| T.R | Title | User | Personal Name
 | Date | Lines | 
|---|
| 1059.1 | Taking care of yourself IS taking care of others! | DEMING::GARDNER | justme....jacqui | Wed Mar 28 1990 13:10 | 16 | 
|  |     
    Dear Insest Survivor,
    Please consider hitting your local psychology section of your 
    library, good book store, or a feminist bookstore.  There, look
    for any and all books on insest.  Start reading....
    There are also 12-step programs on this issue.  Workbooks are 
    available to help you in your decision making that can be found
    where most AA, ACOA, OA, etc books are kept in local bookstores.
    Read and then decide for yourself what is best.  You are responsible
    only for yourself.  What you decide to do is FOR YOU.  Decide only
    what course of action will heal YOU!
    justme....jacqui
 | 
| 1059.2 |  | RANGER::TARBET | Haud awa fae me, Wully | Wed Mar 28 1990 13:26 | 15 | 
|  |     I would suggest subscribing to Sojourner, a nationally-distributed
    feminist newspaper (ca. $18/year, comes out monthly, available in the
    Boston area at New Words bookstore on Hampshire at Prospect).  I have
    frequently seen both letters and articles on how to bring the victim's
    feelings home to the perpetrator.  
    
    It might be that you will have to choose between perhaps destroying
    your grandmother's final years and getting your own catharsis and
    release while he lives; it sounds as though her relationship with him
    is close, and it's quite likely that if you manage to make your
    feelings known to him, it will spill over onto her in ways you cannot
    easily predict or control.  In your place, I would go slowly on that
    very account.
    
    						=maggie
 | 
| 1059.3 |  | RANGER::TARBET | Haud awa fae me, Wully | Wed Mar 28 1990 16:47 | 53 | 
|  |     The following response is from a member of our community who wishes
    to remain anonymous at this time.
    							=maggie
    ====================================================================
    Dear Anonymous,
    I am 27 years old and am just beginning my battle with incest. I have
    three  sisters, their ages now are 21, 29, 31. My father used to come
    into our  rooms at night while we slept and do things to us. My oldest
    sister  remembers more than I do. I have blocked out all instances and
    only have  vague memories of things that my father did. My two older
    sisters have  some memories. It's so amazing how the mind works. That
    it can block out  all yucky/scary things that happen to us as children
    and then let the bad memories out little by little as you're ready to
    deal with them.
    I am seeing a counselor and I will share with you what he has told me
    to do. You may not feel that you need/want to see a counselor, which
    is o.k.  But it sounds like your sister should seek help. It's such a
    hard thing to  deal with, especially when you don't know what to do to
    help yourself. If  you/she really don't want to see someone an
    excellent book that I am  reading, which goes along with all of the
    things that my counselor is  doing is "The Courage to Heal" by Laura
    Bass and Helen Davis. If you can  get the book and get one for your
    sisters. It has helped me tremendously.  It deals only with incest and
    is written for women.
    My counselor tells me that one thing that I need to do is to confront
    my  father (which I haven't done yet). My sister has and he denied
    everything. That would be my advice to you. If you do not want to get
    your grandmother  involved, call him up and meet him someplace. It's
    best not to do it over the phone. You need to tell him what he did to
    you and tell him how it made you feel. Get out all of the anger. He
    will probably deny it as they usually do. My counselor told me that
    that is the one main thing that I need to do to help me on my way to
    heal. To confront him when I have the  upper hand and to do it face to
    face. "The Courage to Heal" book has a  chapter on confronting your
    abuser. 
    If you do nothing else, please just buy "The Courage to Heal" book. It
    is so  helpful to me now. It's like my bible. It's so incredible how
    incest affects us and affects how we deal with every day situations.
    Psychologists  now are just beginning to recognize it and learn about
    it.
    One more fact, sexual abuse happens to one in four women...what a
    thought.
    GOOD LUCK TO YOU AND TO YOUR SISTERS. 
 | 
| 1059.4 |  | RANGER::TARBET | Haud awa fae me, Wully | Wed Mar 28 1990 17:27 | 70 | 
|  |     The following response is from another member of our community who
    wishes to remain anonymous at this time.
    							=maggie
    ====================================================================
    One of the most difficult things about incest is that it's often
    impossible to isolate the perpetrator.  Whatever you do to get back at
    them, there are always persons near them who are close to them, who
    most of the time don't know exactly what happened let alone how long it
    went on or what the effects on the victims were.  These people can be
    badly hurt by the truth.  From your story, that's your grandmother's
    situation right now. She has shared a lifetime with him and if she
    finds out what he's done it will come as an incredible shock.
    That is a real dilemma. You write that you want this out in the open,
    yet that is virtually impossible without her finding out what happened.
    Actually she's already started to find out at the very least that
    *something* has happened, your ignoring him must have raised questions
    for her. 
    You sound very angry in your note, and that's completely understandable
    given the situation.  You've learned about what your sister went
    through, and you suspect what your aunt may have gone through, and it's
    no longer an issue you can ignore or put aside.  And I also feel from
    your note that you're very close to your grandmother and that whatever
    the outcome otherwise, you do not want her to get hurt. 
    Yet you don't seem to have many options left for regaining your piece
    of mind *except* to confront him on some level, and in fact you've
    already started to do so.  
    If you really have to go the whole way, I can only hope that you will
    do it as calmly and rationally as you can.  What you say in your note
    about how he may deny the whole thing?  Count on it.  That may well be
    the first thing you're going to run into.  If that happens it's going
    to be a hard blow for you to take upfront.  And a severe challenge to
    your "cool".  You already  sound *very* angry with him for playing dumb
    about the reason you're "doing this to him", and both that reaction
    from him and your feelings in response to it make me think that that's 
    the part that will be hardest for you. 
    I know you specifically asked us not to advise counseling, but a good
    counselor can really help you here.  You probably can't discharge all
    your anger at your grandfather directly because the only really
    satisfactory way to do that would be to kill him outright for what he
    did.  But if you keep all that anger inside of you, and don't express
    it at all, it might tear _you_ apart. What a counselor should be able
    to do for you is help you express the most of your anger in a way that
    would neither harm you or anybody else, and help you prepare for a
    rational confrontation in which you can express to him your reasons
    why, and keep your head on your shoulders if he does deny what he did
    or plays down the whole thing. You might even decide not to confront
    him personally after all, but that is something you can decide for
    yourself at that time.
    To tell you something about me: I too was sexually abused by my father
    for several years in my early teens.  So were my brother and sister.  I
    don't want to keep going on about it but I've seen firsthand the
    difficulties regarding confrontation and most of all the feelings of
    the other "hostages" - the people you don't want to get hurt, but who
    are the first to be hurt as soon as you try to discharge your feelings
    towards the perpetrator.  It's a painful dilemma.
    Think about yourself, think about your needs and your history, and keep
    in mind that whatever happened to anyone else, your own story is always
    the most difficult because it involves _you_. Whatever you decide,
    you're in a very delicate situation - so get help where you can. 
    						another survivor
 | 
| 1059.5 | Clarify for yourself | EGYPT::SMITH | Passionate committment/reasoned faith | Wed Mar 28 1990 17:54 | 25 | 
| 1059.6 | In case anyone is wondering | EGYPT::SMITH | Passionate committment/reasoned faith | Fri Mar 30 1990 16:08 | 3 | 
|  |     .5 is set hidden 'cause I decided I must have put it in the wrong
    string and I don't know how to move it.
    
