What
is rape & how can you help someone you know who
has been raped?
Please see
the info for survivors, friends and family
page for more information.
Rape is an act
of violence where the perpetrator uses sex to dehumanise and hurt
other people, most often women and children. There is no such thing
as a 'typical' rape or a 'typical' rape victim. However there are
a number of common elements that you can be aware of that may help
to understand the impact of rape on women. Rape is NOT the same
as making love or having sex. Although most rapes involve some form
of sexual contact, this occurs when a woman is in a state of emotional
terror. Most women consider the sexual nature of the rape secondary
compared with the violence, fear, terror and threats to her life
that are involved.
Women are not
responsible for rape. They do not enjoy the experience or ask for
it to happen. People often mistakenly assume that women can prevent
rape by avoiding places, dressing differently or fighting more.
In fact, virtually no one can guarantee their safety, as rapes occur
at all hours of the day, between all manner of people, of all ages
and backgrounds. It is a mistake to assume the woman is responsible
for the actions of the rapist. This is NEVER true. Remember that
no matter what she was doing before the rape, it is the rapist who
is completely responsible for the crime, NOT her. The fact that
a woman has survived a sexual assault means that she did the right
things at the time to stay alive.
Rape occurs
all the time and has done for many thousands of years. It persists
because of all the myths, misinterpretations, jokes and cliches
that still exist about this crime.
Not until it
happens to someone who you love, or to someone you know, does the
tragedy anf reality of this crime become apparent. When someone
close to you is raped, no one remains unaffected. No longer is it
a crime that has happened to someone else or that you see on television.
Sexual assaults
put a great deal of emotional strain on everyone including the rape
victim. Your relationship with her will be affected, and will need
some work and healing. She will be extremely sensitive to other
people's reactions about the assault. She may even fear their reactions
expecting misunderstanding and judgement.
Firstly, you
may cope better by knowing some of what she is experiencing and
by knowing that her reactions to the assault are normal.
Seondly, youa
re encouraged to recognise your own needs and feeling about the
assault and see how your reactions and hers change your current
relationship together.
Your reactions
may include anger, disgust, blame, guilt at not protecting her,
and helplessness. These are common reactions of others close to
someone who has been raped.
You may start
to question the world and why this sort of thing happens. Talk to
someone about your feelings and let her know who you are talking
to. This will help her be aware of who else knows about the assault,
and know that you too are having your own reactions to it.
In time you
may be able to talk together about the impact the assault has had
on your relationship/friendship/family.
Common reactions
of Women
These include:
confusion, anxiety, depression, nightmares, sleeplessness, self
blame, shame, feeling dirty, anger, hotility toward people close
to her, physical soreness and excessive dependence on others.
Her immediate
response may seem confusing and her moods may change abruptly. One
minute she may want you to be there, the next she may act fiercely
independent.
These are
common reactions to the trauma and terror she has experienced.
She is likely
to be experiencing the same shock, disbelief, sadness and anger
tha tyou are. You will be on a similar healing path, although at
different paces and in different phases most of the time.
What to say
Effective
communication is important for a rape survivor and all those close
to her.