Transforming abuse survivors into thrivers
When I was finally out of an abusive relationship, after attempting to leave and thinking about leaving literally every day for years, I thought I left the topic behind me forever. I never wanted to think about it, read about it, write about it, and I most certainly didn’t want to treat it. I wasn’t a victim. I survived, I freed myself, and I found my strength. As my therapist at the time said, “You must leave and never go back.”
But that wasn’t the whole story.
The truth was that I was ashamed of having been abused. In my fear and ignorance, I told myself that I’m college educated, a feminist. A professional in the field of clinical psychology. What’s more, I was afraid that if I admitted I’d been a victim, that I would be victimized again. The only people with whom I shared my story were other survivors. With them, my shame drifted away like smoke. Their eyes saw into my soul, and mine into theirs. We are an underground sisterhood I’d never expected to find but which gives me the courage to put this content out into the world. As we all know, hell is the person you love dedicating their lives to destroying you mind, body, and spirit.
I’m an abuse survivor.
Now that’s a sentence I never thought I’d publish on the Internet. Even though I never wanted anything to do with abuse again, I discovered I couldn’t outrun it. Other survivors found their way into my life, into my home, into my closest circle of friends. And how I thought I could avoid the topic in my work…I have to laugh at my hubris and naivete. I’m not a numbers person, but after practicing psychotherapy for more than a decade now, I’d estimate that 3/4 of my clients are now or have been in abusive relationships. Whether it’s physical abuse, verbal, emotional, and psychological abuse, sexual and financial exploitation, or narcissistic abuse. The damage done to their lives and beyond creates a butterfly effect we can’t even calculate. Simply put, there is a war against women in this world that shows no signs of slowing, and is barely acknowledged. We are held hostage in our own homes, pinioned under the oppressive weight of coercive control. Our greatest enemy is...the person who is supposed to love us. That fact alone rends our hearts, and we spend untold years putting back the pieces while trying to earn a living, care for children, restore our mental and physical health, and love again, let alone thrive.
Do you think I’m exaggerating? Consider this: Why don’t women talk about their abuse more publicly? Why don’t they ask for help when they’re being abused? How do they end up with abusers in the first place? Why don’t they just leave?
Because we are often not believed, even if we do. We are often not protected by law enforcement and the legal system, even if we do. Every person who does not believe an abuse survivor, gaslights her further. Sometimes that's more traumatic than the relationship itself. And guess what? I never met an abuser I didn't like at first blush. You read that right. They are some of the most charming, charismatic people you'll ever meet. In fact, many of them are so manipulative, that even their victims don't know they're being abused.
My intention for this online space is for it to be a vehicle
for healing. Because I was lucky enough to get out and to survive, I want to
share everything I’ve learned about abuse and how to recover from it. I believe
that to be a considerable vault of knowledge, and I’m learning more every day
from fellow survivors, my clients, experts, allies, and the compassionate souls
who support survivors. Because the damage done by abusers has to be undone,
every day, in ways both large and small. It’s an experience that never leaves
you entirely, but nonetheless, doesn’t have to define you.
You can heal. Your story matters. You are valuable. I've not only been there, I've walked alongside many brave people of all genders as they fought like the warriors they are to heal their broken hearts and spirits. I'm with you in the struggle. Don't give up.
Korina Jochim
LMFT