Sexual Abuse & Trauma
Merin* comes from a loving, stable Christian home. Her friends dote on her and her church loves her. None would have imagined that a girl from a safe family could experience the depth of trauma she had endured. While in college, she fell in love with a man who indicated faith in Christ. He was devoted to her and over a period of a year got acquainted with her and each other’s friends and family. Once he won her trust and devotion, the sexual abuse began. On the pretext of caring for her, he would frequently corner her in dark alleys and taxis and seek sexual favours from her. Merin was deeply wounded but since she considered the relationship consensual, she would give in to keep peace and maintain the friendship. Yet deep inside herself, she was cracking. She felt invaded, tormented, hurt, and trapped in a dark hole. Her boyfriend slowly began to gain control over her body and mind, threatening punishment, cussing, and verbally assaulting her for non-conformance. The sexual abuse including verbal and emotional abuse continued for nearly a year after which, she mustered up the courage to break up the relationship. But the pain was far from over. Her deepest fears came alive. Being a charismatic personality, he won the favour of friends and carefully crafted a narrative that made him look like the messiah, and her the witch in the equation. Slowly her friends maligned her good reputation and alienated her. She felt choked and help seemed distant. Public and private places alike became torture chambers. Soon, the demons outside invaded her sleep as well -nightmares of sexual abuse and assault impregnated her sleep, following which she developed panic attacks. Sleep left her, she despised food and of life itself. She felt the only way to end this torturous cycle was to end her existence, but her attempts were in vain. It was at this time that she decided to seek help outside her circle through biblical counseling.
In biblical counseling, we worked together on first separating the true and false guilt by helping her see that what she went through was not a consensual relationship but sexual abuse. Part of the agony of her trauma was that she saw herself equally responsible and guilty of the sexual sins, and that cycle of thinking trapped her with no path of escape. Secondly, Merin began to see that traumatic events left an imprint on her body and her brain to remain on high alert at all times. The brain trusts no one and keeps crying foul even when there is no wolf. “Protect, danger, cover!”, on and on, the brain’s alarm kept ringing, invading even her sleep and life routine. Hence the constant state of fear and panic. We worked through inner man and outer man patterns that kept her in the cycle of trauma and worked to break that cycle. Thirdly, we worked through God’s sure and steadfast love for her as a child of God, and how this loving Father fiercely safeguards and protects His children, even in the midst of evil. We also looked at how God works in and through all the evil that happens in our life and why God permits such evil. Merin had to work everyday and every moment on her real and unreal fears, tracking their source and fighting her patterns through faith in God. Within a few weeks, Merin began experiencing the healing grace of her Heavenly Father. She still struggles, still wrestles, but she has found a safe place in God from where she can wage her battles. Some like Merin heal faster, for some others the healing is slow and works in trickles. Yet in Christ, we can experience substantial healing and hope especially from sexual abuse and trauma. Read Merin’s own words of her journey so far:-