Posts tagged sexual abuse

THE SURVIVOR STORIES PROJECT 2016: Taylor Amell, 38, USA

The Pixel Project is proud to present our third annual Survivor Stories Blog Interview Project in honour of Mother’s Day 2016. The annual campaign runs throughout the month of May 2016 and features an interview per day with a survivor of any form of violence against women (VAW) including domestic violence, rape, sexual assault, female genital mutilation, forced/child marriage, sex trafficking, breast ironing etc. A total of 31 VAW survivor stories will be featured. This campaign was created to provide:

  • VAW survivors a platform to share their stories and solutions/ideas on how they rebuilt their lives and healed/are healing.
  • Girls and women currently experiencing or who have survived VAW ideas, hope, and inspiration to escape the violence and know that there is light at the tunnel and there is help out there.

Our eleventh 2016 Survivor Stories interview is with Taylor Amell from the USA.

TRIGGER WARNING: The first two Q&As in this interview may be distressing for some Domestic Violence survivors.

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The Survivor Bio:

Taylor is a survivor of child and adult domestic abuse who currently works in the early childhood and special needs fields. She is currently studying to for her bachelor’s degree in early childhood leadership while working at an early childhood education centre that services the low-income, homeless or domestic shelter population of Green Bay, Wisconsin, USA. Taylor also works as support staff at The Rainbow House Domestic Abuse Shelter in Marinette, Wisconsin and is proud to be employed by the agency that supported her through the years. Taylor is also the single parent to three amazing children and currently enjoys first-time home ownership.

Taylor Amell 21. What is your personal experience with gender-based violence?

I was born expected to be a boy, hence the name Taylor. My mother never forgave me for being a girl. In her eyes, boys were safe from the reaches of domestic violence. My father molested my step-sisters and me, and when our mother wouldn’t kick him out, my sisters turned their hurt and anger on me. I was found by Child Protective Services and after a few weeks in the neonatal intensive-care unit I began my journey through the foster care system.

In my new foster home, love was disguised as sexual abuse from the father figure, followed by physical and mental abuse from the mother who said I was ‘a slut like my mother’. When I was able to work outside of the home, I jumped at the chance. When my manager molested me in the break room, I was blamed for making up the story by my ‘new family’.

After promiscuous and self-injurious behaviour, I found my future husband and thought I had finally escaped but, prompted by my birth and foster families, plus his escalating drug and alcohol abuse, I became his personal punching bag too. Marital rape and physical abuse can’t compare to the mental abuse he inflicted on me over the next decade.

 

2. How did you escape the violent situation/relationship/ritual?

I would love to say that I picked up my belongings and left. Wouldn’t that be satisfying and triumphant? The reality is I was kicked out by my husband along with my children as he changed the locks and filed for a divorce for the third time. The only difference was this time I chose not to go back.

My children and I stayed on a friend’s couch and were tormented by my husband’s stalking and violent behaviour to the point this family no longer speaks to us; the trauma was just too much to bear.

It took until I didn’t care if I lived or if I died anymore. Whatever the outcome, I made a small decision to stay away for good.

 

3. How did you heal and rebuild your life after the violent situation/relationship/ritual? What actions did you take?

If someone had told me how long it would take to rebuild, the mistakes I would make, the trauma I would endure by his using the courts and the system to torment me, the cost of watching him abuse my children and torture my pets, I don’t think I would have had the strength to bear it.

I survived hour by hour, day by day, month by month with help from my advocate who stayed true to me for more than 14 years.

I started small – got an apartment, got new belongings, found people who would employ me, walked to work until I could afford to drive, volunteered, went to counselling, went back to school, tackled the courts, watched my children fall apart and rebuild themselves, went back to counselling and learned to love and care for myself.

It’s still a work in progress. But now I am working hard to advocate for other families in crisis and to further my education. But most of all I now am thriving and living life to the fullest!

 

4. What would you suggest to or share with another woman or girl facing the same situation as you did?

Choose to believe you are worth more than you are receiving. Choose to speak up and don’t be ashamed to ask for help. Don’t let anyone tell you what to do; own your own victories and mistakes.

Be kind to yourself yet firm. Be alone for a long time and find yourself again, find your spark. Don’t believe in anything less.

 

5. How do you think we can end violence against women?

By bravely telling our stories! By educating ourselves on violence and respect in all relationships. By helping others instead of believing the myths that exist about victim-blaming and abuse. By abstaining from violent and pornographic images and music of women, men, and children. By choosing peace.

 

6. Why do you support The Pixel Project?

Because when you tell stories like this then all of that abuse that I and others endured, all of the nightmares, all of the lost hope was not in vain. My suffering and the suffering of others can reach into the hearts of others – and this way we help others who are lost in the darkness even as we speak.

