Lee Marsh: Abuse Recovery page

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Getting Support   
 
For  many survivors of abuse asking for and getting the support and help they need is a sign of weakness. We are taught from an early age that we shouldbe able to handle things ourselves. Or we think that the people around us should know  what we need and give it to us. These are some of the lessons of the past that we need to change because they no longer help us and even will sabotage our effort to heal.

When I talk about  getting support  I mean letting the people around us who could help know that we need them to listen to us, to hold us, to be there for us, to encourage us, and even to  give us the occasional push in the right direction.

Getting the support we need can also include medical help of counseling or sometimes self-help groups.  It can include reading about the problems we are facing and finding information to help us. Exercise programs, courses, writing, artwork, music, spirituality, meditation, whatever it might be that helps us to focus on dealing with our problems rather than burying them deep inside.

I think too that many of us are scared to let people know what we feel like inside. For us it is such a terrible place and we think that if people know that they will abandon us. Many of us feel dirty, or stupid, or ugly. We feel hopeless and like losers, weak and pathetic.

Sometimes we think that if we tell somebody or write it down, it becomes more real and therefore more painful. And it does. Many are afraid that what we say will be used against us. And sadly sometimes that happens.

The reality is we are trying to resolve problems that were created by others. And many of have spent years during the abuse trying to survive and have spent years since the abuse trying to get on with our lives. And there are those who have been trying for years to get the help they need and not found it.. And mostly we have done that in silence.

As scary as speaking out is, it is the only way out to real healing. We must find ways to put words to experiences and feelings that have never been spoken about. Some of us need to remember what happened before we begin to speak.

I read somewhere that therapy is like having open-heart surgery without the anesthetic
b and we are doing the surgery on ourselves. It’s painful, tedious, and it takes time. Now no surgeon goes in to do open-heart surgery alone. He gets the best team to support him that he can find. If he is going to perform a particular procedure for the first time he does his research thoroughly. He talks to others who have done the surgery. He talks to experts in the field. He checks out the library. He goes in well-prepared. And all the time he is performing the surgery he has other doctors and nurses to help him along the way. He even has someone appointed to wipe his brow or scratch his nose when he needs it.

Well you need a team too. A friend, a partner, a therapist, or other professional. Perhaps a self-help group. An internet discussion forum or chat group. For some even family can be supports although for some that is unrealistic. Read everything you can get your hands on. Use what works for you and ignore the rest.

The same thing that works for one person will not work for another. Each one of us has to find what works for us. We can share ideas and techniques. Some will work and others won’t. Don’t be afraid to experiment. After all the old things don’t work anymore so what do you have to lose.

And you’re here. You’ve started the process by coming here to get information.  Congratulations.





Copyright 1999; 2004: Lee Marsh

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