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Hope, for me, doesn’t mean pretending what happened wasn’t real or that it didn’t leave scars. Hope is the quiet reminder that even when you feel broken, you are still here. That survival itself is proof of strength, even on days it doesn’t feel like it. If you’re reading this and carrying your own story, please know - you’re not alone. What happened to you wasn’t your fault. The shame and guilt you feel don’t belong to you. Healing may come slowly, in fragments, in moments where you notice the weight isn’t quite as heavy as before. Some days, it may feel impossible. But even then, you are not ruined. You are not defined by what was done to you. There is still space for safety, for connection, for joy, even if right now it feels out of reach. And when you can’t believe it for yourself, let someone else believe it for you until you can. Hope, to me, is the possibility of a future not built on fear, but on freedom. And you deserve that future.
Healing, for me, has never been neat or linear. It’s relearning how to live in my own body without feeling unsafe inside it. It’s putting on clothes without questioning what message they might send. It’s teaching myself that eye contact doesn’t have to signal danger, and that silence doesn’t always conceal a threat. Healing is giving myself permission to trust my instincts and set boundaries without apology. It’s untangling the shame that was never mine to bear. It’s forgiving myself for the times I stayed quiet, confused, or convinced I owed him something. Healing, most of all, is naming what it was. Abuse. Grooming. Manipulation. Putting words to it silences the doubt that it was “all in my head,” and reminds me that the guilt and shame were never mine to carry. My healing isn’t about erasing what happened, it’s about reclaiming the parts of me he tried to take: my trust, my voice, my safety, my freedom in my own skin. Healing is possible, but for me it looks like learning to breathe without scanning for the nearest exit, and believing that not every hand reaching toward me intends harm.
He was 53. I was 20. He was my professor, an ex-cop. I didn’t trust him at first. But he worked hard to open me up. He noticed the cracks, the places I was already vulnerable, and pressed on them. I was away from home, dealing with multiple tragedies, withdrawn, guarded, and craving someone who might actually listen. He positioned himself as that person, the one who understood me when no one else did. At first, it didn’t look like abuse. It looked like attention. Being called on in class, asked to stay afterward, seeing me and my wounds, and being told I had potential. It was meticulous. Slowly, the attention became personal. He asked questions no professor should. He touched me without consent - digging his thumb into my collarbone, grabbing my neck, kicking my butt, brushing up against me, physically blocking me. He commented on my body and my clothes. He admitted he had feelings he “couldn’t say or act on.” He went out of his way to prove he could be trusted. He framed my hesitation as a lack of trust and made me feel guilty when I pulled away. He isolated me. He criticized my boyfriend, planted wedges in my relationships. He gave me a simple object he had worn himself, framing it as a reminder “to be himself.” I thought of it that way too, but it became clear it was more like a collar, a way to own me. He noticed when I didn’t wear it. He told me about his dead ex and compared me to her, as if I was supposed to fill her place. He said he thought about me often. He bragged about meeting women in their early twenties at bars - the same age I was. He suggested I should come to his house so I could “feel safe.” He even admitted he kept a list of things written down about me. I saw him as a mentor, sometimes even a father figure. But he refused that. Instead, he tried to reframe the relationship, grooming me to see him in a way that served his desires. There were nights after class when it was just us. He wanted me to walk him to his car. Looking back, I believe that if my friend hadn’t shown up on a few of those nights, something worse would have happened. His eye contact was suffocating, unblinking, sharp, and intimidating. He looked at me in ways that pinned me down, made me freeze - ways that made me feel both seen and trapped. He presented himself as invincible, even bragging he could make himself out to be a “scary person.” On a video call, I’m almost certain he was trying to push me toward doing things. That’s when he asked if I had ever been sexually assaulted before, using it like leverage. He revealed his preferences, and made it clear he didn’t like when women told others about their relationship. When I confronted him once, he said people always painted him as the “villain.” He said it like he was the one who had been wronged. And even then, I felt guilty, like I had hurt him. That’s how strong his hold was. For a year and a half, I stayed in that cycle - sick around him but convinced he was the only one who understood me. The cracks in his mask eventually showed, and his grip loosened when I started calling him out and speaking the truth he worked so hard to bury. I finally ran. I was so drained, stripped of myself, that I couldn’t survive another round of his wicked game. I reported him more than once. The first time, nothing was done. Later, even after he lost his job for unrelated reasons, he tried to pull me back in - even asking me to be a reference for jobs working with children. I reported him again because I feared he would keep targeting students. That time, he was trespassed, but it still didn’t feel like it ended. I still fear I'll run into him. I carried guilt. Shame. Silence. I didn’t tell my anyone for a long time. I thought silence would erase it. Instead, it gave the abuse more room inside me. And I still ask: What was this? Was it sexual assault, even if it never looked “obvious” enough? Was it my fault? Is it all in my head? Is this valid since wasn't underage? Was any of it real? I’m still learning how to feel safe. How to exist in my body without flinching. How to wear clothes without wondering if fabric is an invitation. How to hold eye contact without feeling exposed. How to believe attention doesn’t always come with a price. How to let silence feel peaceful instead of dangerous. How to stop scanning every room for the nearest exit. How to trust my gut. And how to never let someone treat me like that again. I’m still learning how to live in a world altered by his eyes, his hands, his words, and to believe I am not forever marked by them, or by men like him.
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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.