Also, I find it so encouraging to see how The Pixel Project truly reaches this generation where they are, with men and women included in the fight to raise awareness. There are so many issues that are all interconnected with each other, and all need us to have the courage to speak up and not be silent.

After all, it is our connectedness and our voices that scare our abusers the most, as any survivor can agree with!

THE SURVIVOR STORIES PROJECT 2016: Carrie Blake, 43, USA

The Pixel Project is proud to present our third annual Survivor Stories Blog Interview Project in honour of Mother’s Day 2016. The annual campaign runs throughout the month of May 2016 and features an interview per day with a survivor of any form of violence against women (VAW) including domestic violence, rape, sexual assault, female genital mutilation, forced/child marriage, sex trafficking, breast ironing etc. A total of 31 VAW survivor stories will be featured. This campaign was created to provide:

  • VAW survivors a platform to share their stories and solutions/ideas on how they rebuilt their lives and healed/are healing.
  • Girls and women currently experiencing or who have survived VAW ideas, hope, and inspiration to escape the violence and know that there is light at the tunnel and there is help out there.

Our eighth 2016 Survivor Stories interview is with Carrie Blake from the USA.

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The Survivor Bio:

Carrie Blake is a veteran public school teacher; 18 years of her career have been at a Title 1, ethnically diverse, low-income site. For the last three years she has been a public speaker and advocate for SAVE, the organisation that helped her and her children deal with the ramifications of her ex-husband’s domestic violence. She is also the only survivor/civilian member of the Alameda County Family Violence Council. She currently holds two master’s degrees, and is looking to earn her doctorate in the next five years. Carrie has two teenage children, a dog, and loves to be outdoors whenever possible. When she’s at home, she loves making folk art. She currently resides in the East Bay of the San Francisco Bay Area.

Carrie Blake_Cropped21. What is your personal experience with gender-based violence?

I was married for twelve years to a man who abused me and our children in every way. He was physically, emotionally, verbally, mentally, financially, and geographically abusive. He also became a drug addict. Eight years after we had separated, our daughter disclosed that he had molested her as well.

I have had over 400 court filings with him, been in court over 45 times, and have spent the better half of the last twenty years protecting myself and our children from him.

 

2. How did you escape the violent situation/relationship/ritual?

My abuser told me that I needed to get counselling because I was the one with the problems.

When I sought the advice of our pastor at the time, having gone to couples counselling before to no avail, she told me to leave immediately before he killed me and/or our kids. So I sought shelter with friends and the organisation SAVE.

SAVE helped me with the legal side of leaving him safely. Eight years after that, SAVE helped me to protect my kids a second time when my daughter disclosed her father’s abuse to her.

 

3. How did you heal and rebuild your life after the violent situation/relationship/ritual? What actions did you take?

It took 12 years of family, individual, and crisis counselling, the support of SAVE, as well as a strong family support system and sheltering community to help us heal.

Additionally, I put myself through a second master’s programme in forensic psychology. The programme helped provide the educational research and theory that helped me contextualise and understand what the three of us had gone through. It also helped me figure out the best way to heal us and be able to help those around us.

Telling my story at SAVE’s Annual Fundraiser Breakfast was also a key turning point for me as it helped me feel empowered to own my story and help others.

 

4. What would you suggest to or share with another woman or girl facing the same situation as you did?

No matter who tells you to leave your abuser, only you can make the final decision.

However, please know that no matter what he or she tells you, you are NOT the reason that they hurt you. THEY are the reason that they hurt you. You will never “save” them, or “train” them, or “love” them enough to reverse their violence.

You need to understand that in most cases, the most important thing you can do is to remove yourself from the situation and separate your life from your abuser’s as much as possible. And don’t try to do any of that alone – surround yourself with knowledgeable and strong people who can truly help you keep every aspect of your life safe.

 

5. How do you think we can end violence against women?

We need to not only teach women about their worth, but we need to educate men to value and respect women as well. It is not enough to empower women, we need to educate men to value the empowerment of women as well.

Sexism and violence against women is deeply ingrained in the blueprint of our culture. It’s not just going to go away on its own. Retraining has to be a paradigm shift from the inside out, and from the top down.

 

6. Why do you support The Pixel Project?

The Pixel Project seems to take their advocacy seriously and any organisation that brings awareness to and sheds light on the topics of domestic violence and sexual assault is an invaluable organisation to me. This is because domestic violence and sexual assault are the silent hidden crimes that need to be addressed directly and purposefully.

