When a Child Tells About Sexual Abuse
- How Should I Respond to the Child?
- What Should I Do after a Child Tells?
- How Can I Better Understand What My Child is Going Through?
- Possible Reactions of Non-Offending Parents and Caring Adults
- Is the Child Telling Me the Truth?
- What Might the Person Who Has Offended Be Thinking or Feeling after a Disclosure?
Following a disclosure, reactions can vary greatly for non-offending parents and other protective adults. You may feel surprised by some of your thoughts and feelings and might find it difficult to share them with others. Below are some of the feelings that many parents and caring adults experience after receiving a disclosure of sexual abuse from a child.
Fear & Denial
- Hope that it would just stop.
- Denial that it could have ever happened. Doubting the child.
- Fear for the child’s ability to recover.
- Fear for the future and consequences for the person who has abused the child.
- Feelings of reluctance to involve CPS or Police.
Betrayal & Resentment
- Rage towards the person who has abused this child.
- Anger towards the child for not telling sooner.
- Strong feelings of being betrayed by the person who has abused.
- Sense of being deceived or manipulated (especially if abuse is within the family).
- Resentment towards the person who brought this all to light.
Sadness & Loss
- Disappointment in oneself for not seeing it sooner.
- Insecure feelings about who can be trusted now. Sense of loss.
- Feeling of bewilderment: “Who is this person I thought I knew?”
- Feeling obligated to choose sides -- between the victim and the person abusing.
- Feelings of inadequacy if you are the parent or guardian of this child.
- Sense of extreme isolation and that nobody could ever understand.
Doubt
- Questioning whether the child is telling the truth.
- General feeling of not being able to trust others.
- Doubting your own perceptions of what is safe and what is not.
What should I do next?
Upon hearing a disclosure, adults need an opportunity to share their feelings and reactions with a professional who understands child sexual abuse. Some adults may also need strong support and validation in order to effectively protect the abused child as well as find help for the person who is harming that child. This is all the more crucial if those around the adult don’t believe there is a problem in the first place. Resources that support the necessary changes to keep everybody safe are available in most communities.
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- Recognizing Warning Signs
- Definitions of Child Sexual Abuse
- How Abuse Happens
- Understanding Sexual Behavior in Kids
- Warning Signs in Adults and Children
- Warning Signs of Abuse in Children (Behavioral and Physical)
- Signs an Adult May be At-Risk to Harm a Child
- Behaviors to Watch Out for When Adults are with Children
- How Can I Tell if My Child Has Been Sexually Abused?
- Warning Signs a Young Person May Be a Target of Online Sexual Abuse
- Warning Signs of Someone's Dangerous or Illegal Online Activity
- Prevention and Safety
- Talking About It
- Finding the Courage to Speak Up
- Speaking to Someone with a Sexual Behavior Problem
- When a Child Tells About Sexual Abuse
- How Should I Respond to the Child?
- What Should I Do after a Child Tells?
- How Can I Better Understand What My Child is Going Through?
- Possible Reactions of Non-Offending Parents and Caring Adults
- Is the Child Telling Me the Truth?
- What Might the Person Who Has Offended Be Thinking or Feeling after a Disclosure?
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