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When this occurred I also experienced...

Story
From a survivor
🇮🇪

Stuck in the bathroom for 40 years

Stuck in the bathroom. It is possible to be loved. When I spent ages telling my Mum and Dad that it would be ok to travel to city for a gig , I thought I was grown up and street wise. In reality I was a naive young man - my parents reluctantly agreed as long as we stayed with my friends uncle - this would mean we wouldn’t have to travel back late . The gig was fantastic - we got back to his flat the others went to bed. I stayed up chatting with name - after about half an hour he started asking me if I was a virgin and showing me pornographic magazines . I tried to get away and go to bed - he then attacked me and raped me . I locked myself in the bathroom and waited but he was still agitated - he wanted me to sleep in his bed - I had no idea that a man could do what he did to another male. Two weeks later I went back to stay again after a football match - this time I tried to persuade my parents that I shouldn’t go - but they didn’t want the ticket to go to waste - he attacked and raped me again - I eventually managed to lock myself in the bathroom . I mentally stayed in that bathroom for the next 40 years - never telling - never asking for support - 3 failed marriages - problems with drink - difficulties being a good parent. The first person I told after 40 years was my ex-wife - her response was “I can’t love you - you have violated me by keeping this a secret” - this was crushing and led to a decline to a very dark place. Now with the support of my children, my new partner , a fantastic psychiatrist and a therapist from support organisation - I feel better and believe I can be loved. It is never too late to start to heal .

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  • We believe in you. You are strong.

    Story
    From a survivor
    🇮🇪

    My Dad - My Hero, My Idol, My Abuser.......

    As an only child, I had no one to look up to really as a kid. But I always looked up to my Dad. Even though he was never really around due to work (although Mam worked more than he did and still found lots of time to spend with me), I still idolised him. He was my hero. He would always say 'Dads know everything - remember that', so lying to my dad (even little white lies) were pointless. Though when I hit 13 I began to realise he actually DID know everything. He knew what myself and my friends would talk about, he would know exactly where I was and who I was with without even needing to ask me, and I would always wonder why. In reality he had my phone tracked and could read all my messages. Now that I have been through the court system and he has been imprisoned for the abuse he inflicted upon me, I can confirm that he was in fact grooming me from the age of 13. About a month after my 18th Birthday, began the horrific 7.5 year abuse that I suffered. My Dad, masked for the first 2 years as a stranger, blackmailed me into performing sexual acts with strange men in our home - the one place I should've felt safe. When I finally realised it was him, I couldn't tell you how it then turned into just open ended abuse and rape from him. He would advertise us as a couple on hook up sites and in order to avoid physical beatings I would go along with it. I feared for my life so much that endless rapes and sexual assaults were easier - imagine that being the easiest choice - until you're in it, you just don't know how you'll react. I stopped going out, I gave up my hobbies, whilst in college I gave up my part time job - he controlled every single part of my life. And if I even let my "everything is rosey' mask slip even for a second, especially in front of my Mam, well it just doesn't bear thinking about. Fortunately for me, once Mam did find out, he was gone out of my life within 30 mins. Unfortunately, he went on to groom and abuse others after that. He was convicted, and is currently serving his prison sentence - but the fear of him stilll remains.

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  • Message of Hope
    From a survivor
    🇮🇪

    It gets easier to process with time. It never goes away but it does get smaller in my mind.

    Dear reader, this message contains language of self-harm that some may find triggering or discomforting.

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  • Story
    From a survivor
    🇺🇸

    DECADES

    DECADES When I was 22 years old, I was on a college campus with my finance and decided to go out to the car at 11 pm to get the left over cake we had brought from dinner. I man walked near me and I said hi, and proceeded to get the cake. The man came up behind me and flipped me to the ground trying to rape me. I screamed, time slowed down and I remember hearing my Mom say that my car keys are a weapon so I started jabbing him with them. I struggled free, ran to a building, falling on my way. A driver arrived who heard my screams from blocks away and the police were called. The police even thought they got him and showed me several photos of similar looking men, but I couldn’t make a positive id, so he was set free. After this sexual assault, I bought a gun, moved in with my fiancé, took self-defense classes, read books, saw a psychologist who diagnosed me with PTSD due to overwhelming anxiety that paralyzed me. The world was no longer safe. It resulted in triggers, and brought back my first sexual assault as a teenager in a crowded bus in another country of an older man pressing his erection against me as I keep moving away from him toward the front of the bus, until I finally found another teenage who I could sit on her lap to get this stranger to stop. It has been 64 years since I was attacked in that parking lot. I have been happily married for 64 years and have a positive self image. BUT, I still can’t wear skirts. I still can’t go in parking lots alone at night and am uneasy going anywhere at night. I can’t watch a movie or play that has sexual assault or the anxiety becomes overwhelming. I still own the same gun.

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  • Story
    From a survivor
    🇺🇸

    Blackout

    It happened during my second year of graduate school. I traveled from Boston to Connecticut to attend a friend's birthday party. I had other friends that I knew who were going to be there, so I decided why not. The party took place in a private room in the back of a lounge/restaurant. Most of the people who attended where either in the same sorority as me, were a friend, fraternity brother, or fellow military officers of the birthday boy. We all were either dancing, drinking, and grooving to the music that was being played by the DJ in his corner. I remember the birthday boy asking me to take a series of drinking shots with him and a few friends---all custom made by the bartender. "Give us your best shot! [laughter] Surprise us," is what I remember him stating to the bartender over the loud music. The two shots we took at jägermeister mixed with a few other liqueurs. Black out. I woke up naked in a hotel room laying on top of and kissing another female friend surrounded by at least four other men in the room. They were encouraging us to continue to make out and grind on one another, including the birthday boy. In the moment, it looked and felt like that scene in a movie where a group of drunk college boys are at a party and egging each other on to do something stupid--but in slow motion. The slow motion became faster and reality sank in. I remember becoming fully aware of what was happening and jumping back and off of her. I remember her passing out. Black out. I woke up again. This time on the floor in front of the hotel bed. He was having sex with me as I woke up from my unconsciousness. I remember looking up to his face and looking to the left of his face realizing that the hotel tv was playing in the background. I remember telling him "no" and "stop" and pushing him off of me. I ran to the bathroom. I was still naked. As I entered the bathroom and shut the door, the first thought that came to my head as I looked into the mirror was, "How the hell did you get yourself into this situation? Is this really you? Are you really here right now?" I started to cry and then quickly reminded myself of where I was at. I then said to myself, "Wash your face. Find your clothes. Find your phone. But don't make a scene." So I washed the darkened mascara off myself. Walked out of the bathroom to find my clothes and phone. I realized that everyone except him seemed to be sleeping and there was another person who was sitting on top of the bed watching tv. The same tv that I saw to the left of him. The same bed that I woke up in front of, on the floor. "Was he just watching this entire time and didn't do anything?" That's what I asked myself. I found my clothes and phone. Phone was dead. After some time passed, everyone started to wake up and I just sat in the chair and waited for everyone to get dressed. We left the hotel room and went to a local IHOP for breakfast. I wasn't sure how to process what happened just hours before. I wasn't sure if I felt safe enough to ask them what happened. I felt disgusted with myself. I also wasn't sure if what I experienced was real. I was hungover. They all were in the military, including the female I woke up in my consciousness to the first time. They drove me all the back back to Boston and dropped me off at home. There was no mention about what happened. Goodbye. I entered my apartment, went upstairs, got in the shower and cried. After the shower, I crawled in my bed. Black out.

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  • Healing is not linear. It is different for everyone. It is important that we stay patient with ourselves when setbacks occur in our process. Forgive yourself for everything that may go wrong along the way.

