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Thank You Christine Blasey Ford: # Me Too

 

As a psychologist, my specialties for the last thirty three years have been working with adult children of addicts, addiction and relational trauma/PTSD. I have worked with countless cases of sexual abuse.I have discussed these subjects in several of the twelve books that I have published and in numerous articles. I have given support to hundreds and hundreds of clients, both women and men, in working through sexual abuse in various forms. I have never, until today, written a word about being raped myself at 19 years old. I have talked about it in therapy, with my husband and a few, select people. But I have never gone public with it.It feels too dark. And I suppose I wonder, was this somehow my fault?

The Story

In 1969/70 1 was a student in Honduras studying the social institutions of Central America as well as Spanish. I was naive. I hired an Honduran tour guide to show me a few churches in the area, I was traveling at that time with my sister who had a boyfriend with her and I wanted to give them some space and this seemed both constructive and interesting. The guide had been showing us around for a couple of days so I wasn’t worried. He was also an older man with gray hair, I offer this detail because it was a reason I would never have suspected that I needed to be on guard. Quite the opposite, I felt that it made him a protective presence.

What I Remember:

We were driving and dusk was falling, I wanted to return to the hotel and he seemed to be driving in the opposite direction, into the country away from the town.

He pulled into what he called a restaurant saying that he wanted to get a bit to eat before returning.

I had an increasingly uneasy feeling. Maybe this man wasn’t a nice older tour guide. Oh My God, where am I? I saw men who looked like they were drunk. I saw a long row that looked like a motel. Was this a motel? I heard high pitched screaming from women, laughter, drunkenness.

I refused to get out and insisted we return to town.He pulled the car out of that driveway but turned the other direction from town. Suddenly I knew, I saw it, I knew. I told him to turn around.He refused. I unrolled the window and began to climb out because the door was somehow locked. He grabbed me and became aggressive. I pulled the keys out of his ignition and the car stopped. I then made it out the window and began to run down the side of the road. He came after me. He became violent. He tried to pull me down on the ground. Here my head spins and what I see in my memory are swaths of tall green grass, sounds, nature sounds I think, I see the long road, he is swinging me around by my arm, I am swinging in circles. I feel the inevitable closing in on me. This man might kill me I think as I am swinging around and he is getting stronger. He pushes me down. I make a split second bargain with God, be here with me God, be here in this moment and let it happen fast, let me love this man for a moment so I will not be raped. God save me now.

I remember the feeling of grass poking into my back. I remember with such disgust his lips trying to find mine, trying to pretend this was somehow love, that I had said yes, that ….OMG. It happened, he for a few seconds/minutes I cannot say. I cannot say he entered me. But he did. More disgust. Such disgust. It is over, is he saying he loves me. You disgusting old man, you perverted monster. I get up, I pull my dress back in place. I hail a car in the road hoping to find help.

A car filled with men stops. I try to tell them in my broken Spanish that I am being attacked. They look nice, they are sympathetic. They will help me.

The man comes up behind me and says some things in Spanish. They all laugh and drive away. I watch the car going away into the night. No help is coming.

I don’t know where I am, I think I am near some sort of place of ill repute and men stick with men, they laughed. Worse could have happened.

The man who raped me becomes nice and protective acting again, like he was a tour guide.

I make a split second decision to go back to the hotel as he is saying he has to get home.

It feels like my only choice now, I get in.

He is docile. He is trying to tell me he loves me or something like that. I do not know this man, what is he saying. I am quiet but do nothing to aggravate him. He wants to give me money.

I say no.

He tries to put it in my lap.

I give it back.

He begins to get angry again, aggressive, forceful. I get scared, I cannot risk more.

I let it fall on my lap.

Four dollars in Honduran money.

Four dollars.

Four dollars.

What does this mean. Was I just paid for sex? NO.

I get to the hotel where my sister is with her boyfriend. I tell them what happened.

This is very strange to write…I have to list the facts as though it is an account about someone else. It feel like it is sometimes. But I know it is me, I remember it the way I remember the last words my Father said to me before he died, my first kiss, my favorite dog as a kid. It is branded into my psyche.

The laughter of the men.

The high pitched screams of the women.

The wetness of the tall grass.

The man’s glasses.

The dirt road.

The feeling of trying to climb out of the window.

I remember it.

100%.

