It’s incendiary, the bomb of incest or molestation. One moment life as you know it is sailing along, the next it has exploded before your very eyes. In a state of shock, you wonder what just happened, or if what just happened really did happen. Surely it’s a dream – a nightmare – and you’ll wake soon. Only it isn’t, and you won’t.
We talk with great empathy about the victim of this crime, and they deserve every moment of it. They will need loved, nurtured, guided, and cared for on their path to resilient survivorship. But this horror has a ripple affect across the layers of family. There are parents, and siblings, and grandparents – two sets, if not more – and aunts and uncles, and cousins… the list goes on. And if you’ll allow me a moment of piqué, see my blog on how I feel about perpetrators (“I Am Not That Person”).
George (not his real name) molested his brother Todd’s daughter from the time she was eight until someone noticed something amiss six years later. Upon learning that his little girl had been violated, and by his own brother, Todd had to be physically restrained, in the moment, from hunting his brother down and … well, we don’t know because leveler heads than his helped talk him down.
But later that night as he wept with his wife, Todd berated himself for not having known. This was his daughter, the child he would lay down his life for, and he’d missed this huge, huge fact in her life.
I hope, for everyone’s sake, this never happens to someone you love, but if it does, here are some guidelines.
Feelings a parent might have upon learning their child has been molested:
Shock – perhaps even disbelief this could be happening to you. No parent should have to deal with the abuse of their child.
Feeling out of control – the weight of this has you spinning/reeling. Your house felt safe, calm, and was humming along, and now you feel like you’ve totally lost your equilibrium.
Enraged – how could this have happened to YOUR child? It’s an impotent rage, because you can’t do the things you’d like to the person who harmed your child. The law has to take care of the perpetrator. It’s the kind of anger that makes you want to put a fist through a wall, or worse.
Guilt – for not somehow protecting them, for not seeing the signs. It’s natural to feel devastated, and even to be angry with yourself, but any of our children can be victims of things we can’t prevent.
Loss – the landscape of your family system will change as you cut ties with those who hurt your child, or those unwilling to acknowledge the harm to your child.
Grief – that your child’s innocence was stolen from them. It’s gone. Now you’ll need to heal as a family. Your child, you and your spouse/partner, your other children.
Strategies for coping, if you’re the parent or relative, when your child has been molested.
Take care of yourself – emotionally and physically. Your child needs you healthy and able to guide them, to make them feel safe. You, and your family will heal better and faster by staying as well and balanced as you can, and yes – it’s hard.
Believe your child. It’s crucial for their recovery. Tell them how sorry you are they experienced this, how happy you are it has stopped, how much you love them, how it wasn’t their fault. Tell them every time you think they need to hear it.
Share your experience with a trusted friend, or better yet a qualified counselor. You need to be able to be angry, frustrated, devastated with someone who can completely support you, who is not involved in the family dynamic.
Develop a network of support, people to encourage you, and your family.
Be supportive of your spouse’s feelings (provided the abuser wasn’t your spouse). Be tolerant and accepting of their range of emotions. Let him/her talk – or not talk. Tell each other you love each other, often, and that your family can heal from this.
Be compassionate with yourself. It’s natural to be angry with yourself. It’s hard to be boundlessly compassionate with oneself, but cut yourself plenty of slack. More than ever, your child needs you to lovingly help guide them to health.
Take time away from, and do activities that don’t revolve around, the abuse. Getting healthy as a family will take time, and managing all the layers of ramifications can feel absolutely consuming, so set limits.
Take the right stand now for your child. By doing so you demonstrate your belief in your child. Especially now, your child needs to feel safe, surrounded by love. It will make all the difference for them.
The shrapnel thrown by the bomb will leave its scars – that can’t be helped – but those scars can be the badges of honor, marks of weathering, pathos, maturity, wisdom. By taking such a path, both you and the child victimized so unfairly, can become victors. I’ve seen it happen. It happened to me. If I can do it, so can you.
Clara Burris says
Thanks Laura, you did it again. Thank God I did not have to deal with molestation, but your words can apply to so many situations of grief. Appreciate your sharing.
Philip E Jenks says
Thanks, Laura. This is eloquent and powerful!
Laura Landgraf says
Thank you!
Laura Landgraf says
Thank you! For engaging in the discussion, for your support with this difficult subject.
Jigna says
Thanks Laura, the advice is really very good and will surely try and spread it to others
Laura Landgraf says
Thank you, Jigna!
Curt longacre says
This is one of your best blogs, Laura. It invites the reader into the family system of victims of molestation, which helps us better understand the ramifications of molestation. It also offers some very practical advice for those who find themselves in this situation. Thank you for sharing your thoughts.
Laura Landgraf says
Thank you, Curt. Incest or molestation is multi-layered…complex. So much so that one must take one piece of it, dismantled it, address it with its plethora of feelings, and tackle the next. Layer by layer. But it CAN be done.
Emery J. Cummins says
Excellent, timely, and never out of season. These incidents, often buried in embarrassed or shameful secrecy, can be dealt with in healthy fashion. Thanks to Laura for providing a way to open the conversation.
Laura Landgraf says
You’re right, Em, secrecy starts out be the predator’s weapon, but ends up being the victim’s shame. For those who must guide a child while dealing with their own emotions…well, it can be pretty overwhelming. I’m working with a family right now dealing with the fallout of disclosure. Brave, but wounded, people.
John landgraf says
As practical as it is poignant, this is a great article. I will share it widely.
Laura Landgraf says
Thank you, John!
Renate Winkler says
thanks, Laura, for your very helpful advice!