Faith Filled Family Magazine July 2016 | Page 29

vide some insights into the why of the abuse, the reader will be encouraged to explore how the abuse was able to occur in the first place. Part 2 is The Accident Report. This section encourages the reader to take a life inventory, factoring in the resulting immediate and collateral damage from his abuse. We seek to reconstruct the scene to better understand how these events in our childhood informed and influenced the events that followed, many of which we either refused to see or simply had never put together before. It’s about assembling the puzzle of your life, only now with the abuse narrative included. Part 3 is Rehabilitation. Shifting from discovery to recovery, the reader is guided through some elements of healthy self-care, including boundary creation, priority setting, and the realization that it is okay to have feelings. The nature of the pain begins to shift from detection, dissection, and connection to acceptance and transcendence as we invite God into the equation of our experience. Part 4 is Driving Again. Allowing God to transform our wounds and infuse them with deeply personal meaning, we re-engage our world, albeit with a discernable limp. We’ve come to respect our limitations and refuse to waste the suffering we’ve endured and the redemption we’ve found on cynical people. Surrounded by a great cl oud of supporters that include family, friends, counselors and, hopefully, a church body, a new courage emerges to reconcile with the little boy so long gagged and neglected. Can one recover from sexual abuse? Recover is the operative word. Yes, one can. A neighbor’s 20-year old daughter suffered a stroke a year ago that left her significantly disabled. The young woman is surrounded by an incredibly dedicated family, medical professionals and therapists, and an extended support network. The family’s life was instantly changed by this event. She’s learning to talk again and to walk with braces. She’s recovering and she’s beautiful. But she will never be the same. The evil of child sexual abuse is so invasive it goes to the core identity of the victim. When that core identity is compromised, the other physical, mental, psychological, emotional, sexual, and spiritual networks are affected. The level of recovery depends on a variety of factors including: how soon the abuse was discovered, how quickly and effectively the first responders reacted, how the family responded, how the church responded, how law enforcement responded, the availability and competence of trained and experienced psychiatrists, psychologists, and therapists, and so on. When a health crisis occurs, time and quality care are essential, first to survival and then, God-willing, to varying degrees of recovery. A victim of sexual abuse requires the same level of response. Sadly, there is a shortage of specialists in this area and our church culture and the culture at large has failed to make this connection. The headlines are telling us that child sexual abuse is an utter epidemic. Our lack of response ought to be disturbing. The reasons for our lack of response may prove more disturbing still. What can families do to help survivors of sexual abuse? Are there signs we should look for? I have read a lot of stories about sexual abuse survivors. The comment sections that follow these stories scream to survivors that, if we talk, we will not be believed and the absolute worst motives will be attached to us. Understand this: survivors begin with a self-narrative that what happened to them was not abuse. Sometimes it takes decades for a sexual abuse survivor to concede that he was molested or raped. The capacity of the human psyche to dissociate from traumatic realities – even when confronted with clear evidence – is frustratingly stubborn. As parents, when we hear our child recount an experience, we tend to listen through a filter that presumes some degree of exaggeration, embellishment, or misconception. We do so because we don’t want him or her to live in a delusional world and we recognize the importance of telling the truth. I look back with embarrassment on the occasions I doubted my son or daughter, using my skeptic’s filter, only to discover their story was completely accurate. How humbling and appropriate it was to ask for forgiveness! Now raise the stakes. It is critical that a child claim-