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Sexual Abuse And The Sociopath...

BeeLee

Bronze Member
My life has been one long traumatic event that seems to be never-ending. My father began sexually abusing me when I was 4. My earliest memories are of him touching me, making me touch him, and doing other things. He would bring home guys and watch them with me. He would invite the teenage boy from upstairs down, and tell him what to do with me. That continued until I was 7 when my mother died. My dad used to beat her so bad. I would try to stop him, I would put myself in the way. I often sacrificed myself to try to keep her safe. At one point during this period, my dad killed my puppy. He beat it to death with a yellow construction light. I woke one morning to go feed (and play with) Charlie Brown, and my mom tried to stop me from going to the basement, but I had to take care of my puppy. When I got to the basement, there was blood everywhere, flung onto the walls and ceiling. I remember picking up that construction light and seeing matted fur and blood on it, and I kneeled in the middle of that floor and cried. I knew my dad could kill me, my mom, and my newborn sister at any time. In fact, it was my job to get my sister out of the apartment, if she started crying, when dad was drinking, because (his words) "there is no telling what I'll do if I'm drinking and she starts crying. I'm liable to pick her up and throw her against a wall." She was mine to protect and I took that role seriously. I would often have nightmares about a monster coming to get us and I could find a place to hide, but it only had room for one, and I would hide my mom there and let the monster get me, and after my sister was born, there was room to hide two. There was never any room for me to hide.

After my mom died, we moved into my grandmother's home (she was not living there) and my dad would leave my sister and I alone for days and weeks at a time. I was 7 years old and taking care of a 5 month old baby. I would stop eating sometimes to make sure my sister ate, I would eat her scraps. When dad was home, the abuse continued. At the age of 8, he almost did kill me by choking me. At first, I just let him, wanting everything over and done with. I was ready to die. But then I thought of my sister, who would protect her if I was gone? Who would keep her safe? I began fighting dad at that point and he threw me aside in disgust. That night, I realized, that as long as dad was alive, we would never be safe. The next day, as he took a nap, I picked a knife up, not feeling anything, no emotions, completely blank, and walked into the bedroom and raised the knife over my head and stared at him laying there. He rolled over and looked me straight in the eyes. I had never known such a fear as I did in that moment. He would kill me for that. I ran through the house with that knife in my hand and my dad chasing me. When I got to the kitchen ahead of him, I threw the knife down and picked up the scissors. He came into the kitchen, breathless, and asked me what I was doing, and I told him that I was just going to ask him if I could cut up some paper, but he scared me. Two weeks later he came home and told me he was putting my sister and I up for adoption. I was so angry and so hurt. He was my dad, after all. He was saying he didn't want us, didn't love us, that we were worthless.

We were to move in with an aunt and uncle (my mother's sister). Since it was family, I became excited. I thought I could finally be a child and not have to always be worried whether my sister would have enough food, not be woke up to take care of my father's needs, never having a chance to play, always cleaning and playing the role of an adult. I don't remember how long I had been there, at my aunt and uncle's, when my cousin began to abuse me. He was 6 to 8 years older than I was. At 10, I tried to tell on him, and my aunt told him what I had accused him of and asked him whether it was true. He never responded, just walked away and she yelled (very loudly and with a lot of anger), "I don't ever want to hear of this happening again." During these years, my two cousins would tell me how much they hated me, how they wished I would die, how my aunt and uncle hadn't wanted me but my dad wouldn't let my sister and I be separated. After I told, that got worse, but my cousin also started beating me up. He would drag me through the house by my hair. He would throw me on the floor, face down, and beat my face in the floor. My best friend at the time witnessed him doing some of these things, and when she saw him beating my face in the floor, she pushed him off of me because she thought he was going to kill me.

