Category: FALC

  • Have its way.

    I have tried to write about the affects to a person who has been brainwashed…how it appears that the mind has been changed.  But, what I am coming to believe, is that when your choices put someone/something first….you, yourself,aren't clearly defined.

    For instance, in the religion I was raised in, the churches rules took preference…it was consulted first.  "Is this okay with the church?"  Not, how do I feel about this and what do I want to do?

    Brainwashing isn't so much about changing the mind, but changing the allegiance.

    Instead of going within and feeling your way…you consult the outside authority first.

    I see the coorelation between strict religions and abuse, in that it takes away the power or self control.  

    When we turn our choices over to someone else, we are losing ourselves bit by bit.

    What was most unsettling when I discovered my father was a pedophile, and I abused, was not that shocking fact, but the horror….that I had no sense of self.

    No self beyond what the church created and the abuse demanded.

    The sheer free fall into nothing left me breathless.

    I didn't know a self beyond being a compliant member of both church and family.

    I had seldom rebelled and done my own thing.

    Or, the things I did do, didn't define me as much as being a good daughter and christian had.

    Brainwashing…should really be called self washing….or wiping yourself clean of self.  Making the individual self disappear.

    To me, the scariest thing is to see a person totally controlled by a church or an allegiance to family…minus their discerning mind. To feel the absence of a thoughtful self….and instead see the machine like motions of their lives.

    The difference between the me without a me and the one with one is completely different.

    I know that sentence is odd.

    To live a life separated from what the church decrees as right and wrong as well as what the family needs or doesn't need, is quite spacious in its choices.  I am no longer constrained to their preferences.

    I lived for so many years as a tool of each.

    Now, my self is free.  I am not sure it was my mind that was in prison…but I know my self had disappeared.

    Without a self…the church and abuse can have its way.

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  • PTSD in Adult Survivors of Child Abuse (re-post)

    This post is the most popular on my blog.  Every day, many times a day, someone clicks on it.  

    Below is a post from my brother's blog.  I highly recommend reading the article he found on PTSD in Adult Survivors of Child Abuse.  It is a clear, but a very long piece.  It helps to show why we end up the way we end up.  

     

    I have been feeling the intense effects of PTSD this past week and wanted to blog about it.  I found this blog that "frames" the feelings perfectly:

    http://adultsurvivors.blogspot.com/

    Post Traumatic Stress In Adult Survivors Of Child Abuse

    "…Suppose that in the midst of a tornado a child sought comfort and protection from his parents and was told, "What tornado? It's a beautiful day…Go outside and play." That's how crazy and unsafe the world seems to some children. Some survivors have tried to tell the truth about the abuse and were called liars or accused of being responsible for the abuser's behavior."

    "When a victim or survivor is disbelieved, shamed, threatened into silence, or when the disclosure is minimized or becomes cause for punishment, the trauma inflicted by willful ignorance compounds the original trauma. Children can withstand a lot with the help of other people; conversely, the denial or rejection of children's normal thoughts and feelings about trauma can cause as much pain as the original trauma."

    "To minimize the damage of trauma, children also need protection from further harm. But in troubled families it is not in the abuser's best interest to teach the child how to prevent further abuse. The non-protective parent who denies or minimizes the abuse is usually passive. The child is usually left on his own to figure out the best way to protect himself."

    "Survivors rarely, if ever, benefited from the compassionate and reasonable reactions that would have lessened the effects of their troubled childhoods. Given the enormity of what didn't happen after their traumas, it isn't surprising that they entered adulthood numb and anxious, or both. Protective numbing and reactive anxiety are, after all, normal reactions to abnormal situations."

    "Clearly, people were not meant to be physically or sexually abused. Human beings are not equipped to understand abuse as it happens, not to feel the full force of their physiological response at the time. And they cannot, at that moment, find meaning in the experience of the abuse. Each of these important elements of accommodation can only happen later, in distinct stages."

    "Survivors commonly speak of how they endured trauma by pretending that their mind and spirit had gone to a safer place, leaving the body behind to endure the abuse."

    "Abused children abandon reality, dissociating mind from body so they won't be overwhelmed and their ability to cope won't be shattered. Even a relatively minor trauma can provoke dissociation until a person is later able to integrate the experience. "Later", in the case of chronic abuse, particularly where the child has no support, may mean years later."

    "In the short run, dissociation is a very effective defense, walling off what cannot be accommodated. Sometimes the actual memory of the abuse goes into deep freeze. An incident in the present may trigger strong feelings that really belong to an incident in the past. The survivor may become enraged by what merely annoys others, devastated when others are momentarily sad, panicked when others are just worried. Present events tap into a deep well of feelings whose source remains elusive."

    "When asked what the worst memory from their childhood is, many survivors reply, "My worst memory has yet to surface."

