Child Sexual Abuse: From Harsh Realities to Hope
By Jane Gilgun
()
About this ebook
Through case studies, this book shows what child sexual abuse means to children who have been sexually abused, perpetrators, mothers, and other family members. In their own words, persons directly affected tell their own stories. Other topics include services for child and adult survivors, perpetrators, and other family member, talking to children who have been sexually abused, forensic interviewing, prevention strategies for parents and professionals, and strategies for advocacy and for policy changes. This book shows that child sexual abuse is a world-wide problem that requires the serious treatment that this book provides.
Jane Gilgun
I like to laugh. I like witty people. When I'm not with my horses, I in my garden, in the kitchen cooking, or sharing good times with family and friends. I'm Dr. Jane Gilgun, a professor emerita in the School of Social Work at the University of Minnesota, USA, where I was a professor from 1984 to 2021. I have published a lot and am an international leader in the development of qualitative social work research methods. I have served as president of the International Society for Qualitative Inquiry and chair of Social Work Day for the International Congress of Qualitative Inquiry for 12 years. My long-term research was on the meanings of violence to perpetrators, the development of violent behaviors, and how persons overcome adversities. I was the principal investigator for 22 research projects conducted with community partners, focusing on factors associated with good outcomes for children and families. My research draws upon the work of Jane Addams and John Dewey and is based on a pragmatist philosophy of science that takes into account persons and situation, lived experience, meanings and interpretations, researcher reflexivity, and research to be used for the common good. My research has an explicit value base of justice, care, dignity and worth, and respect for autonomy/self-determination. Many of my articles and books are available on the internet for free or low cost. I write books on many other topics based on research I have done for many years. I also comment on public events.
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Child Sexual Abuse - Jane Gilgun
FOREWORD
Public discussions of clergy abuse in the Roman Catholic Church have brought much needed attention to child sexual abuse. People throughout the world now know that apparently respectable people sexually abuse children. Family members, friends of the families, and other people children know and trust account for all but a small percentage of perpetrators of child sexual abuse. Keeping children safe from child sexual abuse may finally take its rightful place at the center of worldwide efforts. The general public may now be shocked into action.
Until recently, many people refused to believe that seemingly respectable and loved members of families and communities sexually abuse children. With clear proof that outwardly holy holy men sexually abuse children, the myth of dirty old men in overcoats as abusers may now be shattered. Seemingly respectable people sexually abuse children. There is no longer dispute about this.
Child sexual abuse is about children. It is not primarily about punishment of offenders or abhorrence over sexual acts with children. It is not about protecting the images of institutions such as churches, schools, and families. Child sexual abuse is about the hurt that it causes children. Millions of children are hurt by child sexual abuse every year. We must do all we can to keep perpetrators from sexually abusing more children, but we no longer can concentrate on punishment and overlook the children and their families. Children who have been abused rarely get the professional care they require and often are blamed for their own sexual abuse. Prevention efforts are half-hearted and underfunded. To keep children safe, this must change.
This book is for people who want to be part of the change. Its purpose is to inform the general public so that citizens throughout the world can press policy makers for change.
The book focuses on the meanings child sexual abuse has to children and to perpetrators. What children and perpetrators say is far different from common assumptions. Much of the available in-formation on child sexual abuse provides dry statistics, lists dire of outcomes for survivors, and separating perpetrators permanently from society and their families.
In this book, you read in children’s and perpetrators’ own words what child sexual abuse means. The realities are harsh, but dealing with harsh realities leads to hope and recovery. By using the words of children and perpetrators, readers judge for themselves what child sexual abuse does to children and how seemingly respectable people can ignore what children require to thrive and satisfy their desires and wants.
The book includes analysis of the stories in order to develop guidelines for policy, prevention, treatment, and education. For policy and programs to be responsive to the issues that child sexual abuse creates, we need an informed public. This book provides a foundation for policy and for prevention, education, and treatment programs
Above all, this book is for survivors and their families so that they can understand the harsh realities in their own lives, find goodness and hope within themselves and in trustworthy other people, and go on to rich and fulfilling lives.
I am a professor at the School of Social Work, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities, USA. I conducted the interviews on which this book is based for more than 25 years and continue to do so to the present.
Jane F. Gilgun, Ph.D., LICSW
Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA
June 10, 2011
The stories and direct quotes are from interviews I conducted for many years with child survivors, adult survivors, perpetrators, mothers, and other family members where sexual abuse has occurred. These individuals participated in this research because they wanted to make things better for others. Child survivors were especially eager to let other children know what they experienced. Mothers and other family members wanted to spare others the traumas they experienced. Perpetrators wanted to make up for the harm they had caused. Their names and identifying information have been changed. The research was approved by the ethics committees of the University of Minnesota, Twin Cities, USA, and Syracuse University, Syracuse, NY, USA.
