"The
Experience of the Victim
of Sexual Abuse:" A Reflection
Mary Gail Frawley-O'Dea, Ph.D.
An Address to the American Hierarchy in Dallas, TX
June 14, 2002
Good
Morning. I am honored to join the groups of speakers we have heard so far
today. It has been a morning filled with great gifts and great grace. My own
offering to you today is to contextualize the characteristics of childhood and
adolescent sexual abuse; to present the experience of early sexual trauma
through the lens of the victim; to make accessible the most common
after-effects of childhood sexual abuse; and to suggest a few vital components
of the healing process. I do this based on fifteen years of clinical work with
men and women who were sexually violated as young people. To succeed, however,
I need your help and a brief story best conveys what I mean by that.
Several years ago, my stepson, Daniel Patrick O'Dea, recommended that I read a
fantasy trilogy authored by Terry Brooks. In the first book of the series, the
young hero sets out on a quest in search of the magIcal
Sword of Shannara (Brooks, 1978). A weapon of
enormous power, the secret of the sword is that, when lifted by the sword
bearer, it reveals to him every aspect of his being. All the good, unpleasant
and truly hideous facets of his personality are reflected back to him in the
blade of the sword. If the sword carrier can stand what he sees, he then can
wield the sworn to do great good and to fend off the worst evil. Most who
raise the Sword of Shannara, however, cannot bear
to see themselves so fully revealed and are destroyed.
Today, I ask each of you metaphorically lift a Sword of
Shannara; to open your hearts and souls to all that the Catholic Church
has been, is, and could be under your care. I ask you to stare courageously at
the full complement of great good and great harm enacted by you and your, brethren and especially, to
reflect on your role in the
devastation of childhood and adolescent sexual abuse perpetrated by priests.
Claude Levi-Strauss declared that, "the prohibition of Incest stands at the
dawn of culture," and, if fact, represents culture itself. Make no mistake
about it. The violation of child or adolescent by a priest IS incest. The
sexual and relational transgression perpetrated by the father of the child
extended family; a man whom the child is taught from birth to trust above
everyone else in his life, to trust second only to God. Priest abuse IS
incest.
Despite the cultural universality of the incest taboo, violation of sexual
boundaries between adults and children is a universal phenomenon. Data
collected over the past two decades inform us that about one third of all
females and one fourth of all males are sexually abused in some way prior to
the age of 18. These numbers hold up worldwide. From Italy to Ireland to
India; from Thailand to Mexico, in Canada and the Middle East, children's
physical and psychic boundaries are violated sexually with alarming frequency.
Thus, the sexual victimization of minors is not just an American problem nor
is it just a priestly problem. Rather, sexual exploitation of the young is a
worldwide scandal in which Catholic priest have participated as fully and as
secretly as have other men across the globe.
So far in these remarks. I have used the commonly
accepted term, "sexual abuse," to describe an adult's sexual traumatization of a child or adolescent. In fact,
however, "sexual abuse," is shorthand terminology for what more accurately is
named the relational betrayal of a minor by an adult who is in a position of
authority with the child and who exploits his own and victim's sexuality to
subjective empower himself by utterly dominating the physical, psychological,
and spiritual experiences of the victim. No wonder we use shorthand. From the
victim's perspective, however, sexually executed relational abuse is the most
meaningful way of conceptualizing that which we call sexual abuse.
As we have read in the media and heard today, sexual abuse victims often are
young people for whom something or someone is missing. They yearn for an adult
who sees them, hears them, understands them, makes time for them, and enjoys
their company. Unfortunately, the sexual predator is exquisitely attuned to
the emotional and relational needs of the potential victims. Like Fr. Geoghan
seeking out fatherless children, sexual abusers ingratiate themselves into the
lives of their victims, evoking respect trust and dependency long before the
first touch takes place. When the confused child or adolescent is frequently
so emotionally entwined with his victimizer so fearful of losing the abuser's
affection or simply so terrified that he readily and silently complies with
the sexual activities imposed upon him.
There are those who devalue survivors of childhood and, especially adolescent
sexual abuse for not disclosing their victimizations when they were occurring.
Secrecy, however, is the acknowledged cornerstone of sexual abuse. Some
perpetrators overtly extract secrecy by suggesting that the victim will be
blamed for the abuse, then taken from her home and placed in an orphanage.
They say that telling would destroy and even kill the perpetrator, or they
threaten that if the victim discloses, the perpetrator will harm her or
members of her family. Sexual abusers may also blame the victim, accusing her
of seducing the predator, thus filling the victim with the sham and
self-loathing more appropriately experienced by the victimizer. In a more
covert covenant of secrecy, the abuser provides the victim with gifts and
special privileges that both silence and instill terrible and long lasting
guilt.
