Hurricane2k9 wrote:
I'm trying to convince her that it really wasn't her fault at all (which it wasn't). But I just can't seem to break through. Any advice on this?
No offense to you personally, but it seems to me at this stage she could be comforted better by a woman. You said she's been violated by a guy she trusts, so she has probably developped trust issues. Trying to comfort her as a guy she trusts, at this point, is obvious fail. Perhaps it can be done, but you'll have to prove you can be trusted first, which if manageable is still a detour. Get a female friend NOT family to talk with her, the less she knows her, the better. She might say she has guilt issues, but I'm fairly certain those are only part of the problem. If she has developped trust issues with guys, evidently she's not going to speak them out to you.
What you could try to gain her trust is pushing the subject. Basically it comes down to being real tough to her rather than comforting (up to a certain level of course). When she starts about guilt, you yourself introduce what you think are her issues and also her views on your position; confront her with the things (you know) she does not speak out. A little care is advised though, but also not too much; as much as she can take, perhaps a little more. It also depends on how much you can take in being tough to your friend.
Ilocano wrote:
Find the culprit. Beat the crap out of him. Present him to her and have her kick him into submission. That should do it...
This is often shoved of as a barbaric and useless solution, but if done well it can work. Find the guy, rough him up, present him to her and then let her decide what to do with him; break his arms etc. Chances are (quite high actually) that she just tells you to let him go, so then you will. The point is that even when she chooses to let him go, it will be her choice. Basically it put her back in control and back in control over the same guy that caused the problem. If however she does want you to break his arms or something, you should, otherwise it might have a negative effect. You most likely won't risk jail or anything, because whatever you do to him he'll always have a sexual assault charge haning above his head, and he'll probably want to leave it at his broken arm and no charges.
It can be an "instant fix", but quite a messy one.
RAIMIUS wrote:
perhaps getting in contact with someone else who has recovered from a sexual assualt may be helpful--common experience and healing, etc.
No, I would not recommend this. It might be too much of a "loosers club". It is difficult to lift people above yourself, it is easier to lift people when you're standing taller.
Last edited by Lai (2009-07-02 10:50:34)