Girls are often born into this world surrounded by messages about who
they are supposed to be, and who they should become; Be cute. Smile.
Be a nice girl. Just give them a hug. Don’t make a fuss. Suck in your
belly. Be the ideal body type. Look sexy. Stay pure and innocent.
Be good in bed. You can have it all if you do it this way.
Is it any wonder why girls and women struggle with feeling
comfortable in their own skin? There is such a deep and contradictory
connection between the messages they receive about their bodies, their
emotional expression, and how to be sexual and relational. Girls and
women are set up to be at odds with themselves inside—to question their
own experience and reality within.
Those messages are tiny ruptures in the attachments girls and women
have with the people conveying them. They’re conveyed through words or
examples. Subtle hurts, that develop insecurities. They may be layered
on top of even more abandoning or abusing experiences from family
members, friends, teachers, coaches, spiritual authorities, leaders and
authority figures, intimate partners, bosses, colleagues, and strangers.
- 1 out of 3 girls will be sexually abused before they reach age 18 (dosomething.org, 2018)
- 1 in 3 women ages 18 to 34 has been sexually harassed at work (timesupnow.com, 2018)
- 80% of 21-year-olds abused as children met criteria for at least one psychological disorder (dosomething.org, 2018)
The “Me Too” and “Time’s Up” movements of today are reflective of
what many girls and women have long known; that it’s difficult to move
through the world without having your body, sexuality, identity, and
more be objectified or used in some way. These movements encourage
individuals to step out of isolation, into shared truth and support and
are messages that are useful for all.
Research on Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACE) shows that women who
experienced these messages, abandonments, and/or abuses when they were
younger, are very likely to struggle with being sexual and relational as
adults.
“Among individuals with a history of adverse childhood experiences,
risky sexual behavior may represent their attempts to achieve intimate
interpersonal connections. Having grown up in families unable to provide
needed protection, such individuals may be unprepared to protect
themselves and may underestimate the risks they take in their attempts
to achieve intimacy” (Hillis, Andra, Felitti, & Marchbanks, 2001).
These childhood experiences can develop into adult intimacy issues
ranging on a spectrum from attachment disorders (over- or
under-connecting with others) to sex and love addiction issues
(confusing sex with love, being compulsively sexual, fearing and
avoiding sex, inconsistent boundaries in and around sex, and more).
Girls experience early life attachment ruptures and carry them into
womanhood. Adverse childhood experiences shape how women see
themselves, see the world around them and see themselves in relationship
to the world. They may find themselves with unconscious, seemingly
body-driven urges to over-connect with some people, and under-connect or
wall off with others. They may even find themselves seeking validation
and closeness from people and situations that could cause further hurt,
as they strive to fill unmet needs from childhood. Sometimes the only
way for a woman to feel a sense of power and control over the world that
has exploited her is to become the exploiter of herself—of her body,
emotional expression, and how she is sexual and relational. This is
often how eating disorder and sex addiction issues arise.
In sex addiction, women essentially reenact the trauma they’ve
survived, or try to avoid more of that trauma, by using their bodies.
A woman may use the sex appeal she’s been taught to develop, to build
intrigue with a sexual or relational partner, and have a brief
encounter seemingly without strings attached by remaining emotionally
walled off in an attempt to avoid possible hurt. She may do this
repeatedly.
For the same intention, a woman may get involved with a partner who’s
already involved in a primary relationship, lending itself to limited
emotional entanglement for her.
Or a woman may feel over-connected emotionally to a long-term
relationship partner who gives her more affection and attention than she
can handle. It feels engulfing and unsafe but she doesn’t want to make
a fuss like she was taught. So she may need to get away to breathe and
act out in an affair which seems simpler.
Or a woman may find masturbation as a way to soothe herself, without
having to be relational with others—especially if she has a negative
body image—yet find herself needing more frequency and intensity to feel
the same degree of soothing. She may need to use a substance or
another process to take the edge off being sexual because she feels
scared, ashamed, or overwhelmed.
And so many other examples.
These types of sexual and relational experiences are just an illusion
of power and control, of course, because in trauma reenactment and
addiction, women are not operating from the frontal cortex of the brain
where logic and intentionality live. Instead, they are very much out of
control or hijacked, by the limbic brain that holds implicit memories,
drives, distorted perceptions, and survival modes of
fight/flight/freeze. They’re unable to decipher what their body and
emotions truly tell them. All the messages, abandonments, and/or abuses
they’ve carried are a barrier to their true needs. Women with this
lifelong set-up are bound by the type of soothing and relief that sexual
and relational acting out seems to provide, however brief. This brings
susceptibility for unsafe sex, sex with unsafe partners, exploiting
others and being exploited by others, infidelity, and more. At the root,
it is a woman’s best attempt to feel comfortable in her own skin, while
actually sacrificing that very body which is her home.
Devastating as this cycle is, there is hope.
Just as women’s realities within are shaped by hurts, their realities can also be shaped by healing and recovery.
Ironically, healing and recovery for women’s sex addiction is rooted
where the seeds of the hurts began—in the body, emotional expression,
and sexual and relational attachment templates. Working slowly, and
with a strong, safe, and qualified support system, women can explore the
early messages, abandonments, and/or abuses they’ve carried. Expert
therapists, somatic and experiential practitioners, 12 Step fellowships,
and groups of women who have walked this path themselves are so
valuable; this is a somatic healing process, using the body’s inner
wisdom as a guide—attuning to grief, heartache, suppressed anger, and a
core of shame and worthlessness that is often old and familiar.
Experientially, this history can be moved through to bring shifts from
the inside out. Honoring and acknowledging what has happened. Using
experiential processes to move carried toxicity out of her worldview in a
fully embodied way. Developing healthy attachments that provide
repair. And addressing real and tangible boundaries to change her
future. This is a recovering path built on a woman’s newly developing
trust in herself and her reality within. This is a path that allows a
woman who has survived struggle to overcome the messages and hurts and
find comfort in her own skin as well as recognition that she is deeply
worthy of that comfort and the boundaries to protect it. This is
freedom from the inside out.
Journey of a Woman’s Heart: Finding True Intimacy is a five-day
intensive therapeutic workshop offered at the Rio Retreat Center at The
Meadows designed to cultivate this healing and recovery. Women are
supported as they work through the roots of their sexual and relational
struggles, where the seeds of the hurts began. Identifying traumatic
messages, abandonments, and/or abuses, and how they have sacrificed
their own bodies and spirits through sexual and relational patterns in
attempts to manage it all, is at the heart of this workshop. The
process is led by an experienced therapist in a small group of up to six
participants to maximize the healing power of walking alongside others
and moving out of isolation toward shared freedom. For more details,
call 866-582-9850.
References:
11 Facts about child abuse. Retrieved January 2018 from http://www.dosomething.org/us/facts/11-facts-about-child-abuse.
Cosmopolitan survey of 2,235 full and part-time female employees, 2015. Retrieved January 2018 from http://www.timesupnow.com.
Hillis SD, Andra RF, Felitti VJ, Marchbanks PA. Adverse childhood
experiences and sexual risk behaviors in women: a retrospective cohort
study. Fam Plann Perspec. 2001 Sep-Oct;33(5):206-11. PMID: 11589541.
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