 | 
| 1059.7 |  | WOODS::KINGR | FUR...the look that KILLS... | Fri Mar 30 1990 21:31 | 5 | 
|  |     Re: 5 Look out, I hear the Vaxnotes patrol heading this way...
    
           REK
    
    And have a nice day!
 | 
| 1059.8 |  | WMOIS::B_REINKE | if you are a dreamer, come in.. | Fri Mar 30 1990 21:57 | 17 | 
|  |     REK
    
    give it a rest please?
    
    Nancy
    
    1. save your note to the $ level
    2. delete the note that you put in wrong
    3. go to the place where you want the note
    4. type reply note.name (the name you gave the note you saved)
    5. edit out headers and other unwanted material
    6. enter your note as usual
    
    if you don't know how to save a note or this is too terse write��
    to any of the mods and we will explain.��
    
    Bonnie
 | 
| 1059.9 | Others' role in Abuse | CSC32::DUBOIS | The early bird gets worms | Thu Apr 05 1990 14:56 | 23 | 
|  | There have been few notes about this, and I am surprised to see that.
One thing I have not seen in this string is the possibility that your
grandmother is not so innocent as you seem to think.  In protecting the abuser,
you are also protecting anyone who allowed the abuse to happen.  It is not
necessarily as easy as you seem to think to abuse a child and have no one
suspect.  People *do* suspect, they just rarely confront the abuser, or they
talk to him/her and get them to say they won't do it again (which may or may
not happen), and then they don't say anything again to the abuser, thinking
they have solved the problem. 
Your mother knew of the abuse that you were suffering, and your grandmother
may have known it, too.  Did she ever see the "tickling" that was taking
place?  Did you avoid "playing" with your grandfather at all?  Were you less
affectionate with him?  Any of these would be clues that she should have
picked up.
You need to take care of yourself.  Read "The Courage to Heal".  It even
has a section on being the partner of a survivor, which may help you
in dealing better with your sister's abuse, as well.
Please write again and let us know how you are doing.  I care.
          Carol
 |