Faith Filled Family Magazine July 2016 | Page 31

in the form of a short note, a meal or dessert, or the propriety of a listening ear. There are also some actions we can take in the civil realm. Lobby your representatives to eliminate the statute of limitations for crimes against children, both in the criminal statutes and for civil liability. Institutions should not be shielded from civil liability by using their leverage to “run out the clock” on their jeopardy to legal action. Understand that the Bible teaches clearly that the courts exist to provide justice for the victims of child sexual abuse. The Scriptures should not be misused to manipulate or to dissuade victims from seeking justice and reparations. Why did you choose to write the book “Naming Our Abuse?” There are many books written on sexual abuse for women. Unfortunately, the library is pretty small when the victims are boys who are now men. We believe we had a unique perspective to share and wanted to build a tool that could be used by survivors, therapists, and pastors to help men confront their child sexual abuse experience in a constructive manner. In short, we wrote the book we really wanted earlier in our journey. We met after Andrew shared his story as part of a Sunday morning message series presented at our church. Kudos to the pastor for his courage in giving the pulpit to a survivor! A group of male survivors formed following this message which continued for several years. Each of us have undergone years of therapy. In fact, we still seek professional therapy today, for various issues. In the course of treatment, we were encouraged to journal and to write about whatever we happened to talk about in a session. Note that each of us has different therapists who are not affiliated. During our support group meetings, we began to share excerpts of our writings together. The experience was so powerful for us we wanted to invite other men and the people who love them to get a taste of writing therapy. We settled on a theme and a structure and each of us contributed four entries for each part of the book. We intentionally limited the level of detail of our stories. We avoid salacious and shocking ele- ments. We sought to share just enough of our stories to invite the reader into the narrative but our goal is always guided by the desire to prompt the reader to connect with some of our metaphors to enter into his own story. Each section concludes with questions for reflection, writing prompts, and coping tips. In fact, we’ve already heard from some therapists that these questions and coping tips are proving very helpful! The survivor’s story is validated in the writing. But there is an indescribable dynamic in, after the writing, to read what you’ve written out loud. Read it aloud to your therapist and, hopefully, in a group of fellow survivors. It’s not easy but it is powerful and it makes a difference. Tears may fall from everyone, and that’s completely appropriate. When we had completed the book, we challenged one another to take an incredibly difficult step, one endorsed by our therapists. The book ends with letters each of us wrote to our “little boy.” Doing so, in a sense, helps to complete the story and integrate various levels of healing by inviting that lost, forgotten, lonely little boy that was left beaten on the side of the road to enter in. In the experience, each of us found a new voice deep within that facilitated a richer sense of healing and connectedness. Was Naming the Abuse a tough subject to write about? Each of our therapists had been encouraging us to journal and to write about different aspects of our recovery process. During our church support group meetings we would discuss how difficult it was to attach words to our feelings. So we began to gently encourage one another to give it a try. At our next meeting we would take turns reading our essays. Our hearts were continually lodged in our throats as we would reflect back to one another what we had just heard – both in what was spoken and in what didn’t need to be spoken. The subject was tough to write about because it is so intensely intimate, personal, and scary to see our broader stories connected in ways even we hadn’t fully seen. What would the other guys think if I shared the different contours of my anger, my grief, my gnawing pain, my deepest fears, my addictions, and so forth? What we found was