This is a space where survivors of trauma and abuse share their stories alongside supportive allies. These stories remind us that hope exists even in dark times. You are never alone in your experience. Healing is possible for everyone.
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Firstly, remember you are not alone; there are plenty of people who will listen to you. You may find it hard to trust others because people have been minimising or gaslighting you, but Secondly, get involved in activities outside your home and work. You need to have the kind of social circle you can dip in and out of, where there is no pressure (because you don't have to live with them and you're not depending on them for a job). Mixing with more people will make you more socially aware which, in turn, will help you set healthy boundaries; if anyone makes you feel uncomfortable, you will know. Thirdly, look after your physical health. Get fit. Eat well. Rest. Learn techniques such as yoga.
I find this very healing. I heard about it on radio just this morning, and I thought it was an excellent idea to allow people to publish their stories without going through the stress of a #MeToo declaration or taking court cases which would only re-traumatise us. Moving on with my life has also helped; I have found a new career as the last one was toxic. To really heal, we need to talk about our experiences bit by bit, never letting them overwhelm us. Posting this today is a brick in the wall I'm building up to distance myself from people who breached my sexual boundaries in the past. I love the fact that there's a "safety exit" as a lot of people who use this may be living with people who would not understand or are their abusers (in which case, they need to escape as soon as they can). Just knowing that there are people who came up with this idea is very empowering. Thank you so much.
I was a prudish teenager in the '80s, an introvert who wanted friend but only on my terms (they had to respect my boundaries, and I had many). It was only in my twenties, while I was working with more liberal people, that I made a conscious decision to cast off my old, narrow way of relating to people because my barriers had become walls. So I opened up more, made myself vulnerable...and attracted perverts. Older men, bosses, colleagues and contacts (I worked in industry). I still had enough boundaries to prevent actual rape, but I would not push them away as forcefully; I would make light of it when a man put his hands on my hips or made some inappropriate comment. This went on for years. I had a a few boyfriends in my twenties including one I stayed with for three years and loved (I still love him but don't want a relationship with him and have to keep enforcing psychological boundaries - he was never a sex pest but he wants to be friends and gets upset when I don't want to meet him). Being an introvert, and possibly Aspie (I have yet to find the courage to look for a diagnosis) I have always felt like an outsider, and in relationships always felt as if I was playing at being "sexy". In my forties, the men who breached my sexual boundaries (with inappropriate comments and the occasional arm around me as I sat beside them on a work assignment) were men my own age and slightly younger; I was still attracting men in the same age group: 40s. They would obviously want to take things further, but I would always put up that barrier...and I noticed that after I rebuffed a man I'd lose a work opportunity. I was frozen out of the cliques in my profession (I don't have family in my industry and I did not go to university so I didn't have the underpinning network to fall back on). I dealt with this by developing a tough, jokey exterior; desperate to prove that I was "not a prude", I merged my career with a rather tarty image (I cannot go into details here without possibly revealing who I am or, worse, narrowing it down - which would not be fair to others who might not want their stories told). At first, it actually helped my career and social life; suddenly I was great craic, a youthful looking middle-aged woman who was happy in her own skin, free-spirited - and "great craic". The men who used to flirt with me would also mock-boast "I'm a prude"; they had respectable wives / partners (indeed many of these women were my colleagues). Eventually, it was time for this middle-aged disgrace to be managed out of the industry. It didn't happen all at once; my mentors and good contacts retired or died (these were the people who never abused me). There were various reasons: cutbacks, personality differences, my political views were at odds with my bosses' views, and there were new people looking to fill my role. I adapted by finding a mosaic career, doing a few courses and muddling through. Now I see my former colleagues (the flirts and their partners) getting on with their careers; I am on the outside, looking in. But I was always on the outside. And I have no doubt that my story is very common (a bit like me, some would say!).
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