accessing specialized therapy

Questions and discussion about sexual or other abuse or assault, and support and help for survivors.
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This area of the boards is expressly for support and help for those who are currently in or have survived abuse or assault. It is also for those seeking information or discussion about abuse or assault. Please make every effort in this space to be supportive and sensitive. Posts in this area may or do describe abuse or assault explicitly.

This area of the boards is also not an area where those who are themselves abusing anyone or who have abused or assaulted someone may post about doing that or seek support. We are not qualified to provide that kind of help, and that also would make a space like this feel profoundly unsafe for those who are being or who have been abused. If you have both been abused and are abusing, we can only discuss harm done to you: we cannot discuss you yourself doing harm to others. If you are someone engaging in abuse who would like help, you can start by seeking out a mental healthcare provider.
dollparties
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accessing specialized therapy

Unread post by dollparties »

my current partner is encouraging me to seek sexual assault specific therapy following my previous relationship but i feel as if i don't qualify for it despite knowing very clearly that i was raped. i have like... rape impostor syndrome though. i feel as if i made it all up and that i'd be accessing services i don't deserve. am i in the wrong?
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Re: accessing specialized therapy

Unread post by Carly »

Hey dollparties -- if you are in the wrong with anything, I'd say it's thinking that you don't deserve access trauma specific services. <3

Can you walk me through the conflict you're feeling internally? You say you know deeply that you were raped, so what makes you feel like you made it up or you don't qualify? What makes you question the experience?
dollparties
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Re: accessing specialized therapy

Unread post by dollparties »

i think it’s in part a feeling of ‘it wasn’t that bad, so i shouldn’t be in spaces for survivors’. even though my partner insists it Was that bad and consistently tells me it was sickening what happened to me i just feel like it wasn’t bad enough to seek help. even if i get triggered to the point of nausea and suicidal thoughts i feel as if i am just making it up. i don’t feel like i experienced anything ‘that bad’
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Re: accessing specialized therapy

Unread post by Logan W »

Hi dollparties,

I hope it's okay that I'm jumping in here. Firstly, you mentioned suicidal thoughts and I want to share this helpline for you to contact when you are experiencing these thoughts, as your safety is the most important thing: https://talksuicide.ca/

You mention that your partner is insisting that things are bad but I want to ask how you feel about the situation?

I also just want to say that we live in a society that downplays and often minimizes sexual assault. If this is something on your mind, it would be best to seek help and talk to a professional.
dollparties
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Re: accessing specialized therapy

Unread post by dollparties »

absolutely no problem, i appreciate the response. :] i am okay at the moment but when i experience flashbacks it tends to trigger suicidal tboughts so i will definitely bookmark that link, thank you.

i don’t know how i feel. on one hand i know he’s right but on the other hand i don’t want to accept it, i guess? either way, i reached out to the therapy place for a group therapy thing, i don’t feel ready for individual therapy.
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Re: accessing specialized therapy

Unread post by Sam W »

Hi dollparties,

Good on you for reaching out for group therapy! That's a big step when it comes to taking care of yourself.

You know, I actually used to run a group therapy sessions at a rape crisis center, and the feelings you've expressed in this thread are ones I definitely heard from folks in that group. As Logan said, there's still a tendency to downplay or minimize survivor experiences, which leads a lot of survivors to feel as if they're accessing services they don't deserve or that someone else may need more. But, something I noticed in that group was that they never downplayed each other's experiences. They never saw each other as somehow stealing care they themselves needed; instead, they saw each other as deserving of care and support, which they, and you, absolutely are.

I do also want to validate that feeling that seeking support, like therapy, is accepting that someone assaulted you. Because in some ways it is, and that acceptance in and of itself can bring up some big, scary feelings on top of the trauma we're already dealing with. A metaphor I find helpful is actually to think about horror movies; in most horror movies, characters are in denial about what's happening/has happened. Which makes sense, because accepting "oh my god my house is haunted" is pretty intense emotionally. But often, what helps a character survive those experiences is that they accept what's going on sooner rather than later, because that helps them move on to making a plan, or protecting themselves, or whatever else they need to do to survive. Obviously, life is more complicated than a movie, but I find that acceptance often has a similar outcome; it makes it easier to tackle the thing that's harming my well being. Does that make sense?
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Re: accessing specialized therapy

Unread post by dollparties »

in a sense it’s nice to know that i’m not on my own in minimizing my own experiences, i think i was worried that it would be just me.

that metaphor makes a lot of sense, thank you. i have an intake call this coming week and i intend on following through with the group. my partner is really happy that i’m doing this. they also have a group for supporting survivors of sexual assault so i might refer him to that if he’d be willing, i think it would be beneficial. not that he’s not supportive or anything, but it’s always nice to learn i think?
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Re: accessing specialized therapy

Unread post by Heather »

I hope both of these go well for you this week, dollparties!
Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has. - Margaret Mead
dollparties
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Re: accessing specialized therapy

Unread post by dollparties »

thank you very much! i’m really nervous for the intake call as i’m unsure what they’ll ask and what it really entails, so i’m going to have my partner with me as comfort. i just worry it will become triggering or graphic, i guess.
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Re: accessing specialized therapy

Unread post by Jacob »

Hey dollparties,

I just want to add that if you have fears around things being triggering or graphic, that it could help you to bring this up early in the intake call, this itself could be a topic of conversation and any good professional would use it as on opportunity to understand how you're feeling and make the space feel as safe as it can for you.

Well done for thinking this all through!
"In between two tall mountains there's a place they call lonesome.
Don't see why they call it lonesome.
I'm never lonesome when I go there." Connie Converse - Talkin' Like You
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