cherryblossom
VIP Member
Why do we feel ashamed when we have survived sexual abuse?
Shame - definition - A painful emotion caused by a strong sense of guilt, embarrassment, unworthiness, or disgrace.
Okay, so firstly we have established that shame is an emotion. So, what is an emotion and how is it formed?
So we feel the emotion of shame because we feel that it’s a personal flaw that someone violated us. We feel that we could have /should have done something different to change the situation. We can even perceive ourselves as fundamentally bad because we have been involved in behaviours considered reprehensible by society. That is particularly the case with survivors of childhood sexual abuse.
So we feel that we should have /could have done something different. However in reality is that the case?
The abuser generally has power over the abused. Whether that be a physical power, or a power of trust such as a parent, teacher, priest, friend of the family. Or the power over a relationship, financial security, a roof over your head. The abuser may be weak in character, but they have the power over the survivor.
If you have survived sexual abuse and you feel shame, then you really need to consider what choices you realistically had whilst being overpowered. What choices did you have at that time? How would you react to your best friend telling you they had been or where being abused? Would you tell them they should be ashamed?
For sexual abuse victims shame has formed a foundation in our lives in two respects:
• The shame of the abuse because it is a taboo subject.
• The shame of abuse because it is an assault on our dignity and personality.
It is often shame that stops survivors from speaking out. We hide the abuse and keep it secret. But that causes us to be isolated and lonely and only feeds the feelings that we are different and have something to be ashamed of. Our own emotion of shame feeds itself. We feel that we are somehow tarnished and to blame and somehow we don’t belong and are no longer acceptable because of the abuse. We fear that others will also see us as tarnished or damaged and therefor unacceptable.
Ironically, the way out of shame is to talk about it with trustworthy people, the very thing many people find so difficult.
Survivors suffer in silence for years, which has hugely damaging effects. This has a massive impact in our lives. It affects our mental health, which in turn impacts our relationships, our careers, our families, and our overall well-being.
Shame is also related to other emotions. Most notably anger and sadness, both of which notably impact our lives.
So how do we overcome shame?
We feel shame because we perceive that we should have /could have done something to prevent the abuse from happening.
It’s important to consider the abusers intention, compared to the survivors’ intention, and the influence of power in the situation.
No-one chooses to be abused. We were abused because we had no choice. None of us are responsible for another person’s actions. The abuser is generally in a position of power. The abuser had a primary motive to abuse. I very much doubt that the survivors’ intention was to be abused. The survivor may have been led to some extent, but the abuser was doing the leading. If you were a child you took sweets or money because you wanted them, not because you wanted to be abuse. If you were threatened you believed that threat and you did whatever you had to do to survive. I’m sure there are numerous other examples but at the end of the day it comes down to who had the intention and who had the power.
In every case of abuse, the abuser had the intention and the abuser had the power.
The abused person is not responsible for other persons’ actions.
Shame exists in an environment of secrets. The way out of shame is to talk about in a controlled environment, with a trusted person. That could be with a counsellor, a friend, a family member.
Freeing yourself from shame can be a long and difficult process, but take my word for it – it’s so worthwhile. I strongly encourage anyone who is suffering in silence with shame following the aftermath of sexual abuse to speak out. Find someone you trust who you can open up to. I would suggest finding a therapist who specialises in sexual abuse trauma.
“I was raped”. Saying those words out loud is by far the hardest thing I have ever done in my life, but it is also the best thing I ever did to free myself from shame.
Sources
[1] Link Removed
[2] http://www.counselling-directory.or...ck-breaking-through-the-shame-of-sexual-abuse
[3] Courage To Heal by Ellen Bass and Laura David – Cedar 1988 page 108
Shame - definition - A painful emotion caused by a strong sense of guilt, embarrassment, unworthiness, or disgrace.
Okay, so firstly we have established that shame is an emotion. So, what is an emotion and how is it formed?
[1] said:Emotion is the process of marking the significance of events in terms of how we assign meaning to the event. The nature of the emotion is a function of the event’s construed significance, with greater significance related to greater magnitude of emotional response.
There are several components that make events significant to an individual. Personal goals, hedonics (the pleasures and pains experienced during events of life), emotional communication, and past experiences are all fundamental to the generation and regulation of emotion (Campos et al., 2004)
Shame belongs to the class of self-conscious emotion. These emotions involve the way in which events reflect on oneself and, in particular, evaluation of the self against one’s goals and standards. Typically, these emotions arise depending on whether standards are met (pride) or violated (shame and guilt). Any negative event in which individuals believe they have failed to live up to personally valued standards because of a personal flaw can engender shame.
