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Is it possible to recover from rape and sexual abuse? Yes and No

When she was twenty-two years old, philosopher Karyn L. Freedman was viciously raped at knifepoint. She narrowly escaped being murdered and her body disposed, perhaps never to be found. In her memoir, One Hour in ParisFreedman recounted her efforts to heal from this horrifying ordealNearly 25 years have passed since she was raped, but she has yet fully recovered and doubts she ever will. Even after years of therapy, support group meetings, and educating rape survivors in Africa about the effects of trauma, Freedman claimed:

 

“The biological truth of my trauma is anchored in me, but it lives there like a parasite. And as I move in and out of recovery I am reminded that however much work I do, healing from a traumatic experience is never complete. This is one of the most significant facts about psychological trauma. It is permanent. The psychological damage that results from the experience of terrorizing life events over which we have no control is profound. It sticks around for life. It is a chronic condition, which makes recovery from traumatic events an ongoing process.”

 

Freedman’s continued struggle is common. Susan J. Brison, also a philosopher and also brutally raped in France as an adult, wrote the following about the lingering impact of her rape:

 

“People ask me if I’m recovered now, and I reply that it depends on what that means. If they mean, ‘am I back to where I was before the attack’? I have to say, no, and I never will be. I am not the same person who set off, singing, on that sunny Fourth of July in the French countryside. I left her — and her trust, her innocence, her joie de vivre — in a rocky creek bed at the bottom of a ravine. I had to in order to survive. I now have my own understanding of what a friend described to me as a Jewish custom of giving those who have outlived a brush with death new names. The trauma has changed me forever, and if I insist too often that my friends and family acknowledge it, that’s because I’m afraid they don’t know who I am.”

 

Although I have never been raped as an adult, I was sexually abused as a child. I spent years nostalgically imagining the person I might have been had I not been abused, and went through periods haunted by nightmares and flashbacks that kept me reliving my twisted fate. Still, I consider myself lucky. I have managed to escape sexual revictimization as an adult, which happens with appalling regularity to women with histories like mine.

 

Yet like Freedman’s and Brison’s rapes, the impact of sexual abuse persists. Sometimes I fail to see the secureness of my present life because of the protracted shadow of fear that is cast by all forms of sexual violence. Something startles me and I am reminded that safety can be eclipsed in a moment. Even now, I am prone to dissociate the felt sense of my body when I am overwhelmed by fear. I learned to escape in my head conditions that were inescapable in my environment. Some habits are near impossible to break.

It has taken me a long time to honor these survival responses and acknowledge that sexual violence is not something I, or anyone else, fully recovers from, although this is not a reason to give up on recovery. Survivors can and do become strong again — sometimes stronger than they ever imagined — and often graced with an awareness of the fragile nature of life that deepens their capacity for compassion.

 

But the process of healing from sexual violence is slow, painful, and expensive. And because I have worked hard for a peaceful mind and body, I am protective of them. I have a low tolerance of toxic attitudes and behaviors that might upend my recovery. But I am also quick to stand up to injustices that impact others, and I have witnessed this trait in people like myself who are committed to healing their wounds of violence and abuse. Unintentionally, we become warriors of the heart — the would-be Bodhisattvas and protectors of those less fortunate and vulnerable — those we imagine are like we were before we reclaimed our right to dignity and self-preservation, and those we imagine could become victims like we once were.

 

Not everyone likes the justice-seeking aspect of recovering survivors of sexual violence and other abuses. Anyone who needs to exert power over another, needs someone capable of being a victim. Furthermore, the psychological complexes and interpersonal dynamics that lead to subjugation extend well beyond the predator-prey dynamics of sexual violence.

 

I once had a supervisor describe my penchant to protect others as a “Joan of Arc” complex. This observation followed after I asked her to stop calling my clients names like “bitch,” “putz,” and “schmuck.” Shortly after my objections, I was removed from my position. Had I avoided the work of recovery, I might have lacked the courage to defend my clients, especially given what I sensed (and heard) about this person’s penchant for bullying. Had I not taken the time to address how sexual violence had led to certain defensive behaviors and beliefs in me, I might have continued my early life habit of silencing my objections to perceived wrongs, since this submissive style of defense had protected me. But it’s no way to live, even if the consequence of standing up to injustice is more injustice. The price of dignity can be great, but the price of submitting to injustice is greater.

 

In large part, although often unconscious, the commitment to heal is a sustained effort at avoiding becoming a victim again. And the changes we make in our efforts to ensure future safety and integrity also lead to resisting abuses of power in all aspects of our lives.

