Tag: sexual abuse

  • Sexual Abuse And Shame A Cultural Perspective

    Some years ago, I read Shame Interrupted and learnt that shame was the root of most negative emotions.

    That means emotions such as anger, fear, guilt, low self-worth, low self-esteem has one root; Shame. These are also common themes when dealing with sexual abuse.

    With help, the woman on her healing journey can identify the triggers, separate thoughts from feelings and cultivate healthy coping strategies. However, many things can compound this shame.

    Brene Brown describes shame as “the intensely painful feeling or experience of believing that we are flawed and therefore unworthy of love, belonging, and connection.”

    Within the black community, we are familiar with the message that we are ‘flawed’. Most women shame story is a personal attack on their bodies, their hair and their behaviours.

    There’s also a generational shame that influences all aspects of our lives. Though often untold, our parent’s shame stories are lived out in the home and have an imprint on our lives. 

    Living in a marginalised community plagued by inequalities makes it challenging to separate one shame story from another. Without expert help, these stories can merge into one. Culturally competent therapy can help a woman identify where the embarrassment of sexual abuse start and end?

    That intense feeling that Brene Brown described will be familiar for every black woman who’s been to school, the shops, shunned on the playground or at work. She understands implicit biases and many other experiences that send the message that you are not good enough to be here. It’s our everyday lived experience.

    In summary, as black women, it is often challenging to separate shame from sexual abuse and chagrin from being black living in a white world.

    Culture and sexual abuse

    Shame is also connected to how certain parts of black culture process abuse and receives victims. For example, growing up in Jamaica, my experience is; the victim gets blamed; it was her fault. She has the responsibility of keeping herself safe and protecting men. 

    A woman raped can ask herself questions about what she was wearing and things she could have done to protect herself before even thinking about what she needs because it is embedded in her psyche to blame herself.

    The media also portrays a sexualised version of black women highlighting specific parts of our bodies to fit the narrative they want to spin. They make some features of our bodies desirable while at the same time we can also get scorned and labelled vulgar and lose. The latter version is prevalent when the media misunderstands how some black women express themselves in dance; they label it improper.

    Shame and religion

    Humiliation is felt even in religious settings, where many things about back women’s bodies become problematic and need fixing. The message of eurocentric reform influences guilt and embarrassment in the one place we should feel welcomed and safe.

    Our shape is different. Certain clothes highlight our natural form, which is the focus of many preachers sermons. Shaming a woman for having a particular structure is neither Christlike nor appropriate.

    She is not responsible for a shape, nor can she change herself—confusion reigns when the feeling of not being good enough shows up in both religious and secular settings. 

    We feel it as our sisters gets shamed when they mature earlier than others, and she becomes the focus of men’s attention. The men never get cautioned. Instead, her body gets the blame for the unwanted sexual attention.

    Many years ago, at a retreat (not wounds to Scars retreat), a fellow attendee and I had a very intense discussion in the middle of one group session. She felt that young girls were lost and inviting attention depending on how they dress.

    She gave an example of a church elder (male) who spoke to a particular young woman he felt was not appropriately dressed.

    I felt he was out of place and shouldn’t have spoken to her.

    We had a back and forth for a while non of us were willing to give up. The discomfort in the room was palpable no one wanted to join or give an opinion either way, and I feel sometimes that’s the problem. Young black girls are often unprotected and used as an example of what is wrong. Older women who have also grown up in a culture of shame sometimes join the conversation not to defend but to rebuke and reinforce the message that she’s unworthy, not good enough.

    Any censure or even a notice of her body can damage a young woman carrying the shame of sexual abuse. These messages about her form in dress or someone negative comment about her body adds another layer of confusion. Healing becomes complex, and therapy is needed to unravel shame from the abuse.

    Churches often neglect to deal with their lack of awareness around race and used the same Eurocentric culture as the measuring stick for all women. Modesty gets viewed through the lens of what looks good on our white sisters.

    In this environment, a black woman can be blamed for her body looking different in the dress prescribed by the organisation. She doesn’t feel able to break free from that culture for fear of being ostracised, so she tries to conform, denying the feelings, not knowing what to do with them or even if it’s “right” to feel them.

    It takes a culturally competent counsellor to understand these nuances and appropriately help a black woman process sexual trauma.

    A young woman dealing with the shame of sexual abuse can get re-traumatised when men, whether in leadership or not, chose to comment on what they are wearing

    Men who show no interest in their lives beyond condemning or accusing.

    That makes shame complex for many black women dealing with the pain of sexual abuse. In this environment, it is challenging to differentiate one shame from the next.

    Sexual abuse, shame and counselling

    As I work with black women healing from sexual abuse, this separation of shame becomes part of the work. It is often necessary to highlight the different layers of the emotion to put the embarrassment of sexual abuse in its proper perspective. With that done, she can work at managing triggers and develop methods of coping that can help her effectively move through the pain of abuse.

    This woman maybe for the first time feeling able to talk about the shame of being black and a woman. For the first time, many are becoming aware of the guilt that they carry around their bodies. Without a culturally competent therapist, this woman can leave therapy with unresolved issues and no way of working through the shame triggers.

    In shame interrupted, the authors said

    “Shame is the deep sense that you are unacceptable because of something you did, something done to you, or something associated with you. You feel exposed and humiliated.”

    An unravelling of all these elements is vital for a black woman working through sexual abuse.

