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by Jerry McMullin Parents can consider themselves lucky when their children confide
in them that someone – a friend, a relative, a teacher, or a church leader
has touched them inappropriately or otherwise abused them. Obviously,
they are not lucky because the abuse happened, but rather because they
found out about it and can therefore take action to protect their child
from further assault and facilitate the healing process.Unfortunately,
children often do not tell their parents – or anyone – what has been (or
is being) done to them. Because they don't tell the abuse may continue
for years unabated. Even those parents who focus on developing close
relationships with their children, who make a whole-hearted effort to keep
the lines of communication open, may never hear about the abuse their children
are experiencing on a regular basis.
The reality is that many child predators commonly utilize a wide
variety of methods to dissuade children from telling what was done to them.
They know how to cover their crimes by exploiting children's vulnerabilities.
Much child abuse is systematic, planned, and deliberate rather than the
result of a spontaneous loss of control. The predator's plans often
include determining which techniques and strategies will be implemented
to make sure – absolutely sure – that the child never tells on them.
The widespread reports by abuse survivors of specific techniques
lends further credibility to the assertion that information about how to
silence children is shared throughout a predator subculture. These
techniques, which often involve the use of terror, torture (that leaves
no visible wounds), drugs, and hypnosis are carefully crafted and assiduously
applied on victims. The techniques typically include verbal threats
of serious consequences to the victim and the victim's family if anyone
were to find out. The victim may also be convinced that painful consequences
would result if the abuse is even remembered.
Although such training is helpful in some situations, the primary
responsibility for making sure that children are safe must rest with adults.
Although most parents do not have the resources needed to watch over and
safeguard their children 24/7, they can take precautions that significantly
reduce the likelihood that predators will be able to be alone with them.
1) Establish and consistently enforce a family rule that children
may not participate in sleep overs or slumber parties in other people's
homes.
At first glance such precautions may seem overprotective, unnecessary,
or even paranoid. However, when deciding how much to limit other
people's access to their children, parents would do well to remember three
fundamental realities. The first is that a lot more predators
are out there than law enforcement has identified. The second is
that these predators ply their trade by exploiting the naivete and courting
the trust of relatives, neighbors and friends who might give them time
alone with their children. The third is that many predators are emboldened
by confidence in their ability to ensure that their victims won't tell
anyone – not even their parents.
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