Sin addition man abused minors maintain silence because they accurately
perceive that there is no one in their environment who will help them if they
disclose. It is more hopeful for a child to preserve a fantasy that IF he
told, someone would protect him than it is to reveal the abuse to another who
ignores, blames, or re-abuses him. Finally, children and teenagers do not
disclose the sexual abuse secret because they care for the perpetrator. A
central cruelty of sexual abuse, in fact, is the perpetrator's trampling of
the young person's generously and freely bestowed affection or respect.
It is from this epicenter of betrayed trust that the mind splitting impact of
sexual abuse ripples outward. The victim, of early sexual violation simply
cannot reconcile the respected figure who may help him with his homework,
teach him how to throw a curve ball, or take him to the local hockey game with
the sexually overstimulated and overstimulating man presenting an erect penis to
suck. It is simply too much and the resulting fracture of the victim's mind
and experience often leads to a debilitating post- traumatic stress disorder
that affects every domain of the victim's functioning and lasts for years and
years after the abuse has stopped.
Let me now guide you on a tour through the corridors of a psyche twisted by
sexual transgression. It is a trip through a
traumatogenically constructed, psychological House of Horrors in which
experiences of self and other are grotesquely distorted and terrifying images
unexpectedly pop out from seemingly safe places. The visitor lurches from one
emotional shock to another in an interior atmosphere of darkness, one
punctuated only by frightening flashing lights and nightmarish unreality. Our
first stop is the organization of the victim's images of self and others.
When a young person is being abused, the psychological shock is so great that
the normal self cannot absorb or make sense of what is happening to it. In a
valiant attempt to cope with the overwhelming
overstimulation and sense of betrayal literally embodied in sexual
trauma, the self splits using the psychic mechanism of dissociation. The
normal operation of dissociation allows, for example, each of us to drive ten
miles and then "come to" with no memory of the time just past. For the victim
of child or adolescent sexual violation, however, dissociation is an
exponentially more dramatic process, one that serves as both a blessing and a
curse.
On the one hand, by entering into an entirely different state of consciousness
while being abused, the victim preserves a functional and safe self who is
removed from the trauma and is therefore able learn, grow, play, and work.
Many a patient has reported for instance, that she--the self recognized as
"I"--floated above the bed on which that "other kid"--the alienated victim
self--was being abused. On the other hand, the curse of dissociation condemns
the state of self who experienced the abuse to a trapped existence in the
inner world of the survivor, a place dominated by terror, impotent but
seething rage, and grief for which there literally are no words. Because
trauma impels the brain to process events quickly and in a state of hyperarousal, verbalizing pathways are bypassed.
Instead, the sexual violations are encoded by the child and retrieved by the
survivor as non-verbal, often highly disorganizing feelings, somatic states,
anxieties, recurring nightmares, flashbacks, and sometimes dangerous
behaviors.
Often, the adult survivor's life is wracked by unexpected regressions to his
victimized self that are triggered by seemingly neutral stimuli. Much as the
Vietnam Vet who hits the floor during a thunderstorm is, in a very real way,
back in the Mekong Delta seconds before his buddy's
sckull is blown off, so too the sexual abuse survivor may be triggered
into a regression by something or someone reminiscent of his earlier traumas.
No longer firmly located in the present, the survivor thinks, feels,
experiences his body, and behaves as the victim he once was, badly confusing
himself and those around him. For victims of priest abuse, a Roman collar, the
scent of incense, light streaming through stained glass at a certain time of
day, organ music, or most certainly, interacting with priests and bishops
about their abuse may well evoke the appearance of usually dissociated self
states.
Coexisting with the violated, terrorized, grief stricken victim self, the
adult survivor of sexual abuse has within her a state of being that is
identified with the perpetrator. Through this unconscious ongoing bond to the
predator, the survivor preserves an attachment to the abuser by becoming like
him in some ways. When threatened by experiences of helplessness,
vulnerability or anticipated betrayal, the survivor unconsciously accesses
this self-state to gain a sense of empowerment. Subjectively experiencing
themselves as righteously indignant, survivors may enact at times breathtaking
boundary smashing, cold contempt, and red-hot rage. Not surprisingly,
survivors are sickened by the thought that they resemble in any way their
perpetrators and therefore avert their gaze from their own Swords of Shannara for long periods of time lest they
fragment even further at the sight of their own abusive tendencies. I want to
be clear that, here, I do not mean that survivors become sexually abusive.
