This site is a content portal for other adult
victims of the many faces of child abuse. If one person who views this site finds the same sense of closure I have found, it will be worth every minute expended.
Some personal lessons I have learned:
Abusive parents never
change. What changes is their ability
to continue to physically and emotionally harm us, as we grow up and eventually leave
home.
But the attempts at mental abuse and emotional blackmail
will usually never end. The opportunities for the toxic parent to cause
you new emotional pain on top of the scars from the old abuse will not arise
as often as they did when you were under the same roof. But at certian points, opportunities will arise and old behavior will be
repeated with continued contact with the abusive parent.
Why?
Because the personality flaws that make an
abusive parent abusive do not change. Given the same opportunity, or
the same set of circumstances under which they abused you before, they
will abuse you again. Abusers don't "get better" (except perhaps
those with chemical dependencies) The victims merely get away from the abusive
environment. If you never grew up, but remained a child forever,
they would still be abusing you today.
So what now?
Spare yourself the hopes for a sincere apology
(any apology you have to ask for or even beg for can't really be sincere).
Forget about ever finding an understanding for why the abuser treated
you (and others) the way they did, and give up on any hopes of closure
through some miraculous, healing reconciliation.
Tell yourself right now: "The person who abused
me does not consider themselves an abuser".
Consider: As a child, how many times did you try to
tell the abuser or someone else, a family member or friend, how you felt
about the abuse, only to hear the abuser deny it ever happened, or say
(even worse) that you deserved everything you got?
Some counselors recommend a face to face
confrontation with the abuser to reach closure. Depending on the
nature and degree of the abuse, this may help the abused reach some temporary
sense of closure. But for others, that confrontation is going to
escalate into a situation that mirrors all the others before.
For the sites author, any confrontation with the abusive mother
about her behavior ended in one of three ways, usually with a variation
only in the order they were played out:
1. The tried and true "You're just
like your father", which was the beginning and ending of so many beatings
as a child and through adolescence that they defy counting, though
they can document the frequency from the very detailed journals kept throughout
that period.
2. The ridiculous crying jag full of
self-pity eliciting statements, all of them said in a harsh accusatory
tone: "I guess I just wasn't a very good mother then, was I. But
you seem to have turned out okay".
3. The feigned panic/heart attack.
"You're killing me with this. You're just killing me. I can't take this
from you."
In all three, the net result is always the
same. No acknowledgement of responsibility. No apology for
the abusive behavior. No closure.
So where do you find closure?
You get closure by getting on with your
life. As a victim of abuse, the past will never truly be behind
you. You will live with a part of it every day. But you may choose to accept it, and you can
cut the abuser out of your life just as you would a cancer from your body.
Don't wait for the day when they can reopen old wounds, or worry about
how they may treat your own children should you leave them alone with
them. As an adult, you have a right to choose who you and your children associate
with, even if they are 'family'.
You can also get closure by talking about
your experience, and receiving reassurance from friends and true family.
You can do as the author does, and post your experience online, and find reassurance
that others have survived. There is also closure in merely getting
the matter out in the open, reviewing it, and letting it stand on its
own.
Be aware in advance that the abuser will
of course claim that you are a liar, that you were never abused, and have
some ulterior motive for wanting to harm him or her with your words.
Let them. It's amazing that years after living in a home with an
abuser, the abused still have a tendency to worry about their opinion, worry about
what they might say about us, worry about what they might do to us.
That is the painful legacy of abuse. They may try to slander you
to family or friends, to protect their own "image". You may have
already been through this kind of behavior before. Don't worry about
the opinions of others. Worry about your own.
Live the life you deserve, and leave the abuse behind.
My Personal Experience with PAS
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