The Swimsuit Theory
The “swimsuit theory” is one of the most common ideas about how to approach children about sexual abuse. The idea is that if we tell them not to let anyone touch their “swimsuit areas” –… The Swimsuit Theory
The “swimsuit theory” is one of the most common ideas about how to approach children about sexual abuse. The idea is that if we tell them not to let anyone touch their “swimsuit areas” –… The Swimsuit Theory
All right, the sexual abuse isn’t funny. But this cracked me up: How to Talk to Your Kids About Sexual Abuse By ehow_parenting_writer Rate: (1 Ratings) Child sexual abuse is a serious problem today.… When sexual abuse is funny
Celebrity gossip blogs are an excellent place to addiction-watch. Or abuse-watch. They are full of people acting out, abandoning their kids, getting wasted, and staring vacant-eyed past everyone into a hell only they can see.… Lonely Miley
I was reading a review of Geneen Roth’s “Why Weight?” today and came across the funniest idea. Now, I have’t read this book, so I don’t know what it says or what I think of… Is carrying chocolate crazy?
Zen Habits posted a list of tips for loving our enemies the other day. Actually, it was “loving thy enemy,” which prompted a little discussion in the comments about why it should be “thine” (apparently it’s the difference between “a” and “an”) and prompted me just now to realize what sometimes bothers me about that site: it’s generally phrased as “here’s what you should do,” not “here’s what I do.” The tips are things that the blogger has been doing, but they’re written out in a way that’s prescriptive, rather than descriptive.
It chafes me a little because I’m used to people speaking from their own experiences, because we rarely know what our audiences are already doing, whether what has worked for us will work for them, or whether they’re way ahead of us in some areas. And I think that writing that way cheats us out of sharing a lot of our own experiences. Writing from my own perspective gives me a chance to learn more and process more of them as I go, and to learn that just sharing my life can benefit others. And personally, it helps me get off of the codependent soapbox that I love so much, from which I think that I have to fix everyone’s problems, say everything perfectly, anticipate their objections and knock those out of the ballpark too, and just generally take everyone’s inventories and tell them what to do instead.
So, there were some interesting – and I think very common – objections to the idea of loving our enemies. One person insisted that resentment was good for us and that it’s a “poison that exfoliates our soul”, which didn’t make a lick of sense to me – although the idea of clinging to my resentments sure did. Another shared her experiences with an extremely abusive family, with a sister who is undergoing brain surgery as an eventual result of the addictions caused by that abuse, and with her own ongoing rage around these things. She said, “What if as a result of how you were raised their actions continue to torment you, your siblings as well as themselves?” and shared the pain of her ongoing anger “simmering below the surface” as it ate away at her. I wrote the following reply in comments and wanted to share it here. Forgiving our abusers: is it insane?
The articulate gay blog Towleroad reports that in California this week, one fourteen-year-old shot another, apparently for being gay – although much of what is described sounds like the murdered child would have arrived at… You can’t say “homophobia” without “home”
I just ran across a 2004 article about Amy Winehouse in the Guardian that had a great little… what should we call these moments when the effects of abuse show their faces? It’s like a bump in… Protesting too much
Someone over at the FOOBiverse read this and said, “Finally, someone’s acknowledging that Jim might be depressed!” What interests me is that there’s no recognition from Iris (who knows what his doctor is supposed… Tragic Comics
So, if that last run-in taught me a lot about the components of emotional abuse, I figured that breaking out old emails from confirmed abusers would be even more helpful! The hard part was choosing… Using the abuser’s tools against them