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Answer by Dr. Laura
PhD Mental Health Nurse & Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner
Thank you for reaching out to us. It sounds like what happened between you and your neighbor, at five and six years old, was sexual play rooted in curiosity and imitation, not predation or something that tells us anything dark about who you were or who you are. Children at that age do not have the cognitive or emotional architecture to understand sexuality. What they do have is curiosity, a drive to imitate, and absolutely no filter when adults are not explaining what they are seeing. Research in child development is clear that sexual curiosity and exploratory play between same-age children is a documented, normal part of development. What was not normal was what surrounded it...adult content left on in an unsupervised home, no adults who could explain what you were seeing in a safe way, and then a mother who responded to your reaching out with physical punishment instead of care.
The pride you both felt, that sense of thinking you knew something grown-up, is completely recognizable. Children often act confident about things they do not understand, especially when a topic feels adult and off-limits. You were two kids trying to make sense of something way too big for either of you, handed to you by a world that was supposed to protect you from it. There is something worth holding gently about that, for both of you.
What is really worth sitting with is that you were the one who stopped it. You felt discomfort, you noticed your friend's reaction, you named it, and you ended it. Then when she smiled and asked to continue, you held the line even after your mother's response had already taught you that speaking up brought pain. At five or six years old. The disgust you feel is not evidence of guilt. It is what happens when an experience gets met with shame and punishment instead of gentle correction, and the nervous system files it away as something to feel bad about forever. Shame also has a way of distorting memory, making the past feel more deliberate or more wrong than it actually was. The disgust is not telling you the truth about who you were.
Your mother hitting you when you came to her in confusion and honesty added another layer onto something you were already struggling to carry. That response taught you that your instincts about something being wrong were dangerous to voice. The shame got attached to you when it belonged to the circumstances around you.
If this memory keeps returning with the same weight, a trauma-informed therapist would be worth seeking out. If therapy is not accessible right now, consider writing a letter to your six-year-old self. Not to go over what happened again, but simply to say what should have been said to her then. What did that child need to hear? Sometimes putting that on paper begins to shift something.
The shame you are carrying belongs to the circumstances that exposed a child to adult content without guidance, not to the child who was trying to make sense of what she saw. You knew to stop. You have always known more than you are giving yourself credit for.
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Grounding activity
Find a comfortable place to sit. Gently close your eyes and take a couple of deep breaths - in through your nose (count to 3), out through your mouth (count of 3). Now open your eyes and look around you. Name the following out loud:
5 – things you can see (you can look within the room and out of the window)
4 – things you can feel (what is in front of you that you can touch?)
3 – things you can hear
2 – things you can smell
1 – thing you like about yourself.
Take a deep breath to end.
From where you are sitting, look around for things that have a texture or are nice or interesting to look at.
Hold an object in your hand and bring your full focus to it. Look at where shadows fall on parts of it or maybe where there are shapes that form within the object. Feel how heavy or light it is in your hand and what the surface texture feels like under your fingers (This can also be done with a pet if you have one).
Take a deep breath to end.
Ask yourself the following questions and answer them out loud:
1. Where am I?
2. What day of the week is today?
3. What is today’s date?
4. What is the current month?
5. What is the current year?
6. How old am I?
7. What season is it?
Take a deep breath to end.
Put your right hand palm down on your left shoulder. Put your left hand palm down on your right shoulder. Choose a sentence that will strengthen you. For example: “I am powerful.” Say the sentence out loud first and pat your right hand on your left shoulder, then your left hand on your right shoulder.
Alternate the patting. Do ten pats altogether, five on each side, each time repeating your sentences aloud.
Take a deep breath to end.
Cross your arms in front of you and draw them towards your chest. With your right hand, hold your left upper arm. With your left hand, hold your right upper arm. Squeeze gently, and pull your arms inwards. Hold the squeeze for a little while, finding the right amount of squeeze for you in this moment. Hold the tension and release. Then squeeze for a little while again and release. Stay like that for a moment.
Take a deep breath to end.