Contents
One: Sensitive, Responsive Care
Two: What Child Sexual Abuse is and is Not
Three: What Child Sexual Abuse Means to Child Survivors
Four: What Child Sexual Abuse Means to Male Perpetrators
Five: What Child Sexual Abuse Means to Women & Girl Perpetrators
Six: Shock and Disbelief as Reactions to Disclosure
Seven: Protecting Children
Eight: Trauma and Child Sexual Abuse
Nine; Signs of Sexual Abuse
Ten: Talking to Children Who Have Been Sexually Abused
Eleven: The Sex Education of Children
Twelve: Finding Someone to Confide In
Thirteen: Family Incest Treatment & Treatment of Abusers
Fourteen; Treatment of Children Who are Sexually Aggressive
Fifteen: Treatment of Adolescents Who Perpetrate
Sixteen: Treatment of Adults Who Perpetrate
Seventeen: Do Sexually Abused Children Become Abusers?
Eighteen: Risks for Becoming Abusers
Nineteen: The Prevention of Sexually Abusive Behaviors
Scholarly Publications
About This Book
Acknowledgements
About the Author
One
Sensitive, Responsive Care
Sensitive caregivers are emotionally available
Sexual abuse is the opposite of what children need to thrive. Children require sensitive, responsive care in order to develop well. Sensitive caregivers are emotionally available to children. They are responsive to children’s cues when, for example, children want to interact with adults or are hungry, frustrated, or sad. They help children to express their thoughts and feelings and soothe children when children are stressed. The give and take between children and caregivers is mutually satisfying.
The expectations of sensitive, responsive adults fit children’s levels of social, emotional, sexual, and physical development. Sensitive, responsive parents teach children the skills of everyday living, such as how to let others know what they want and do not want and how to be responsive and sensitive themselves.
Not only do caregivers teach these behaviors, but they also treat children with such care that children internalize these behaviors, value them, and enact them in their everyday lives. When children experience adversities, they have the confidence gained through experience that their parents and other trusted adults will be there for them and to help them through difficult times. Exceptions to this principle arise when perpetrators of child sexual abuse scare children into silence, or children have other fears related to telling.
Sensitive, responsive caregivers teach children and show by example how to deal with everyday problems. Such caregivers seek to understand issues that confront them and consider alternatives and consequences of their actions before they act. Children learn to do likewise. Through sensitive, responsive care, children learn to trust themselves, trust others, and to figure out who is trustworthy and who is not.
Trust is the foundation for healthy development. Even when children are scared into silence when someone sexually abuses them, their capacities for trust will be a foundation for recovery when they feel safe enough to tell someone, even if they wait until adulthood to do so.
Social Class
Research has shown that children can develop well in a wide range of socio-economic and ethnic settings. It is a myth that poverty automatically means inadequate care. Income is not a predictor of good developmental outcomes for children. Parents who do not have much money can and do provide responsive care that promotes children’s optimal development. Conversely, parents with adequate and high incomes are not automatically sensitive and responsive.
The attunement of parents to their children is the most important factor in healthy child development, not income. Parents who are stressed and overwhelmed with their own issues, however, rarely are psychologically available and sensitive to their children. In order to be effective parents and have satisfying lives, they seek the support they need to maintain their own emotional health.
Parents as Teachers
Infants are dependent upon adults for their survival. Over time, children become increasingly independent of their parents but remain connected to them in healthy ways. They learn to walk, talk, feed and dress themselves. Sensitive parents provide support for children’s age-appropriate activities and are effective teachers. They structure tasks so children can learn how to do them. They are respectful of developing children’s autonomy and allow children to explore and attempt tasks without adult interference, but are ready to help when children need it. They present children with new tasks that challenge children but that children can attain with a bit of stretching.
Sensitive, responsive parents help children to deal with the ups and downs of everyday living. Multiple times daily, children confront situations they do not understand and may not know how to handle. Parents who are emotionally available provide comfort, help children understand their responses and the situations that gave rise to them, help children to name and understand their emotions, guide children to think about various ways to handle situations, and coach children in how to handle situations and their emotions more effectively in the future.
Sensitive, responsive parents provide gentle supervision and guidance. They set firm, consistent limits so that children can learn how to behave appropriately. They catch children doing something right and immediately praise them. Penalties are brief and clear. Children feel safe and protected when parents are warm and sensitive, provide clear guidelines, and set clear limits.
