This article deals with themes of child sexual abuse and may be triggering for some readers.
They say the past cannot be changed. To let go, to live in the moment, to look forward.
But what happens when you are struck by a secret so blistering that your past is no longer what it was?
This is the reality one 45-year-old Australian mum-of-two is now facing, when in a single moment, everything Karen* thought she knew about her quiet, happy family life was shattered.
Last year, her 17-year-old daughter Laura* confided in her that she had been sexually abused by a close family friend. She was only eight years old at the time, and her parents had no idea they’d been inviting a “monster” into their home.
All they had was an inkling that something was amiss. But they thought they’d put a halt to it before any real damage was done.
Karen recalls how when Laura was age nine, she scurried into their room, shaking her and her husband awake. She told them she had just woken up to find Andrew* sitting on her bed, shining his phone towards her.
Andrew was one of their oldest friends, and he was visiting from overseas where he was based. The family was putting him up for a few nights on their living room couch.
“My husband and I were in a state of shock, we were trying to work out what possible reason there was for him to be in her room,” Karen tells Mamamia.
When they confronted Andrew that night, he spat out excuse after excuse. He said that he had insomnia. That he couldn’t find his sleeping pills and thought maybe he dropped them in her room. That he thought watching Laura sleep might help him get to sleep himself.
Top Comments
Thanks for sharing this horrible experience your family went through. I hope your daughter and you guys are coming to terms and healing. I am actually terrified to let my daughter go to other people’s houses - she is 9. They might be lovely people but they could have a creepy neighbour, her friend could have a perverted older sibling or family friend. I struggle but let her go but I do because I don’t want to raise her with fear like mine. I talk to my daughter about how grown ups sometimes target kids inappropriately or sexually because they think they can get away with it and frighten the child into not telling anyone. Interestingly, George Pell’s recent case being on the news opened this dialogue. It’s so heartbreaking how often the abuse only comes out years later after years of anguish of a child keeping the secret thinking they are somehow responsible.
Thankyou for sharing this. I am terrified of the stats that abuse is often perpetrated by a known individual. I am currently encouraging my 3 year old daughter to tell ALL the adults in her life if any adult tells her to keep a secret or touches her private or does anything to make her uncomfortable. It is awful that families go through this, but I am grateful they share their stories, so as parents, we can arm ourselves and our children against these monsters.
I have practiced this with both my girls from age 3. As they have gotten older we have talked about good secrets (what my mothers day gift is) and bad secrets (someone touching you or bullying you etc etc).