I also remember the dress I was wearing with the orange, gross grain straps. But this part you will understand only if you have been through it. I could paint it even today I remember it so vividly. My stomach tenses as I write this, my throat is going dry. I actually remember the scene from above, of the man getting violent and swinging me around. My mind left my body and I could see myself and this man and the decision I made to allow this to happen I made from up there. Simply because I didn’t want to die that night.

This happened 49 years ago and I have never written it down. Until today. Until feeling pulled by Christine Blasey Ford’s testimony and my burning awareness because of my years as a psychologist of how little people really understand traumatic memory. I am relaxing now and sailing back into that part of my mind that can think clearly and write easily and in descriptive, long sentences. I am out of yesterday and back to the here and now. And I don’t want to go back there. None of us do, those of us who have experienced sexual assault. I saw in Christine Blasey Ford a woman who doesn’t want to go back there, who like me would rather not talk about it. But who like me is a trained professional who knows that she should so that she can heal and move on.

Back to the details which are easier to say now that I am in the present again.

When I got back to the hotel I told my sister and her boyfriend. They were pretty horrified. I told them that they had to take the 4 dollars, they felt radioactive in my hand. They didn’t want them either so I got them to promise that they’d go with me the the next day and we’d buy hot fudge Sundays, familiar comfort in a strange land.

I went to the shower, it was a dingy hotel and a dingy shower. I stood below a stream of water for I don’t know how long, I wanted to wash away the grime, the fear, the torridness. I prayed for God to wash it off, to rid me of this and I let the water be cleansing, holy water.

The next day I wrote my mom about this.

When I got back to the states I told my other sister.

My mom never asked me one question about it, not one. I took this to mean I should never bring it up again. There was other sexual abuse in my family that my mother never talked about. But it’s not my story to tell, not today anyway. It didn’t directly involve me.

But I knew Mom’s rules. I knew her ways.

My other sister did not seem to understand what I had been through and brought it up twice in social situations, like it was an adventure.

It was not an adventure.

It was awful.

But I knew the rules. Don’t talk. Drop this.Unless you want to be ridiculed or doubted or blamed.

Truthfully both times my sister brought it up I felt very supported by the other people in the room. It felt good and it came from men and women alike, they seemed concerned about me. I took it in. I had learned to take in support where I could find it.

Hard to write again, my fingers are shaking. Breathe, it isn’t now. It was then. Breathe. Coming back now, back into the present.

Thank you Christine Blasey Ford for making it safe enough for me to come out with this in writing. If you could do what you did, I can do this in the privacy of my own living room with my husband’s full support. If you can do what you did, maybe some of this can change.

Wanting to cry now. That’s good. Tears are good. Oh they are gone again, just a flash of sadness, it’s gone again.

That’s OK. That’s OK.

I am a psychologist and I understand the nature of traumatic memory.

It comes and goes. Sometimes I feel a lot, sometimes so little. I remember some things with a kind of crystal clarity that is spellbinding, other details elude me.

It happened so long ago.

About 20 or more years after this occurred, once I was married with two children leading a very wonderful life on all levels I was chatting on the phone with my mother. Out of the blue she said , “hey, I owe you an amends, I think.” I said, “what for, Mom?”.

“Well when you were raped as a kid you sent me a postcard and I never said anything about it.”

I felt as if she had taken a knife and driven it through my heart.

“Mom, you got that card? You got my card? You never said a thing? Oh Mom.”

But I didn’t say this.

Instead I asked, “what were you thinking that you didn’t ask me about it?” I so couldn’t imagine doing that myself.

Mom’s voice came back, “I guess I just thought what’s she gotten herself into now?”.

The knife went further in and I wanted to say, “why tell me this now Mom, why crack open my heart like this? I had forgotten, convinced myself that …I don’t know….I had successfully “forgotten” that you said nothing to me.”

It took days from me to get past that feeling, weeks maybe I don’t remember. But it was clarifying. Why would I feel safe talking about this when I knew what might be in store for me?

But today I feel what we call in the trade safe enough. Thank you Christine Blasey Ford for opening this door so wide that I can walk through it, too.

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Comments (18)

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Tears....thank you for having the courage to get your story down on paper AND putting it out there to give other women (and men) the strength to do the same. Christine Blasey Ford is in good company.

