The New Zealand Herald

Why I’m wary of journo’s campaign

Journalist’s #MeToo initiative raises a few alarm bells

- Deborah Hill Cone

Journalist­s are not therapists. I guess that’s pretty obvious huh? A journalist’s primal motivation is to tell a good story. A therapist’s primal motivation is to safeguard their patient’s wellbeing. I think that’s about right. But maybe this is changing.

Because it seems sending a message to a celebrity is now recommende­d as the way for a vulnerable person to process their trauma.

I just read an interview with Alison Mau, on The Spinoff website, talking about how she has started a public campaign, #MeTooNZ, asking people to contact her with their stories of sexual harassment.

In just a few days, she said, she had had 200 messages from people detailing what she said were sometimes very serious complaints. She described some of them as “heartbreak­ing” and “horrific”.

She said she had found the stories of how harassment or abuse had ruined people’s lives “affecting”.

“They leave their jobs or even their careers. They end up broken. It’s awful.”

Quite a few of the people who had contacted her had never spoken about their situation before and just “wanted to tell somebody in confidence”, Mau said.

It strikes me as a mistake to choose a journalist as the best person to tell anything “in confidence”. Let alone your most traumatic experience.

This is where the roles of journalist and therapist seem to have become a bit confused.

The Spinoff says: “Garnering support from journalist­s and the public alike, #MeTooNZ provides a myriad of ways for people to securely get in touch with Mau and her investigat­ive team, and promises a range of support options once they have reached out.”

I am encouraged that the media organisers say they have “a range of support options”. But what are those exactly? I have a mental picture of therapists standing by in the newsroom, with old dial phones, like a sort of 0900 sexual harassment Telethon, but apparently not.

“If you had somebody who came forward with quite a serious complaint and needed quite immediate help, the sexual assault support services generally work by referral from the police so you can go that way.”

I am not sure what the waiting lists are like for free counsellin­g, but I hope they are not too long and that they will fund proper therapy. I have spent almost four years in twice weekly therapy. Dealing with painful emotions from the past takes time.

There has been some criticism of Mau’s campaign with fears it will be a witchhunt and innocent men, in particular, will have their reputation­s damaged. That is not my focus. I am more concerned right now with the way vulnerable people are being encouraged to exhume their pasts in public.

I respect Mau and I am not questionin­g her sincerity. But I do wonder what training she has in dealing with trauma.

As a journalist, in the course of her job she is likely to have interviewe­d victims of serious crime or natural disasters. But in that role, there are clear protocols which provide some distance and boundaries for the interactio­n.

But when a journalist sets themselves up as an ersatz trauma therapist, I’m not quite sure what rules apply.

For example, Mau admits she has not yet replied to some of the people who have sent her their “horrific” stories.

I am not a therapist, but I do know from personal experience that bringing up long buried traumatic experience­s can set off a cascade of powerful emotions and reactions, even fragmentin­g quite stable people. Reaching out to someone who does not even reply, does not sound very — sorry, overused word — “safe”.

Mau says: “It’ll be the first time that many of those people have had an avenue to speak out.” I would wish for everyone to feel they have a right to speak their truth. But the liberating experience comes from owning it yourself, not reliving your trauma for everyone else’s consumptio­n. I know a bit about this through my own misjudgmen­ts in spilling my guts in this column, in ways that sometimes I have later regretted.

Mau: “I haven’t talked to anybody who is involved in any of these initiative­s who hasn’t said ‘yay, let’s go, let’s get these stories out there in the hope that we can shape some long-term change’.”

That sounds positive, but I can’t help wondering what happens when these “yay let’s go” journalist­s are preparing stories for publicatio­n and the whistleblo­wers change their mind about going public?

Maybe I am worrying for nothing because perhaps in this new media landscape journalist­s are not conflicted. Maybe they are more interested in pursuing social change than getting a scoop. And maybe Janet Malcolm was wrong when she said: “Every journalist who is not too stupid or full of himself to notice what is going on knows that what he does is morally indefensib­le. He is a kind of confidence man, preying on people’s vanity, ignorance, or loneliness, gaining their trust and betraying them without remorse.”

For vulnerable victims of sexual abuse, I hope so.

It strikes me as a mistake to choose a journalist as the best person to tell anything ‘in confidence’.

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 ??  ?? Having the right support available is vital when people are being urged to dig up their past.
Having the right support available is vital when people are being urged to dig up their past.

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