 

Knowledge is a powerful way to defend against further subjugation. In One Hour In Paris, Freedman shared an extensive knowledge of PTSD, the history of the DSM, and the treatment of psychological trauma. Obviously, I share her desire to know everything I can about healing. Every textbook I have read on the treatment of trauma has been with double vision: one eye on how to maintain my own recovery, the other eye on how to help others with their’s. Having fallen victim once, some of us arm ourselves with knowledge to fail-safe our recovery, but also to ensure we never fall victim again.

 

One outcome of this unanticipated expertise is a nuanced understanding of the consequences of unrestrained power that includes knowing how to heal from subjugation and avoid further victimization. This is valuable wisdom, and a largely untapped resource. The wisdom of recovery can enlighten efforts at creating a society centered on safety, respect, and fairness.

 

Because of the insights gained through recovery, I believe the commitment to heal is a generous act, even though the process means focusing intently on oneself. Individual efforts to heal become the groundwork for equality and respect in relationships, families, communities, work environments, and societies. Healing society really does begin with healing its members.

 

Granted, as Freedman and Brison shared, even after an extended period of recovery, suffering still happens. No one ever completely gets over being a victim of a sexual predator. Still, with time and effort the reactions can be managed. In the process, the survivor often gains a stronger spirit, greater integrity, and better self-care that together foster a deep caring for others. As Brison also wrote:

 

“But if recovery means being able to incorporate this awful knowledge into my life and carry on, then, yes, I’m recovered. I don’t wake each day with a start, thinking: ‘this can’t have happened to me!” It happened. I have no guarantee that it won’t happen again, although my self-defense classes have given me the confidence  to move about in the world and to go for longer and longer walks—with my two big dogs. Sometimes I even manage to enjoy myself. And I no longer cringe when I see a woman jogging alone on the country road where I live, though I may still have a slight urge to rush out and protect her, to tell her to come inside where she’ll be safe. But I catch myself, like a mother learning to let go, and cheer her on, thinking, may she always be so carefree, so at home in her world. She has every right to be.”

 

In what follows, I discuss some of the reactions, beliefs, and emotions that interfere with seeking help following sexual violence, and thus getting the process of recovery started. I have found for myself, and for others I have had the honor to support in recovery, that it is difficult to accept the extent of the damage caused by sexual violence. The tendency is to believe that if you can avoid thinking about the rape or abuse, its impact will fade away. Furthermore, shame, no matter how undeserved, keeps women from seeking help. Taking a trauma-informed perspective can help overcome these obstacles to beginning recovery.

 

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Brenda,

Thanks for sharing your story of collective grief and struggle, alongside a male survivor. This is so rarely heard. There is so much more that can be done to approach SA as a human rights and humanitarian issue. Thanks for acknowledging how male survivors are routinely shut out of the healing conversations and the effect this has for society. Thanks for connecting your healing to the well being of a male survivor. This is a social narrative that has been very slow to change in professional and popular culture, and the rebuff I've known has only stymied my own healing, and so many other male survivors who've gone silent.

 

Appreciative,

Andrew

Hi Brenda,

 

Congratulations on your choice to seek training in clinical work. I think wanting to help others with recovery is a natural progression when survivors commit fully to their own recovery -- at least this has been the case with so many of the people I have met, as well as part of my own journey. It's not easy, but I think it does make for a full life. And there's something so wonderful about being with people as they learn to trust themselves, life, and love. 

 

Like you, my brother was also sexually abused. He's dead now, and I believe his life was shortened as a result of the long-term impact of childhood sexual abuse. I saw many of the same reactions in him that you describe in your brother. Right now, I'm writing a memoir about our relationship, trying to understand us and myself in the process. It makes me sad to write, though. So I'm continually shelving it. Hopefully, though, one day I'll get it done and feel ready to share. 

 

I appreciate your perspective of sexual violence as a human rights issue, and I think your experience of being scapegoated is all too common, and unfortunately, a classic way people avoid making the changes that would put an end to sexual violence. I'm saddened you have had to carry this added burden. 

 

Thank you for your heartfelt and open reply.

