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I'm wondering if people could tell me of their experiences, when "running" services for ACEs (or if you're up to it, your own experience of difficulty), in getting people to disclose / describe / describe fully their experiences of experiencing ACEs.

New Zealand / New Zealanders seem to have great difficulty acknowledging such experiences -- in whatever area of abuse, trauma etc. This country has the highest, or one of the highest, rates of intimate partner violence in the world, and many people would still like to keep that "under wraps". This could be one of the ongoing reasons for this country being so desperately far behind some other countries.

I'm sure people are "well acquainted" with the literature of prevalence of stigma / shame associated with these experiences, and the need to address it early on in "therapy". People might also be familiar with things like the statistics on self-referral in those seeking assistance from organisations like the former (it's been renamed) Australia's Adult Survivors of Child Abuse organisation -- that those seeking such assistance are, on average, over 50 years of age, indicating that many need some development and consolidation of personal resources before starting to work on these issues. (ASCA, now renamed the Blue Knot Foundation, has published these statistics online if people wish to check them).

From my own experience, I can say that I disclosed "bits of it" to trusted colleagues at work in my early 20s, but that most of it I also haven't disclosed until after turning 50, especially my history of sexual abuse -- never disclosed in my relationships with women (I'm hetero) -- that was always too "shameful" and confusing. However, I always felt different from others, and in my earliest school years was "ashamed" of the separation of my parents -- could never talk about what my parents did for work, despite that being a "normal" part of what children of that age talk about. So, it's been a very slow, roundabout journey, but finally, now in my 60s, can "almost" talk about most of it without too much difficulty.

Last edited by Russell Wilson
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Dear Russel:

Great question. I was recently asked if I had done a lot of personal work BEFORE learning about ACEs and how I might have responded if I had not. I am not sure of the answer to that because I've only found info. about ACEs to be validating. However, your question makes me think about what age or stage or life has to do with ACEs and disclosure. 

I was not public and comfortable sharing, in writing, until my 40's and at almost 50 can only speak about it now and not always easily or comfortable. Writing is much easier. I am not worried, at this age and stage about losing a job or a friend or a date. But that wasn't always true. 

It depends on who is talking and how it is being talked about. That has a lot to do with if or how much I will share as well and that's about the dynamic, environment and who I'm with. I personally believe it has a lot to do with approach and ease. If people are saying "We with ACEs" vs. "You with ACEs." that's going to have a HUGE impact on if, how much and whether I share.

It matters if I trust who is asking and if I think they have any info. that makes risking disclosure and maybe getting a lousy response worth it.

I do think some ACEs have more stigma, like you said, sexual abuse is certainly one that has lots. For me, witnessing domestic violence and parental abandonment are also harder to me to share and disclose, even now, than say divorce or neglect or physical abuse that happened at older ages. It is not because any are mroe serious than others just because of lots of cultural messages about what's too private, too much and the stigma associated with being a victim of certain things vs. others.

Silence and shame that come from others as well as my own self. And that even can vary depending on context and environment and peers.

When I worked at a shelter for homeless families, and lots of the household members had fathers who abandoned, it wasn't shameful. My father was homeless and these families were homeless. Homelessness touched us all on some level though not identical.

However, with the staff, I did not talk of my father. It didn't seem wise or appropriate plus I didn't think they'd get it as they didn't share the experience.

It didn't seem like a "pro" but certainly something to hide or at least not acknowledge.

That wsa the same environment just with different people at different income and class levels. We all might have had experience with some ACEs but we did not all have similar backgrounds and that did impact how much was shared and where. At least for me.

Good question. 

Cissy

Christine Cissy White posted:

Dear Russel:

Great question. I was recently asked if I had done a lot of personal work BEFORE learning about ACEs and how I might have responded if I had not. I am not sure of the answer to that because I've only found info. about ACEs to be validating. However, your question makes me think about what age or stage or life has to do with ACEs and disclosure. 

I was not public and comfortable sharing, in writing, until my 40's and at almost 50 can only speak about it now and not always easily or comfortable. Writing is much easier. I am not worried, at this age and stage about losing a job or a friend or a date. But that wasn't always true. 

It depends on who is talking and how it is being talked about. That has a lot to do with if or how much I will share as well and that's about the dynamic, environment and who I'm with. I personally believe it has a lot to do with approach and ease. If people are saying "We with ACEs" vs. "You with ACEs." that's going to have a HUGE impact on if, how much and whether I share.

It matters if I trust who is asking and if I think they have any info. that makes risking disclosure and maybe getting a lousy response worth it.

I do think some ACEs have more stigma, like you said, sexual abuse is certainly one that has lots. For me, witnessing domestic violence and parental abandonment are also harder to me to share and disclose, even now, than say divorce or neglect or physical abuse that happened at older ages. It is not because any are mroe serious than others just because of lots of cultural messages about what's too private, too much and the stigma associated with being a victim of certain things vs. others.

Silence and shame that come from others as well as my own self. And that even can vary depending on context and environment and peers.

When I worked at a shelter for homeless families, and lots of the household members had fathers who abandoned, it wasn't shameful. My father was homeless and these families were homeless. Homelessness touched us all on some level though not identical.

However, with the staff, I did not talk of my father. It didn't seem wise or appropriate plus I didn't think they'd get it as they didn't share the experience.

It didn't seem like a "pro" but certainly something to hide or at least not acknowledge.

That wsa the same environment just with different people at different income and class levels. We all might have had experience with some ACEs but we did not all have similar backgrounds and that did impact how much was shared and where. At least for me.

Good question. 

Cissy

thanks for your comment, Christine.

My enquiry springs from a comment by someone on a MH FB group where someone said "people don't want to be seen as that, Russell" -- i.e., as having their MH issues as a result of experiencing ongoing effects of ACEs. ??? so much for stigma of different issues in one's life.

All of this, of course, relates to how difficult it is to set up different types of services for different people in different communities -- and the broader question "Why is it so difficult to set up "ACEs" groups in New Zealand?". My own recent difficulties in this area are not new for "innovators" in this area here. I have another question -- but I'll post that separately: how do people put info about ACEs on their websites?

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