When I was 12, my dad wanted my sister and I to spend the night with him. I didn't want to but my aunt felt that it was okay. That night he made pallets on the floor and started to put my sister in the middle. I realized he had been drinking and she was the age I was when dad began molesting me, so I made sure to move her away from dad, so that couldn't touch her. He began touching me. I stopped him and stood up and told him it wasn't going to happen, that I was going to make up the bed for my sister and myself, or if he wanted the bed, my sister and I could sleep in the living room, but we were not going to sleep in the same room with him. As I was making up the bed, he came into the bedroom and pushed me down from behind and raped me. Up until this point, there had been no penetration that I can remember. He took my virginity, something that was not his to take, something that was mine to give to my future husband. Afterwards, I went into the bathroom and wiped away the blood. I crawled into a tub of water, as hot as I could stand it, and scrubbed myself. He called into the bathroom, calling me by my mom's name, and telling me he didn't mean to hurt me. I wanted to yell and scream at him that I was not my mom, I was HIS DAUGHTER.

Back at my aunt and uncle's, it wasn't long after this that my uncle would begin to reach out and touch my bottom. One day, I was standing at the side of the kitchen stove, cooking, when he walked by me and the next thing I knew, his hand was cupping my breast. I pushed his hand away and said, "Don't you EVER touch me again!" The abuse by my cousin continued and my uncle continued to touch my butt as he walked by. At 14, I ran away. I moved in with a cousin and her boyfriend began trying things with me. I couldn't go through it again. I ran away. I couldn't tell anyone, they wouldn't believe me. I knew her boyfriend wouldn't stop. And I didn't want to hurt my cousin, I loved her too much to ever hurt her that way.

Over the years, I got away from my family. But when I was 17, another cousin came to visit me and he asked me if I remembered when my mom and dad had tried to get him and I to have sex. I yelled at him and kicked him out of the house. I could believe that of my dad, but not my mom, never my mom.

Fast forward to today and I recently reconnected with family that I have not seen in over 30 years. One was the cousin I had lived with as a teenager. She informed me that my dad had molested her, that other cousins had told her the same story. That another cousin had lived with us, a male cousin, and he left because he said, "There is some strange things going on in that house." And he told her that my mom and dad had crawled into bed with him and both of them tried to get his pants off of him. Then I was informed that my dad killed my mom, that he beat her to death. He had beat her to the point that she was almost unrecognizable and she was dead two days later from multiple blood clots that had broken loose and went to her heart and lungs. Then I was informed by an aunt that my mom used brag about how much money I brought in. She didn't believe her, thought she was making things up. But she didn't know about the men my dad would bring home and watch them with me. They had sold me. They had sold me ... And my mom was a part of it all. All of these years believed her innocent and a victim of my dad and now I learn that she wasn't, that I was a victim of both of them. My dad was a sociopath and a pedophile. And I don't know how to cope with all of this new information. I keep having the thought arise, "They sold me," and I start crying. How can any parent sell their child? I had loved my mom all of these years, had an image of her in my mind, that wasn't true. And now that image is forever tainted and I'm not sure how I feel about it, about her. I'm just numb. So numb.
 
I never heard of a childhood worse than mine. My childhood was filled with death and parents suicide attempts a house fire that killed my sister and being blamed for their deaths by a drunken mother. All I can say is the I can empathize with your pain. There is hope though I have found a lot of support here. My suggestion would be to find a trauma therapist. I have been doing EMDR for a little over a year and it helps. You carry a great deal of pain with you. You can be free of it but it takes hard work. No one should have had to live through what you did. Yet you survived and continued your are very strong and very brave. Welcome to the forum. I hope that you find some peace.
 
Thank you Brad, for the welcome and the kind words. One of the things I've always tried to keep in mind is that if I can survive the life I have, then there isn't anything that can break me. I had overcome so many of my PTSD symptoms over the years and have not had any symptoms in such a long time, until I got this new information. The PTSD symptoms have started again and I'm just not certain how to process all of this information, especially that my mom was involved. I had such an ideal image of her, probably because she died when I was 7. I cried for her over the years, wishing she were alive, needing her at times so bad. And then to realize that she is responsible for some of the pain I do carry with me. She was my mom, she was supposed to protect me, not abuse me, and yet I tried so hard to protect her. I tried so hard to stop dad from beating her. And instead of her stopping my dad from abusing me, she joined in and helped him. I have very few memories of my mom. But one thing, I never wanted to look at was knowing her scent, a scent a child should not know. I just always tried to explain that away as ... I don't know. I just never looked at it too closely. Thank you for the suggestion regarding EMDR. I'm an LMSW and am familiar with the therapeutic technique, but have not given it a try. And you do realize you are not responsible for your sister's death, right? You are a very strong soul too. I sometimes wonder how we always find the strength to keep going, and I think that perhaps it's because we are just that strong to begin with.
 