    "Sometimes only the feelings go into deep freeze. Some survivors have perfect, excruciating detailed recall of the abuse itself, but are numb to their feelings. Their hearts are in deep freeze. They do fine when they are not provoked to feel too much. They may avoid friendships and romance, or enter into them only on their own terms. They believe their feelings are as troublesome and overwhelming today as their parents once told them they were. They are numb to feelings as a way to keep control."

    "Many survivors ask, "If I don't remember the trauma, or if I don't have strong feelings about it, isn't that better?" Dissociation eventually takes far more effort than it is worth. The more we try not to, the more feelings and thoughts assert themselves, unconsciously demanding our attention. It takes an enormous toll to keep perfectly legitimate memories and feelings about childhood trauma in deep freeze. In the long run, one is better letting the thaw happen, and with the support of others, participating in some manner of "cure" that will allow life to go on."

    "Some survivors don't know they have a highly recognizable and treatable anxiety disorder called Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), which has been associated with survivors of the Vietnam War, the Holocaust, mass murders, natural disasters, rape, kidnapping, accidents, torture, and other extraordinary events"

    "People with PTSD often re-experience the trauma in their minds. When the memory brings on a physiological response or feeling this is called an abreaction. (The release of emotional tension through the recalling of a repressed traumatic event.) Often the situation that brings on the abreaction is reminiscent of the original trauma."

    "An abreaction could be triggered by something someone says, circumstances such as the press of a crowd, being left totally alone, a darkened room…or even a particular time of the year, smells, touch, tastes…or other things associated with the trauma. Suddenly, the survivor is transported as if in a time machine to the event of the original trauma and reacts with the emotional intensity that would have been appropriate then, though not now. During an abreaction it is difficult to distinguish "what was" from "what is"."

    "Herein lies the Achilles Heels for survivors. They function well in many aspects of life until they encounter the events or circumstances that are likely to trigger abreactions: emotional vulnerability, physical illness or evasive medical procedures, struggles with authority figures, cultural oppression or abandonment, to name a few."

    "A person with PTSD lives with a persistent avoidance of stimuli associated with the trauma or numbing of general responsiveness. Survivors with PTSD may avoid any intimate connection, often resulting in feelings of detachment or estrangement from others. Survivors often have highly developed social skills and may seem to be extremely extroverted, but their dealings with others may preclude vulnerability. They can talk about movies or work or the weather, but they have difficulty expressing their feelings. O
    r, they may have constricted feelings. They may be unable to identify and express a wide range of emotions, particularly the anger, fear and sadness so closely associated with the original traumatic events."

    "Certain circumstances can make the disorder longer lasting and more severe. If a trauma is repeated, for instance, as in chronic physical or sexual abuse, then the disorder might persist more than it would after only one incident. Repitition does not make one immune to the consequences of trauma. Rather, it has a cumulative effect, as unresolved trauma is layered upon unresolved trauma."

    "Traumatic events that are human in origin seem to have more severe after-effects than natural disasters. Hurtful and frightening as it is to be raped by a stranger, or to be in the path of a natural disaster, the creation of a personal disaster by a loved one is vastly more bewildering and overwhelming."

    "Another circumstance that contributes to the persistence of PTSD is the victim's age. The younger the victim, the more vulnerable he is. The more developmental skills and life experiences uncontaminated by trauma a child has, the more he has to draw on in the face of trauma. When life goes well, and children are loved and protected, each day is like a deposit in a savings account. Neglect, repeated physical abuse or sexual assault…or other life-threatening events, make huge withdrawals on the account. The more a child has in the bank when the trauma occurs, the better the prognosis for a quick recovery. Small children who are repeatedly traumatized usually have few deposits and easily become emotionally bankrupt."

    "When the survivor is ready to deal with it, memories and feelings begin to reconnect. He or she remembers, with the mind and feelings, instead of dismembering through dissociation."

    "The beginning of reconnection is usually attributed to the fortuitous occurrence of a trigger – an event or circumstance obviously associated with or reminiscent of the original trauma. There must also always be the simultaneous occurrence of a positive trigger before the reconnection can begin. For instance, the survivor may have found someone trustworthy to talk to (therapist, friend, partner, support group) and may finally feel safe and sane enough to explore and accept her feelings."

    "The pain and disorientation can be balanced by focusing on the positive trigger. During this process, survivors should ask themselves, "Why now? Why didn't I remember this two years ago? Five years ago?" The answer lies in the conjunction of this trigger, along with the negative one, which tells the survivor "you can afford to reconnect now…you have the power, judgement, insight and support that you truly did not have as a child. It is safe enough."