    Story
    From a survivor
    🇺🇸

    the story I'm finally strong enough to write.

    sorry that this is super long😭😭😭 when I was younger I was best friends with this girl we met on the first day of kindergarten and were inseparable and when we were 7 she started touching me on the school bus and I told the school and instead of helping they put me and her in the school counselor's office and she showed us a video of keeping our hands to ourselves and not letting other people touch out bodies 3 weeks she raped me in her bedroom and I didn't know what to do so I just laid there and didn't speak I think it made it worse that she is a girl and its not typical for females to rape other females so I felt as no one would believe me so I stayed quiet because of what happened the first time after that stuff kept happening but then I got into the 5th grade and we didn't see each other because it was there first real year of COVID so it was all basically online and we were in different classes but then 6th grade started and I was back to seeing her every day and that was super hard and she started to do that stuff and it was really bad on my mental health then she decided to punch me in the face for no reason so I stopped talking to her I ended up admitting myself to a psych ward where I did end up getting help and was doing better and I went to my ex friends play performance and this friend was friends with the girl at the time and I still wanted to be his friend so I because friends with her again and told her that I stopped talking to her because my best friend told me to that night she raped me in my own bedroom after I let her borrow my clothes my shows by hairbrush my everything and she still decided to rape me and that hurt and again like the first time I sat there doing and saying nothing for some reason I couldn't no matter what no matter what I thought no matter what I said nothing I was frozen I always everyone talk about fight or flight and no one ever talks about freeze even tho its one of the most common ones every time she did something like that I would freeze I wouldn't talk I would barely move I just laid there helpless like God was gonna send someone to help me but he never did I was all alone I was like a helpless dog dying on the side of the road and I just let her do it I said no once and after she didn't stop I gave up I didn't know what do do anymore and I didn't wanna repeat myself for some reason so thus I didn't after that I stopped talking to her all together and in 8th grade after being out as transgender for about a year when kids would say stuff what I would correct them on my name she would stand up for me and I hated that I hated it so much it made me feel like I couldn't hate her for raping me and assaulting me because now shes standing up for me so if I hate her I would be a bad person even tho I know I am not a bad person for hating her because I have every right to because of what she did to me even if it was a long time anyways I think that's it sorry again that this is super long I don't know what others look like so I don't know if mines actually long or not compared to other peoples but if you read all of this thank you for reading my story and I hope all of you have an absolutely amazing 💗💗💗

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  • Story
    From a survivor
    🇺🇸

    #294

    *THIS IS MY FIRST TIME TELLING ANYONE MY STORY** I had just turned 13 and had my first crush, a boy 2 years older than me, we'll call Name cause well that's his name. His Cousin had invited me to a"house party" only when I showed up it was just me, him and his cousin. When I got there they were both waiting for me in the entry way, my first thought was wow they're excited to see me, cool. Then I felt someone grab me by the back of my head by my ponytail. Then my pullover jacket I had just got for Christmas was pulled over my head, and I felt a sharp cold knife against my throat. I was forced into a bedroom With only one of them Wich I couldn't see because my jacket was still over my head, but I could tell by the voice it was Name I remember hearing the clips on my farmer jeans being messed with, but he couldn't be bothered to figure it out so he pulled them down over my shoulders and eventually down to my feet. My coat had moved down a little so I could see his hand flat on the bed with the knife underneath it, mind you this was my first time having any kind of sexual experience at this point I had never even kissed a boy, all I could think of was if I grab this knife I can stab him and run but that would have been impossible considering my farmer jeans were still around my ankles and I was in so much pain and bleeding everywhere. I froze, I left my body, I let him do what he planned on doing from the start, I felt so stupid, so naive and so VIOLATED. I walked from this "house party" rape plan 7 blocks crying hysterically as blood dripped down my legs, Wich I didn't even notice, I was so young I didn't know what happened your"first time". I'm 40 now and I'm finally coming forward because it's been eating me alive for years. And PTSD is real. This scumbag not only took what I was saving for my future husband, he took my pride, my self esteem, my trust and my ability to open up sexually to the love of my life. If I didn't have my husband I'd probably be in a psych ward somewhere, I know I didn't deserve or ask for this, but it still affects me daily, I stay far away from where it happened, I'm always looking over my shoulder, I'm sick of living in fear since he was released from prison for other things..... He actually had the nerve to request me on Facebook! That's when the flash backs started.... I thought I had this tucked away, hidden deep down in the depths of my soul, never to be spoken about EVER. All I want to do is tell my husband, but I feel like I've been lying by omission, I want to tell him so bad, I just can't bring myself to tell him without breaking down completely or hurting him somehow.....I love him so much, he is my safe place.

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  • “It’s always okay to reach out for help”

    Message of Hope
    From a survivor
    🇺🇸

    To my fellow survivor, I want you to know that your silence doesn’t have to define your story any longer. For so long, I, too, carried the weight of secrets and pain, believing that silence would protect me from the shame, the memories, and the fear. But here’s what I’ve learned: silence only allows the wounds to deepen. Speaking up—sharing your truth—is the first step toward healing. It’s not easy. The fear of what might happen when you finally break that silence can feel overwhelming. You may worry that no one will understand, or that your pain will be dismissed. But I promise you, your voice matters. Your story matters. In finding the courage to speak, you begin to reclaim the power that was taken from you. The silence that once held you captive loses its grip. There is a world of understanding, of compassion, waiting for you. The act of breaking the silence is not just about finding your own healing—it’s about letting others know they are not alone. Your voice has the power to inspire, to bring light to places where others feel lost in the dark. We are not defined by what happened to us. We are defined by how we rise. And rising begins with speaking. It begins with the moment you decide that your story is worth telling. Don’t let fear, shame, or the voices of those who tried to silence you keep you from stepping into the light. You deserve healing, and the world deserves to hear your voice. Together, we can break the silence, and in doing so, we can heal not just ourselves, but countless others who need to know that their voices, too, can be heard.

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  • Story
    From a survivor
    🇺🇸

    Name

    I am now 74 years old and still suffer PTSD related to my abuse over 50 years ago. I was married for 7 years and 5 of them were spent trying to find resources so I could leave. Unfortunately, there were none. The police officers would tell me, “You need to figure this out.” I had four children. My second son passed at 6 weeks. Which was a god send because my husband had another girl pregnant. She ended up getting an illegal abortion inCity. My third child, a girl, is still with me. My fourth child I gave up for adoption because I was planning on leaving and didn’t know what my future held. I was rescued by my father on a very chaotic night. I packed two suitcases and my 20 year old sister drove me to their house while my father stayed behind to confront my husband. Of course he completely denied any abuse but my dad had proof that he couldn’t argue with. I believe my dad threatened his life. Within two weeks I was in counseling that was charging what my income was. Nothing. So my counseling sessions were $1.50 a week. I had a hysterectomy that my husband refused to let me have, and signed up for nursing school. I lived with my parents for a little over a year until I graduated. I bought a beater car and became a single mother of 2. I am not an easy person to know because of my suspicions about peoples motives. Trauma is something that fades with time. I married again after five years and have been married 42 years. My message is to never give up. Thankfully, there are many resources for women now. Push and push hard to be seen and heard. I finally found my voice, you can too.

