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Survivor-Led Advocacy Initiatives

 

It's not trauma-informed if it's not informed by trauma survivors.

I say this as a trauma survivor but even more as someone who has worked at a shelter for homeless families at a time when my own father was homeless. I saw class differences cause clashes that went beyond clumsy and awkward moments. People were hurt and dis-empowered at times by the very staffers working hard, and for low pay, to help.

I was in college, and with only that as a qualification, told, during my first interview, that part of my job (which I did get) was to "model" healthy child-parent interactions for the mothers who had children.

This, even at the time, troubled me.

"I don't have kids though, " I said sure there was a mistake.

It was assumed my manner with the children, patience or whatever, would be good and better and something to emulate - because I was middle class.

Being middle class does not automatically make someone a better person or parent. I didn't share I had an abuse history, homeless father and was the first in my family going to college. I didn't share that I related more with the residents than the staff.

I worked at the shelter for two years. Before I left, I ended up interviewing them all. The staff as well as well as the residents who stayed for six months. I noticed that what we think will help people doesn't necessarily help people. I saw how infrequently people who are being helped are even asked, "What do you need or want?" by the people attempting to help.

So these decades later I am thrilled to be here where there are conversations between and with all of us willing to consider and examine and discuss from so many varied view points.

Those of us with lived experiences. Those of us working as change agents. Many of us are, publicly or privately, both.

Here, I am not only "allowed" to share about survivor-led programs and initiatives but can celebrate them. So today, I'm going to share a few. They are all survivor led. 

Beating Trauma with Elisabeth Corey, Survivor & MSW

She speaks from personal experience, is an advocate as well and writes about things such as being a recovering helicopter parent or changing beliefs.

She offers online support to survivors whether in awareness raising groups or email classes for those of us doing what I call break-the-cycle parenting. She keeps her prices reasonable and has free resources, quotes and discussions on her Facebook page regularly.

Trigger Points Anthology - Joyelle Brandt and Dawn Daum

These two silence breakers are movers and shakers. They met online and wanted to fill the void about how the heck we parents with an abuse history are supposed to do this parenting with a history of trauma and attend to the needs of our children and our own healing at the same time. Or just be able to acknowledge and discuss our daily issues, concerns or struggles - AND moments of celebration.

They edited an anthology. They created an online community. They have a website and are always working to reach out. Right now, they are having a Fathering as a Survivor Interview series to make sure men are included in conversations about parenting with an abuse history. IMPORTANT WORK!

#FacesOfPTSD, a social media campaign (disclosure: I'm a part of it)

#FacesofPTSD1We hope to make it so that images of women come up on Google (Bing or Yahoo) when PTSD is searched. Women get PTSD twice as often as men. We are sharing as many pictures of women with PTSD as possible so that this changes and asking others who are willing to do the same. We are also asking all of those with websites and blogs to update images used, to include women. And we are all writing articles, making videos, creating songs and sharing pictures to make a change.

Do you know of any survivor-led resources or initiatives, tools or programs that are interesting or effective? Please let me know and I'll link to them and add them to the resources here for those of us Parenting with ACEs or interested in this topic.

 

 

 

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Comments (12)

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Corinna West posted:

Poetry for Personal power is survivor led. Plus we pay survivors a living wage instead of asking them to work for free.

Corinna:

Would you mind sharing a bit more about Poetry for Personal? I'd love to learn more about the mission, the style and even how the pay works as that's a great model. It sounds like you are involved.

I'd like to consolidate a directory of resources and have brief descriptions of what's included from those who know/use/lead or partner with the resource or organization.

Personally, I LOVE the healing power of poetry and writing. I'm curious about this program.  Thank you for sharing it and your time if you are able to share a link and a sentence to a paragraph about what Poetry for Personal Power is all about.
Cissy 

 

Dear Karen: Thank you for sharing your blog and the link to the booklet you wrote.

The more survivor-led resources available here the better. And if you want to summarize what your blog is about and/or what the booklet is about, for others and in your own words, that would be wonderful.

Please keep sharing!

Cissy

 

 

 

 

Robert

Hi Robert:

Can you share a bit more? I'm not familiar with Moynihan's work in this regard? Plus, what are the victories you mentioned? I know you do lots of advocacy work so I'd love to learn more if you have time to share.

And those one on one conversations, that shared knowing, we don't have to have had the same trauma to have that connection, knowing and understanding. It's one of the reasons I love expressive writing, in groups, that aren't therapy but are just people sharing stories, because we see how similar we all are and connect on that human to human level - as equals - who might be carrying different things and with more or less ease depending on lots of things - but who share basic humanity and feelings. Many trauma survivors lose this connected feeling, as though our experiences or words can't be shared with others and to do so, if and when we want, while safe, can be such a wonderful relief and so normalizing. So many people are carrying so many stories, and not just pain or sadness, but wisdom and hope. It's beautiful when it's safely shared.

Thanks for sharing!

Cissy

Recently, I was talking with a woman store clerk, whose father had been a Marine Corps Psychiatrist, who'd lost her mother [she died] during a hurricane while both of them were working in Honduras. She wept when she told me, and said she'd felt nobody could understand her experience....,

Earlier this month, I also saw the "capitaltocapital" bicyclists arrive in Lebanon, NH while they were enroute from Ottawa, Canada to Washington, D.C. to raise awareness of PTSD among First Responders. I talked with one woman rider in the group.

Judith Lewis Herman, in her book on Trauma, notes that men in combat are not the only ones with PTSD, as she distinguishes between Combat in the Public Sphere (War) and combat in the Private Sphere (Domestic Violence, etc.) ....

Diane:

That poem is beautiful and wrenching. Thank you for sharing it and the art as well. It got me teary-eyed reading it. It has the child's voice and the adult wisdom. BOTH.

I'm so sorry to hear what you endured and how much impact it has had on your life.

I'm amazed that you are such an advocate now in all the work you do (in all the styles too).

Isn't it great that we can all connect directly with one another and to share art, experiences, writing and hope?

Cissy

Yes! Yes! Yes! It is imperative that trauma survivors inform trauma understanding and trauma treatment, and very importantly, trauma prevention. I am a poet, artist, and child psychiatrist who experienced molestation as a young child. I was held down and sodomized with a stick by some neighborhood children who lived very close to my home. Even that one experience colored the rest of my life with anxiety and fear as my world of safety of living at home, in my neighborhood and at school was shattered. It led to a life dedicated to helping children to be heard and to be helped. Very many decades later, when I was the Medical Director of a Preschool Service, and learned that a young child in our care was being abused in his foster home, having already experienced countless abuses in his biological home, I was inspired to write the poem, Questions to a Child. I cried as I wrote it. The artist, Paul Anderson, created a painting to embody and evoke the poem. donated the poem to the NJ Prevent Child Abuse silent auction, and the husband of a leader in the organization, purchased it for his wife. If there are individuals and organizations interested in the poem poster please let me know. I am at artsmedicine@hotmail.com and www.artsmedicineforhealthandhealing.com. Thank you, Christine Cissy White and all the trauma survivor "informers" for the valuable and important work you are doing!     

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