    It is natural for a victim of sexual abuse to believe that she’s to blame. The message that black women receive about their bodies makes it easy to blame themselves; this can impact her parenting, how she functions in the home, at work, and affect her ability to do life from a space of worthiness.

  • Surviving Sexual Abuse can be hard. Here are 4 practices that can help.

    Surviving Sexual Abuse can be hard. Here are 4 practices that can help.

    Sexual abuse touch the deepest parts of us. Without earnest, preserving effort, healing will not be possible.
    The journey can start with therapy, retreats, self-help books, help from the community and friends.
    The potential for healing is enhanced when undertaken in a safe place with a trained professional.

    I have listed four reasons many struggles to embark on the journey.

    Shame
    Shame has different presentations at different ages and stages of our lives. Sexual trauma is perhaps one of the most significant areas that influence shame. Many negative emotions are the fruit of shame.
    You might experience shame because your body responds; This is a natural process, but because shame is grounded in lies, you have to go in search of the truth. However, it will take time and help to deconstruct, process and separate what is the truth.

    Practice – telling yourself the truth often, don’t distance yourself from people. Sometimes they reflect positivity that can help to combat shame. Learning how to receive and use the feedback can be a source of healing.

    Details
    As they say, the devil is in the details, and this is also true for survivors of sexual trauma. Sometimes there is an overarching obsession with more information, there can be a constant rehearsing of the details in your mind; this can produce anxiety and other conditions.

    Practice. Learn techniques that help you to relax whenever you are tempted to rehearse details. Try to stay present, enjoy simple activities that will help to build positive memories and give the brain something where else to focus.

    The neglected child
    Learning to love your wounded self is essential to healing and emotionally healthy life. However many struggles to love and accept the wounded child. Getting to know and love her is a critical part of overcoming. Sharing is crucial because you have information that is vital to her healing. You can share love and acceptance with her that perhaps no one else has ever had.

    Practice: sharing information with her that will help to soothe her in times of difficulties. Speak to her with kindness and sympathy. Use a gentle tone and compassion to give her information. Tell her that you will keep her safe.

    Avoidance
    Avoidance might be easy as the people that are around you pretended it never happened. At times they would prefer it if you do the same. Avoidance shows up in many ways, self-neglect, not eating, failing to access support or telling yourself you can do this without anyone.

    Practice: talking to yourself about it. Use journaling as a way of externalising feelings. Getting feeling out in the open will help you become more comfortable with acknowledging things to yourself.

  • Trauma symptoms

    Trauma symptoms

    Today in my workshop on connection, a young person asked the symptoms of depression. After answering her question, I thought about you. The people in my community. I decided to share some of the symptoms of trauma so that you can know the signs and be ready to help when needed. Or be ready to get help for yourself should you need it.
    You might notice this in the behaviours and interactions of the people around you. If you do, be a safe and supportive space for them to come when triggered.
  • Sexual Abuse and Intimacy

    Sexual Abuse and Intimacy

    Bonding disconnect

    Sometimes when we have been abused as children we struggle with trust, this lack of confidence is not a conversation that we have with self rather it is an unconscious decision that we make to protect self from further harm.

    I was blessed to be a loving, caring home with healthy attachment figures. When I identified my disconnection in relationships I had those relationships to draw, they provided safety for me as I learned to relate and make deeper connections with my husband.  If these links are missing and there are no family relationships to draw on, get the help of a good counsellor who will help you to work through this problem and help you learn the skills to make deep connections that will benefit your relationships.

    Experience people as unsafe

    If you have never experienced the world as a safe place then you will not know how to trust anyone, you will not experience anyone as trustworthy because we learn to trust others by experiencing people as trustworthy.  If the abuse happened in our childhood and we didn’t find secure attachment and were bonded to our primary caregivers, then it becomes difficult if that hurt is not healed to attach in adult life to other people.

    At times decisions are made never to trust or allow you to become vulnerable again.  These unconscious choices could be the root of some of the problems in the marriage.  It is worth the effort to examine the leading cause of some of the challenges in your relationship and take an honest inventory of your habits and tendencies to identify the root of some issues.

    Can see the unsafe traits of the abuser in everyone

    We had booked in and were waiting to board our flight to London; I was making my usually confident stride up the passage to use the restroom one more time before boarding.  I was at peace, settled finally.  I had attended a conference on abuse and was able to cry uninterrupted for the first time. It was healing.

    As I make my way to the restroom, a man was approaching me on his mobile phone, and I froze.  This man looked just like my abuser, and my feet refused to move.   My head worked it out within seconds, but the communication was slow getting from my brain to my limbs.  After he passed and I regain use of my legs I got angry.  Why did the abuser still have such powerful reaction over me?  That episode in the airport changed my life and was the catalyst for Wounds to Scars. 

    Like my moment of frozen in fear sometimes we can see the unsafe traits of the abuser in everyone even our spouses.  The way they talk, touch, etc. anything can sometimes be a trigger and send us to places of pain.  People often deal with this in two ways. One we hide, try to bury the pain or two we can confront and deal with it.  The former is often the cause of many problems in marriage as the hidden pain often manifest itself in many ways in the relationship.  For example, we often use anger to cover our sadness. In this regard anger often becomes an almost safe place. If you recognise any of these traits it might be necessary to find a safe space to process the impact of the abuse.