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  • Story
    From a survivor
    🇺🇸

    #3

    It is still difficult for me to look back on my story and not feel that shame and embarrassment that I linked with the events time and time again. Difficult, but not impossible. My story is not one isolated incident, it is three stories piled into one. Some would say “I did not learn my lesson the first time”. Despite those people, I will share the entirety of my story. Gory details and all. For the first time today. And as painful, as challenging, as inevitability “embarrassing” as the past may be, it needs to be told. I have come to believe there is strength in sharing. Power. There is the potential for healing. 15. My high school crush invited me to the homecoming game and then dance. What fifteen year old girl wouldn’t be thrilled. The beginning of the night was wonderful, and my feelings continued to grow. Then my crush decided to pursue more than me, he decided to pursue being intimate. Physically. I knew I was nowhere near ready. But it turns out it was not up to me. One day at lunch he tried to touch me. I was firm, telling him ‘no’. Despite the observable anger reading across my face, he tried again. I reacted, with a slap across the check and a quick exit. We never spoke again. 19. After spending a year together, I ‘knew’ he was the one. This was the man I would marry. We planned to spend time together like any other Saturday night when he was home from school, only this time his parents would not be home. We started to kiss, then we started to progress. When he insinuated going further, I honestly answered that I did not know if I wanted to. He responded with seemingly-kind false reassurance, “don’t worry, it will be okay. I love you”. I did not known what I wanted. What was best for me. So I told him, and he echoed back “don’t worry, it will be okay. I love you”, as if I had not spoken at all. I watched his frustration build as I finally stopped objecting. I was afraid he would stop loving me. He did, that night when he stole my virginity. 23. About one month and several dates later, he had already pushed boundaries. I was uncomfortable, but convinced myself that if I had not yet been clear, then how would he know the limits? It was not his fault, so I forgave him for pushing. The red flags were there. But so was being desperate to find love. So I ignored the warning signs in pursuit of a relationship. Despite my gut feeling, I invited him over that night with the intention of cooking us dinner, followed by a movie. At this point, I was not ready for our physical relationship to move beyond kissing. I was not ready. I was very clear. When I told him about my past, he responded with a tone of understanding, apologizing again and again for anything that may have been too far. Yet during the movie, he suggested seeing my bedroom. I quickly disregarded the option, saying it had to be an early night. It was a work night, so let’s finish the movie. He was persistent. And I stood my ground. At some point, he self-justified going to my room without my permission. Keeping it light, I suggested we continue the movie as I casually followed. When he tossed me onto the bed, I laughed, nervously. Then as I tried to get up, I felt his hands push against me. He forced me back down and started to kiss me. My memory is scattered at best from this moment forward. I have no memory of how my body ended up fully on the bed. I have no memory of his clothes coming off. I have no memory of my own clothes coming off. I do remember pleading as he laid on top of me, “Please, don’t”. Again, “Please don’t”. He gently lied in my ear, “Don’t worry. I won’t”. He stole my sense of safety that night. In my own home, my own room, my own bed. When looking back at my past, the people in it, the choices that were made for me—I could see darkness. I could feel hopelessness. And while I have, but I do not today. Since these moments in time, my brokenness has been transformed into a mission. My voice used to help others. My experiences making an impact. I now choose to see power, strength, even beauty in my story.

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  • If you are reading this, you have survived 100% of your worst days. You’re doing great.

    Every step forward, no matter how small, is still a step forwards. Take all the time you need taking those steps.

    Story
    From a survivor
    🇮🇹

    It's not your fault

    I was on a packed bus in rome with my friend when the bus came to a stop and the doors swung open. The bus was so full of people there was no way anyone else could fit. But, just as the thought crossed my mind a man close to his 50s hopped on. More like pushed himself on. I turned to look at him, he smiled at me and I smiled through my mask. He seemed nice. As the bus jolted in acceleration so did all of us on the bus swaying against one another trying to keep our balance since there was nothing to hold onto. Suddenly, the man started pushing behind me. Where is he trying to go? i thought. There’s no where else to stand. He pushed until he was directly behind me. Weird, but maybe he’s just trying to hold onto the arm rail above us. Now, I could feel his chest against me as well as his crotch. Why is he pushing me we are all so squished? Suddenly, i could feel him thrusting up against me. Again, am i imagining this? i wanted it to be the fact that the bus was making us all jolt back and forth but i knew that was not the case. I suddenly felt a hand touching my butt. Is it his? i thought. Does he know he’s touching me? i moved forward slightly but my friends back was directly in front of me so I couldn't move far. The hand made it's way onto my side touching my thigh. He definitely knows it’s there. I turned around to look at him but his eyes were roaming the bus. His hand is on my waist now. i sprung forward murmuring the words “what the fuck” under my breath. my friend turned around laughing at me thinking I was referencing how crowded this bus ride is. I could feel his hand again. he takes a step forward placing his hand on my waist again this time with more grip. i take his hand off my waist. 2 seconds later his hand is on me and is pulling up my dress. i put my hand on top of his to push it back down. No one seems to see me struggle. We are all so close but no one is seeing this? How is no one seeing this? his hand moves away from mine as he grabs for my vagina. I spring forward again this time, not just pushing my friend but everyone around me. Everyone is looking at me in annoyance for pushing against them. I look at my friend and tell her we’’re getting off at the next stop. she doesn’t question it. As the bus doors swing open I make a break for it. i tell my friend what happened as soon as we get off the bus. "Girl why didn’t you turn around and punch him I would have" I don't know. Why didn't I? why didn’t i say anything. "That was the longest 10 minute bus ride of my life" she says. we were on the bus for 10 minutes? that lasted for 10 minutes? i had 10 minutes to do something and i didn’t. We spent the rest of the trip taking in the sights. But i could still feel him on me.

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  • Message of Healing
    From a survivor
    🇺🇸

    Healing is hard work and trying to trust again

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  • Story
    From a survivor
    🇺🇸

    Help me

    Help me please I found out i was assaulted when i was ten or so by my older half brother. I woke up to him in my bed, and i was a child so i didnt think much of it, but i always had this rule where i didnt want anyone in my bed because it was mine and blah blah, so i told him i was gonna tell on him later and he ran back to my brother bunk bed where he originally slept and didnt say anything. I ran over to tell my parents, and in the morning yhey obviously knew something was wrong so they asked him why he was in my bed and he admitted that he been using my ass to masturbate for months. And i got memories to when i would wake up in the middle of the night where he’d be walkong back and forgh with paper tissues and my butt would feel wet and i always thiught i was just seeaty and stuff but it then clicked and i remembered all the tomes he would grind against me randomly but again i didnt think anything of it and he got beat for three days and he had to applogize to me and i saw him pleading for forgiveness cause they forced him too and i was so scared but i always thiught it wasnt that deep cause it wasnt actually rape and i was jever conscious for him doing that and now im much older now but this week has been really hard and even to this day it turns me on so much to think of me being assaulted like i hate it when i hear of of others getting hurt in that way but it arouses me so much and i thiught it made progress but during this period it turned me on so much and its terrible and i dont know what to do its still haunting me when i didnt even really go theough anyrhing and ive been telling myself that im fine for the longest time and that everything is okay but this is jsut revealing that in not okay and that im judt some sicko who gets off to other people hypothetically assaulting me whats wrong with me i dont know what to do please help me llease validate me please do something i dont like feeling like this what should i do

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  • “Healing to me means that all these things that happened don’t have to define me.”

