ever talked about this, meant that our foundation had cracks long before the house, we call a human life, was even fully built. 

As always, every story is different but a lot of us would forget about the abuse, once we grew up. I encountered some sceptics, who had a hard time believing that I would forget such an awful thing happening to me so early in life.  Forgetting or suppressing can be helpful, when it comes to functioning in society. On the other hand, if we forget, we live with a huge shadow over our heads, we’re unable to truly develop our potential and are robbed of the chance to be our true selves. 

Here are just a few examples on how our lives may be different from other people: 

We can be loners

Like I mentioned above, we don’t always remember the abuse and if we do, we tend to avoid talking about it.  Which in turn makes it much harder for others to understand us.  Just as much as we are feeling this strange and scary shadow hanging over our heads, others notice it too. But whether we have  always remembered the unspeakable, remember later or not at all, we may often seem different to our peers.  Often we would notice that others have a kind of unity, we don’t feel able to participate in. Others seem to be able to accept widespread views of the world or what their families have taught them, while we remain doubtful.  We have a subconscious awareness that there is more to the world than the official narrative, and that you cannot always trust your own family and the people closest to you. However, we often cannot quite point our finger to it, which may make us appear even more like the odd one out, and in a way the people surrounding us may even become suspicious of us.  This then goes full circle, when we cannot really explain ourselves – either we don’t remember where this ominous shadow comes from, or we feel like we mustn’t talk about it – we end up spending a lot of time on our own. We feel safest in our own company.

We lack self-esteem and do not develop our full potential

Abusers often put it in our minds that we are profoundly unworthy, as this enables their abuse – we believe that we don’t deserve any better.  The ramifications of such manipulation tactics are usually disastrous, but if you were brainwashed in this manner when you were really young, they are even worse. 

We live in a society that is success driven and that requires a certain level of self-esteem. With our deep-seeded feelings of unworthiness, our self-esteem is sometimes simply non-existent. I can’t even begin to describe to you, how often people were surprised with my utter lack of self-confidence. Occasionally, they even seemed to be thinking that I was somehow faking this in an attempt to appear less of a threat, if there was some kind of competition involved. I must’ve heard the sentence: “I don’t know anybody else, who is so mean to themselves!” a gazillion times. 

The abuse at a young age takes away our spirit and then as survivors, we don’t really go for the things we want. We tend to give up halfway or completely avoid the risks necessary taking, if you want to advance in life.  Because we don’t feel worthy of achieving our goals, we sabotage ourselves. 

People pleasing is a thing

A ‘fun’ tool child molesters employ is to make children pay for love and attention.  The payment, in this particular case, is letting yourself be raped.  It is in essence, your abuser granting you your right to exist. We had no choice, but to constantly seek their approval, but not only theirs. Because we were so young when being violated in this most disgusting manner, we were conditioned to do everything the abuser(s) or anyone else demanded. Because if we wouldn’t, there’d be hell to pay. Children simply cannot exist thinking they did something wrong and then not try to make it all better.  For a child to survive, they need to feel safe with the adults that care of them and fitting in, being loved and acknowledged by them, means everything. The pattern runs so deep with us, that when we grow up ,we often attract more abusive people in friendships and relationships. And in everyday life, it remains vital to us to be liked by as many as possible – the people pleasing behaviour will persist.  To us it seems like, what we had to offer in the past in exchange for love was so vile, that compared to that people’s expectations now seem manageable, even if we end up only giving and never receiving.

Promiscuity / our adult sex-life 

Unlike what many may think, survivors of childhood sexual abuse often tend to be very promiscuous. People often seem to think that such an experience would leave you being practically asexual and for sure, some survivor’s sex life might be non-existent, due to what happened to them. However, as strange as this may sound, because we were so highly sexualised from such a young age, sex is often the only way we know how to connect at all.  Unfortunately, unless it is with the right person, there is not much connecting going on and we’re often left feeling more empty after having sex. On the outside, we may seem slutty,  but really we just want to be a part of life, of inter-human connection..of something, and we never learned that it is OK to say No. 

Whether we are promiscuous or end up completely inhibited, when it comes to sex and even try to avoid it at all costs, we’re not in the best position to find that lasting relationship, we long for and that can leave us feeling lonely and unfulfilled. 

C-PTSD  / PTSD

With the very first time the sexual abuse happens, we are traumatised for life. Even if it only happened that one time, PTSD will affect you well into adulthood. For many of us though, the abuse happens frequently over a certain period of our life – very often on some kind of unsavoury schedule. Therefore, we can easily develop Complex PTSD/ or C-PTSD.  Our entire focus is always on our survival, because we were never safe as a child.  We are in a constant fight or flight mode, that can make us appear zoned out and overwhelmed. Frankly, sometimes people just assume we’re stupid.  Therefore, things that come relatively easy to others can be a struggle for us.  This shadow I talked about, it can make us paranoid. Even if we don’t remember the abuse itself, we have this innate knowing that there may be danger around us.  That danger can be as simple, as encountering a person who really doesn’t like us.  This would be a normal thing, right? Not a problem for a healthy person, but for us it is.  When we were not loved as a child, our wellbeing and survival was at stake, remember? So, the world remains a strange, at times unbearable,  place to us. If you feel that unworthy, danger practically lurks at every corner. 

