Speaking as a victim of child molestation, yes it can go away. Mine happened 20 years ago. I was a pre teen. My brothers were teenagers (two committed separate acts - one over a number of years).
They repented. They regret what they did. They’d change the past if they could.
I forgave them and I moved on. I’m not going to hold a mistake they made as young teenagers against them for the rest of their lives. It took therapy (I did end up with some serious mental health issues - probably this and severe neglect from parents was to blame) and healing which can only come from God. Forgiving my brothers is one of the best things I’ve ever done - for me. The hate I carried around for so many years just ate at me. Been at peace with what happened and with them is a much more pleasant way to live.
I think it is a true crime against victims to tell them they can’t move on. It tells them they have to be victims for the rest of their lives. Every time I hear a new case about sexual abuse that happened 50/40/3/20 years ago “ruining my life” I want to shake the woman. The man didn’t ruin her life. She ruined her life because she let the abuse be such a defining characteristic of it. It also goes against Christianity. We are told to forgive. We’re not told to forgive ‘if it’s easy’. There is no qualifier. We are to forgive, full stop. I believe that is as much for our own benefit as it is the benefit of those who sinned against us. Carrying the sins others have committed against us around our entire lives, never letting go, the anger and the hate… it ruins ones life. I know. I’ve been there.
I also think it incredibly unfair to label a man as a sex offender for his entire life because of a mistake he made as a child. 13 is a child. Children make mistakes. They don’t understand right and wrong the same way an adult does. I imagine this is especially true around sexual behaviour if what is and isn’t appropriate isn’t discussed with them - in those scenarios they’re left to try and determine it themselves. Made more difficult given the highly sexualized society we have. I believe that is what happened in my brothers cases. Once they realised why what they did was wrong, they both regretted it intensely.
I am sorry you haven’t been able to move on. You are wrong to assume that just because you haven’t yet means that no body can however. Plenty of women do. We just don’t talk about it non stop because there is no need. It’s over. I hope and pray that one day you can move on. The peace that comes with it is priceless.
edit for clarity: By ‘moving on’ I mean making peace with what happened. Forgiving the guilty and the abuse no longer itself no longer been an issue any more. I don’t think about the abuse, about the guilty in terms of the abuse or what I go through in terms of the abuse. There may be things that have to be dealt with as a result of the abuse, but the concern is those issues specifically - the abuse itself is a non-issue.
First of all, my abuser was a grown *** man. He was my best friend/next door neighbor’s step-dad. He knew what the hell he was doing. He not only molested me, he molested her too. Oh, and since there was no physical evidence, since we were both frightened children (I didn’t even know what “being molested” meant when this happened to me) and didn’t tell until YEARS later they were going to put 12/13 year old girls on the stand in front of that SOB.
13 year olds DO know right from wrong. Kids start going to confession around 7. A 13 year old knows that you don’t touch people in private places. Stop making excuses for your brother. Making excuses for abuse is similar to Stockholm Syndrome, where hostages are empathic to their captors.
I am not going against Christianity when I am touched a certain way my mind goes back to what happened, or even being touched to be woken up puts me in a panic. Because that is what happened, I was woken up as an 8 year old little girl being touched by a man that was like a father to me.
I don’t wish him ill. I don’t want him to burn in hell. I’m not going against Christianity just because it pops in my mind occasionally and it makes me uncomfortable.
It isn’t like I go around talking about it, however, it doesn’t just go away. And no victim should live with their abuser, ever. Like these girls had to do. Their parents knew and just swept it under the rug. Disgusting.
Abuse IS the issue. I wouldn’t have this problem if I wasn’t abused. I have talked to mental health professionals and I go to the psychologist regularly, I have been assured that my feelings are normal and no, we don’t talk about it every time I go, just so you know. It was an abhorrent thing to happen to someone. I didn’t choose this. I didn’t ask for it. I didn’t ruin my damn life.
And you to have the audacity to say that I am wrong and going against Christianity makes me want to come through this computer and show you what “going against Christianity” is. :stretcher:
Forgiveness doesn’t mean the scars go away or your mind forgets it.