| Myth:
Rape runs in the family--it is in the genes.
Fact: Rape is not in the genes in the
family of someone who rapes. Rape is perpetrated by someone who
is acting out rage. Physical and sexual child abuse are the majority
factor in creating the level of rage that compels anyone to commit
rape, domestic violence or murder. We have known for a long time
that the one commonality among rapists is physical and/or sexual
child abuse. Serial killer, Ted Bundy is a classic example of this
phenomenon. Since 80% of sexual child abuse survivors are sexually
abused by family members there are usually several generations within
a rapist's family--sometimes both maternal and paternal. Current
statistics reveal 70% of children are physically abused once a week.
It is believed the number of children who are physically abused
has decreased in the past 15 years. However, the current rapists
in society would have grown up in the era when physical abuse was
more prominent, therefore, we can assume there is a high percentage
of people who are potential rapists when we consider date rape and
rape in domestic violence, which is seldom reported or if it is
reported, is seldom prosecuted. Therefore, society has no way to
access the number of rapes committed per capita.
Myth: Children lie or fantasize about sexual activities
with adults.
Fact: Using developmental terms, young children cannot make
up explicit sexual information. They must be exposed to it to speak
about it. Sometimes a parent will coach a child to report sexual
abuse falsely. The key indicators of the falseness in such a report
are the child's inability to describe explicit details, the inability
to illustrate the act, or gross inconsistencies within the account.
Myth: Most victims of sexual abuse are teenaged girls.
Fact: While more girls than boys are sexually abused, many
are abused before their first birthday.
Myth: Boys can't be sexually abused.
Fact: Masculine gender socialization instills in boys the
belief they are to be strong; they should learn to protect themselves.
In truth, boys are children and are as vulnerable as girls. They
cannot really fight back against the perpetrator. A perpetrator
generally has greater size, strength, knowledge, or a position of
authority, using such resources as money or other bribes, or outright
threats--whatever advantage the perpetrator can take to get what
they want.
Myth: Sexual abuse of a child is usually an isolated, one-time
incident.
Fact: Child sexual abuse and incest occurrences develop
gradually, over time; often, repeat occurrences are generally the
rule rather than the exception.
Myth: Children will naturally outgrow the effects of sexual
abuse or incest.
Fact: Sexual abuse or incest affects every aspect of human
development. The damage is profound, extensive and pervasive. It
is deeper than the physical and emotional level--it is a soul injury
that requires multifaceted, multidimensional, therapeutic processing
conducted by a psychoprofessional who specializes in sexual abuse and
incest trauma recovery.
Myth: Non-violent sexual behavior between a child and an
adult is not emotionally damaging to the child.
Fact: Although child sexual abuse often involves subtle
rather than extreme force, nearly all survivors experience confusion,
shame, guilt, anger, as well as a lowered sense of self-esteem;
these are classic aftereffects, although they may not initially
reveal obvious signs.
Myth: Child molesters are all. Dirty old men.
Fact: In a recent study of convicted child molesters, 80%
committed their first offense before age 30.
Myth: Children provoke sexual abuse by their seductive behavior.
Fact: Seductive behavior may be the result, but is never
the cause of sexual abuse. Amy Fisher, the Long Island teenager
who shot her perpetrator's wife in the face and whom the media dubbed,
Lolita, is a perfect example of this myth. During her trial for
attempting to kill Joey Buttafuoco's wife, Amy Fisher revealed that
she had been sexually abused before her abuse by Buttafuoco. Her
behavior that many considered seductive and promiscuous may have,
in fact, been a result of prior abuse. However, regardless of the
victim's behavior or reason for such behavior, the responsibility
for appropriate behavior always lays with the adult, not the child.
Myth: If children wanted to avoid sexual advances of adults,
or persons in positions of greater power, they could say, stop or
no.
Fact: Children generally do not question the behavior of
adults. In addition, bribes, threats, flattery, trickery and use
of authority coerce them.
Myth: When a child is sexually abused, it is immediately
apparent.
Fact: In cases of incest against children, as much as the
perpetrator might be hurting the victim, the child loves him or
her and needs her family. Therefore, she convinces herself that
she is somehow causing him or her to behave this way, and she remains
silent. In her confusion of loyalty to her perpetrator, she protects
him or her by holding the secret. Thus, she carries the shame and
guilt. In cases regarding sexual abuse and incest, the victim often
believes that she has cooperated with the perpetrator in some way
and places inappropriate blame on herself. Therefore, although with
tremendous suffering, she hides her pain through denial, dissociation,
numbing, zoning out, hyperactivity, as well as other distracting
behaviors. However, the aware parent would recognize these behaviors
as a sign that something is wrong.
Myth: When the sexual abuse victim is male, male homosexuals
are the abuse perpetrators.
Fact: Heterosexual men, who do not find sex with other men
satisfactory, perpetrate most child sexual abuse. Many child molesters,
even though they are heterosexual, abuse both boys and girls.
Myth: Boys abused by males are or will become homosexual.
Fact: Whether victimized by males or females, boys or girls,
premature sexual experiences are damaging in many ways, including
confusion about their sexual identity and orientation.
Myth: When a boy and a woman take part in sexual behavior
and it is the boy's idea, he is not being abused.
Fact: Child abuse is an act of power by which an adult uses
a child. Abuse is abuse; a woman engaging in sexual behavior with
a male child is still sexually abusive, even if she thinks he initiated
the contact.
Myth: If the perpetrator is female, the boy or adolescent
is fortunate to have been initiated into heterosexual activity.
Fact: Premature or coerced sex, whether by a mother, aunt,
sister, babysitter or other female causes confusion, at best, and
rage, depression or other problems in more negative circumstances.
Whether male or female, to be used as a sexual object is always
abusive and damaging.
Myth: If the child experiences sexual arousal or orgasm
from abuse, he or she has been a willing participant or enjoyed
it.
Fact: Children can respond physically to stimulation (get
an erection) even in traumatic or painful sexual situations. A perpetrator
can maintain secrecy by labeling the child's sexual response as
an indication of his or her willingness to participate. . You liked
it, you wanted it. The survivor is then manipulated with their own
guilt and shame because they experienced physical arousal while
being abused. Physical, visual or auditory stimulation is likely
to occur in a sexual situation. It does not mean the child wanted
the experience or understood what it meant.
Myth: Males who were sexually abused as boys all grow up
to sexually abuse children.
Fact: Only some sexually abused boys become perpetrators
of sexual abuse.
Myth: Boys are less traumatized as victims of sexual abuse
than girls.
Fact: Studies show that long-term effects are equally damaging
for either sex. Ironically, males may be more damaged by society's
refusal or reluctance to accept their victimization, and by their
resultant belief that they must .tough it out. in silence.
Myth: If a child is sexually active with his or her peers,
then it is not sexual abuse.
Fact: The act is abusive if the child is induced into sexual
activity with anyone who is in a position of greater power, whether
that power is derived through the perpetrator's age, size, status,
or relationship. A child who cannot refuse, or who believes she
or he cannot refuse, is a child who has been violated.
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