We also do not quite understand, why we feel so dirty, like something is so wrong with us and everyone can see it, for sure. They must know there is a dirty little secret in our past, even if we don’t quite remember.  And before, we let them expose us, we need to develop a mechanism to control the situation and never take any risks. 

This is exhausting. For me, a big thing this manifested as, is my OCD. It takes me at least three times as long as anyone else I know, to leave my house. 

You may asked why.  Well, I was made to believe that it was my fault that I was raped, that I always misbehaved and that if the grown-ups ignored me, it was definitely my wrong doing that caused this.  So, imagine how guilty I’d feel now, if I hadn’t made sure my stove was switched off ten times or that the door was really locked 100 times, before I leave. If there was to be a fire or a break in, I’d have to kill myself.  I am often already exhausted, before I’m even out the door to go and attend the actual activity, I was heading to.  And I know, I am not the only survivor dealing with this. 

Need to revive what was lost

This last one might be simpler and seem way less dramatic, but I wanted to mention it anyway. Because survivors were practically robbed of their childhood, we tend to make up for that later in life.  We can be or act very childlike, enjoy playing games way too much, watch children’s programmes and laugh about jokes, designed for ten year olds.  Sometimes I feel judged for being like that. So, I just wanted to say to anyone who hasn’t been through this, we survivors need to be a little childish sometimes. It helps, it makes us feel as though we can have a tiny part of what was lost back.  And at the end of the day, we are capable of adulting. So, please let us have some innocent fun every now and then.

***

I could continue this list and probably never come to an end.  At this moment, I still feel I’m not doing my fellow survivors justice with this post and I hope they’ll forgive me for that.  This is, of course, just an excerpt which stems solely from my personal life experience. Other survivors would have different, more profound things and stories to add.

It has been estimated, that one in four adults has experienced sexual abuse in childhood.  That would be a quarter of the world’s population, which is a horrible thing to consider. Personally, I believe those numbers might be higher. Simply because, it is well known, that men are less likely to speak up or seek help, so who really knows, what the dark figures may be.

But this is exactly why I will never stop talking about this. People need to be made aware and society needs to act. I know this is not a pleasant topic and whenever I hear the story of someone else, who has experienced CSA, I am heartbroken. But I am also grateful. So grateful from the bottom of my heart, that they have the courage to share their story, to make those listen who try to deny this and for making the world a little bit better. Thank you! 

My biggest intention here is to make others, who went through something similar, feel less alone. I truly hope to make a little bit of an impact with my tiny blog and if you are a fellow survivor, please just know that you’re not alone. 

Please know what an extraordinarily courageous human being you are for surviving this!

Happy to be a Part of Your Problem

Survivors on a Mission 

Many people seem to see social media as some kind of curse and granted there are a bunch of negative side-effects to being able to share your entire life online. like online bullying.

But,  on the other had, the voice that social media and the internet as a whole, have given to abuse survivors is truly beneficial.  A voice has been given to people, who didn’t really have one before. Whether it is a whistle-blower, a creative person who finally gets to promote their art, or an abuse survivor.  

Finding your voice is important in any case, but for abuse survivors it is also an essential part of the healing journey.  And if you’re not comfortable telling your story to others, it may be enough to tell it to yourself.  Very often the trauma, we survived stays stuck inside of us, quietly wreaking havoc.  Others might not understand what we’re going through and surviving abuse can be very lonely at times. So, while we need to be careful whom we share our stories with, there is a sense of relief in doing so and an opportunity to find others, who have been through something similar.  Finding your own tribe, a family, whatever you wanna call it – it is essential. 

Another big plus of sharing your insights – raising awareness! People have started to tell their stories, be it on social media, platforms like YouTube, they’ve written books, blogs, they have podcasts etc.

But the point is that survivors of abuse now DO share their stories, whether they have a professional background, as in the field of psychology or not.  And that is great!

Abuse has been going on for eons and all over our beautiful planet. But never before, has there been a time when information about it was so widespread.  We can now just google terms, like ‘gaslighting’ or ‘dog-whistling’ and educate ourselves. And that goes for everyone – people, who may have no idea how serious these things are, people who are being abused and survivors. Everyone gets a fair chance to find out the truth of what’s out there. But all of this has another huge advantage. It makes the life of abusive people harder. 

Awareness is everything.  And when victims of abuse start to actually understand what mechanisms lie behind the atrocities they had to endure, it’ll get harder and harder for abusers to have their way. 

People who are aware, that they are being gaslighted are much harder to be gaslighted. When you eventually learn that other victims of domestic violence found a safe place and were able to escape, you might be empowered to ditch your own unhealthy relationship. When someone with a lack of self-love becomes aware, that this is a direct result of childhood abuse and realises that the person, who molested them as a child is the same individual who made them feel so unworthy in the first place – the cycle can be broken. 

