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Walking Together provides specialized education and training to medical, therapeutic and religious communities on two key aspects of family violence: relationships with and healing for adult survivors of childhood sexual abuse; and female sexual abuse of children.
Workshops
#300 Female Perpetrated Sexual Abuse of Children: The Best Kept Secret
Linda Crockett
Sex offenders are not always male. A growing body of research is revealing that a significant number of children are sexually abused by female caretakers, many of them biological mothers of their victims. Societal idealization of mothers and the identification of women as victims, rather than perpetrators, in public discourse about abuse and within legal and other systems, helps to maintain a blanket of silence in which victims seldom come forward to seek help.
The taboo of talking about female sexual abuse of children exists even among many mental health professionals. In a 1997 study by Bobbie Rosencrans1 of 93 adult survivors of mother-daughter sexual abuse, only 3% had ever told a therapist, despite 81% of them being in therapy. They could talk about male abuse with their therapists, but not the abuse by their mothers. They felt too ashamed; and feared they would not be believed.
This workshop will focus primarily on mother-daughter sexual abuse, but will also include information and discussion on male victims, as well as other female perpetrators in care-taking roles with children.
#301 Working with Adult Survivors of Incest
Linda Crockett
Offering the concept of "accompaniment" as a new paradigm for healing, this workshop offers counselors insight into the delicate and complex dance of relationship with survivors, exploring how such relationships offer transformation and growth to survivors and those who walk with them. Issues such as the role of touch in therapy; bodywork as adjunct; medical treatment roadblocks for survivors; and vicarious traumatization are included in this workshop.
1The Last Secret: Daughters Sexually Abused by Mothers by Bobbie Rosencrans, MSW, Safer Society Press, 1997.
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