While that can happen, it is exceedingly rare. Rather, they enact some
aspect's of there abuser's lack of respect for others. It is important for
therapists and, in this case bishops, to recognize that the clay of the
survivor's abuser self was molded quite literally by the hands of a
master–-their own sexual and relational victimizer. While those in
relationship with survivors can model setting limits on what they will
tolerate in relationship with another, an empathic understanding of the source
of the survivor's sometimes outrageous behavior is essential to hold in mind.
Finally, the sexual abuse survivor sometimes may enact an aspect of self that
is greedy, grandiose, and insatiably entitled, an element of self that remains
out of awareness for a long time. There comes a day in every survivor's
recovery upon which he fully comprehends what was so cruelly taken from him.
Further personal growth and healing requires that the survivor then mourn the
childhood or adolescence that never was, the defensively idealized caretakers
who never existed, and perhaps most poignantly, the self that could have been
had trust, hope, and possibility not been so brutally shattered.
I cannot exaggerate nor can I adequately convey the soul searing pain of this
phase of recovery. One patient, at this point in
treatment, cried, "This is too much. I can't stand it– I won't–-you
can't make me. I can deal with the abuse--maybe, perhaps. But the idea that I
can't go back, that my childhood is broken forever–-I can't live with that. I
won't know that I never was and never will be just a kid."
Quite understandably, the sexual abuse survivor may act to avoid the ultimate
mourning necessary to move on from the abuse and all that was stolen from him.
Launching a lawsuit against the perpetrator or against those who abetted the
abuser may be one strategy employed to deny unrecoverable loss, while instead
pursuing an illusion of full restitution of that which, tragically, never can
be restored. No matter the amount of the ensuing financial settlement, a
residue of emptiness and lost hope persists. At the core of the survivor's
being, the worst has happened yet again; he has been paid off to go away while
life goes on relatively untouched for the perpetrator and those who shielded
him.
Now let me be absolutely clear. Money can be a
little better than nothing and
is what the Church too often historically offered victims. Many survivors, in
fact, resorted to lawsuits only after being stonewalled in their quest for
more personal reparative gestures. Legal action, in this situation, represents
a last ditch effort by the survivor to become an agent in his own life.
Further, a lawsuit, when all else has failed, puts into action an
understandable demand that the truth be told one way or another. In addition,
many survivors need financial assistance for therapy, substance abuse
rehabilitation, and educational or vocational training previously unattainable
because of post-traumatic stress symptoms plaguing the victims. But money is
not nearly enough, no mater how much it is, and lump sum payments that are not
individualized to meet the specific needs of each survivor fail to meet
recovery needs. Rather, what serves healing well it much more difficult, much
more personal, and much more humbling for clergy.
Real healing for survivors requires that priests, bishops, and cardinals
conform to the template upon which rests the Sacrament of Reconciliation, te ritual cleansing of
the soul in which Catholic priests profoundly believe. Real healing thus
demands that Catholic clergy apologize
personally to each and every victim of priest abuse; not through
eloquent public letters but in face-to-face encounters. Bless me, my son or
daughter, for I have sinned. The Vatican recently cautioned that the
administration of group absolution is not an acceptable venue and that
confessions should be heard individually and in private. So, too, survivors
deserve to meet with those who have harmed them and to hear from clergy
genuine confessions of failings and remorse.
Real healing must draw from the Church a deeply meaningful commitment that
every priest, bishop, and cardinal will do everything in his power to prevent
further priest abuse, and that he will act swiftly, decisively, and above all,
publicly to remove abusers from his ranks. Finally, cardinals, bishops and
priest must do penance to restore each survivor's trust in humanity as well as
in the Church. Retreats and group processing sessions that include survivors,
clergy, and professionals are just some possible approaches to restorative
penance. Whatever penitential road is chosen, it is essential that the clergy
of the Catholic Church put their mouths, souls, and physical beings where
heretofore mostly only their money has been. It is right and it is needed for
survivors of priest abuse to heal.
Leaving the realm of sexual abuse survivor's organization of self, we enter a
related corridor on our tour, one in which we explore typical characteristics
of the victim's interpersonal relationships.
A survivor's relationships with other people are hued and shaded by
expectations and anxieties forged during their traumatic experiences.
Approaching others from within the psychological confines of post-traumatic
stress disorder, the trauma survivor exhibits rapidly shifting relational
stances, painfully lurching from periods of extremely dependent clinging, to
those marked by vicious rage aimed at the same person. Stark terror and tears
can switch in an instant to cold aloofness, while warmth and vivacity may turn
kaleidoscopically to paranoid suspicion. All this, of course, leads to many
chaotically unstable relationships, often alternating with stretches of the
loneliest isolation.
