The Mercury News Weekend

Healing from childhood trauma

- AskAmy Amy Dickinson Contact Amy Dickinson via email at askamy@ amydickins­on.com.

DEARAMY » I was a victim of sexual abuse, starting when I was 4 years old. I was first raped when I was 7. As a result, I (to my frustratio­n and shame) became very promiscuou­s as a young teen and into adulthood. I have allowed myself to be abused physically, emotionall­y and sexually my entire life.

I have battled drug addiction and shame for, first, what was done to me, and then because of my shame at my own behaviors afterward. I am following a much better path now. I’m 36 and have lost so much of my life. At one point, I tried to kill myself.

I know how terrible it all sounds. If I were to listen to my story from anyone else, my heart would break for them. But for myself, I am impatient and frustrated with how I have wasted my life. How do I forgive myself? — Trying to Mend DEARTRYING » For survivors of abuse, certainly at the scale you experience­d, shame, guilt and anger are the primary emotions you would access. This is be- cause your childhood was stolen from you, and your emotional developmen­t was arrested before it was even formed.

You are experienci­ng many of the signs and symptoms of childhood sexual trauma.

The abuse was not your fault. Repeat this until you believe it, and for the rest of your life. You were exploited and then not protected by the adults who were supposed to protect you. You should receive profession­al help from a counselor with an expertise in dealing with adult survivors.

The Wings Foundation serves to connect adult survivors of childhood abuse with therapists and support groups. Check its website at wingsfound.org. DEARAMY » I am 22 years old. My fiance is 51. We are very happy together and have a nice life. Years ago, I moved out of my parents’ house. For the first few months after I moved out, my mother was vile. She commented about my weight and my tattoos (that I got after moving out), and attacked my boyfriend. I blocked her numbers.

My grandmothe­r was sort of caught in the middle, and while she was on my side, she eventually stopped even mentioning me when she would speak to my mother.

Recently my grandmothe­r was in the hospital, and my mother and I were finally in the same room together. Since then she has not contacted me. I believe she doesn’t want to have a relationsh­ip with me, unless I leave my boyfriend.

What can I do to make my mother accept my decision and want to have a relationsh­ip with me? — Motherless DEARMOTHER­LESS » If you want to have a relationsh­ip with your mother, write to her and say so. Let your father be a go-between. Yes, you two should meet in a public location. Given your history with your mother, any relationsh­ip with her will start out rocky — and it may stay that way. But relationsh­ips are built with small steps, and one of you has to take the first one.

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