    "Walling off parts of the trauma was once the solution to an unbearable situation. Eventually, it causes problems in the mind, heart and spirit, in ones relationships with the child within and others, and in ones work. Trauma, if left unresolved, is destined to be re-enacted in one of those vital aspects of the self."

    "To recognize that a mother is exploiting you for her own ends, or that a father is unjust and tyrannical, or that neither parent ever wanted you, is intensely painful. Moreover, it is frightening. Given any loophole, most children will seek to see their parent's behavior in some more favorable light. This natural bias of children is easy to exploit."

    "It is not just the child's body that is abused or neglected. Troubled families mess with a child's mind. Virtually all survivors believe that their ability to think, to intellectually master the challenges in their lives, was of of their greatest strengths as children. Like other coping mechanisms, their over-reliance on rationality fell into obsolescence and became one of their greater weaknesses."

    "Children struggle to make some sense of a loved ones abusive and neglectful treatment. If the child understood what abuse really was, a random and violent imposition of another's will onto a relatively helpless person, he would despair at such hopelessness and betrayal. Therefore, he uses every mental effort to make himself seem in greater control while transforming the abusive parent into the safe and loving caretaker he so desperately needs. Such lies of the mind require mental gymnastics."

    "Children don't do this thinking in a vacuum. In some situations they are told what to think. In most cases they are influenced by the abuser's faulty thinking and by the rationalization of the adults who passively enable the abuse to go on. Children hear what those powerful adults say and what they don't say."

    "On top of the abuse and neglect, denial heaps more hurt upon the child by requiring the child to alienate herself from reality and her own experience. In troubled families, abuse and neglect are permitted; it's the talking about them that is forbidden."

    "Minimization is a thinking error designed to protect the injured self, making one seem a little less injured. The need for it can lessen as the survivor can afford to embrace the full reality of the past. (Refraining from denial is an act of courage for survivors. They have to choose quite literally between being alienated from themselves and reality…or being alienated from family members who still deny abuse.)"

    "In troubled families, the thinking around who is responsible is convoluted at best. Abusive parents externalize, blaming other people, places and things for their behavior. They compensate by controlling everyone around them. But…in their heart of hearts…they feel out of control. They must blame others because it is too painful to take responsibility for their unhappiness. Children are easy targets because they cannot challenge their parent's thinking errors. Few children can argue when facing an enraged mother. Hearing accusations often enough, children come to believe that they are responsible for their parent's troubled behavior."

    "Unfortunately, children receive an internal psychological payoff when they believe the abuse is their fault…a false sense of power. The child can let the unfairness and danger of the violence shatter him, or he can tell himself, "I'm not frightened or angry or sad or helpless or innocent. There is nothing wrong with this situa
    tion. This is happening to me for a good reason. This is happening to me because I deserve it, because I provoked it, because I was put here on Earth to endure such things. There is really nothing out of the ordinary about this."

    "The child is doing the best he or she can do to make sense out of the abuse or neglect, by feeling guilty and responsible, thereby holding on to the illusion that he or she is in control of what is truly out of control. This illusion of power seems better than acknowledging that one has no power at all. Such pseudo logic quells feelings of hurt, rage, terror, confusion or sadness…rationalizing them into a deep freeze."

    "The child's sense of guilt and responsibility is useful to the abusive parent, who believes he isn't abusive..that it is the child who forces him into being abusive. The non protective adults want the child to bear the guilt so they won't have to face the harm their neglect is causing. So…the dance of the violent family begins: Children are responsible for adult's behavior…adults are responsible for nothing."

    "Faced with random, senseless abuse, a child begins to think herself as inherently unlovable."

    "Believing oneself to be guilty, responsible, or in control of others hurtful behavior can be a tenacious habit. Many survivors deal with any overwhelming experience – physical illness, abandonment by a friend or spouse, academic or job demands – by "comforting" themselves with the illusion that they are in fact in control and to blame. An enormous amount of energy is sapped by this irrational guilt."

    "Rarely do survivors see themselves as so powerful over the good in their own lives. Here, their parent's constant projection has left it's mark. Many survivors, convinced of their inherent worthlessness and inadequacy, look to other people, places and things for salvation. Only when they have the "perfect intimate partner, their dream house, or public recognition for their work" will they be redeemed. Of course, anything so powerful to save their lives might also destroy their lives, which brings the survivor back full circle to his original feeling of powerlessness. Responsible for all the pain in the world…he is inept at enjoying his own happiness."

    "Fantasy, as a coping mechanism can also be a weakness. Too often fantasies become more real than relationships. Survivors may fantasize a lot about what other people think or feel about them."

    "Trauma influences our ways of organizing in our minds what goes on out in the world. Survivors who have not fared well in life tend to think in sweeping generalities…people are either good or bad, with no gray area in between. Everything is "always" or "never", with no room for "doesn't matter much." In contrast, some survivors have thinking that is highly compartmentalized."