Perhaps needless to say, normal sexual functioning is almost impossible for
most survivors until well into their recovery. Too often, sex, even with a
trusted other, triggers terrifyingly disorganizing flashbacks during which
survivors sometimes literally see the face of their abuser superimposed on the
visage of their sexual partner and experience dreadful
relivings of their sexual traumas. In addition, survivors frequently
are disgusted by and ashamed of their own bodies and sexual strivings.
Unreasonably blaming the abuse on their own sexuality, they often desperately
insist that it never would have happened were it not for their self-perceived
horribly seductive bodies and deplorable sexual desires. Heterosexual boys
abused by men additionally are tormented, wondering what it was about them
that attracted the perpetrator. Sexual abuse survivors of all genders and
sexual orientations are deprived of the right to grow gradually into a mature
sexuality and, instead, are forced or seduced into premature sexual encounters
they are emotionally ill equipped to handle. As adults, therefore, these men
and women often spin between periods of promiscuous and self-destructive
sexual acting out and times of complete sexual shutdown during which, like
burn victims, they experience the gentlest physical contact as excruciatingly
painful.
Finally, there is a characteristic relational stance assumed by many sexual
abuse survivors that is particularly germane to these proceedings. It involves
others who did not abuse them but also did not protect them.
If it takes a community to raise a child, it also takes a community to abuse
one so that whenever a minor is sexually violated, someone's eyes are closed.
Throughout history and in every segment of society,
the most common response to the suspicion or even the disclosure of childhood
sexual abuse has been self-defensive denial and dissociation. No one finds it easy to stand in
the overwhelming and destabilizing reality of sexual abuse. Thus, blindness,
deafness, and elective mutism are responses
endemic to many confronted by a victimized child, an adult survivor, or a
perpetrating adult. To the extent, however, that the sexual victimization of a
minor depends upon the silence of adults who knew, suspected, or should have
known about the abuse, the burdens of shame and reparation reach beyond the
perpetrator. In the case of the Church, it is not just abusing priests and
abetting bishops who must lift a symbolic Sword of
Shannara and face what is reflected back to them in its blade. Rather,
every rectory housekeeper, every parish maintenance man, every religious woman
or lay teacher, every parishioner - any of these individuals who once felt
uneasy about a priest's relationship with a young boy or girl and said nothing
need ponder their inaction and resolve to behave protectively in the future.
Zero tolerance must include the silent as well as the predatory.
What is important to recognize at this conference is that adult survivors of
sexual abuse frequently are, at least initially, even angrier with adults who
failed to protect them than they are with the perpetrator himself. Because the
survivor's internal relationship with his abuser often is organized around
competing feelings of attachment and hate, he often feels freer to turn the
full blast of his long pent-up rage and bitterness on those who did not
protect him and who, in addition, failed to provide for him in ways the
perpetrator seemed to, albeit at an unholy cost to the exploited child or
adolescent.
How turning down another corridor on our tour of a psyche ravaged by early
sexual trauma, we examine the impact of sexual abuse on the cognitive
functioning of the victim and survivor. Part of what is overwhelmed during
sexual abuse is the young person's ability cognitively to contain, process,
and put into words the enormity of the relational betrayal and physical
impingement with which he is faced. It is striking and often bewildering to
observe in adult survivors completely contradictory thought processes that ebb
and flow with little predictability. One moment, you are speaking with an
intelligent adult, capable of complex, flexible, abstract, and self decentered thinking. Under sufficient internal or
external stress, however, or in situations somehow reminiscent of past abuse,
the cognitive integrity of the survivor shatters and becomes locked in rigidly
inflexible, self-centered thought patterns, simplistic black and white
opinions devoid of nuance and an immutable conviction that the future is
destined to be both short and unalterably empty. For example, one survivor
patient who worked as an investment banker was so intellectually gifted that
she was considered a brilliant whiz kid in the competitive New York world of
finance. When beset by psychological or interpersonal stimuli linked to her
uncle's sexual abuse, however, she became in her own words, "stupid minded."
At those times, she literally could not think at all or could access only
immature, disorganizing and panicky ways of thinking.
If a survivor's cognitive functioning is severely ruptured by sexual abuse,
his affective life, the next stop on our tour, is even more impaired. When a
young person is sexually traumatized, the hyperarousal
of the autonomic nervous system and the body's subsequent attempt to restore
order disrupt the brain's neurochemical regulation
of emotion. In addition, we are now learning that attachment relationships
also impact upon the brain's ability to modulate feelings, with traumatic
attachment experiences interfering with effective neuropsychological
regulation of affect. The brain of the sexually abused minor thus suffers a
double assault. Both the sexual traumas themselves and the betrayal of an
attachment relationship assail the flow of affect modulating neurochemicals.
