05.10.09
Protective Mothers that Fight for their Children
This blog article is a tribute to the mothers out there in the world that have spent huge chunks of their lives fighting for the safety / healing of their children. These women are incredible spirits and are an inspiration to us all.
I know mothers who have absolutely gone the distance for their children. These women don’t get thanked often, but I do want to let them know that they are appreciated, recognized and deeply valued.
These mothers do a lot of things right.
- They listen attentively to their children, even if hearing the horror stories of abuse breaks their heart. They want to know what happened, and no matter how hard it is to hear, they listen to every single word.
- These mothers have clearly done a good job building communication with their children even before this point. Children have to know that it is ok to tell – “telling the secret” is often one of the biggest barriers in children getting help from their abuse. The children have to have someone safe to tell, someone they trust, someone that they can rely on to help them. If the mother hasn’t already built that kind of relationship with her children, she has drastically lowered the chances that her children will ever tell her their deepest secrets of abuse. Mothers that are approachable will
- These inspirational mothers do what it takes to protect their children from abusers, including leaving the perpetrator in whatever way is necessary – divorce, moving to another area of the country, going into a shelter, etc.
- They take assertive strong legal action against the perpetrator such as filing a report with child protective services, filing protective orders, pressing charges against the offender.
- They withstand the pressure from other friends and family members who may, for whatever reasons, oppose taking a strong stance against the perpetrator. These mothers know that protecting their children is more important than the approval of family members who want to hide embarrassing issues in the closet.
- These mothers are dedicated to finding helpful resources for their children’s therapy and treatment for sexual abuse. This is not always an easy task, and it might require a great deal of persistence, but these mothers will persist, for as long as it takes.
- These mothers sit with their children as they cry, they comfort their children after nightmares, they let their children cling to them when “being away from mommy” feels too scary. These mothers recognize that their children have been crime victims, that they have PTSD from their abuse, and that their neediness has skyrocketed. Good mothers let it be ok that their children need this extra time and attention to rebuild their emotional security again.
- These mothers are strong for their children, even when their heart is breaking. They get their own personal support system to help with their intense emotions (believe me, being the mother of an abused child is a highly emotional situation), and they find a way, place, and time to talk about their own grief and anger so that they can be present and available for their children.
- These mothers are brave enough to honestly assess the situation, and to look closely at how their children got tangled in an abusive situation. They learn from whatever mistakes were made, and correct them. They think back to see if there were any warning signs or high-risk factors that they missed, and learn how to handle things differently now that they are aware of the abuse. They figure out what to do in the future to keep their children safe from being abused in that particular way ever again.
- These mothers spend hours and hours of time with their children, even if they are acting-out and emotionally distraught from the abuse they suffered. The mothers temper their discipline with deep understanding that their children are acting out of their hurt, fear, pain, anger, etc. These moms realize that their children’s behavioral issues are not about the children being “bad”.
- These mothers provide new and positive activities for their children to help boost their tattered self-esteem and body image. They find recreational activities, or artistic activities, etc that give their children healthy feelings of acceptance, accomplishment, mastery, positive self-worth, creativity, growth, etc.
- Protective mothers will do everything in their power to help their children overcome the long-term negative effects of childhood sexual abuse. They are determined to not leave their children to suffer in silence and isolation. These mothers actively attend their needs, provide comfort, and help their children move forward as healthy, productive members of society.
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Helping children recover from sexual abuse can be a long, difficult process, but if non-offending mothers are not willing to be protective and helpful for their children, the negative affects of the abuse can multiply and worsen through the years. Untreated sexual abuse issues lead to all kinds of additional complicating factors such as addictions, promiscuity, self harm, depression, anxiety, mental health issues, repeated involvement in destructive relationships, angry behavior, destructive behavior, sexual acting out, hospitalizations, additional abuse, dissociative disorders, etc. The cost of untreated sexual abuse truly multiplies exponentially over time.
Mothers that are willing to help and protect their children as close to the injury-point as possible are helping their children in the here-and-now, and creating a permanent and positive effect on their children’s lives. These mothers are also making a positive difference that can have a positive influence on society for years to come.
For those mothers that are willing to protect their children, here are my very best wishes that today is the most wonderful Mother’s Day for you. Thank you, thank you, thank you for helping your children. You truly deserve a good day today!