THE SURVIVOR STORIES PROJECT 2016: Palesa Mompe, 36, South Africa

The Pixel Project is proud to present our third annual Survivor Stories Blog Interview Project in honour of Mother’s Day 2016. The annual campaign runs throughout the month of May 2016 and features an interview per day with a survivor of any form of violence against women (VAW) including domestic violence, rape, sexual assault, female genital mutilation, forced/child marriage, sex trafficking, breast ironing etc. A total of 31 VAW survivor stories will be featured. This campaign was created to provide:

  • VAW survivors a platform to share their stories and solutions/ideas on how they rebuilt their lives and healed/are healing.
  • Girls and women currently experiencing or who have survived VAW ideas, hope, and inspiration to escape the violence and know that there is light at the tunnel and there is help out there.

Our seventh 2016 Survivor Stories interview, in partnership with CLIMB,  is with Palesa Mompe from South Africa.

TRIGGER WARNING: The first two Q&As in this interview may be distressing for some Rape and Sexual Assault survivors.

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The Survivor Bio:

Palesa Mompe retired from the corporate world after 11 years to pursue youth and community development work. She is actively involved in transforming young people to new thinking where they can explore a different view of themselves and their realities. She spends her time working as a facilitator and coach with NGOs that aim to promote health on a social and economic level. To ground herself, she enjoys hiking, outdoor activities and spending time with her daughter and family.

Palesa Mompei1. What is your personal experience with gender-based violence?

I was born to a young mother and raised by my grandmother. Like all children in the neighbourhood, I was sent out to play in the streets. A molester lured me to his house: I remember afternoons with 5 or 6 other little girls and sweets to distract us. One by one, we would eventually get called into his bedroom. We were too young to understand what was going on and I thought it was okay.

I was 7 when my father, whom I did not know, passed away and I was taken to live with his parents. There, a family friend molested me until I was 12. I was silenced by my fear, shame and confusion. All this trauma was locked in and I could not recall it for years. I switched off by diving into the fantasies that came with books.

When I was 18, someone very close to me was gang-raped in my presence whilst she was 7 months pregnant. This incident triggered a lot of unhealthy symptoms: I was moody, angry, and anxious. There was no one to talk to, since I was sworn to secrecy. I fought to avoid recalling the images and did what I could to keep moving: disappearing from home for days; getting drunk and making many friends in order to avoid feeling this unexplained and untreated void. Needless to say, my school work suffered greatly.

 

2. How did you escape the violent situation/relationship/ritual?

My first abuse stopped because I was sent to live with my paternal grandparents. My second one ended when my abuser moved away. As a child I was glad because I did not have the courage to stand up against my perpetrators. I was humiliated and ashamed and that stayed with me throughout my growing years. I went through life fearful of everything and everyone, suspicious of people and never allowed people to get too close to me.

In my twenties, after much impulsive and destructive behaviour, which included a suicide attempt, I tried reaching out for help and realised that another root of my emotional dysfunctionality was my mother whom I held accountable for my abuse because of her absence in my life. I realised my inability to stay in relationships was linked to the anger I felt towards my mother. Working and learning to forgive her instead of harassing her for answers and explanations as to why she had abandoned me was my first breakthrough. It gave me an opportunity to run back and search for inner love.

 

3. How did you heal and rebuild your life after the violent situation/relationship/ritual? What actions did you take?

In my early twenties I was easily overwhelmed emotionally and did not know how to handle relationships. On a drive to Eastern Cape, I had a horrible flashback of myself as a young child on my knees in some man’s room. That was how I remembered that I was a victim of sexual abuse throughout my childhood.

I booked myself into a psychiatric hospital. For the first month I was on heavy medication. I was then introduced to mindfulness, which reconnected me to the world and to myself. I was also introduced to programmes like Dialectic Behavioural Therapy and distress tolerance, which helped me manage my anxiety and my life.

Speaking out was never easy but talking was like giving myself permission to breakdown and mourn the girl who was still left behind and scared. This required me to acknowledge and accept that I was abused in order to rebuild what was broken in me. My breakdown was much needed for me to unlearn a lot that was not working for me. It also gave me courage to share my story. I began working with other causes fighting violence against women such as CLIMB. At 35, there are still flashbacks, but the difference is that I am now empowered.

 

4. What would you suggest to or share with another woman or girl facing the same situation as you did?

I would like women to remember that no matter the circumstances of the abuse, we never ask nor do we deserve the violation and humiliation that comes with abuse. It is critical to find our voice because silence is a way of allowing the perpetrator to silence us. We give power to them and increase myths such as victim-blaming.

We need to keep talking, to find someone to tell – tell and tell until someone listens. It is important and there are people out there who want to know about what is happening to you and are there to hear you. You do matter, you are important. You have an equal right to be safe and to be treated with respect, and no one has the right to infringe upon that.

 

5. How do you think we can end violence against women?

Violence against women (VAW) is so prevalent in all cultures and societies, the statistics and number of reported cases, should inform us that on issues such as these, we simply can’t wait for national campaigns or outreaches to start sensitising people about VAW.