As an adult, the survivor shifts--sometimes quite rapidly--between states of
chaotically intense hyperarousal and deadened
states of psychic numbing. This inability to modulate emotional arousal often
leads to interpersonally inappropriate verbal or motoric
actions when the survivor is
hyperstimulated, and to similarly
inappropriate emotional and psychomotor constriction as the individual moves
into psychic numbing. Further, autonomic arousal becomes a generalized
reaction to stress in the midst of which the sexual abuse survivor is unable
to discern realistically the severity of a perceived threat. Instead of
reacting at the actual level of psychological danger, the survivor may engage
in seemingly irrational behaviors like temper tantrums or terrified
withdrawal. These behaviors do no fit the present day situation but are
perfectly complimentary to the now affectively revived earlier trauma.
Because of the damage done by sexual abuse to affective brain functioning,
adult survivors often need psychotropic medications for periods of time during
recovery. For some, their impairments are sufficiently intractable to require
lifelong medication. These drugs are expensive and it would be a specific and
reparative use of Church funds to provide survivors who are under the care of
psychiatric professionals with the medications they need to function more
adaptively.
We now are almost finished with our psychological tour and are about to enter
what can be the most shocking corridor of all. Also partly due to disrupted
brain functioning, sexual abuse survivors often display a truly spectacular
array of self-destructive behaviors. They slice their arms, thighs, and
genitalia with knives, razors, or shards of broken glass. They burn themselves
with cigarettes, pull hair from their heads and pubic areas, walk through
dark parks alone at night, play chicken with trains at railroad crossings,
pick up strangers in bars to have unprotected and anonymous sex, drive
recklessly at high speeds, gamble compulsively, and/or further destroy their
minds and bodies with alcohol and the whole range of street drugs. Both male
and female prostitutes tend to have backgrounds of early sexual abuse.
Survivors also are two to three times more likely than adults without abuse
histories to make at least one suicide attempt in their lives (Briere
& Runtz, 1986). Sometimes they die.
Survivor self-abuse performs a myriad of functions too complex to address
adequately today. A quick inventory of a survivor's motivations to act
self-destructively includes: punishment for the abuse he blames himself for;
mastering victimization by taking charge of the timing and execution of harm;
self-medication of turbulent affective storms; and unconsciously seeking
states of hyperarousal that then trigger the
release of brain opiods, providing the survivor
with a temporary sense of calm. At an even more deeply unconscious level,
frighteningly self-destructive sexual abuse survivors want to turn the table
on present day stand-ins for those who violated and neglected them.
Unconsciously, they long to see their own terror, helplessness, impotent rage,
and shocked recognition of utter betrayal reflected now on the face of someone
in their lives. Who can blame them?
As we exit now from our tour of the terrifyingly disorienting psychological
House of Horrors, constructed amidst sexual abuse, and maintained by its
aftermath, it should be clear that a survivor's recovery is a long,
complicated, sometimes treacherous process. There is a cohort in this country
of professional men and women who have labored long and hard in the clinical
trenches of trauma since the sexual abuse of children was dragged out of
society's skeleton closet in the early 1980's. The bishops and priests of the
Catholic Church need the expertise of professionals to effect healing both
within the Church and in relationship with survivors. Please call on us to
help you.
Psychoanalyst Le.onard
Shengold entitled his book on the effects of childhood sexual abuse, Soul Murder (Shengold,
1989). I do not think that early sexual trauma necessarily has to result in
soul murder but it most surely
batters and deadens the soul of the young victim and the adult survivor. That
this ravaging of souls has been administered by priests entrusted with a
sacred covenant to protect and enliven souls is despicable; it is evil itself.
The Catholic Church and you, its American shepherds, are at a crossroads. Like
the recovering victim of sexual abuse, you can choose to defend, deny,
retrench, and rigidify. You can refuse the reflection of a Sword of Shannara and turn away from all your decency, all
your love and generosity, all your arrogance and indifference. When a survivor
takes that familiar and well-worn road, further fragmentation and diminished
integrity of mind and soul ensues. But, as is the case for so many sexual
abuse survivors, another road can be chosen. Collectively wielding a blade
shining with truth and courageous determination, you can decide to lead the
American Church on a path of recovery, growth, and restored faith. This
conference could become a new epicenter from which ripples the revitalization
and restoration of souls. It is a matter of your will which road is taken. May
great grace walk with you and guide you in the days to come. It has been a
great grace to me to address you today.