Tian, I really connect with the need to feel safe enough to share. I'm thankful you feel safe enough in this community and in your own skin now to add to our collective record of horrifying experiences that are far too common among us. I feel sad and protective of your 19 year old innocent and trusting self who was betrayed and demoralized. I'm very thankful that you were able to come to terms with your experience and not be held back on your life as a result of it. I have benefited from your books which many who have experienced trauma like you have not been able to write. 

I'm in Canada so I'm careful about making comments regarding the politics of other countries. What I can say is I watched Dr. Blasey Ford's entire testimony and could feel the strain myself with every word and gesture. I feel your strain too. What strikes me most about the whole situation is that collectively we seem to be oblivious to the standards of behaviour in our society  - we would rather blame women and find fault in their accounts of event than acknowledge that laughing and joking around and groping and taking has been and still is in many places a standard behaviour of young men. This year marks the 5th anniversary of the death of a young girl named Rehteah Parsons who took her own life after having been publicly shamed for being assaulted at a party 18 months earlier. 

Boys and men laughing at the expense of young women as they take from them sexually is not a new phenomenon. Women talking about their experiences openly is new. And that is hopeful for me. This has to stop. We can make this stop, by making sure our experiences can never be silenced again. 

Thank you for your bravery and inspiration. Someday I also hope to feel safe enough. 

Elizabeth Perry

Laneita Williamson posted:

Thank you so much for your story.  I think many women have a similar story.  History of abuse is with me too.  As a nurse I have an analogy.  When people are in a motor vehicle accident, whether they are at fault or not, within minutes the EMS arrives.  After this the patient is transported into a setting to heal the injuries where physicians, nurses, nurse assistants, dieticians, lab techs, radiologist, respiratory therapist and physical and occupational therapist are there to help.  Then the family and community becomes aware and often churches or community members donate food or funds to assist.  The patient has support at many levels of this journey and can openly talk about it immediately and years later because of that support.  We as trauma survivors are hit without warning and we have to become our own physician, nurse, etc. to cope with the trauma in that moment.  No one is there for us.  It's not our fault we were hit.  It's not our fault we had to handle trauma that we are not trained or prepared to handle.  So with this lack of support and the challenge of being faced with something we aren't prepared for, we remain quiet while we take care of our mind and body for survival.  I love that I can now say "My abuse was like a car accident that I didn't see coming", and I am proud that I had the strength to crawl out of that accident on my own and did the job of physician, nurse, nurse assistant, physical therapist, and community.   But I'm enraged that we have a society that treats me differently than an unexpected car accident. It was a while before I found my voice, but when I did....I did, and I'm now very vocal. What is absolutely wonderful is that many women and men coming forward will find a community of experts, friends, and survivors that can provide expertise, support, and compassion. Sure there will always be the folks that will never have the capacity to be a healer.  That isn't something they can do, but when we are in an accident we go to those that heal, and there are many of us.

Thank you to all the healers.... the quiet, the loud, and the ones finding their way.  It's an honor to be on a journey with insightful and compassionate people.

Laneita - so glad you are here. I loved having your voice on last Thursday’s  webinar on the Community Resilience Model.  Nurses see and know so, so much.  You, in your work especially, see the result of severe trauma and traumatizing situations. I love the way you write and look forward to seeing your comments, posts!  

Tian -

You giver of space and light and love and acceptance,  thank you for sharing this. 

For too long men have laughed at the expense of women. Women who do not understand have blamed their sisters, "somehow it must have been your fault."

Plenty of times I realize that I barely escaped a similar fate, trusting older men who were "mentors" and suddenly, out of nowhere, wanted to be more. Was I just naive, or stupid, or both? Mercy. I think sometimes God spared me on some fronts because I know I saw and heard so much,  in the womb, and as an infant and child, that I should never have seen. Bruises on my mom. My dad playing with a pistol as though he would kill himself right in front of me; taking the steering wheel and acting as if he would plow the car into a telephone pole to "just end the whole damned thing." Those memories ran through my consciousness and stuck in bits and bytes through the years, because to have had them all at once would have been like so much water-boarding.

So I, too,  understand your stopping and starting your writing about your experience. The waves of sadness that come and go. The bits of memories that are processed in bite-sized chunks instead of strangling gulps.

I am glad you were healthy enough to not let this experience cost you the love of yourself, the love of self necessary to create what must be a strong, wonderful, and trusting relationship with your husband. I love how you know and share how fortunate you are that you've had a strong marriage and healthy children. Gratitude is healing.