    "Children simply do not have the cognitive development or life experience for clear thinking in the face of trauma. Their thinking errors reflect their best attempt to comprehend the incomprehensible…when the truth wasn't offered or allowed. A first step to recovery, then, is to examine, challenge, and change these old ways of thinking about trauma."

    "The goal of sorting through the lies of the mind is to learn to take the abuse less personally, and thereby to feel safer. By looking back, the powerful adult mind can more objectively measure the powerlessness of the traumatized child."

    "Thinking clearly may not be the entire answer, but it is an excellent and necessary beginning. Emerson wrote: "It is the oyster who mends its shell with pearls." But, unlike oysters, we are not solitary creatures. We mend one another as well as ourselves. Pearls of wisdom help us to take the next step…to heal in the company of other people, feeling the effects of the trauma while we hold onto our life rafts."

    "Feelings begin in the body, not in the mind. Many survivors say, "I know what happened wasn't my fault, but I still feel somewhat unlovable and damaged. My self-worth is measured by how other people see me. My head knows that is wrong, but my heart feels differently. Thinking comes much more easily to me…it's still a big risk to feel. If I ever started to cry, I'd cry a river. If I ever felt the terror of it all, I'd disintegrate into nothingness."

    "Children don't innately know how to repress their spontaneous responses. They have to be taught, and troubled parents are perhaps the best teachers of all. There are three iron-clad rules in the abusive home: Don't talk. Don't trust. Don't feel. To break any of them means risking rejection or punishment."

    "One of the few predictable aspects of a violent family is the unpredictability of the parent's responses. Every time the child cries, he gets a different response. Soon he realizes that it is unsafe to cry. After a while, he keeps his feelings to himself and perhaps loathes spontaneity because it causes so much trouble."

    "Young children offer their feelings to adults as gifts, as their currency of exchange in intimacy. All they can do to be close to adults is to offer their feelings. When their feelings are ignored or rejected as wrong, bad, troublesome, sick, crazy or stupid…they feel rejected. The young mind reasons "since my feelings are unacceptable, I must be unacceptable, too."

    "Beyond teaching children to recognize and articulate their feelings, parents help children to contain and express feelings constructively. When children do not learn how to do this they may become overwhelmed by them, experiencing them as floods. They may come to fear or loathe their feelings."

    "Adults from abusive homes can also become pain-avoidant. Survivors attempt to control the people and events around them so that they will never feel pain again."

    "What is most tragic about pain-avoidant behavior is that it is a defense against something that has already happened and cannot be undone. A survivor cannot live fully in the present until he or she has the past in perspective. Sometimes being preoccupied and defensive abou
    t the pain waiting in the future is just a distraction from addressing the real pain in the past."

    "To be intimate is to risk pain. There are no guarantees. To miss years of loving to avoid the pain of loss is too high a price to pay."

    "Survivors attempt to flee from feelings about having been abused, from normal reactions to an abnormal situation. Because that situation was life-threatening in the past, some survivors mistakenly believe that to experience those feelings today would also be life-threatening, would bring on an emotional breakdown, a falling apart akin to death. They do not understand that the breakdown has already happened, when their feelings were preempted by shame."

    "A survivor can afford to look that "death" squarely in the face when he has people who will stand by him, as well as the insight and power he did not have as a child. When it is finally safe enough, the survivor will remember the memories and feel the feelings about the trauma. Such a "thawing out" is a second chance, an emotional reincarnation. Still…the first sensations that have been repressed or avoided all of ones life can feel like a tidal wave."

    "When he is ready, the thoughts and feelings return. In response to what has been uncovered, he often feels great anger at the betrayal itself and the injustice and randomness of the violence."

    "Underneath that anger is a terror and helplessness that is more difficult to experience than the anger. ("Maybe it wasn't as bad as I remember. Maybe I'm just exaggerating.") This can go on for a long time, but with the help of others, the survivor will eventually accept that the trauma was as bad as he knows it was."

    "Profound sadness follows. This compassionate acceptance of "poor me" and the mourning of the losses that the trauma created eventually lead to resolution."

    "When the losses engendered by trauma are fully mourned, the trauma loses its power over the survivor. Instead of the emotional breakdown they feared…survivors experience an emotional breakthrough! Completing the grieving process means divorcing the trauma from ones sense of identity and self-worth."

     

    I could have highlighted all of it. It is good to recognize yourself, even if it is in an article about PTSD. 

    – See more at: http://imperfectlady.typepad.com/my-blog/2012/07/below-is-a-post-from-my-brothers-blog-i-highly-recommend-reading-the-article-he-found-on-ptsd-in-adult-survivors-of-child-ab.html#sthash.yVJnCIKn.dpuf

  • With his tears…

    In a conversation about Robin Williams, it was brought up that while the spot light is shining today, in a year the light will have long moved on.  And, it will leave back in the darkness, those who struggle with darkness…alone.