My childhood was different but equally as sexually abusive and violent. I'm really sorry to hear another story like mine.

EMDR made me intensely suicidal. My understanding is that for those of us with a laundry list of repeated trauma it is sometimes contra-indicated because the flood of emotions it brings up is too big. Go slowly and carefully with a trained practitioner.

I do feel better than I did. I don't hate myself like I used to. I haven't been raped in almost seven years. Progress, not perfection. Welcome to the forum.
 
Thank you CrazyHorse for the very warm welcome. I really don't feel like I've been through too much. I've wondered about that, and the only explanation I can find is that I know no other life, no other way to have lived, so that for me, my life was almost normal. I have gone on to have 3 very beautiful and wonderful children, who are overly protected and spoiled beyond belief, but very intelligent and polite and kind and compassionate and curious and .. I could go on and on about how amazing my children are. I have gone to college, and then to grad school, and work with the elderly and disabled, as a case manager, have worked as a hospice social worker, and a case manager for adolescents that had been removed from their homes and placed in a group home setting. I had decided at a young age that I was not going to let them break me, that I could allow my past to define me and shape who I become, or I could define my past and become who I was meant to be. It's just this new information that has thrown me for a loop. I can deal with my past as I have remembered it all of these years, but to know now there are things that I don't remember, things that make it so much worse in my eyes, that my memories of my mom were false ... I think I needed my mom to be a victim too, to explain why she could never help me, and I can't place her in that role any more, not entirely. As I told a friend recently, it's just one more thing to get through, and I will because that is what I do, but it's going to take some time to work through it. Thank you again for the very warm welcome.
 
rightkindofme, thank you for the welcome. I am so sorry to hear that you have had to deal with anything similar. No child should ever have to experience what we have. Childhoods are supposed to be filled with love and tenderness and imagination and exploration of the world around us, not terror and fears of being killed by the very people that are supposed to protect us. I'm very glad you survived.

I've had very little therapy over the years, once as a teenager when I lived in a group home (for 3 months), for about 6 months when I was 27 after a suicide attempt, and a year of therapy when I found out I was pregnant with my last child, a daughter, and a while after her birth. And now. I've only ever attempted suicide twice in my life. Once when I was 10, I tried drinking bleach. And once when I was 27, after the dissolution of my first marriage. I reached my lowest point at that point and I swore I would never let myself get that low again, I would not give those that abused me the satisfaction. But as an LMSW I'm familiar with the therapeutic techniques that are used for individuals with my background, but I've never experienced them in action with myself. I will trust your statement about the EMDR. (I was in grad school when this technique was becoming a big thing and had an EMDR therapist come to class to talk about it.) I just really know myself and need to talk about it with a therapist to get a handle on it and my emotions.

I'm glad you don't hate yourself. It's amazing to me how we were the victims, and yet we are the ones that end up hating ourselves so much. We should love ourselves deeply and unconditionally, because we got through something that most people would not have been able to. We come out the other side, stronger. And I like your statement, "Progress, not perfection." If you don't mind, I'm going to type that up and place it on my office wall as a reminder to myself. Thank you rightkindofme. Thank you so much.
 
I'm glad my words helped.

I say to myself over and over all day long that I can't be perfect. I can just improve.

I have attempted suicide many times. I've been institutionalized twice. I was a pretty severe self-mutilator for a long time.

I do best with Harm Reduction Specialists. They tend to understand how and why my negative ways of coping *have kept me alive* so they do not shame me for having bad habits. My habits are not the habits of someone who has been treated well throughout a lifetime--no shit. But I do improve as the years go by.

I find that running and gardening both help a lot mixed in with therapy. And crying. I need to cry all the tears I wasn't allowed to cry when I was a child. Even if it makes other people uncomfortable that I cry. That can't be my problem.