__________
By:
Kathy Broady LCSW
makesnosense2me said,
May 10, 2009 at 6:01 pm
Thank you so much for this blog on Mothers Day. Needed to see this today.
haberlach said,
May 10, 2009 at 6:28 pm
Thanks, Kathy. This is a great Blog. I hope to be that positive mom in the lives of my children. I think my mom was that mom for me.
marjakathriver said,
May 10, 2009 at 9:17 pm
Bravo! Excellent post. Thanks for sharing this today.
castorgirl said,
May 11, 2009 at 6:57 pm
I realise that these posts were meant to be positive, but all we see is how our mother ticks all the indications of being a bad mother and fails to meet any of the traits of a good mother. Not a particularly nice thing to face.
Take care
Kathy Broady said,
May 11, 2009 at 8:21 pm
Oh Castorgirl,
I’m so sorry… and yes, these posts are positive and/or educational for the mothers out there that do / did / will fight for their children’s safety. Unfortunately not all mothers put in such effort to do so. And then, recognizing how little a parent did, when it was genuinely their responsibility to do something – anything – to protect, well… that is a really painful realization. Yes, it is very hard to face, but maybe it helps you to understand more about why you had to dissociate and split to handle the trauma that happened in your life. If you didn’t get the comfort and support from someone, your mind had even more reason to separate from it. How else could a child manage??? If there was no help, no support, no medical attention, no someone to keep the thinking straight…. well, a young child just can’t manage all that on their own. The abuse scars them so much more…
I’m so sorry…
Kathy
shenison said,
May 12, 2009 at 9:41 am
Thank you for this. Unconditional love is the one thing that could have saved me as a child, and is the thing I have been most diligent about giving my children.
I am writing about my recovery from trauma in my blog at:
http://reunitedselves.blogspot.com/
I have spent the last two years “integrating” different parts of me, learning how to control and handle severe mood swings and panic attacks, and generally healing from the abuse of my childhood. I find it really helpful to read other people’s stories and approaches to healing.
Kathy Broady said,
May 16, 2009 at 1:15 am
Hi Shenison,
Thank you for your comment, and welcome to the DiscussingDissociation blog.
Thanks for sharing the link to your blog. It sounds like you have been doing a whole lot of emotional healing work – good for you. And it is excellent that you have been able to love your children.
And yes, connecting with other survivors, and sitting alongside with them, sharing stories, feeling understood, recognizing each other’s pain — all that is really helpful in the healing process. You certainly are not alone – the best news since the internet has arrived – is that no matter where you live, you don’t have to be alone in your pain anymore. There are other survivors out there that can understand and sit with you.
Have you considered joining a group forum? SurvivorForum is an excellent forum for dissociative trauma survivors. The group works really hard at supporting each other, and because the sections in the Therapeutic Membership sections are private to the members only, there is a good depth of personal sharing that goes on there. Since listening to other survivors is particularly helpful for you, that might be a good option to consider.
I wish you the best in your healing journey – and I hope you come here again and again.
Kathy
shenison said,
June 6, 2009 at 6:34 pm
aha! I checked that I wanted to recieve notifications of comments with my second post and got one for this one, finally! I didn’t see that I could do that before, so I hadn’t seen this comment.
Thank you for reading and all your kind words. I will check out survivorforum right now.
shenison said,
June 6, 2009 at 6:46 pm
Darn it, I tried to register and it said there was an error in sending me the confirmation. Then I tried again and it said there is already a member with that email adress.
Let me know if you have any suggestions. I really wish I could have gotten in to look around. I am struggling today and everyone seems to be away.
Kathy Broady said,
June 6, 2009 at 9:00 pm
Shenison —
It actually did let you register at SF the first time. I don’t know why that silly forum thingy says that error message — it’s driving me nuts and confusing people with it’s ridiculousness !!! But it does take a bit of time for us to manually admit someone after they register — so it’s not an instant process (helps to keep more of those spammers out by doing it that way).
Anyway — the good news is — I’ve activated your registration now, and you are able to see and participate on the Survivor Support side of SurvivorForum. Thanks for joining, and welcome to SF!! It’s a great place to be when you are feeling lonely, and there are people there, and you will certainly be welcomed into the group.
I look forward to reading more of your posts –
Warmly,
Kathy
myangelk said,
November 30, 2009 at 5:10 am
I’m presently & always will be one of these/those mothers. My daughter was recently diagnosed with DID. It was VERY heart wrenching to realize what had happened to her. We sent her to church camp that she wanted to go to…little did I know it would also be the one place her life would change forever. She is 18yrs now, her personalities are just know telling us her story and what happened. She remembers nothing. I’m fighting left and right to get the help she DESERVES and needs. Living in a small community, there just isn’t a lot to offer. So I’m on the phone constantly fighting for her. I can’t imagine not doing this for her. She is my world. I feel very blessed to have her for a daughter. Would I wish something different for her. ABSOLUTELY…together we are learning and the love I have for her grows stronger each day.