Basic education around gender-based violence needs to be incorporated at entry level in schools/churches, etc. The topic about sex on its own is still very taboo in a lot of communities, making it difficult to think of reporting an incidence of abuse. I find it vital to create friendly platforms to speak out and talk about it.

 

6. Why do you support The Pixel Project?

Because The Pixel Project recognises the seriousness of violence against women as a global issue. The platforms they provide are a means of building a culture free of rape, violence and abuse. It also supports victims of gender-based violence who know that the issue is being talked about and that people are being sensitised. It’s also encouraging to see how other people who have been victims are coming forward, creating greater reach and impact.

THE SURVIVOR STORIES PROJECT: Kelly Wilson, 39, USA

The Pixel Project is proud to present the Survivor Stories Blog Interview Project in honour of Mother’s Day 2014. The project runs throughout the month of May 2014 and features an interview per day with a survivor of any form of violence against women (VAW) including domestic violence, rape, sexual assault, female genital mutilation, forced/child marriage, sex trafficking, breast ironing etc. A total of 31 VAW survivor stories will be featured. This project was created to provide:

  • VAW survivors a platform to share their stories and solutions/ideas on how they rebuilt their lives and healed/are healing.
  • Girls and women currently experiencing or who have survived VAW ideas, hope, and inspiration to escape the violence and know that there is light at the tunnel and there is help out there.

This project is also part of a programme of initiatives held throughout 2014 in support of the Celebrity Male Role Model Pixel Reveal campaign that is in benefit of the National Coalition Against Domestic Violence and The Pixel Project. Donate at just US$1 per pixel to reveal the mystery Celebrity Male Role Models and help raise US$1 million for the cause while raising awareness about the important role men and boys play in ending violence against women in their communities worldwide. Donations begin at just US$10 and you can donate via the Pixel Reveal website here or the Pixel Reveal Razoo donation page here.

Our nineteenth Survivor Stories interview is with Kelly Wilson from the U.S.A.

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The Survivor Bio:

Kelly Wilson is an author, comedian, and survivor of childhood sexual abuse, trying to maintain sanity through laughter. She is the author of Live Cheap & Free and Don’t Punch People in the Junk. Her third book, Caskets From Costco, demonstrates the certainty of hope and healing in an uncertain and painful world through her own story of survival. Kelly Wilson currently writes for a living and lives with her Magically Delicious husband, junk-punching children, dog, cat, and stereotypical minivan in Portland, Oregon. Read more about her at www.wilsonwrites.com.

Kelly-Wilson-headshot-for-Pixel-Project1. What is your personal experience with gender-based violence (this may include domestic violence, rape, sexual assault, female genital mutilation etc)?

I am a survivor of childhood sexual abuse at the hands of my father. Both of my parents were alcoholics and my mother was a classic enabler. When I came forward as a teenager about my abuse, she left my dad, only to take him back a short time later. He eventually left our family, which has since imploded, and the last I heard was that they both continue to blame me for the abuse I experienced.

2. How did you escape the violent situation/relationship/ritual?

When I was 17, my dad left and the rest of my family moved to another state. I lived with a friend’s parents to finish my senior year of high school and was able to get a full-ride scholarship to attend college in Portland, Oregon. This has been my dream and plan for escape since I was 10 years old.

3. How did you heal and rebuild your life after the violent situation/relationship/ritual? What actions did you take?

I went through many years of counseling, which I continue now, as well. I made it through school and read a tonne about surviving and thriving after trauma like this. I wrote my experiences into a book – Caskets From Costco – that I hope will offer enough hope to help others. I practice taking basic care of myself, including taking anti-depressant medication, attending counseling sessions, building a strong support system, eating a balanced diet, sleeping well, and exercising regularly. As I tell my husband, “This is a tonne of work, my friend.”

4. What would you suggest to or share with another woman or girl facing the same situation as you did?

Ask, ask, ask for help until you get what you need. You are strong and capable. You can do this, but you must seek the help you need. Choose hope.

5. How do you think we can end violence against women?

It’s really important for us to stand together against all kinds of violence against women. This allows for support for survivors at any stage of their personal journeys and brings awareness to people around the world about the depth and breadth of this issue. Prevention through education is also key to ending this violence. It’s essential to break through dated cultural and societal traditions, providing victims with options and hope, and perpetrators with possible rehabilitation. Lastly, one of my personal goals is to help end the stigma against mental illness. Because of the perceptions and lack of education about mental illness, people do not seek out the help that they need, which ultimately perpetuates abusive cycles.

6. Why do you support The Pixel Project?

I know personally how hard it is to get out of an abusive situation and how much damage can be done. I, also, know that, as a survivor, I have the power to break the cycle. I have hope and can work toward healing. I want other survivors to understand this, too, and The Pixel Project is helping to make that happen.