    Story
    From a survivor
    🇺🇸

    Name - My SA Trauma in a Summary

    To start off, this may be a bit triggering for some. I didn’t learn what consent really was until I was about 13, roughly 14. But, I did have common sense and I knew it was never okay to do something that wasn’t okay with someone else. All of the terms, r*pe, molestation, sexual assault and more were very new to me at the time. I had no idea what these things really were until I had went to my uncle one evening after school. I talked about what my grandpa had done to me when I was 8 years old. He told me in short, “You were molested.” My heart dropped, I didn’t know what that meant but it didn’t sound good with how he was saying it. I asked him what it was and he was surprised I didn’t know. With me just learning I was a victim of my grandfathers actions, it got me to thinking about other situations where people were doing things to me. Things that weren’t okay, but I didn’t know they were wrong. When I was 14, I found out what COCSA was. At first, it was very confusing. I didn’t understand the term much but the more I read about it, the more it made sense. I remembered back to a time where my sister, who was 6 at the time, told me that we should do something together in the bathroom. From a vague memory, I can remember asking, “What?” That’s when it got wonky remembering the rest of what really happened. I was 10, turning 11. When you’re in a situation like that, a child with a child who is younger than you, your sibling, there isn’t much you can do. There was nothing I could do. It’s almost impossible for a persecutor to be younger in a situation like that, but I have heard it’s so possible. With her being young, me being young but also old enough for people to expect me to know better, I was at a loss of words. I have never told anyone about any of this due to pure embarrassment, and I wasn’t sure of how to approach it in any way. I completely blocked it off. On another note, I have always had trouble sticking up for myself and saying no to people. This was especially present during my childhood and my early teen years (11-15). I have been a victim of multiple sexual encounters that I did not want. Every time they’d happen though, I would immediately freeze and lock up. To cope, I would resort to self harm or avoiding the abuser in any way I could. I have heard that avoidance is super common with victims and their abusers, especially if they are made aware later that what the abuser did was wrong. There were so many times that I never said no, I never said anything. I always felt guilty for never saying anything, a guilty conscious mind was my greatest enemy, it still is. There is a huge gap in my childhood that I cannot remember, I’m not sure if it’s due to trauma or anything. As a summary, I have been put into the habit of never saying anything, even if I’m incredibly uncomfortable with it. Even if I knew it probably wasn’t okay, but I felt defenseless, I was a kid. I am trying my hardest to do what I couldn’t do as a child, even if it feels impossible, like a permanent lump in my throat and a pit in my stomach, I know it’s best to let someone know now. The difference is, I’m not scared of who I am with now, nor the people I surround myself with. I can tell them if I feel scared or threatened, which is still something I have to adjust to. Thank you for reading. This is the briefest way for me to put it honestly, if there was a way for me to go into full grave detail, then I would.

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  • “It can be really difficult to ask for help when you are struggling. Healing is a huge weight to bear, but you do not need to bear it on your own.”

    Story
    From a survivor
    🇺🇸

    #1259

    I met him when I was 14 he was 19. My mom introduced us. He did things for me no one had ever done before so I thought he loved me. We were still together when I was 16 and that’s when I had sex with him for the first time. It felt really uncomfortable and I didn’t like it. He was upset but it was really fast and had no meaning to it. For my first time it was a terrible experience. I had been SA’d as a child so now it makes sense why it was uncomfortable back then it did not. We got married when I was 17, it wasn’t until we were married he became physically abusive. He was abusive before it was emotional something I knew nothing about. I was 18 and we were married with one child we had just moved and we were sleeping on the floor. He worked 2nd shift and I wasn’t feeling good and he wanted to have sex I didn’t not. He told me if I didn’t he was going to rape me. I can remember small pieces but mostly the after not the during. I had on a white shirt with a few buttons towards the top it was v neck with lace and red roses. He ripped the shirt. I remember him putting on his belt after and leaving and I got up and was standing in the mirror no pants on just staring at myself. It was a long mirror on the closet door. When it comes to mind it’s like I stood there forever as if I’m still standing there and never left. After that anytime he’d ask for sex I’d give in a “let him” for 25 years this happened. Mostly I’d try and fight him off but I’d give up and was thinking I wanted it only understanding today I was in fight then freeze mode I was appeasing him whatever I needed to do so he’d never rape me again. I also thought I let me but I suppose the idea of him raping me sounded worse than just “letting him” do it. I didn’t want to be raped but I was over and over again for a really long time and the more I fought him the worse he’d be to me. Sometimes instead of physical abuse he’d use hurtful words I had once told him how someone saying mean things to me hurt more than hitting me. I only remembered this yesterday. I’m going thru a divorce with him and the lawyer said the judge might say I lived with him and went back and yes I did and I thought but how do you argue I didn’t want to be there the entire even though I was. Then today I realized I was surviving and the more I fought him the more he hurt me so I’d stop fighting when it got to be too much and I shutdown. My memory is slowly coming back and I’ve learned it’s possible to rewire your brain but it’s really hard. I had no control but as long as I agreed I gained some control over not being raped again.

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  • Story
    From a survivor
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    Name

    When I was eleven, I went to a sleepover with a girl I thought was my friend to work on a science project. This was my first sleepover since I'd moved across the country and I was very nervous, not wanting to do anything to ruin the friendships I'd finally made. I was doing everything she suggested due to this fear. She knew I wouldn't fight her, that I would do anything she said, and she took advantage of that. I was eleven years old, very thin, and would later be a late bloomer, and wore a pink Monster High shirt and blue jeans, both slightly too big. She spent hours molesting me, touching me, forcing me into roleplays and power imbalance situations. I won't make you listen to everything she did. When I went home early, having finally burst into tears when she'd accidentally hit me, I threw that shirt away. It had been my favourite shirt up until that point, and I threw it away and never wore those jeans again because I didn't want to be reminded of what happened. I was a sheltered child and didn't yet know what rape was, but I knew my parents had told me to tell them if anyone ever did anything like what she did. But I thought "anyone" only meant adults, not a girl my age. So I said nothing. After another year with her in the school, in my friend group, she was expelled. She'd claimed a fifth-grader had assaulted her, which was proven to be false beyond a shadow of a doubt. Fast forward six years after the initial incident, and I'd finally told my parents what had happened. I was finally in therapy over what had happened. And she was back in my life. I was going to a vocational school, which had students from several schools in the county, and one of those students was her. Only a few days after telling my parents, I picked a fight with her in the lunch room. I told her I hated her and that if she ever so much as thought about looking at me ever again, I would fight her. The timing of what happens next is important- one of my friends, also a trans man and a survivor of childhood violence like me, left the school because he couldn't deal with the bullies in his class. Shortly after he left, the rest of my "friends" started inviting my rapist over to the table. Every single day, she would come to my table and stand six feet away from me for five, even ten minutes, before she and two of the girls who I'd thought were my friends would go to the bathroom and vape. I would have panic attacks, I would throw up, I was too anxious to function. The only solution was for me to go to the nurse's office every time she came by, but my "friends" would forget to text me when she was gone and I wouldn't eat lunch, as I would spend the rest of the period in there and couldn't eat from the anxiety before. I tried to come up with other solutions- couldn't my friends go over to her table, or couldn't they talk in the bathrooms instead of close to me? My "friends" shot each of these down, saying they couldn't stop her from coming and that the current system worked fine. But it didn't, because I wasn't eating and was dealing with crisis after crisis. I tried talking to the principal, who'd gotten involved shortly after I threatened her, but he refused to do anything, even though the girl was violating Covid rules by visiting our lunch table. He gave me no solution and, like my "friends," shot down every solution I proposed. I seriously considered breaking my moral code and becoming a narc, telling the resource officer about the vape and getting them in trouble. But I didn't. I'm no narc, and they would have known who did it. The last half of my senior year was spent in online school, as things escalated until my father was almost forced to make the impossible choice to put me in a psychiatric hospital. It's been two years. I've been getting better and even unfollowed and blocked all of my "friends" who chose my rapist and her vape over me. I hope I never see any of them again. Except for my friend who left the school, I hate all of them. I don't know that I'll ever be able to forgive them, and I wish I could write all of this in a review for that school to warn parents to never send their children there. There is no end to this story, not yet, but there will be one day. One day, I'll be healed. I'll be happy. I'm in the process of picking up the pieces, and I know that one day they'll be mended back together with gold. One day, it will be okay. This storm will pass, I know it.