    It appears that we can't bear to be with such negativity for too long. 

    Just as I thought Penn State was going to open the flood gates for so much social change…for it to be the event that changed things for victims.  It was a loud splash, but the lake has returned to its usual calm.

    How much truly changed with Penn State?

    How much will Robin Williams death change things for those who suffer like him?

    What is the "Thing" we are all waiting for?

    What do we expect of those who turn away?

    What can a person whose life reflects Robin's mental state say or do today, that will make a difference.  If dying isn't the answer, than what is?

    If exposing sexual abuse doesn't change the dynamics than what will?

    We are at a place where the old hopes of change is dying. We need a new working model.

    I had thought, that by speaking out, folks would hear…they don't.  I thought if they heard, than changes would automatically follow, they don't.

    So, it leaves us all to ponder what will work.

    What do those who suffer severe depression need that will cause them to reach out instead of end their lives? What is this magic thing?

    What will make folks turn away from those who abuse, instead of staying in relationships?  What will it take for parents to realize that their children are in grave danger as long as they refuse to see and hold abusers accountable?

    It appears, at least to me, that we as a society are challenged to come up with ways to embrace the darkness of depression in a way that accepts and honors it as a tangible disease of untrue thoughts.

    The challenge I believe between these two "Depression" and "Sexual Abuse".

    One…depression is believing things that are not true…and the other is to believe things that are.

    Both are states of denial of reality.

    And it begs me to consider that the more we can stay with reality, and accept what is, the less abrassive life will be…and the easier it will be to live your truth.

    When the depressed have to surpress and hide their darkness…by putting on a happy face, when victims of abuse are made to stick with families or be shunned and left alone…we are setting the stage for pretend living.

    My dream society would be for all to be able to be themselves, no matter what that looks like.  For it to be honorable to be truthful and for it to be accepted.

    While many sat and laughed with Robin Williams, how many would have been able to sit with his tears?  

  • He is a hero to me.

    I watched a few segments of Oprah interviewing Matthew Sandusky as he spoke up about his experiences being abused by his adopted father; a coach and seemingly unlikely abuser.

    What struck me is how the public character often is the toughest enemy when it comes to children being believed….even adult children.  Had there only been one child to speak up against this Penn State coach, I am not sure there would have been a conviction.

    For it requires enough evidence to out weigh the life that is lived in the light of day.  

    Somehow this seems to be held on the scales as 'evidence' to the contrary of his capabilities to abuse.  Most will fail to recognize how it dove tailed nicely and played perfectly to be the perfect role to be an abuser.  It didn't make it harder, but easier.

    The manipulation and the selection of boys isn't done half-assed. It is carefully orchestrated and played out.  It is a huge part of the dance for the pedophile….child friendship.

    If only folks would recognize that it matters NOT what the abuser does…what office he holds, what religion he is, what sport he plays…for more often than not, it is the gate way to gaining access to those he will abuse.

    I am encouraged by more and more cases being exposed and others standing up and speaking out about their abuse and their abusers.  It opens the pathway to make it more believable….or at the very least, not so shameful.

    I see Matthew Sandusky as he said…no longer being a coward.

    I had to look up the definition of "Coward".

    "a person who lacks the courage to do or endure dangerous or unpleasant things."

    Isn't it funny, but we intuitively know, we will have to endure danger or unpleasantness IF we speak up.

    He said how family always stood together 'against them', whomever that was…Family stands by family, no matter what.

    And, his unwillingness to do so, set him apart from family.

    I understand this best.

    He is a hero to me.

    (You can watch episodes on OWN Network, online….oprah.com)

  • Move Intuitively.

    My tea bag read, "Our intuition comes from innocence".  

    The near miss with my mother followed me around yesterday, lingering like a shadow I couldn't seem to shake.  Feeling visited by a ghost.

    What came to me is that she enters places playing the role of innocent.  That the application of "Forgiveness of Sins" has removed all past behaviors, that she is indeed whiter than snow and a restored mother.

    As she carries herself boldly innocent…it makes my actions seem insane. How dare I 'act' like her sins are still present?  

    I am again uncertain I can articulate the juxtaposition it places on reality.

    For those who believe she has been restored to loving mother, my actions are completely and wildly insane.  The actions of a madwoman.

    What also came to me while mowing yesterday is how us 'mad people' are made insane when we don't treat folks with the heavy glove of pretend.

    When we don't go along to get along, we are then the insane.  NOT, the folks who refuse to take responsibility for their actions.

    I am insane for walking away from an innocent woman.

    My refusal to pretend, all is well with thee… has labeled me Mental.

