The best word I have found to describe the confusion [this abuse
introduces into our lives] is "Chaos". There is no up or down, no place to land
your feet to gain a footing. There is nothing by which to measure right or wrong, truth or
deceit, helpful or hurtful. All foundations we need to stand on to make decisions, have
been crumbled and scattered into the vast void of time and space. There is only the
knowledge of our existence, and nothing to help us understand what that existence is
supposed to mean. We are tumbling through a the dark void with no maps, landmarks, or
solid ground from which we can gain our bearings to see with a clear perspective. We are
tumbling head over heels trying to figure out where we are, and how we got here, yet there
is nothing around us to shed any light of understanding. It is like a rug being pulled out
from under your life, and you can't tell if you're tumbling up or down, whether you are
going to land on your feet or your head. All you can do is flail your body helplessly as
you tumble through the air. There just aren't words which adequately describe the depth or
impact of this confusion, which is a total confusion. It is confusion of the mind, the
heart, the soul, and the spirit. It penetrates the total of who we are.
Anon
"After the exploitation, I found my trust in everyone was affected to
varying degrees. Even those who have proven to be trustworthy friends over
the years, I cannot fully trust to the same extent as I did before. The
ONLY ones I trust completely are my husband and God. I don't view this as
a totally negative thing. I believe there should always be a healthy
question in our mind about all relationships. Of course, the key word is
healthy. I feel I am finally approaching that healthy level of discernment
after three long years of healing. I will never again blindly trust simply
because someone claims to be knowledgeable, and is a certified
professional. It is the character of the individual which matters most,
not their title, and it takes a fair amount of time to determine someone's
character. Even then, there is room for error in judgment! The bottom
line... even after granting someone a certain level of trust, continue to
watch for, and be aware of, any behaviors emerging after the fact which
are possible indicators of a poor character. Do NOT ignore the subtle
warning signs. Take them seriously! There is nothing wrong in revoking
trust already given if the person's character proves to not deserve it!"
cs
"I realized recently I am still
healing from the pain and sexual sessions my therapist had with me years
ago when he was gratifying his needs while exploiting my vulnerability. I
am a strong willed person, with strong faith as well, and am a survivor,
but the realization of what he did has left scars that marred my sex life
with my new husband, and also my trust in people. You know, when you are
hurting and go to a supposed professional, you do put your utmost trust in
them. If they have helped you and continue to do so, it is exciting for
both. Then he took that one step further and used all I had shared with
him, and started to hug and caress me more and more and more lustfully
saying I had to allow my life force to flow again, and he was helping me.
He went further and further with every session and the last 18 mos of my
sessions that cost me thousands turned into sex sessions basically
gratifying his addiction yet confusing me with false hopes, then causing
me new pain. I had to leave, and he called and wrote telling me to come
back as I still had issues to resolve. I just had to run....and I guess I
put it away. Only recently has dreams been coming to me of his
aggressiveness with me in session, and his false reasoning for us to start
a relationship outside the office to help him set up seminars. But mostly
now, my new husband and I are dealing with my problem of intimacy and sex
with anyone. But I have faith God is guiding me to total healing. He
guided me to you and you are helping and giving me real HOPE."
Thanks, J http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Crete/3718/
"I spoke out about the abuse I suffered by my therapist, I thought
this person really cared about me. How can you ever trust anyone again? When you continue
to get hurt over and over again. Is life really worth all this? There is one person I do
trust now and is helping me through this situation, If she was not there for me I could
not make it through this. Thank you." A.
There is a responsibility in the large HMO network
organizations and medical field to protect patients, their rights, records, and
to help them heal. Amazingly one of the largest companies with held records from
the patient's doctors. Their attorney's had it! Where is the responsibility???
It further rapes the patient, their rights, and their belief that no one can be
trusted! Have you as a professional taken an oath to do no harm???? This is
complete & utter destruction for patients. It engrains the rape again when
this type of violation occurs, it insures no peace of mind, and shows healing
cannot be done in our own way, with trust, hope, and no more fear. I have seen
corporate puppets, I have felt the abuse repeated by those who claim to provide
confidential care-- the larger the organization, the more likely to be swept
under the rug, buried six feet under with no way out. All this after the states
action, finding of facts for gross negligence, violations of patients rights and
more.... If you work for the big guys--remember your oath, remember to heal, and
join the survivor's side by providing the aide necessary while taking
responsibility for your former employee's rape of client(s). Provide us with the
tools to heal. This is why we come to you, we want to heal, not be destroyed!