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  • Taking ‘time for yourself’ does not always mean spending the day at the spa. Mental health may also mean it is ok to set boundaries, to recognize your emotions, to prioritize sleep, to find peace in being still. I hope you take time for yourself today, in the way you need it most.

    Message of Hope
    From a survivor
    🇮🇪

    It gets easier to process with time. It never goes away but it does get smaller in my mind.

    Dear reader, this message contains language of self-harm that some may find triggering or discomforting.

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  • Story
    From a survivor
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    Blackout

    It happened during my second year of graduate school. I traveled from Boston to Connecticut to attend a friend's birthday party. I had other friends that I knew who were going to be there, so I decided why not. The party took place in a private room in the back of a lounge/restaurant. Most of the people who attended where either in the same sorority as me, were a friend, fraternity brother, or fellow military officers of the birthday boy. We all were either dancing, drinking, and grooving to the music that was being played by the DJ in his corner. I remember the birthday boy asking me to take a series of drinking shots with him and a few friends---all custom made by the bartender. "Give us your best shot! [laughter] Surprise us," is what I remember him stating to the bartender over the loud music. The two shots we took at jägermeister mixed with a few other liqueurs. Black out. I woke up naked in a hotel room laying on top of and kissing another female friend surrounded by at least four other men in the room. They were encouraging us to continue to make out and grind on one another, including the birthday boy. In the moment, it looked and felt like that scene in a movie where a group of drunk college boys are at a party and egging each other on to do something stupid--but in slow motion. The slow motion became faster and reality sank in. I remember becoming fully aware of what was happening and jumping back and off of her. I remember her passing out. Black out. I woke up again. This time on the floor in front of the hotel bed. He was having sex with me as I woke up from my unconsciousness. I remember looking up to his face and looking to the left of his face realizing that the hotel tv was playing in the background. I remember telling him "no" and "stop" and pushing him off of me. I ran to the bathroom. I was still naked. As I entered the bathroom and shut the door, the first thought that came to my head as I looked into the mirror was, "How the hell did you get yourself into this situation? Is this really you? Are you really here right now?" I started to cry and then quickly reminded myself of where I was at. I then said to myself, "Wash your face. Find your clothes. Find your phone. But don't make a scene." So I washed the darkened mascara off myself. Walked out of the bathroom to find my clothes and phone. I realized that everyone except him seemed to be sleeping and there was another person who was sitting on top of the bed watching tv. The same tv that I saw to the left of him. The same bed that I woke up in front of, on the floor. "Was he just watching this entire time and didn't do anything?" That's what I asked myself. I found my clothes and phone. Phone was dead. After some time passed, everyone started to wake up and I just sat in the chair and waited for everyone to get dressed. We left the hotel room and went to a local IHOP for breakfast. I wasn't sure how to process what happened just hours before. I wasn't sure if I felt safe enough to ask them what happened. I felt disgusted with myself. I also wasn't sure if what I experienced was real. I was hungover. They all were in the military, including the female I woke up in my consciousness to the first time. They drove me all the back back to Boston and dropped me off at home. There was no mention about what happened. Goodbye. I entered my apartment, went upstairs, got in the shower and cried. After the shower, I crawled in my bed. Black out.

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  • Story
    From a survivor
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    the story I'm finally strong enough to write.

    sorry that this is super long😭😭😭 when I was younger I was best friends with this girl we met on the first day of kindergarten and were inseparable and when we were 7 she started touching me on the school bus and I told the school and instead of helping they put me and her in the school counselor's office and she showed us a video of keeping our hands to ourselves and not letting other people touch out bodies 3 weeks she raped me in her bedroom and I didn't know what to do so I just laid there and didn't speak I think it made it worse that she is a girl and its not typical for females to rape other females so I felt as no one would believe me so I stayed quiet because of what happened the first time after that stuff kept happening but then I got into the 5th grade and we didn't see each other because it was there first real year of COVID so it was all basically online and we were in different classes but then 6th grade started and I was back to seeing her every day and that was super hard and she started to do that stuff and it was really bad on my mental health then she decided to punch me in the face for no reason so I stopped talking to her I ended up admitting myself to a psych ward where I did end up getting help and was doing better and I went to my ex friends play performance and this friend was friends with the girl at the time and I still wanted to be his friend so I because friends with her again and told her that I stopped talking to her because my best friend told me to that night she raped me in my own bedroom after I let her borrow my clothes my shows by hairbrush my everything and she still decided to rape me and that hurt and again like the first time I sat there doing and saying nothing for some reason I couldn't no matter what no matter what I thought no matter what I said nothing I was frozen I always everyone talk about fight or flight and no one ever talks about freeze even tho its one of the most common ones every time she did something like that I would freeze I wouldn't talk I would barely move I just laid there helpless like God was gonna send someone to help me but he never did I was all alone I was like a helpless dog dying on the side of the road and I just let her do it I said no once and after she didn't stop I gave up I didn't know what do do anymore and I didn't wanna repeat myself for some reason so thus I didn't after that I stopped talking to her all together and in 8th grade after being out as transgender for about a year when kids would say stuff what I would correct them on my name she would stand up for me and I hated that I hated it so much it made me feel like I couldn't hate her for raping me and assaulting me because now shes standing up for me so if I hate her I would be a bad person even tho I know I am not a bad person for hating her because I have every right to because of what she did to me even if it was a long time anyways I think that's it sorry again that this is super long I don't know what others look like so I don't know if mines actually long or not compared to other peoples but if you read all of this thank you for reading my story and I hope all of you have an absolutely amazing 💗💗💗

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  • Message of Hope
    From a survivor
    🇺🇸

    To my fellow survivor, I want you to know that your silence doesn’t have to define your story any longer. For so long, I, too, carried the weight of secrets and pain, believing that silence would protect me from the shame, the memories, and the fear. But here’s what I’ve learned: silence only allows the wounds to deepen. Speaking up—sharing your truth—is the first step toward healing. It’s not easy. The fear of what might happen when you finally break that silence can feel overwhelming. You may worry that no one will understand, or that your pain will be dismissed. But I promise you, your voice matters. Your story matters. In finding the courage to speak, you begin to reclaim the power that was taken from you. The silence that once held you captive loses its grip. There is a world of understanding, of compassion, waiting for you. The act of breaking the silence is not just about finding your own healing—it’s about letting others know they are not alone. Your voice has the power to inspire, to bring light to places where others feel lost in the dark. We are not defined by what happened to us. We are defined by how we rise. And rising begins with speaking. It begins with the moment you decide that your story is worth telling. Don’t let fear, shame, or the voices of those who tried to silence you keep you from stepping into the light. You deserve healing, and the world deserves to hear your voice. Together, we can break the silence, and in doing so, we can heal not just ourselves, but countless others who need to know that their voices, too, can be heard.

