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Your First Steps to Get Help
Howard R. Fradkin, Ph.D., LICDC
Congratulations on finding your way to this site, and having the courage to read about taking your first
steps toward healing. Given that one in 6 men is sexually abused as a child, and many others are abused
and raped as adults, the number of services available to men who have been abused is grossly inadequate.
Because of a number of organizations that have developed in the past two decades, more and more
psychotherapists have been trained, however, when men do come forward, there's still a lack of enough
trained therapists. There are women's rape crisis recovery centers all over the country, however, most of
those places do not treat men. Men can call those places to get referrals, but they don't usually provide
the same kind of services. This website lists a number of specific websites for male survivors, and also
a number of general websites and some specific websites given the type of abuse or abuser. I encourage
you to visit these websites, and learn as much as you can.
My hope is that the help that's been available for women in past decades will become just as available
for men. It's really essential that men have the resources, the help and the support so they can heal
just as effectively as women have learned to do.
First Steps for a Man Who's Ready to Talk About His Abuse:
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Give yourself a big applause daily. It takes a lot of courage to do this, and one step at a time,
you absolutely can heal and recover.
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Find somebody to talk to who's safe. That may mean calling a therapist, a mental health center
or local psychological association. There are many types of trained therapists: psychiatrists,
psychologists, social workers, mental health, family, marital, and pastoral counselors, as well as
trained body workers and self defense experts who can help. You can go online to find organizations
that list therapists who are helpful:
1in6
With an emphasis on men finding their own pace, 1in6 helps men educate themselves about sexual abuse,
reflect on their situations, find answers to their questions and explore their options in complete
privacy.
MaleSurvivor
MaleSurvivor is dedicated to preventing, healing and eliminating all forms of sexual victimization of
boys and men through online support, Weekends of Recovery, education, advocacy and activism.
MenThriving
MenThriving is a peer-support resource offered to men who survived sexual abuse in their childhood or
adulthood.
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Attend support groups. The Internet is filled with lots of resources, chat rooms and bulletin
boards where you can go and talk to other men and just listen to other men share their stories.
This is important because men need a community in order to heal. Remember it is fine to just listen
at first, and only share a little at a time. You will feel safer this way, and your safety is very
important as you start and continue to recover.
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Know you're not alone. Know there are other men out there who understand. You're not isolated.
There are other people who are going to understand. Remember those 200 men who stood in the Oprah
audience holding up their childhood picture on November 5th. These men were recruited from many
different national organizations who work to support the healing of men.
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Take your time. Talking about your abuse is a process, and it's really important that you be
very gentle with yourself and take your time and know this is not a race. We can take our time. We can
be compassionate with ourselves. We can learn to be loyal to functionality and disloyal to dysfunction,
which means that men really have to examine the messages that got planted in their heads by their
perpetrators and by usually well-meaning families. Messages like, "You should keep it to yourself.
You have to be strong and powerful. You will hurt others if you tell." You can learn to give yourself
permission to have to be vulnerable.
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Be willing to have feelings in order to heal. It's absolutely possible to heal and to fully
recover. It just takes time, and it's important to have that hope and to keep reaching out for as much
support as you need.
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Learn to breathe, slowly and deeply. There are many books on mindfulness practices, which will
help you feel more in control of your body, mind and soul. Remember you cannot be tense and relaxed
at the same time: it is physiologically impossible.
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Ask for help, and then ask for all the help you need to support you. Remember, men learn they
shouldn't need help; as survivors, we didn't get the help we need. Now, it is essential to have help
from people who have been on the recovery path and have wisdom to share.
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Practice daily affirmations. See some possibilities below. These affirmations are designed to
help you practice being disloyal to the dysfunctional messages you may have learned growing up. Say them
out loud, preferably looking at yourself in a mirror, or say them to someone who cares about you as you
look them in the eyes. Be mindful of whatever feelings arise as you say the affirmation; any feelings
you have are okay, even if you cry. Every tear you cry validates your worth and the worth of the boy
inside you.
10 DAILY AFFIRMATIONS FOR MALE SURVIVORS OF SEXUAL ABUSE
- Recovery is ABSOLUTELY possible and achievable for me.
- I will practice being DISLOYAL to DYSFUNCTION and LOYAL TO FUNCTIONALITY
- I give myself permission to CONNECT to loving, affirmative, strong, sensitive, accepting men and women in my community.
- I release and forgive myself for ANY responsibility I have accepted in the past for my abuse
- My abuser (s) chose to hurt me; I will stop repeating the lie that it "happened" to me.
- SELF COMPASSION is a necessity for my healing and growth.
- I commit to connecting to the boy inside me today so we can play, laugh and experience joy together, even if just for a minute or two.
- I believe deep inside me I possess the ability to face the truth of my abuse and the tools to heal.
- I have the right and the ability to speak the truth of my abuse and deserve to be heard, understood, believed and supported.
- Feeling is healing; as I heal, I am developing the ability to experience a wider and wider range of emotions to enhance my health and connections to others.
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