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Why Don’t We Just Get Over It?

We live in a world where so many of us don’t understand the facts versus the myths about sexual abuse of children, and the devastating emotional and financial effects it has on us and our country. Perhaps that is why it’s just easier to say: “Why don’t you just get over it?” I suppose that question is easier to ask  than to entertain the possibility that CSA (child sexual abuse) is happening in every community across this country.

I received a comment from someone asking me to talk more about the sexual abuse of boys, and some of the negative reactions he experienced with his disclosure of the truth. Girls do not hold a monopoly on CSA, as the statistics show now (1/4 girls and 1/6 boys will be sexually molested by their 18th birthday). I am sure the statistics will eventually reflect that the abuse will be evenly distributed between both sexes of our children.

Now try this on for size. Humans are so tightly connected through our DNA, more than we ever imagined. In fact, according to Prof. Marcus Feldman of Stanford University, quoted in Science magazine:

  • “…all humans are 99.9 per cent identical and, of that tiny 0.1 per cent difference, 94% of the variation is among people from the same populations and only six per cent between people from different populations.” This was posted by Roger Highfield, science editor at The Telegraph.

Once you let that fact settle into your bones and your heart, it becomes clear that when we harm another person, we are also harming ourselves. The statistics of child sex abuse are correct, but only as far as what has been reported. In reality, well over 80% of all sexual abuse is NEVER reported.

  • According to a study by Dr. David Finkelhor, close to 2/3 of all child victims may not tell their parents or anyone else because the fear being blamed, punished or not believed.

The bottom line is that no child (male or female) should ever be abused by ANYONE. Sexual abuse and other maltreatment inflicted upon our world’s children has created the very world we live in now.

Millions of adults are walking around with wounded souls. How can we begin to teach our own children about kindness and love and empathy, when so many of us have not rescued our own inner child? As adults we have many choices. Here are a couple:

  • we can abandon our inner child
  • we can go within and take your child's hand. Let them know she/he are safe, loved, and will that you will never let him/her be hurt again. You become the parent of your own inner child.

Adult survivors of childhood abuse are finding their voices (there are 42 million of us in the US alone). And together, we are speaking our truth, and letting go of a shame and guilt that was NEVER ours to carry. Eventually, the realization of this epidemic will be brought into the light of day and we will be forced to deal with it.

Personally, I would much rather be proactive. But I’m used to the subject matter and understand that it is a very difficult and uncomfortable thing for many people to talk about and to hear. No More Silence (thank you Pamela Pine). Why don’t we let the healing begin?

And the most wonderful part of all of this is that not only are we healing ourselves, but we are helping children and young adults know that they are not alone. They do not have to fight this battle by themselves. The time for silence has ended. What a beautiful sound. Then we will know what it means to raise happy, healthy and safe children. That time is NOW.

- Randa Fox

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Comments (3)

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Hi Brenda!

Your comments and thoughts are so well stated.  Finding like-minded individuals is like meeting fellow warriors.  I've reread your email several times, and have wanted to ask you if I can it on my website - NotOnOurWatch.NET.  But how easy it is for me to get a little lost in cyberspace.  

It warms my heart Brenda, when I see healthy parenting.  It gives me hope for our future.   Everyday heroes who speak our truth, we stand tall, speak clearly, love fiercely, and we make a difference.  And we know that this message, our message of putting an end to the sexual abuse of our children, this simple but powerful message that we are shouting from the mountain tops, we know it is for everyone's ears to hear.  Because we are not alone.  I am One.  We are One.

So thank you so much for sharing with me about your journey.  I want to focus also on the millions of people (like yourself) who have created healthy, resilient, safe and vibrant families.   So please let me know if you will allow me to put your comments on my website.  

Much love,

Randa

Randa,

I LOVED your post!  I related to every single word you wrote!  I am all about proactivity and feel, as you do, that the shame for having been abused NEVER rests with the "victim."  We need to re-educate our society about the issues surrounding child sexual abuse, the trauma it leaves behind, the truth about how recovery works and how important it is to be believed, to be heard, and to be valued as someone OTHER than an abuse "victim". 

It also helps to parent my children in a way that my parents could NOT provide to me: to heals me in every way to be engaged, vigilant, understanding, open, honest, and to listen to what they have to say.  This is what heals me most in my life: I get to revisit my own childhood through their's and it is so wonderful to see two healthy, happy, well-adjusted and educated children growing up free from abuse.  Keep writing - you have a strong and truthful voice!

Brenda Yuen

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