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  • Story
    From a survivor
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    #3

    It is still difficult for me to look back on my story and not feel that shame and embarrassment that I linked with the events time and time again. Difficult, but not impossible. My story is not one isolated incident, it is three stories piled into one. Some would say “I did not learn my lesson the first time”. Despite those people, I will share the entirety of my story. Gory details and all. For the first time today. And as painful, as challenging, as inevitability “embarrassing” as the past may be, it needs to be told. I have come to believe there is strength in sharing. Power. There is the potential for healing. 15. My high school crush invited me to the homecoming game and then dance. What fifteen year old girl wouldn’t be thrilled. The beginning of the night was wonderful, and my feelings continued to grow. Then my crush decided to pursue more than me, he decided to pursue being intimate. Physically. I knew I was nowhere near ready. But it turns out it was not up to me. One day at lunch he tried to touch me. I was firm, telling him ‘no’. Despite the observable anger reading across my face, he tried again. I reacted, with a slap across the check and a quick exit. We never spoke again. 19. After spending a year together, I ‘knew’ he was the one. This was the man I would marry. We planned to spend time together like any other Saturday night when he was home from school, only this time his parents would not be home. We started to kiss, then we started to progress. When he insinuated going further, I honestly answered that I did not know if I wanted to. He responded with seemingly-kind false reassurance, “don’t worry, it will be okay. I love you”. I did not known what I wanted. What was best for me. So I told him, and he echoed back “don’t worry, it will be okay. I love you”, as if I had not spoken at all. I watched his frustration build as I finally stopped objecting. I was afraid he would stop loving me. He did, that night when he stole my virginity. 23. About one month and several dates later, he had already pushed boundaries. I was uncomfortable, but convinced myself that if I had not yet been clear, then how would he know the limits? It was not his fault, so I forgave him for pushing. The red flags were there. But so was being desperate to find love. So I ignored the warning signs in pursuit of a relationship. Despite my gut feeling, I invited him over that night with the intention of cooking us dinner, followed by a movie. At this point, I was not ready for our physical relationship to move beyond kissing. I was not ready. I was very clear. When I told him about my past, he responded with a tone of understanding, apologizing again and again for anything that may have been too far. Yet during the movie, he suggested seeing my bedroom. I quickly disregarded the option, saying it had to be an early night. It was a work night, so let’s finish the movie. He was persistent. And I stood my ground. At some point, he self-justified going to my room without my permission. Keeping it light, I suggested we continue the movie as I casually followed. When he tossed me onto the bed, I laughed, nervously. Then as I tried to get up, I felt his hands push against me. He forced me back down and started to kiss me. My memory is scattered at best from this moment forward. I have no memory of how my body ended up fully on the bed. I have no memory of his clothes coming off. I have no memory of my own clothes coming off. I do remember pleading as he laid on top of me, “Please, don’t”. Again, “Please don’t”. He gently lied in my ear, “Don’t worry. I won’t”. He stole my sense of safety that night. In my own home, my own room, my own bed. When looking back at my past, the people in it, the choices that were made for me—I could see darkness. I could feel hopelessness. And while I have, but I do not today. Since these moments in time, my brokenness has been transformed into a mission. My voice used to help others. My experiences making an impact. I now choose to see power, strength, even beauty in my story.

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  • Message of Healing
    From a survivor
    🇺🇸

    Healing is hard work and trying to trust again

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  • We believe in you. You are strong.

    Story
    From a survivor
    🇺🇸

    DECADES

    DECADES When I was 22 years old, I was on a college campus with my finance and decided to go out to the car at 11 pm to get the left over cake we had brought from dinner. I man walked near me and I said hi, and proceeded to get the cake. The man came up behind me and flipped me to the ground trying to rape me. I screamed, time slowed down and I remember hearing my Mom say that my car keys are a weapon so I started jabbing him with them. I struggled free, ran to a building, falling on my way. A driver arrived who heard my screams from blocks away and the police were called. The police even thought they got him and showed me several photos of similar looking men, but I couldn’t make a positive id, so he was set free. After this sexual assault, I bought a gun, moved in with my fiancé, took self-defense classes, read books, saw a psychologist who diagnosed me with PTSD due to overwhelming anxiety that paralyzed me. The world was no longer safe. It resulted in triggers, and brought back my first sexual assault as a teenager in a crowded bus in another country of an older man pressing his erection against me as I keep moving away from him toward the front of the bus, until I finally found another teenage who I could sit on her lap to get this stranger to stop. It has been 64 years since I was attacked in that parking lot. I have been happily married for 64 years and have a positive self image. BUT, I still can’t wear skirts. I still can’t go in parking lots alone at night and am uneasy going anywhere at night. I can’t watch a movie or play that has sexual assault or the anxiety becomes overwhelming. I still own the same gun.

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  • Healing is not linear. It is different for everyone. It is important that we stay patient with ourselves when setbacks occur in our process. Forgive yourself for everything that may go wrong along the way.

    “It’s always okay to reach out for help”

    Story
    From a survivor
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    Name

    I am now 74 years old and still suffer PTSD related to my abuse over 50 years ago. I was married for 7 years and 5 of them were spent trying to find resources so I could leave. Unfortunately, there were none. The police officers would tell me, “You need to figure this out.” I had four children. My second son passed at 6 weeks. Which was a god send because my husband had another girl pregnant. She ended up getting an illegal abortion inCity. My third child, a girl, is still with me. My fourth child I gave up for adoption because I was planning on leaving and didn’t know what my future held. I was rescued by my father on a very chaotic night. I packed two suitcases and my 20 year old sister drove me to their house while my father stayed behind to confront my husband. Of course he completely denied any abuse but my dad had proof that he couldn’t argue with. I believe my dad threatened his life. Within two weeks I was in counseling that was charging what my income was. Nothing. So my counseling sessions were $1.50 a week. I had a hysterectomy that my husband refused to let me have, and signed up for nursing school. I lived with my parents for a little over a year until I graduated. I bought a beater car and became a single mother of 2. I am not an easy person to know because of my suspicions about peoples motives. Trauma is something that fades with time. I married again after five years and have been married 42 years. My message is to never give up. Thankfully, there are many resources for women now. Push and push hard to be seen and heard. I finally found my voice, you can too.

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  • If you are reading this, you have survived 100% of your worst days. You’re doing great.

    Every step forward, no matter how small, is still a step forwards. Take all the time you need taking those steps.

    Story
    From a survivor
    🇺🇸

    Help me

    Help me please I found out i was assaulted when i was ten or so by my older half brother. I woke up to him in my bed, and i was a child so i didnt think much of it, but i always had this rule where i didnt want anyone in my bed because it was mine and blah blah, so i told him i was gonna tell on him later and he ran back to my brother bunk bed where he originally slept and didnt say anything. I ran over to tell my parents, and in the morning yhey obviously knew something was wrong so they asked him why he was in my bed and he admitted that he been using my ass to masturbate for months. And i got memories to when i would wake up in the middle of the night where he’d be walkong back and forgh with paper tissues and my butt would feel wet and i always thiught i was just seeaty and stuff but it then clicked and i remembered all the tomes he would grind against me randomly but again i didnt think anything of it and he got beat for three days and he had to applogize to me and i saw him pleading for forgiveness cause they forced him too and i was so scared but i always thiught it wasnt that deep cause it wasnt actually rape and i was jever conscious for him doing that and now im much older now but this week has been really hard and even to this day it turns me on so much to think of me being assaulted like i hate it when i hear of of others getting hurt in that way but it arouses me so much and i thiught it made progress but during this period it turned me on so much and its terrible and i dont know what to do its still haunting me when i didnt even really go theough anyrhing and ive been telling myself that im fine for the longest time and that everything is okay but this is jsut revealing that in not okay and that im judt some sicko who gets off to other people hypothetically assaulting me whats wrong with me i dont know what to do please help me llease validate me please do something i dont like feeling like this what should i do

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  • “Healing to me means that all these things that happened don’t have to define me.”

    “It can be really difficult to ask for help when you are struggling. Healing is a huge weight to bear, but you do not need to bear it on your own.”