Stand behind us! Help us heal! Develop a plan for patients like us so no further
violations happen. Personally, assist- for each time you walk away we may lose
another soul. The confusion desperation engulfs them, hence death. It is someone
who needs help, some one who may walk by you one day being the only available
person to assist you- pick them up with your own hands, words, just as you,
yourself would want to be. Do for them, what you yourself would want done, do
unto others- as you want done to you. Commit to growth, life, and human
compassion.
"I am continuing the long process of recovery and
grieving as a survivor of severe physical, sexual and emotional trauma - and recent
exploitation by a helping professional. I suffer from DID and depression. In a recent
conversation with my current therapist, I was intending to speak about heartache; I felt
rather depersonalized and from deep within came the words, 'heart rape.' This is an
accurate description of the feelings we encounter when a professional helper becomes a
perpetrator. This is the most ultimate violation. My travels on the road to healing helped
me to discover a "new self" and a new life. The feelings of comfort and
satisfaction that I continue to stumble upon (these feelings are awkward and unfamiliar to
survivors) is worth every effort I make." Anon
"Four years ago while attending an Alcoholics
Anonymous meeting in Seattle, I briefly mentioned having been raped. After the meeting, a
man in attendance at the meeting approached me and said he was an MSW for an agency in
Seattle that offered sexual abuse counseling and urged me to seek help at his agency. I
made an appointment and eventual began taking classes and seeing another therapist there,
but this particular MSW counseled me informally in the waiting room on areas of grief (my
father had just died), anger management, and crime victims compensation. 5 months later he
asked me out on a date. 2 weeks later we were sleeping together. I quit attending
counseling because I was uncomfortable with the situation. 6 months later he moved into my
apartment with me. When I questioned the ethics of this, he insisted there was no problem
as long as I had one year of sobriety. I kicked him out of my apartment 5 turbulent months
later. It wasn't until I accidentally encountered my rapist and fell apart emotionally
that I realized some of the damage the MSW had done. I hadn't begun to deal with the rape.
I filed a complaint with the State of Washington and they eventually revoked his MSW
license for 10 years and fined him $5000. In the process I discovered that I wasn't alone.
He had been reprimanded in the past for several similar incidents. I still hate him and
believe he should be castrated, but working through the complaint process with the State
was very healing." Debbie H.
"I have spent many hours being unsure of what happened, why, what
part was my fault, what part was his - only to find that ultimately, I have a hard time
trusting my conclusions. Part of me really knows that this man was more cruel to me than I
would have ever thought possible. Yet another part of me still sees it as my fault, still
hopes that somehow we'll have a "real" relationship instead of the one we
actually had in which he simply used me for sex. One thing that I've found has been
helpful is to make sure that I don't let myself spend too much time thinking about it.
That was really the most difficult part for me. But, I've found that when I get away from
it, look at and live in the world without him in it, that I can then get a more realistic
perspective that I can trust..." L
"I was referred to a counselor by my psychiatrist,
she was a friend of his. I assumed she was a licensed , experienced therapist and that I
could trust her because of the referral. After about six months, she began telling me she
thought I had a multiple personality and that she also was one. This put me into a sense
of shock for quite a while. She was seeing me weekly or every other week as the occasion
warranted. She was doing something she referred to as 'medication' which was really
hypnosis because it put me into a trance like state. She suggested ideas to me and would
change things I said happened to be other things. This went on for 3 years and degraded
into me listening to her talk about her own problems and experiences. She suggested I
bring my husband in so her husband could talk to him about what it is like to live with a
multiple. Her husband and mine were invited into our session and she 'put me under her
meditation'. Her husband then took over and put his face near mine (2") and was
talking threatening and loudly about bad things about my therapist and how she made a fool
of herself as a multiple and how she was hanging out with her old heroin friends etc. This
terrified me. Then after this part was over, she suggested they take me to a pie place and
put me under and give me things to eat. Terrifying. I never went back after that. I told
my psychiatrist what happened. Later I came to realize that the only education she had was
a 6 week certificate in "codependent counseling" and very little experience. The
only experience she had dealing with MPD was her own from her own counseling sessions with
a counselor. She had not even read anything about it. It has taken me years to get over
this and trust again. I now see my psychiatrist (a different one) but she doesn't know
much about DID either. "
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