Parents teach children about appropriate and inappropriate sexual behaviors. Some children attempt to touch parents’ breasts or genitals, or they touch their own genitals in public, sometimes showing the pleasure they feel. Parents set limits. They explain to children that sexual body parts are private. Children cannot touch the sexual body parts of their parents, other adults, or other children. Children can touch their own sexual body parts in private, such as in their own bedrooms. Touching their sexual body parts is not to be done in public.
Children need to know that other people cannot touch their sexual body parts. If anyone does, parents instruct children to tell them right away. Parents also teach children about privacy and modesty and the circumstances under which sexual behaviors are appropriate and inappropriate. Children are not left to guess, learn from the mass media, or learn from peers who often are uninformed and share distorted information about sexual behaviors.
Parents’ Issues
Parents with mental illnesses, chemical dependency issues, and histories of trauma such as abuse and neglect can parent well as long as they manage the effects of these conditions. Whatever issues parents have, they must deal with them effectively if they are to parent their children adequately. Some of the ways that parents can manage their own issues include the support and understanding of family and friends, therapy, support groups, self-help groups, psychoeducation, and reading and learning about their issues. Psychoeducation is a form of education that includes not only information about human behaviors, but the psychological and emotional meanings of the behaviors. Often participants try out new behaviors, such as learning how to express emotions. Furthermore, participants in psychoeducation may choose to share personal experiences in psychoeducation groups. Psychoeducation about child sexual abuse would include the kinds of information that are in this book.
Unfortunately, some parents deny that they have issues that interfere with their adequate functioning. Many of them were at the receiving end of insensitive and non-responsive parenting. They learned not to trust others and to deny their need for comfort and understanding. In turn, they are unable to provide their children with sensitive care, despite their love for their children.
Repair
Parents cannot always be there for their children. Sometimes they are preoccupied or distracted. Sensitive, responsive parents realize that they have been inattentive and gauge how this has affected their children. They deal directly with their inattentiveness by stating something like, I’m sorry I didn’t pay much attention to what you were saying a while ago. Can we have some time together now?
Reconnection after a break in connection is called repair. Quality of relationships depends upon capacities to repair breakdowns that happen in any relationship. Children and parents have cut-offs, avoidance, and ambivalent relationships because of incapacities to do repair. It is not okay to act as if nothing happened after breakdowns in relationships. Parents must deal directly with breaks in connection to their children, take responsibility for their behaviors, and take remedial action. By example and gentle instruction, they teach their children to do the same.
Power Over Children
Adults and older children have power over children. Not only are adults bigger and stronger, they know more. Their cognitive skills are more developed. In addition, social customs and tradition bestow authority on adults and older children. Children understand that they are smaller and weaker and are subject to the authority of others.
When adults are sensitive caregivers, pleasurable contact between adults and children in the forms of touching, hugging, and kissing are mutually enjoyed but do not become sexual. Both parents and children regulate the frequency and amounts of affectionate exchanges. Parents, for example, do not force children to kiss people they prefer not to, but they can insist that the children show respect.
As children develop, they form attachments with persons who are generational equals while maintaining family ties. They eventually form intimate relationships, some of which become sexual. With sensitive, responsive care, children do not grow into persons who exploit, abuse, and behave in hurtful ways toward others, and they know what to do when others treat them this way. The respect that sensitive caregivers teach and show children pays great dividends when children enter into intimate relationships.
Betrayal
Child sexual abuse is a betrayal of the principles of healthy child development. Perpetrators are insensitive and non-responsive to children. Rather than guide children through situations they do not understand, perpetrators take advantage of children’s naiveté. For example, perpetrators may interpret a young child’s touch on their genitals as an invitation to sex. Rather than teaching children what is appropriate and inappropriate touch, they take advantage.
Perpetrators abuse the power they have over children. They undermine children’s sense of autonomy. They betray children’s trust. This betrayal affects children’s capacities to trust others and interferes with their capacities to form friendships and intimate relationships.
Children can and do recover from child sexual abuse, but they require sensitive, responsive care to do so. Within the safety of secure relationships, they can deal directly with what happened during the abuse and what the abuse means to me. Persons with whom they have secure relationships also can provide well-timed psychoeducation about sexual abuse and related issues, such as sexuality and being entitled to tell others what they want and do not want.
If children have experienced other adversities and no one has helped them to cope with those adversities, they have a much more difficult time. The more negative life events children experience in addition to being sexually abused, the more difficult recovery is. Recovery is possible when survivors feel safe and valued and are committed to recovery.
In the absence of sensitive, responsive care, children with many adversities are at risk to suffer poor outcomes, such as reckless behaviors, thrill-seeking, chemical abuse issues, self-destructive behaviors such as cutting and suicide attempts, and antisocial behaviors that include destruction of property and physical and sexual aggression. Such behaviors are not inevitable if children receive sensitive, responsive care.