So we feel the emotion of shame because we feel that it’s a personal flaw that someone violated us. We feel that we could have /should have done something different to change the situation. We can even perceive ourselves as fundamentally bad because we have been involved in behaviours considered reprehensible by society. That is particularly the case with survivors of childhood sexual abuse.
So we feel that we should have /could have done something different. However in reality is that the case?
The abuser generally has power over the abused. Whether that be a physical power, or a power of trust such as a parent, teacher, priest, friend of the family. Or the power over a relationship, financial security, a roof over your head. The abuser may be weak in character, but they have the power over the survivor.
If you have survived sexual abuse and you feel shame, then you really need to consider what choices you realistically had whilst being overpowered. What choices did you have at that time? How would you react to your best friend telling you they had been or where being abused? Would you tell them they should be ashamed?
For sexual abuse victims shame has formed a foundation in our lives in two respects:
• The shame of the abuse because it is a taboo subject.
• The shame of abuse because it is an assault on our dignity and personality.
It is often shame that stops survivors from speaking out. We hide the abuse and keep it secret. But that causes us to be isolated and lonely and only feeds the feelings that we are different and have something to be ashamed of. Our own emotion of shame feeds itself. We feel that we are somehow tarnished and to blame and somehow we don’t belong and are no longer acceptable because of the abuse. We fear that others will also see us as tarnished or damaged and therefor unacceptable.
Ironically, the way out of shame is to talk about it with trustworthy people, the very thing many people find so difficult.
Survivors suffer in silence for years, which has hugely damaging effects. This has a massive impact in our lives. It affects our mental health, which in turn impacts our relationships, our careers, our families, and our overall well-being.
Shame is also related to other emotions. Most notably anger and sadness, both of which notably impact our lives.
[2] said:Feeling shame impacts massively on our lives.
Behaviours characterised by shame can include:
- Feeling “something is wrong with me” - everything is coloured by shame
- Fear of rejection is very strong
- Isolated and lonely - fearful when someone wants to have a close relationship
- Fearful of intimacy - wanting relationship but pushing people away
- Defensive when criticised
- Entering into people pleasing behaviour patterns - not aware of how to get own needs met
- Punishing self with negative and destructive self-talk - or physical harm
- Feeling over responsible for everyone and everything that happens
- Aggressive or abusive behaviour
- Having problems with Depression
(Source: Adapted and put into by own words from an idea in “Helping Victims of Sexual Abuse”– Heitritter and Vought – Bethany House Publishers – Published 1989)
So how do we overcome shame?
We feel shame because we perceive that we should have /could have done something to prevent the abuse from happening.
It’s important to consider the abusers intention, compared to the survivors’ intention, and the influence of power in the situation.
No-one chooses to be abused. We were abused because we had no choice. None of us are responsible for another person’s actions. The abuser is generally in a position of power. The abuser had a primary motive to abuse. I very much doubt that the survivors’ intention was to be abused. The survivor may have been led to some extent, but the abuser was doing the leading. If you were a child you took sweets or money because you wanted them, not because you wanted to be abuse. If you were threatened you believed that threat and you did whatever you had to do to survive. I’m sure there are numerous other examples but at the end of the day it comes down to who had the intention and who had the power.
In every case of abuse, the abuser had the intention and the abuser had the power.
The abused person is not responsible for other persons’ actions.
Shame exists in an environment of secrets. The way out of shame is to talk about in a controlled environment, with a trusted person. That could be with a counsellor, a friend, a family member.
[3] said:Shame exists in an environment of secrecy. When you begin to freely speak the truth about your life, your sense of shame will diminish…Secrets destroy people and they destroy them unnecessarily. It’s like being reborn when you shed the secret, because you have no more fear
Freeing yourself from shame can be a long and difficult process, but take my word for it – it’s so worthwhile. I strongly encourage anyone who is suffering in silence with shame following the aftermath of sexual abuse to speak out. Find someone you trust who you can open up to. I would suggest finding a therapist who specialises in sexual abuse trauma.
“I was raped”. Saying those words out loud is by far the hardest thing I have ever done in my life, but it is also the best thing I ever did to free myself from shame.
Sources
[1] Link Removed
[2] http://www.counselling-directory.or...ck-breaking-through-the-shame-of-sexual-abuse
[3] Courage To Heal by Ellen Bass and Laura David – Cedar 1988 page 108