    It is my humble opinion, that most of who we call mental, are folks who can't live in the land of pretend.  Our bodies, minds and souls feel better being with the truth…it is like our pretend button is broke.

    We, as a society, have become more comfortable with the untruth, than with reality. 

    Being authentic is rare…and most often too uncomfortable to be around.

    We have built relationships and family legacies around pretending folks to be something they are not.

    And, those of us who fail to live in pretend, are relegated to insanity.

    I had to go and look up the word "Pretend".

    "Speak and act so as to make it appear that something is the case when in fact it is not."

    This is what I can no longer do.

    I can't act or speak as if nothing happened.  As if the fact isn't the fact…

    And, this is how I view them all behaving…speaking and acting to make the family a family, and not a dysfunctional sea of abuse.

    I guess what I feel mostly, with these strange encounters with my mother, is not even so much my honest response, but the feelings I get from the subconscious society; that the insanity claim is mine, not theirs.

    How is it possible that I am a minority that moves truthfully?

    How is it that we see and feel that the majority that participates in pretense is more mentally well?

    While I may speak out about abuse, it seems the problem isn't about whether there was abuse or not, but rather how we then live with this fact.

    Do we pretend so we can disguise the fact….or fully accept the facts as they are?

    And, who is more mental?

    The innocent move intuitively.

     

     

  • Always Innocent.

    When another sexual assault case is in the paper, (Canadian Paper – link below) it is the battle of he said, she said and witnesses and the 'task' of finding the truth or covering it up.  

    http://blogs.windsorstar.com/2014/06/20/windsor-spitfire-ben-johnson-trapped-woman-in-washroom-stall-sex-assault-trial-hears/

    We all sit on a side.

    We all come to the article with our own experiences.

    We will lean either toward victim or with the 'alleged' perpetrator.

    Until the close of trial, the girls/women are seen as guilty and he innocent.

    I see them on trial more than him. 

    The women having to prove more…explain the unreasonable with reason…and defend their actions…like they put themselves in harms way.

    And his virtue appears more ironclad than theirs…for he is a hockey player.

    And, he stands with his atheletic career and they stand alone.

    Does his career lend more weight and make abuse 'less likely'?  Does this make the job of a victim harder?  Their actions appear to be more easily questioned than his.  

    I am interested in this story on many levels…and will follow its trail.

    The curiosity of the silence and the lack of coverage in our local media is odd.  

    For, you know if it was about his career, they the family would be demanding it.  Now, he is in the big leagues in a legal fight and we are not hearing it.  And, where are the men of the church? Why is there not an outcry for the injustice of women?  Who are they supporting with their silences???

    Funny how the 'alleged' abusers garnish such respect.

    And how victims aren't helped, supported and praised for exposing such behavior…but rather relegated to 'guilty' until he is proven guilty.  He gets the innocent billing until it is proven otherwise.  And, they get to wear the label guilty.

    We as society have agreed with this. There is no allegedly guilty….for the victims…but guilty.

    We stand and carry the weight and shame of this crime until the courts and the lawyers 'weight' things out.  It isn't the truth that is weighed and measured, but rather the skills of the lawyers.  

    Will this be…."He who has the most money wins?"

    Maybe the Canadian Court System has more checks and balances, maybe they lean on the side of the victim and for justice.  Maybe….just maybe the victims are seen as innocent and he the guilty party.

    Imagine the change in our legal systems if this were the case?

    What I know, is that my father was guilty on so many accounts, and only one entered the court room with him. By the time the courts were done with him, he was set free.  

    The truth was not served.

    Yet all knew the truth…and victims had no victory.

    I guess we believe that once the courts of the lands get the perpetrators, it will prosecute them.  

    I have faith in the victims voices, but not in the courts to succeed in taking these guys off the street.  

    We will have to see what the Canadian Courts do with this case.

    My energy goes to the women standing opposite of him.

    Victims are always innocent.

    (He was raised in the FALC)

     

  • Feelings of Guilt

    When you contemplate the Cause for guilt, it really is a weird idea…and even more so Sin.  Coming from a religion that was very sin based as well as having the antidote, I sit with the why of it all. 

    What is its purpose or cause? 

    Will making someone feel bad garnish good behavior?

    Will constricting them with rules breed kindness and joy?

    In A Course of Miracles…this phrase echoed my feelings. "Today's idea but states the simple truth that makes the thought of sin impossible.  It promises there is no cause for guilt, and being causeless it does not exist.  It follows surely from the basic thought so often mentioned in the text; ideas leave not their source.  If this is true, how can you be apart from God?"

    Again, what is the cause for guilt?  What is its mission statement or what does it accomplish in the lives of the church members?