I've been in a lot of therapy. 21 therapists over 27 years, often under court order. I have found that my progress depends entirely on the quality of the relationship I have with the therapist. Some people can bond with me and some people haven't. If someone has never been traumatized they will probably not be able to bond with me. I am too scary and unpredictable. I don't think I am really *that* scary but there you go. Other people get to have different opinions. :)

Because you are a LMSW you understand that these things will come up in waves. Over and over throughout your life you will have to "deal with" new layers of stuff you thought you were "over". Be patient and loving with yourself even if no one else is. Maybe this isn't the journey you wanted this lifetime but you are on it any way.

I find that having children has been huge for me. I get to watch them be loved and cared for properly and I get to "mother" myself in the process. I get to learn what it means that in this house no one gets hit. I get to learn what it means that every one in this house is allowed dignity and separate opinions and preferences. I get to find out what it is like to make mistakes and apologize and have someone say, "I love you and forgive you" instead of insults and berating comments and screaming and hitting.

I find that being with my children is simultaneously the best and the worst thing that has happened to me. Because now I understand what is possible. Now I understand how badly I was abused because I can see the contrast. Now I *know* that I was beaten constantly as a child even though my siblings said, "Oh you were barely touched. Shut up. You don't know what a beating is." When I was twenty I still believed them. Now that I have children of my own and I have to learn self control I know the difference. Hoo boy.

I respect me more by the year. I haven't hit my kids. I don't even yell at them inappropriately very much. When I do raise my voice I apologize and try to fix it. Here no one lives in fear.

My kids ask me questions sometimes about why I freak out because it really is out of the blue. My comment is, "Stuff happened to me a long time ago which wasn't so good. When bad stuff happens when you are very small your brain gets used to it. My brain doesn't know that I don't need to be afraid any more. It is having trouble remembering. That's why I cry."

I'm so grateful for my kids. I am completely certain I would be dead if I didn't have them.
 
CrazyHorse, you didn't victimize me in any way, at all. And thank you for the very kind words. I think sometimes we need to hear those kind words, probably more than others. There was some research done one time that said that we tend to accept negative words much more easily, and that in order to reverse those negative words we adopt, that the positive words have to be repeated over 300 times before we could start adopting and believing the positive words. So always stay so loving and kind, because you never know when your words will be the 300th time and will finally *stick* with that person (at least that's what I try to live by).
 
rightkindofme, I don't even know where to begin. To say you are an amazingly strong person would be an understatement. I never did the self-mutilation but I could understand how that could release the pain. My self-abuse tended to be more emotional and verbal. I have all of these lies that repeat in my head about myself, this negative self-talk that I would engage in with myself. No one can ever be harder on me than I am on myself. I'm working on accepting myself as a loving and compassionate person, because you can't do the work I do without being just such a person, but it's hard to accept myself in that way. I was very impulsive when I was younger, very unpredictable, and could not engage in anything that would hurt another human being, but I could put myself into situations that would be very painful for me. It didn't matter how unkind someone was to me, I would protect them at all costs, because I didn't ever want them to know the pain I did. But that cost was often at my own expense. I made myself the sacrificial lamb for everyone else. I still find it very difficult to cry, especially in front of anyone. Crying makes me feel weak and vulnerable, and I refuse to allow myself to be either, ever again. Though, on another level, I know I need to cry. I can do it when I am alone. I tend to isolate myself though. I always feel separate from every thing and every one around me. I feel better alone.

I love the description you gave about your children. My children were my safety net, my salvation. Watching them grow up at the ages I was when certain things transpired, made me realize just how little I was, how vulnerable, and how much I was not to blame for what happened to me. I could never put the blame on my children at the ages I was when these things happened, because I could see the innocence and trust in them, and have had to realize that I was just as innocent and trusting as them, and that it was definitely very unfair of myself to heap all of that blame onto my own shoulders. It is incredible the change in perspective that children give us. I'm so glad that you, too, get to know the unconditional love and trust that your children have given you. You should always have known that type of love and trust, as I should have as well. The one thing I have loved about having my children, is finally experiencing a childhood. I never got to have that experience when I was a child, but I do now. My husband (we are separated) has told me that he loved watching me with our children sometimes, because he could see the wonder and awe in my eyes of the world around me, the same wonder and awe that I should have been allowed to experience as a child. He says he can see the little girl I should have been allowed to be. I just know they (my children) taught me how to laugh and how to live.

I'm glad you are here, rightkindofme. Really and truly glad.
 

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