It is interesting that your mom made an amends. Or tried to. Mine did as well, and forgiveness accepted is healing for the giver and receiver, no matter how late it comes. Though it doesn't erase the being diminished and dismissed. 

I pray someday that the men -- and women -- who have now taken to mocking Dr. Ford will have the "aha" moment about casting doubt. I'm not wishing them pain. I am just hoping that they understand that it hurts to be doubted; being doubted deepens the wound all over again. Being minimized, doubted, diminished is brutal. I have to think that some of the people who are doing it must have had it done to them. Pain passing pain on to another is especially sad. It makes me wish we could all just hit the STOP button and each feel the root of our pains, sob for a while, turn and comfort the person who happens to be sitting next to us at the time, and then go and have a communion of consequence-free hot fudge sundays, or whatever treat is chosen best by each individual. That we all stop and eat them together at the same time. We need that acknowledgement of hurts felt and passed along, hurts forgiven and healing, collective comfort and nurture. I so pray we can have it.

Your article, Dr. Ford's testimony, posts on LinkedIn from civic leaders talking about being sexually abused by parents, hundreds of thousands of women sharing this #MeToo "moment" -- all of this energy toward truth and healing has to count for something. I am hoping it is that this insanity of blaming and shaming, hurting and feeling somehow privileged enough to hurt and not feel consequences -- will stop. Just. Stop. 

I so appreciate you and your writing. It has been healing and sustaining to me. It is especially wonderful to see your work here on ACEs Connection. This is a place where it is needed, understood, acknowledged, deeply appreciated, and shared.So we can pause and not add to our own pain. Or to the pain of others. 

C. 

Thank you all again, I keep seeing these moving comments....it feels so great, thank you! I just posted an article on The Nature of Traumatic Memory....it is up now and I hope explains more....not about me but about trauma memory. Meanwhile I do want to also say that I am fundamentally over this and have been much of my adult life.....and I have learned to "separate the disease from the person" ....living with addiction that and forgiveness have been a real lifeline for me....I feel basically just blessed at having such a good life....and it just feels that much sweeter hearing all of your voices supporting this, it wasn't easy to say. If you haven't seen it Connie Chung did a really moving story of her own. It feels amazing to read these accounts.....go #metoo.....and Christine Blasey Ford really opened something up........this is important!

Tian:
I have no words. This is so powerful and I'm still not able to be emotional and articulate at the same time about some things on some days (or months or years). This is so important. THANK YOU!!! You speak for so many, unfortunately, and while there's fear and brutality and the parts of humanity most difficult, there is so much strength, hope, and healing in you and your honesty and sharing. THANK YOU!

Safe enough. Those two POWERFUL words. Safe enough. 

WOW!

Thank you, which doesn't feel near enough...
Cis

Thank you Tian for your bravery in talking about your abuse. It all sounds like such a terrifying experience you went through.  I too have a history of abuse.  Traumatic memory is a real thing.  As you know, our minds don’t choose to dissociate, it’s a built in part of our nervous systems ability to enable us to survive horrifying experiences.  The abuse gets “locked up” in its own file, unprocessed, still having a life of its own, creeping into our present life in the forms of shame, anger at loved ones, identity confusion and persistent depression.  We carry the secret,  determined to “never let this happen again” when it was never our fault in the first place.  Only until we safe can we go back and reintegrate the experience to feel whole again.  The world has to understand this process in and out.   Thanks to you and Dr. Ford’s bravery, more people are coming forward making it a lot safer for victims. 

Thank you so much for your story.  I think many women have a similar story.  History of abuse is with me too.  As a nurse I have an analogy.  When people are in a motor vehicle accident, whether they are at fault or not, within minutes the EMS arrives.  After this the patient is transported into a setting to heal the injuries where physicians, nurses, nurse assistants, dieticians, lab techs, radiologist, respiratory therapist and physical and occupational therapist are there to help.  Then the family and community becomes aware and often churches or community members donate food or funds to assist.  The patient has support at many levels of this journey and can openly talk about it immediately and years later because of that support.  We as trauma survivors are hit without warning and we have to become our own physician, nurse, etc. to cope with the trauma in that moment.  No one is there for us.  It's not our fault we were hit.  It's not our fault we had to handle trauma that we are not trained or prepared to handle.  So with this lack of support and the challenge of being faced with something we aren't prepared for, we remain quiet while we take care of our mind and body for survival.  I love that I can now say "My abuse was like a car accident that I didn't see coming", and I am proud that I had the strength to crawl out of that accident on my own and did the job of physician, nurse, nurse assistant, physical therapist, and community.   But I'm enraged that we have a society that treats me differently than an unexpected car accident. It was a while before I found my voice, but when I did....I did, and I'm now very vocal. What is absolutely wonderful is that many women and men coming forward will find a community of experts, friends, and survivors that can provide expertise, support, and compassion. Sure there will always be the folks that will never have the capacity to be a healer.  That isn't something they can do, but when we are in an accident we go to those that heal, and there are many of us.

