HealthyPlace.com Abuse Issues Community

abuse issues community

Escaping Hades

Home
My Story
What is Rape/
Sexual Assault
Telling What
Happened
Guilt and Shame
The Side Effects
Who's to Blame
Treatment & Healing
Poetry & Quotations
Self-Defense
Legal Issues
Family & Friends
Tori Amos

back to
abuse issues
community


send this page
to a friend


advertisement

 

advertisement

After Rape:
Putting the Pieces Back Together

Trauma can cause psychological as well as physical pain. Trauma can fracture our integral parts (thinking, feeling, sensing, and behavior).

Rape can affect different parts of your psyche

Here are some of the psychological symptoms of rape trauma that you can experience:

  • Confusion
  • Difficulty sleeping
  • Headaches
  • Increasing fears
  • Overeating
  • Difficulty concentrating
  • Unexplained emotional outbursts
  • Panic attacks
  • Anxiety
  • Depression
  • Palpitations

Why treat rape trauma?

If the trauma causing the above symptoms is not treated, they can worsen and develop into the following patterns and problems:

  • Distressing memories or dreams
  • Loss of interest in what were meaningful activities.
  • Emotional numbing
  • Increased anger feelings
  • Increased health problems
  • Feelings of detachment or separation from others and self
  • Restricted range of emotions, such as inability to have loving feelings

Deciding on Getting Treatment

For many rape victims, it's easy to put off getting treatment because the memory of the event is so painful or so feared that it seems best to avoid it. Some people even deny that the event occurred, or that it bothered them. Unfortunately, evidence and clinical experience show that memories of traumatic events do not just fade away like other more trivial memories.

Traumatic memories stay with you until reprocessed in dreams or in therapy. When dreams are recurrent and interrupted by sleeplessness, they can not serve the function of desensitizing the feared material. Putting off dealing with traumatic memories just makes the work you'll have to do in therapy more complicated and lengthy.

advertisement

Treatment

The treatment of traumatic stress (or Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder) involves re- experiencing the traumatic events. In therapy, y ou should learn from these incident(s) that what you did was probably the best you could have done to survive at the time.

Once traumatic events have been fully re-experienced in this way, they should not re-emerge in dreams or in waking thoughts (flashbacks or intrusive thoughts).

The goal of therapy for traumatic incidents, like rape or sexaul assault, is to desensitize the person to these events. The prognosis for therapy of PTSD is generally favorable without the use of medications. This is especially true if treatment can begin relatively soon after a single traumatic incident. Treatment of chronic or early trauma is more complex, but perhaps even more valuable.

How long will the psychological effects of rape last?

The mental and emotional effects may last a lifetime, but crisis counseling and rape support groups can help reduce long-term effects and help a rape victim cope with feelings of isolation, guilt, depression, or anxiety.

It's important to get emotional and psychological support. Contact a hospital, psychologist, social worker, or rape crisis center to find out about the resources available to you. You may benefit from a rape support group where you can share your feelings with others who have had a similar traumatic experience.

Do not isolate yourself. Allow family members to provide emotional support. There are family counseling programs for family members who need help dealing with their concerns and increasing their ability to provide emotional support.

 

Back to top

Share your story | What is rape/sexual assault | Telling what happened
Guilt & Shame | The side effects | Who's to blame | Treatment & Healing
Poetry & Quotations | Self-defense | Legal issues | Family & Friends
Tori Amos |






advertisement

 

 

{short description of image}

Home to HealthyPlace.com

Chat Forums Communities Healthyplace Radio Support Groups
News
Bookstore Site Events Web Tour
Advertise Email Us

Search HealthyPlace.com

© 2000 HealthyPlace.com, Inc. All rights reserved. Terms of Use Privacy Policy Disclaimer