    Story
    From a survivor
    🇺🇸

    Name

    When I was eleven, I went to a sleepover with a girl I thought was my friend to work on a science project. This was my first sleepover since I'd moved across the country and I was very nervous, not wanting to do anything to ruin the friendships I'd finally made. I was doing everything she suggested due to this fear. She knew I wouldn't fight her, that I would do anything she said, and she took advantage of that. I was eleven years old, very thin, and would later be a late bloomer, and wore a pink Monster High shirt and blue jeans, both slightly too big. She spent hours molesting me, touching me, forcing me into roleplays and power imbalance situations. I won't make you listen to everything she did. When I went home early, having finally burst into tears when she'd accidentally hit me, I threw that shirt away. It had been my favourite shirt up until that point, and I threw it away and never wore those jeans again because I didn't want to be reminded of what happened. I was a sheltered child and didn't yet know what rape was, but I knew my parents had told me to tell them if anyone ever did anything like what she did. But I thought "anyone" only meant adults, not a girl my age. So I said nothing. After another year with her in the school, in my friend group, she was expelled. She'd claimed a fifth-grader had assaulted her, which was proven to be false beyond a shadow of a doubt. Fast forward six years after the initial incident, and I'd finally told my parents what had happened. I was finally in therapy over what had happened. And she was back in my life. I was going to a vocational school, which had students from several schools in the county, and one of those students was her. Only a few days after telling my parents, I picked a fight with her in the lunch room. I told her I hated her and that if she ever so much as thought about looking at me ever again, I would fight her. The timing of what happens next is important- one of my friends, also a trans man and a survivor of childhood violence like me, left the school because he couldn't deal with the bullies in his class. Shortly after he left, the rest of my "friends" started inviting my rapist over to the table. Every single day, she would come to my table and stand six feet away from me for five, even ten minutes, before she and two of the girls who I'd thought were my friends would go to the bathroom and vape. I would have panic attacks, I would throw up, I was too anxious to function. The only solution was for me to go to the nurse's office every time she came by, but my "friends" would forget to text me when she was gone and I wouldn't eat lunch, as I would spend the rest of the period in there and couldn't eat from the anxiety before. I tried to come up with other solutions- couldn't my friends go over to her table, or couldn't they talk in the bathrooms instead of close to me? My "friends" shot each of these down, saying they couldn't stop her from coming and that the current system worked fine. But it didn't, because I wasn't eating and was dealing with crisis after crisis. I tried talking to the principal, who'd gotten involved shortly after I threatened her, but he refused to do anything, even though the girl was violating Covid rules by visiting our lunch table. He gave me no solution and, like my "friends," shot down every solution I proposed. I seriously considered breaking my moral code and becoming a narc, telling the resource officer about the vape and getting them in trouble. But I didn't. I'm no narc, and they would have known who did it. The last half of my senior year was spent in online school, as things escalated until my father was almost forced to make the impossible choice to put me in a psychiatric hospital. It's been two years. I've been getting better and even unfollowed and blocked all of my "friends" who chose my rapist and her vape over me. I hope I never see any of them again. Except for my friend who left the school, I hate all of them. I don't know that I'll ever be able to forgive them, and I wish I could write all of this in a review for that school to warn parents to never send their children there. There is no end to this story, not yet, but there will be one day. One day, I'll be healed. I'll be happy. I'm in the process of picking up the pieces, and I know that one day they'll be mended back together with gold. One day, it will be okay. This storm will pass, I know it.

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  • Taking ‘time for yourself’ does not always mean spending the day at the spa. Mental health may also mean it is ok to set boundaries, to recognize your emotions, to prioritize sleep, to find peace in being still. I hope you take time for yourself today, in the way you need it most.

    Story
    From a survivor
    🇮🇪

    Stuck in the bathroom for 40 years

    Stuck in the bathroom. It is possible to be loved. When I spent ages telling my Mum and Dad that it would be ok to travel to city for a gig , I thought I was grown up and street wise. In reality I was a naive young man - my parents reluctantly agreed as long as we stayed with my friends uncle - this would mean we wouldn’t have to travel back late . The gig was fantastic - we got back to his flat the others went to bed. I stayed up chatting with name - after about half an hour he started asking me if I was a virgin and showing me pornographic magazines . I tried to get away and go to bed - he then attacked me and raped me . I locked myself in the bathroom and waited but he was still agitated - he wanted me to sleep in his bed - I had no idea that a man could do what he did to another male. Two weeks later I went back to stay again after a football match - this time I tried to persuade my parents that I shouldn’t go - but they didn’t want the ticket to go to waste - he attacked and raped me again - I eventually managed to lock myself in the bathroom . I mentally stayed in that bathroom for the next 40 years - never telling - never asking for support - 3 failed marriages - problems with drink - difficulties being a good parent. The first person I told after 40 years was my ex-wife - her response was “I can’t love you - you have violated me by keeping this a secret” - this was crushing and led to a decline to a very dark place. Now with the support of my children, my new partner , a fantastic psychiatrist and a therapist from support organisation - I feel better and believe I can be loved. It is never too late to start to heal .

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  • Story
    From a survivor
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    My Dad - My Hero, My Idol, My Abuser.......

    As an only child, I had no one to look up to really as a kid. But I always looked up to my Dad. Even though he was never really around due to work (although Mam worked more than he did and still found lots of time to spend with me), I still idolised him. He was my hero. He would always say 'Dads know everything - remember that', so lying to my dad (even little white lies) were pointless. Though when I hit 13 I began to realise he actually DID know everything. He knew what myself and my friends would talk about, he would know exactly where I was and who I was with without even needing to ask me, and I would always wonder why. In reality he had my phone tracked and could read all my messages. Now that I have been through the court system and he has been imprisoned for the abuse he inflicted upon me, I can confirm that he was in fact grooming me from the age of 13. About a month after my 18th Birthday, began the horrific 7.5 year abuse that I suffered. My Dad, masked for the first 2 years as a stranger, blackmailed me into performing sexual acts with strange men in our home - the one place I should've felt safe. When I finally realised it was him, I couldn't tell you how it then turned into just open ended abuse and rape from him. He would advertise us as a couple on hook up sites and in order to avoid physical beatings I would go along with it. I feared for my life so much that endless rapes and sexual assaults were easier - imagine that being the easiest choice - until you're in it, you just don't know how you'll react. I stopped going out, I gave up my hobbies, whilst in college I gave up my part time job - he controlled every single part of my life. And if I even let my "everything is rosey' mask slip even for a second, especially in front of my Mam, well it just doesn't bear thinking about. Fortunately for me, once Mam did find out, he was gone out of my life within 30 mins. Unfortunately, he went on to groom and abuse others after that. He was convicted, and is currently serving his prison sentence - but the fear of him stilll remains.

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    #294

    *THIS IS MY FIRST TIME TELLING ANYONE MY STORY** I had just turned 13 and had my first crush, a boy 2 years older than me, we'll call Name cause well that's his name. His Cousin had invited me to a"house party" only when I showed up it was just me, him and his cousin. When I got there they were both waiting for me in the entry way, my first thought was wow they're excited to see me, cool. Then I felt someone grab me by the back of my head by my ponytail. Then my pullover jacket I had just got for Christmas was pulled over my head, and I felt a sharp cold knife against my throat. I was forced into a bedroom With only one of them Wich I couldn't see because my jacket was still over my head, but I could tell by the voice it was Name I remember hearing the clips on my farmer jeans being messed with, but he couldn't be bothered to figure it out so he pulled them down over my shoulders and eventually down to my feet. My coat had moved down a little so I could see his hand flat on the bed with the knife underneath it, mind you this was my first time having any kind of sexual experience at this point I had never even kissed a boy, all I could think of was if I grab this knife I can stab him and run but that would have been impossible considering my farmer jeans were still around my ankles and I was in so much pain and bleeding everywhere. I froze, I left my body, I let him do what he planned on doing from the start, I felt so stupid, so naive and so VIOLATED. I walked from this "house party" rape plan 7 blocks crying hysterically as blood dripped down my legs, Wich I didn't even notice, I was so young I didn't know what happened your"first time". I'm 40 now and I'm finally coming forward because it's been eating me alive for years. And PTSD is real. This scumbag not only took what I was saving for my future husband, he took my pride, my self esteem, my trust and my ability to open up sexually to the love of my life. If I didn't have my husband I'd probably be in a psych ward somewhere, I know I didn't deserve or ask for this, but it still affects me daily, I stay far away from where it happened, I'm always looking over my shoulder, I'm sick of living in fear since he was released from prison for other things..... He actually had the nerve to request me on Facebook! That's when the flash backs started.... I thought I had this tucked away, hidden deep down in the depths of my soul, never to be spoken about EVER. All I want to do is tell my husband, but I feel like I've been lying by omission, I want to tell him so bad, I just can't bring myself to tell him without breaking down completely or hurting him somehow.....I love him so much, he is my safe place.