Thank you to all the healers.... the quiet, the loud, and the ones finding their way.  It's an honor to be on a journey with insightful and compassionate people.

Deepest thanks for your courage in writing about what happened to you and sharing it with us in this community.  It requires incredible bravery to share our experiences at any time - and at this time it is even scarier in a lot of ways, but also so incredibly important.  I consider Dr. Blasey Ford a hero, and I will never forget her story or her courage - and now I can say the same of you.  Thank you.

I am really touched by these kind comments and it makes me realize that this community is really paying attention, really seeing things......thank you to all of you who have written. The reason I wrote it as I did is because of the nature of traumatic memory.....the way we remember....it's spotty, it's very limbic because the thinking mind is in and out of functioning.....the limbic system gathers sense impressions and processes emotion. I'll post something about this soon. I'll write about the nature of traumatic memory. Thank you again.....

Thank you, Tian, for sharing your story with us, for your courage and strength to continue living and helping others heal!  I wish for you and all survivors of trauma, people to support you and a place to have your trauma witnessed and heard.  Please continue to take good care of yourself and know that you and your trauma is held in my heart, with a sense of healing and support!  Thank you for being in our lives!  

Thank you, Tian for sharing. What stops many of from telling our stories is the 'non-acknowledgment' of our close family. Your mother's silence must have hurt real bad. Glad you are in a place where you have support. Every story will be the 'guiding light' for the next generation dealing with sexual assault. They will not be silenced. They don't have to feel the shame most of us felt. Love & Hugs

Thank you for writing this and sharing it with the ACEs community, many of whom no doubt resonate with your story, Tian. It took great courage. Unfortunately, this happens so frequently as to have become nearly normal, and the only way we can change that is to talk, write, shout from the rooftops about our experiences, and that we are determined to create a world of women and men who understand what is healthy, but also remember what is cruel, so that we don't create environments in which cruelty slips back into normalcy.

Tian, thank you so much for your courage, just like Dr. Ford's, to share share your story here.I too was spellbound reading it. I especially was moved by your last line:

But today I feel what we call in the trade safe enough. Thank you Christine Blasey Ford for opening this door so wide that I can walk through it, too.

Dr, Ford has opened the door for so many important conversations to occur and i am SO THANKFUL for that.

Be well, Gail

Karen Clemmer (ACEs Connection Staff) posted:

Tian, I was/am spellbound by how vividly you articulated your your memories and how you moved between the memories of a naive 19 yo and the competent woman you are today.  I can see those images so clearly. Thank for for seeing this as a safe place to bring forward stories we have held unspoken for so long.  When I witnessed Dr. Blasey Ford's testimony it felt painfully powerful and yet empowering as the same time.  Thank you for bravely joining Dr. Blasey Ford and sharing your vivid story here. I hope this is a point in our shared history and that we will never forget it, instead we will leverage it to accelerate a cultural transformation.  With gratitude, Karen

"Spellbound" -- that describes exactly how I felt reading this. Spellbound because the story was so clearly, vividly told, spellbound because it echoed so much about my own (mostly untold) story, and spellbound because of the incredible courage and insight of the author. Thank you, Tian. Thank you.

Tian, I was/am spellbound by how vividly you articulated your your memories and how you moved between the memories of a naive 19 yo and the competent woman you are today.  I can see those images so clearly. Thank for for seeing this as a safe place to bring forward stories we have held unspoken for so long.  When I witnessed Dr. Blasey Ford's testimony it felt painfully powerful and yet empowering as the same time.  Thank you for bravely joining Dr. Blasey Ford and sharing your vivid story here. I hope this is a point in our shared history and that we will never forget it, instead we will leverage it to accelerate a cultural transformation.  With gratitude, Karen

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