Laura,  I read your blog and found it very honest.  I too am a survivor of child sexual abuse and have (and had) the same feelings as you have expressed.  Recovery is an ongoing process and one that I know I'll never fully achieve.  But I want to live a full life any way, so I'm enrolled in a Master's program for Clinical Mental Health Counseling so that I can help other trauma survivors and members of dysfunctional families begin their healing too.  Living it is far more instructive than learning about it.  I have recognized how much passion I have to keep others safe and to help them find a sense of purpose and happiness.  I would be remiss if I didn't mention that another member of my family also experienced far more child sexual abuse than I did -- he and I even share one abuser (I'm older and I never said anything and I was assigned to him at the age of 5 when he was born).  I do not separate my experience of abuse from his.  It ties us together in our pain, and in that silence that he still holds on to and I have let go of...which has torn us apart.  I can't see my experience as a female separately from his as a male.  He carries even more shame, more self-blame, less support for acceptance in society, and more forced "act like a man" masculinity, which I find destructive (perhaps even more destructive than my experience of femininity).  I will never completely heal until he starts his healing journey.  And right now, he's too angry, too caught up in the shame (which he should place directly on his abusers and not on himself), and too manipulative because of his need for some piece of control in his life that he's lacking. That manipulation allows him to control my extended family, allows them to shun me in support of his "secret", and provides me yet another form of victimhood.  I am the family scapegoat for all the anger, rage, and shame that no one else but me can express openly.  For me, sexual violence is a human right's issue and I feel that right down to my very core.  A lot has to do with my family's story.  I thank you so much for openly sharing yours.  It's not easy to point to yourself and say "this happened to me too."  Take care.  Brenda

Thank you, Jane, for creating an atmosphere where people can safely talk about sexual violence and its effects. 
 
My post is just one way of approaching healing, and it's been empowering for me, as well as inspiring, to read the narratives of other women who have committed to their recovery — like Karyn Freedman and Susan Brison. The internet has also made possible more women sharing their narratives, even if they do so anonymously, which is impacting how people perceive sexual violence and its victims. Granted, it's not always safe to share, but for those of us who feel we can, I think we will one day look back at our actions as foundational for others' recovery and healing, and hopefully, a shift in societal attitudes and behaviors. 

Every woman who's experienced sexual abuse would benefit from reading this, Laura. It explains so much of our lives. 

Thank you for writing it. 

Louise, thank you for recognizing the vulnerability, which was great for me with this post. I have a big debt of gratitude to all the people who support my recovery and have helped me grapple with the shame, which unfortunately, still can come up. But speaking out hopefully supports others' recovery, and so its well worth the discomfort that comes up for me.
 

Andrew,

 

Thank you for taking the time to carefully read my blog post. Your observations, which are important and I believe correct, address different topics than the focus of this post. As it stands, my post is already over 4500 words -- atypical for the blogosphere. The topic is complex and deserves wide attention and many perspectives.

 

Power itself is a very nuanced issue. For example, I wonder how many women would in a blog response to a man begin with a grammatical correction?

 

I do hope more attention is given to the sexual abuse and assault of men. As you point out, these individuals are not given enough attention or adequate support. However, women should not have to change their narratives or their needs to accommodate men. Rather, all of us, men and women, deserve support that addresses our unique needs and acknowledges the complex nature of sexual violence and the equally complex nature of recovery.

 

Thank you for taking the time to reply.

Laura, thanks for a refreshingly nuanced discussion of the internal terrorism of sexual violence. Several observations. In the 1st paragraph, I believe you mean "she has not yet fully recovered," rather than "she has yet fully..."

 

In a fuller pursuit to address sexual violence, consider including the testimony of 1 in 6 men, some of which were also raped. Unfortunately, one-sided discussions extend "sanctioned stereotypes" that keep men silent. The effect of this social editing also keeps predators from getting the help they needed, before they preyed on others later in life. Many social narratives have yet to accept this reality, creating many counselors who are advocates (of one gender), but not adequately humanitarian. What many professionals claim in advocacy, they deny in clinical method. 

 

Further, it's a default mode to focus on power, but the backdrop of sexual abuse is far more multi-factorial, including: cultural mores, religious ideologies (which you say nothing about), domestic patterns, experience of abuse, and social stigmas. This relational ecosystem enables a more realistic diagnostic profile than our contemporary infatuation with power--and who doesn't have it. When this broader profile is not acknowledged, one often fails to mention that many predators were also victims, themselves, only making the profile more complex. It should also be mentioned that abuse and rape of a child, in their developmental years, only complicates the traumatic sequelae.

 

In an era when it's commonplace to deconstruct religion, your discussion would only be strengthened by investigating the "religious attachments" that are also in play for many victims. The academic community, in particular, still doesn't know what to do with the faith component. But this can also be a significant part of recovering from rape and sexual abuse.

 

Thanks for the attention given to the painful processes that so many victims go through. 

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