- Post starter
- #25
The more important thing is that something happened to you. If I were you, I try not to worry too much (easier said than done I know) about what exactly happened, and focus more on what effect it has had on you, and try and heal from those effects. You don't need to know exactly what it was in order to start healing from it.
No, I totally agree, and no offense taken. Valid feedback. Its hard to let go of "investigating" but I am going to have to do it for my own mental sanity!!! Because I have truly been driving myself nuts. In a WAY, it doesn't matter who did it. Like, in terms of my own recovery from this. I KNOW SOMETHING HAPPENED, that isn't the issue. I guess it would be helpful to me mentally to know who did it so I could put a picture to the experience, you know? And like have someone to "blame" and also so that I could publicly take a stand that he is a pedophile and should be kept away from children. (I still know he will never be around MY children.)
I also think many of the comments in this thread regarding your parents possibly being in denial and being manipulative of you have some validity. I would suggest at least taking a break from having contact with them, and see if you feel differently about these things in a few months.
I agree, and I am just going to have to work really, really hard on being assertive and setting a boundary. I think it is best for my mental health to have some distance. My mother is mentally draining on me, and there are some days when I am just too unstable mentally to deal with her crap. And I shouldn't have to. I live outside of her house, she doesn't pay my bills, I don't ask her for anything....and haven't for years and years, like, actually, probably at least five years I haven't asked her for anything. So I can actually do what I want. The dynamic in our relationship (that I have allowed) just doesn't feel that way.
It might make some sense that if your stepfather abused you your mind would want to believe it was a stranger because that would be less traumatic than it being someone who was supposed to protect you. The simplest explanation for that memory is that it was correct, your step father did take part in abuse, and your parents have an interest in denying it. I'm not saying thats absolutely the truth, but its the simplest explanation and I think has the greatest chance of being the truth.]
Yes, I agree. The reverse makes MUCH more sense. Especially since I did love my stepfather as a child. It wasn't as if we had a poor relationship. In contrast, he was the parent who let me do what I want, who bought me extra stuff, who was lenient....like, I wouldn't have had a reason to believe he did that if he didn't.
Thank you so much for your excellent feedback. :)