    I know, that for the most part going up in a world of sin and being steeped in worthlessness, it seems that the idea of sin is to navigate around it and the application of the forgiveness (when you fall into 'sin') will restore you to wholeness, but for a brief moment in time.

    What if there was no source or real cause for guilt?

    What if there were no sin?

    What then would happen to the buildings with steeples?

    What would there be left to talk about.

    No sin = no reason for the application of forgiveness that wipes the sins away.

    What if instead we saw our lives or ourselves through the lens of nature…and to see our imperfections making us perfect coming from whence we came.

    What if we could understand and see how the lives we lived and were raised in, made us into the beings we are….and when we know better, we do better.  What is there to be guilty then, about?

    I just can't find a reason to feel guilty for being me.

    For all I did was become who I was raised to be…

    I am the complete and utter manifestation of living and surviving not only sexual abuse, but religious abuse.  The church had its hand in lowering and separating my essence and I.

    It (church) decided for me, (and I agreed) how to live my life.  And, it was a mutual understanding, that I was worthless.  The churches idea of me, matched how I felt after abuse.

    When I understood my innocence in being abused, I could then see the tragedy of what the churches mission was.  It was to fill us up with worthlessness for its power.

    What again is the cause for guilt in the church? Why does it need folks to feel guilty?  What would happen if, we all came to my understanding…"the thought of sin is impossible…?"

    Would religion exist without sin?

    I see the world as human beings living out their childhoods, until they can unlearn and undo its damage.  I don't call that a sin.  I call it survival and doing the best you can with the tools you were given.

    If we were to take 'sin' off the table, you would see people re-enacting their pain and using the definitions of love they saw modeled as children.  Sexual abuse leaves a mark…not on the body, but in the mind.  It messes with our definitions of what we call love.  

    I don't see sin…I see folks looking for love.

    When they can redefine what love is, they will seek a different love.

    A definition of Sin…was missing the mark.  Is there a cause for guilt if you miss the mark? Or do you just have to reset your sights?

    I love that there is no cause for guilt, and being causeless it does not exist.

    Imagine a world without the feelings of guilt….

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  • Be Free

    "Letting go of your attachment to your vision of parenthood and your desire to write your children's future is the hardest psychic death to endure. It demands that you drop all prior agendas and enter a state of pure release and surrender. It asks that you forgo your fantasies of who you thought your child would be and instead respond to the actual child in front of you." Dr. Shefali Tsabary

    This works in reverse in how we see or don't see our parents…as well as how we see or don't see our children.  

    Sometimes it seems that our dreams of people are meeting their dreams of us.  Neither are willing to endure the psychic death, which would endanger our relationships (Dreams of each other).

    Imagine meeting the actual person compared to our vision of who they are?

    Imagine further being able to be who you are and not have to worry about whether you are 'fitting into their dream'?

    I have seen this both ways.

    I have been the dreamer for my children and I have killed my dreams for them…my only desire is for them to be happy doing what they want to do.  If I am upset with what they do, it isn't their problem it is mine.  More of my psychic ideas have to die.

    I also have been a dream girl in so many dreams and then their nightmare when I stopped pleasing them.  I have felt the disappointment from them when I no longer cared about their dreams of me.  When I stopped worrying about how being me impacted their dreams of me.

    Life was incredibly hard and prison like when I was dancing for their dreams.

    It left me completely out of my own desires.

    The girl/woman I was for 46 years was held in place by what they needed me to be.

    Who I am today, is a free woman.  

    I wasn't set free by them…for if they had their way, I would return to the fold and be the old me.

    In springing myself free from my parent's dreams…it released my children. For as I saw myself locked into my mother's needs…I could see how my needs locked up my children.

    Many parents may believe that their dreams, beliefs and desire to have their children 'in the faith' that they hold dear…is kind.  It isn't.  You are separating your child from their spirit and merging them into you.  Making them in your image. Like you are God also.

    I didn't have this book but I did what she is suggesting. I became conscious.

    Conscious of my prison…and the prison I was building for my children. 

    The legacy of dysfunction…

    Freedom is love.

    When there is a battle of wills, it is our spirits trying to be free.  

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • Real Person

    This truly would change the world…"The Conscious Parent" by Dr. Shefali Tsabary.

    In the first few pages…

    "Many of us don't consider how the way we parent affects our children, which might cause us to change our approach.  Does the method especially include listening to your child's spirit? Would we be willing to change the way we interact with our child if it became clear that what we are doing isn't working?"

    "Each of us imagines we are being the best parent we can be, and most of us are indeed good people who feel great love for our children.  It certainly isn't our lack of love that we impose our will on our children. Rather, it stems from a lack of consciousness. The reality is that many of us are unaware of the dynamics that exist in the relationship we have with our children."

