Last week I posted two articles related to the Vienna Presbyterian Church in Vienna, Virginia. Between 2001 and 2005, as many as a dozen teenage girls may have suffered sexual, emotional and spiritual abuse from a church youth director. This year, the youth director was long gone, but church leaders felt that the wounds had not be properly addressed and healed. So a few months ago, the pastor and church issued a public apology.
Lawyers for the church’s insurance company warned the church not to accept responsibility for the failings of the youth director. Doing so, the insurance company said, would jeopardize the church’s coverage in case a lawsuit was filed.
The Vienna Presbyterian Church ignored the demands of its insurance company. On March 27, Pastor Peter James preached a sermon that acknowledged the church’s failings.
“Let me speak for a moment to our survivors,” he said. “We, as church leaders, were part of the harm in failing to extend the compassion and mercy that you needed. Some of you felt uncared for, neglected and even blamed in this church. I am truly sorry ”¦ I regret the harm this neglect has caused you.”
Guess what—so far, none of the young women has filed a lawsuit.
Why not? The case would be a slam-dunk. The youth director pleaded guilty to contributing to the delinquency of a minor. The church accepted responsibility. Several of the now young women have trouble in relationships, because they are still seeking the fantasy that the youth director promised. If they filed suit, they’d win.
My guess is that the women don’t want money. They want to be heard. They want to be validated. And they want to be healed.
Invisible damage
The problem with sociopathic entanglements is that so much of the damage is invisible. Even in cases where we lose money, jobs, homes, and are subject to physical violence, the big wounds are not readily apparent. Before all those obvious injuries occurred, the sociopaths softened us up with emotional manipulation, psychological control and spiritual abuse. These internal wounds not only eat at us, but they make it difficult for us to respond to, and recover from, the obvious physical damage.
After the sociopath, we need to purge our emotional and mental pain. We need internal stability. But when we reach out for help on this level, many of the people around us simply don’t get it.
They don’t understand why we need to talk so much about what happened. They don’t understand how, when we suspected that we were being used, we allowed it to continue. They don’t understand why we are still confused in our thoughts and emotions about the sociopath.
Get over it, they tell us.
These are the people, of course, who are lucky enough to have avoided a direct assault from a sociopath in their own lives. We often understand why they don’t really understand what happened—after all, we were once as clueless as they are. Still, their ignorance of the depth of our pain seems to increase our pain. We feel like we are not being heard, and our suffering is being invalidated.
Debriefing
Karin Huffer, in her book, the Legal Abuse Syndrome, describes this situation in detail in her chapter on “Debriefing.”
Debriefing, she says, is the first step in recovery. In the debriefing process, we tell someone exactly what happened to us, in all the painful detail. Unfortunately, it’s hard to find what Huffer describes as “quality listeners.” These are people who have the ability to hear what we have to say, overriding their own protective filters. She writes:
Protective filters are always at work. If an individual begins to share with another and the data threatens the listener’s feelings of safety, they may try to divert the data or simply not hear it at all ”¦
The function of this protective filter is to maintain the equilibrium of the listener. Victims’ stories shake the foundations that we lean upon in order to feel safe. When it is impossible for friends or family to hear, due to their protective psychological filters shielding them from vicarious pain, the victim feels rejected and alone.
Huffer goes on to describe a formal debriefing process. It’s best done with a quality listener or support group, but an individual can do it alone if necessary.
Support at Lovefraud
I believe that we have many, many quality listeners on Lovefraud. I am always amazed at the thoughtful, comforting and patient comments posted in response to readers who are spilling their traumatized guts.
The reason Lovefraud readers can do this, of course, is because we’ve all been there. We know what it’s like to be deceived, betrayed and assaulted. We know what it’s like to sit amidst the wreckage of what was once our lives. We’re all on the path to recovery, and those of us who are further along help those of us who are just beginning.
Healing, in the end, is an individual journey. To fully recover, we must consciously excavate and examine our pain, and find a way to let it go. But the process is helped immensely when we are heard and validated. I am so glad that Lovefraud offers this to so many people.
Hi Onestep. I’m sorry you’re feeling crumby, today. How can I help?
You’d need to be taken for a ride by a non wanted spath, like a boss or a teacher of the last subject you’ve pendig for your degree, to forget about the luuuvely, romaaantic one!
LOL and laughing out on the floor…my arse. I don’t remember the last part 😀
sstiles54 says:
“spathole”!
Love it. ROFL. Best term yet for the creeps.
Hi Kim – my schizophrenic nighbor has been inraveling for awhile, and yesterday he lost it – i was not in immediate physical danger, but it went on and on for hours – threatening notes to neighbors, dumping stuff out his windows, the police, the mental health team being here…then i saw him carting things off into the woods as I sat at my desk looking out the window – random stuff – big rocks, rakes, wood, a big gallon of something…i finally gave up and left the house.
my ptsd is triggered. i cancelled my meetings today. my body aches all over i feel really dull because of all the chemicals the stress released in my body, and my damn ‘stranger danger’ was triggered. should have seen the look i gave the weird guy at the bus stop last night.
i just spent the last few minutes on the phone with the woman i know who deals with stress via supplements and vitamins and we ran through everything i should take. i had already taken most of it, but the magnesium sulfate (inside and out!) is helping with the aches and pains.
i don’t lknow what is happening with this guy – his light was on when i came home late last night and i had thought his mom would have taken him out of here. i work from home, so this is shit. this is the same guy who freaked out over a year ago and they moved him out….then they moved him back in this march. have been watching the weird behavior escalate. i need to know what is going to happen now. one of my neighbors will be here in about an hour and i will ask him. i know that if i call the landlord they won’t tell me shit, because they don’t like me.
To Donna and all my Love Fraud friends:
A song from Grace Griffith, “My Life”
the simple joys and experiences can be the most healing…
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WUG3mc-sQeg
Thank you!!
omg – i just heard the questionable child minder who lives up the street tell the kids to ‘touch with their eyes, not their hands’ as they walk through the woods. god forbid they get some dirt on their hands or break a stick.
oh, and here comes crazy boy -fuuuuck.
Onestep, yeah, I would be triggered too. He sounds very unstable and that makes him scarey. Could you possibly ask the police what is going on? Ask them what you can do to protect yourself?
Kim,
my neighbor will probably know more than the police (as the crazy boy’s parents would have talked to them last night) and he should be home soon. I talked to the police lots yesterday, and they told me what they could and could not do.
I am not so worried about my physical safety – but perhaps i should be. i do have mace. (which is illegal here) andi will carry it and my cordless phone when i step outside. the hard part is getting this shit out of my head. i am well and truly triggered.
I am going to do a few things in the house, until the neighbor comes home and i can talk to him, then i am going to go for a long walk to the water and just breath a bit and take care of myself.
Yeah, what Kim said.
I would think that keeping the police involved with what’s going on with “crazy-boy” would be to your advantage. Especially in the context of asking for advice on protecting yourself from him.