When parents and other adults respond sensitively and responsively to children who have been sexually abused, children not only learn to cope with, adapt to, and overcome the effects of child sexual abuse and other adversities, but they can thrive. Children become resilient and have enhanced skills for knowing what to do and how to cope when they experience other adversities. They fulfill their potential and become contributing members of society.
Some children wait for years to tell anyone. Perpetrators may scare them into silence or they may be afraid of how others will respond. If they have relatively few other adversities and many sources of support and guidance, they may function quite well, although there would be some internal suffering. They may be too afraid of consequences to tell anyone, even though they have experienced adequate and even exemplary parenting.
Two
What Child Sexual Abuse is and is Not
Perpetrators take advantage of children
Child sexual abuse is an abuse of power, where other people seek emotional and sexual gratification by taking advantage of children who are in vulnerable situations. Typically, perpetrators are older, stronger, more knowledgeable, and have authority in the eyes of children. When children sexually abuse other children, however, these variables are not part of the abuse. In these cases, the power involved is situational and not one of physical size and authority. Children abused by other children are in situations where they are vulnerable to sexual assault, which usually is sudden and unexpected.
An example is a four year-old boy who approached Olivia, also four, from behind, pulled down her pants, and penetrated her anus with his penis. Olivia smacked
him immediately. They were the same size and had similar physical strength. Olivia did not view the other child has having power over her. When a grandfather figure sexually abused Olivia, she was hurt and confused, but believed she had to do what he said. Authority was part of the situation when an older man abused Olivia, but it was not part of the situation when another child abused her.
Child sexual abuse is a physical act and a psychological experience. As a physical act, child sexual abuse involves both touch and non-touch behaviors. As a psychological experience, child sexual abuse represents an abuse of power where perpetrators satisfy themselves emotionally. They often giet a thrill and a high out of sexual abuse, while children are afraid, confused, ashamed, and embarrassed. Children also feel used and discounted. Some children are so scared it is almost as if they are not there, and the sexual acts are being done to someone else. This is a psychological state called disassociation. Some children fight back, as did Olivia, discussed earlier.
In some instances, children may feel warmth or tingle in their sexual body parts, and some have orgasms. This usually makes the children more afraid and confused. Bob, an adult male survivor, said about the abuse a teacher perpetrated when Bob was thirteen, I remember hating it. I remember being scared of the sexual stuff. I do remember it felt pleasurable, too.
Olivia, too, felt some sexual stimulation when her grandfather figure sexually abused her. She said, ‘Sometimes it felt good, but that made me feel guilty. Sometimes it stung. Why is that?"
Sexual stimulation can occur in some instances of abuse and not in others. Other children feel only discomfort, stinging, or pain. Children sometimes may appear to initiate sexual contact with adults who have abused them previously. They are doing the best they can to have some control over what abusers do to them. Some children who have been sexually abused approach adults who have not sexually abused them. Sensitive, responsive adults gently tell the children that these behaviors are not appropriate and guide them into appropriate behaviors. If the behaviors persist, adults seek professional consultation. Responsible adults do all they can to protect children and to help them to deal with the many complicated issues connected to being survivors of child sexual abuse.
Touch Behaviors
Sexual abuse that involves touch means that abusers perform sexual acts on children or they force children to perform sexual acts on them. Perpetrators touch children on their breasts, buttocks, vulvas, penises, and testicles, and they make children touch their penises, testicles, or other parts of their bodies This gives perpetrators pleasure and gratification.
The sexual acts may also involve penetration of the vagina, anus, or mouth with the penis, tongue, fingers, or objects, or can involve cunnilingus (mouth and tongue on vulva or vagina) and fellatio (mouth and tongue on penis). Some perpetrators, especially those who create pornography, may force children to perform sexual acts with other children or with adults.
Non-Touch Behaviors
There are many types of non-touch sexual abuse, such as sexualized looks and talk, voyeurism, exhibitionism, and child pornography, and pimps who engage in child prostitution and child trafficking. In families, sexual talk and sexualized looks create a sexualized atmosphere that children do not understand and that can scare, confuse, and hurt them. This is called covert incest. Children are uncomfortable and afraid. Most do not know what to do. They may be too ashamed or embarrassed to tell an adult, and so they suffer in silence.
Voyeurism involves such acts as watching children as they get dressed or take showers. This is also called peeping. Another is showing their sexual body parts to children. This is called exhibitionism or flashing. Exhibitionists and voyeurs experience intense excitement and sometimes also describe warm sexual feelings that wash over them.
Other forms of non-touch sexual abuse occur when adults treat children as sexual objects by dressing them in sexy
clothes and rewarding children for imitating