    "None of us likes to think of ourselves as unconscious.  On the contrary, its a concept we tend to balk at.  So defensive are many of us that, let someone say a word about our parenting style, and we are instantly triggered. However, when we begin to be aware, we redesign the dynamic we share with our children."

    "Our children pay a heavy price when we lack consciousness. Overindulged, overmedicated, and over-labeled many of them are unhappy. This is because coming from unconsciousness ourselves, we bequeath to them our own unresolved needs, unmet expectations, and frustrated dreams. Despite our best intentions, we enslave them to the emotional inheritance we received from our parents, binding them to the debilitating legacy of ancestors past. The nature of unconsciouness is that, until it's metabolized, it will seep through generation after generation. Only through awareness can the cycle of pain that swirls in families end."

    "To Connect With Your Children, First Connect With Yourself."  

    "Until we understand exactly how we have been operating in an unconscious mode, we tend to resist opening ourselves to an approach to parenting that rests on entirely different ideals from those we may have relied on until now."

    "Traditional parenthood has been exercised in a manner that's hierarchical. The parent governs from the top down.  After all, isn't the child our "lesser," to be transformed by us as the more knowledgeable party? Because children are smaller and don't know as much as we do, we pressume we are entitled to control them. Indeed, we are so used to the kind of family in which the parent exercises control, it perhaps doesn't even occur to us that this arrangement might not be good for either our children or ourselves."

    "On the parent's side of the equation, the problem with the traditional approach to parenting is that it rigidifies the ego with its delusions of power.  Since our children are so innocent and ready to be influenced by us, the tend to offer little reistance when we impose our ego on them – a situation that holds potential for the ego to become stronger."

    "If you want to enter into a state of pure connection with your child, you can achieve this by setting aside any sense of superiority. By not hiding behind an egoic image, you will be able to engage your child as a real person like yourself." Dr. Shefali

    Just imagine the difference it would make in the lives of children and parents to be aware and conscious and to separate ourselves into real people?

    I know, that my parenting changed drastically when I discovered how disconnected I was with myself.  How much I needed my children to fulfill my needs and how I had parented so unconscious…as unconscious as I was myself.

    I would highly recommend this book, for its goal is to erase the dysfunction unconsciousness breeds.  Some may think that sexual abuse was the biggest factor in creating dysfunction in our home, but its overriding system was unconscious parenting.

    Just the fact that the FALC awards parents who can create mini selves with their children, when you can have them all conform to your beliefs, shows the model of NOT seeing the child and its spirit.

    It would horrify the loving parents of many religions to know they are actually shutting out the spirit of their child when they impose their expectations upon their child. 

    Instead of many religions igniting the spirit, they are separating the child from who they were born to be.

    I can't express adequately the powerful change I experienced when I understood these two drastically different ways of parenting….unconscious to conscious.

    When parents change the way they parent…we will see beautiful expressions of spirits being born…instead of the continual seeping of dysfunction from one generation to the next.  The sheer volume of pain unconscious parents create would stop…if they first connected to their own pain….their self.

    Our generation is the start of this paradigm shift.

    Just to be aware we do not have the right to douse the spirit of a real person.

     

     

  • To grow

    I watched a few documentaries this weekend about breaking the silence and a family  confronting the abuser; a family friend.

    In both, you see how small the actual event of abuse is, compared to the life effects after.  How the family is without clear tools in the years in which the abuse happened and then the different responses to their abuser.

    Below is a family dealing with the "after" the event…and wrestling with the relationships that follow.


    Awful Normal by cine1_freemovie 

    The other you can rent on Amazon for $2.00.  Called ""Stories of Silence"… Recovering from Boyhood Sexual Abuse." by Director Ethan Delevan

    I am not sure there will ever be a clear cut road free of the abuses effects on your life or what is helpful in recovering, but we are learning more and more how devastating it is to living a life with emotional integrity.

    If you take away anything, it is to see the life struggle without a healthy inner peace and sense of self…when you have to leave the truth behind out of fear or the lack of being believed or the failure for the family to distance themselves from the abuser.

    To see and bear witness to the uncomfortable life of carry the truth, alone.

    What I see is the dramatic change that happens when the stories are told. When the individual faces their abuse and how they appear lighter and stronger.

    We are, as one man said, "At the tip of the iceberg".

    It isn't that we want to continue to spout the ugliness and the criminal aspects of abuse…and its images…for they are horrible enough. But to show the lives…whole lives that are ruined.  The struggle that ensues from the moment after abuse. Until the silence breaks, and we can open the event to the air of truth, it blocks living as a whole emotional being.

    I am encouraged as more and more speak up and the way it changes their lives.  

    It changes them back…slowly towards who they were before abuse.  You will never erase the abuse, but you can get back the aspects of yourself that was taken.

    Breaking the silence frees the child and allows her to grow.