Abusers are manipulators. Often the manipulation of their victims, is enough abuse in itself. But their entire gig depends heavily on being able to influence their victims, especially if the abuse is ongoing.  At the very least they need to make you believe that this is OK, meaning that it is not actually abuse and if you think that, you are the crazy one. Or they make you think that you are the problem and this is happening to you because you deserve it. Because you are inherently bad. But in some way, shape or form, they need to have some sway over you, to keep you in line.

So, when the victim starts to educate themselves about the mechanisms abusers employ, this narrative becomes much harder to maintain or may even be completely destroyed. Speaking out and dragging these abusive mechanisms into the open, makes it harder for abusers to follow through on their plans and, I truly believe, that it may even help prevent some things from happening.

And while I fully understand that me and my blog are just tiny little fish in the vast ocean of the internet, I have to admit that I actually feel honoured to be a tiny little part of this problem for abusive individuals. I am not a therapist, psychiatrist or in any way formally educated, when it comes to these matters.  All I have are my personal experiences. But still, I do believe that every voice that may provide even a little bit of insight, can be helpful.

So, please find your voice if you can. Every story counts. Every story helps.

This is a valuable source with some tips when it comes to the safety of kids: https://www.siebenpolklaw.com/child-safety-tips/

Nightmares

Pondering how surviving abuse might have affected my dream state…

Since I was a child, I have had nightmares on a regular basis.  I never thought too much about it, because I’ve always been an avid dreamer, who also remembers her dreams very well.  I guess, I just  always assumed that nightmares were a normal part of everyone’s life and I am sure to a certain extend they are.

Over the days leading up to and on Halloween my nightmare rate increased and I was reminded of my lifelong history with them. Ever since I was a little child, like four or five years old, I’ve been dreaming about very violent things. ..Like dead bodies and dead bodies bing burned in my presence to cover the tracks of the murderer. 

Like I said this had become a normality in my life, I guess I always thought that everyone had gory nightmares like that. Now I am aware that it is not actually everyone, although this may be hard to tell, as I  have also noticed that a lot of people feel uncomfortable talking about their dreams in general.  I can absolutely relate to that, too. Dreams are very personal, often weird and intimate. Our society doesn’t necessarily encourage us to share those aspects of our existence and experience. 

But there are also other people, who remember their dreams well and who occasionally share them, maybe because they were weird in a funny and entertaining way, or maybe they would share them with a therapist in an effort to get to the bottom of their trauma. 

But what I am only becoming fully aware of recently, is that it might not be ‘normal’ for a five year old to dream about dead bodies being buried and hidden.  It is the proverbial skeleton in the closet, which you probably shouldn’t even have too many of, at that age. 

Since I now know that I had been sexually abused at that age already, I can’t help but think that this gruesome dream image might relate to a popular line that pedophiles like to tell the children, they abuse: “This will be our little secret.” The secret that needs to stay hidden…buried.

It is an awful memory, accompanied by the memory of these gory dreams and  I have to admit that writing this makes me feel particularly vulnerable and I sometimes wonder, if it is the right thing to do, putting myself out there like this.  

But I also know, that children are out there right now, being molested and that it may be an extremely uncomfortable topic, but that we need to talk about these things going on in our world and what they do to people in the long run, anyway.  Not addressing it at all, simply won’t help.

I chose to share this quite extreme nightmare, because I’ve come to believe that everyone, who has been abused in some way, shape or form – and I know, they are all horrible, no matter what it was in each individual case – might experience nightmares, accordingly. Whether they remember them or not.

They are scary, no doubt, and sometimes they’d make us feel weird and very uncomfortable with ourselves, but I also strongly believe now, that they are an essential part of recovery.  A way of our subconscious mind to deal with what happened to us and maybe even the starting point of our healing journey. 

Naturally, I looked up some interpretations of my particular nightmare and the bottom line seems to be that it is about mental discomfort and trying to hide or shy away from a certain part of ourselves. In a way that is almost poetic to me. As horrible as the experience was and as much as I  had to suppress these memories for my mental wellbeing at a very young age, it was also important for them to come up in this way, for me to be able to address them later on.  it is all about being able to heal. 

Naturally, I looked up some  common interpretations of a dream like mine and it usually seems to relate to an attempt to mentally disconnect to a certain part of ourselves and trying not to face it or deal with it.  

Thinking about this, made me realise just how much my very young self couldn’t possibly deal with the experience in her conscious mind and it brought up some other examples of nightmares, that might stem from being abused.

Someone might relive the day their narcissistic ex left them, in a dream, over and over again. Someone in high school, might dream a couple of times each week about the bully, they face on a daily basis in school. 

Someone might dream about a parent, who they officially have a good relationship with,  being extremely violent in their dreams. 

None of these dreams are particularly pleasant, but I also noticed that they occur less and less with time, when you face what you went through. May it be through therapy, talking to others about it or simply have a good, relieving cry. Those dreams showing up less and less in my experience -I take that as a sign that my healing keeps progressing and that no matter, what we went through, healing is possible.

So, I wanted to share this with you to let you know, that you have the power to survive whatever you had to go through. 

We can do this,  we will support each other and keep on fighting for our happiness.