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    It's not your fault

    I was on a packed bus in rome with my friend when the bus came to a stop and the doors swung open. The bus was so full of people there was no way anyone else could fit. But, just as the thought crossed my mind a man close to his 50s hopped on. More like pushed himself on. I turned to look at him, he smiled at me and I smiled through my mask. He seemed nice. As the bus jolted in acceleration so did all of us on the bus swaying against one another trying to keep our balance since there was nothing to hold onto. Suddenly, the man started pushing behind me. Where is he trying to go? i thought. There’s no where else to stand. He pushed until he was directly behind me. Weird, but maybe he’s just trying to hold onto the arm rail above us. Now, I could feel his chest against me as well as his crotch. Why is he pushing me we are all so squished? Suddenly, i could feel him thrusting up against me. Again, am i imagining this? i wanted it to be the fact that the bus was making us all jolt back and forth but i knew that was not the case. I suddenly felt a hand touching my butt. Is it his? i thought. Does he know he’s touching me? i moved forward slightly but my friends back was directly in front of me so I couldn't move far. The hand made it's way onto my side touching my thigh. He definitely knows it’s there. I turned around to look at him but his eyes were roaming the bus. His hand is on my waist now. i sprung forward murmuring the words “what the fuck” under my breath. my friend turned around laughing at me thinking I was referencing how crowded this bus ride is. I could feel his hand again. he takes a step forward placing his hand on my waist again this time with more grip. i take his hand off my waist. 2 seconds later his hand is on me and is pulling up my dress. i put my hand on top of his to push it back down. No one seems to see me struggle. We are all so close but no one is seeing this? How is no one seeing this? his hand moves away from mine as he grabs for my vagina. I spring forward again this time, not just pushing my friend but everyone around me. Everyone is looking at me in annoyance for pushing against them. I look at my friend and tell her we’’re getting off at the next stop. she doesn’t question it. As the bus doors swing open I make a break for it. i tell my friend what happened as soon as we get off the bus. "Girl why didn’t you turn around and punch him I would have" I don't know. Why didn't I? why didn’t i say anything. "That was the longest 10 minute bus ride of my life" she says. we were on the bus for 10 minutes? that lasted for 10 minutes? i had 10 minutes to do something and i didn’t. We spent the rest of the trip taking in the sights. But i could still feel him on me.

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    Name - My SA Trauma in a Summary

    To start off, this may be a bit triggering for some. I didn’t learn what consent really was until I was about 13, roughly 14. But, I did have common sense and I knew it was never okay to do something that wasn’t okay with someone else. All of the terms, r*pe, molestation, sexual assault and more were very new to me at the time. I had no idea what these things really were until I had went to my uncle one evening after school. I talked about what my grandpa had done to me when I was 8 years old. He told me in short, “You were molested.” My heart dropped, I didn’t know what that meant but it didn’t sound good with how he was saying it. I asked him what it was and he was surprised I didn’t know. With me just learning I was a victim of my grandfathers actions, it got me to thinking about other situations where people were doing things to me. Things that weren’t okay, but I didn’t know they were wrong. When I was 14, I found out what COCSA was. At first, it was very confusing. I didn’t understand the term much but the more I read about it, the more it made sense. I remembered back to a time where my sister, who was 6 at the time, told me that we should do something together in the bathroom. From a vague memory, I can remember asking, “What?” That’s when it got wonky remembering the rest of what really happened. I was 10, turning 11. When you’re in a situation like that, a child with a child who is younger than you, your sibling, there isn’t much you can do. There was nothing I could do. It’s almost impossible for a persecutor to be younger in a situation like that, but I have heard it’s so possible. With her being young, me being young but also old enough for people to expect me to know better, I was at a loss of words. I have never told anyone about any of this due to pure embarrassment, and I wasn’t sure of how to approach it in any way. I completely blocked it off. On another note, I have always had trouble sticking up for myself and saying no to people. This was especially present during my childhood and my early teen years (11-15). I have been a victim of multiple sexual encounters that I did not want. Every time they’d happen though, I would immediately freeze and lock up. To cope, I would resort to self harm or avoiding the abuser in any way I could. I have heard that avoidance is super common with victims and their abusers, especially if they are made aware later that what the abuser did was wrong. There were so many times that I never said no, I never said anything. I always felt guilty for never saying anything, a guilty conscious mind was my greatest enemy, it still is. There is a huge gap in my childhood that I cannot remember, I’m not sure if it’s due to trauma or anything. As a summary, I have been put into the habit of never saying anything, even if I’m incredibly uncomfortable with it. Even if I knew it probably wasn’t okay, but I felt defenseless, I was a kid. I am trying my hardest to do what I couldn’t do as a child, even if it feels impossible, like a permanent lump in my throat and a pit in my stomach, I know it’s best to let someone know now. The difference is, I’m not scared of who I am with now, nor the people I surround myself with. I can tell them if I feel scared or threatened, which is still something I have to adjust to. Thank you for reading. This is the briefest way for me to put it honestly, if there was a way for me to go into full grave detail, then I would.

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    #1259

    I met him when I was 14 he was 19. My mom introduced us. He did things for me no one had ever done before so I thought he loved me. We were still together when I was 16 and that’s when I had sex with him for the first time. It felt really uncomfortable and I didn’t like it. He was upset but it was really fast and had no meaning to it. For my first time it was a terrible experience. I had been SA’d as a child so now it makes sense why it was uncomfortable back then it did not. We got married when I was 17, it wasn’t until we were married he became physically abusive. He was abusive before it was emotional something I knew nothing about. I was 18 and we were married with one child we had just moved and we were sleeping on the floor. He worked 2nd shift and I wasn’t feeling good and he wanted to have sex I didn’t not. He told me if I didn’t he was going to rape me. I can remember small pieces but mostly the after not the during. I had on a white shirt with a few buttons towards the top it was v neck with lace and red roses. He ripped the shirt. I remember him putting on his belt after and leaving and I got up and was standing in the mirror no pants on just staring at myself. It was a long mirror on the closet door. When it comes to mind it’s like I stood there forever as if I’m still standing there and never left. After that anytime he’d ask for sex I’d give in a “let him” for 25 years this happened. Mostly I’d try and fight him off but I’d give up and was thinking I wanted it only understanding today I was in fight then freeze mode I was appeasing him whatever I needed to do so he’d never rape me again. I also thought I let me but I suppose the idea of him raping me sounded worse than just “letting him” do it. I didn’t want to be raped but I was over and over again for a really long time and the more I fought him the worse he’d be to me. Sometimes instead of physical abuse he’d use hurtful words I had once told him how someone saying mean things to me hurt more than hitting me. I only remembered this yesterday. I’m going thru a divorce with him and the lawyer said the judge might say I lived with him and went back and yes I did and I thought but how do you argue I didn’t want to be there the entire even though I was. Then today I realized I was surviving and the more I fought him the more he hurt me so I’d stop fighting when it got to be too much and I shutdown. My memory is slowly coming back and I’ve learned it’s possible to rewire your brain but it’s really hard. I had no control but as long as I agreed I gained some control over not being raped again.

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