| Literature DB >> 25999803 |
Abstract
The effect of interpersonal trauma on sexuality can be profound. The field of sexual trauma is complex empirically and clinically, with contradictory theories and conflicting data. Research definitions and treatment protocols for child sexual abuse are very imprecise. There are no firm, empirically proven guidelines for treating men and women who have been sexually abused as children or adolescents. Overt sexual abuse (OSA) in children and adolescents is defined here as molestation, rape, or incest. Research has shown that OSA may, but does not necessarily, lead to sexual dysfunction in adulthood. The effects of OSA are worsened by concurrent types of family of origin abuse, such as emotional abuse or physical abuse. One factor that seems related to the varying impact of OSA on adult sexuality is the patients' family of origin experience with nonsexual Milestones of Sexual Development. Without positive experiences with touch, trust and empathy, the ability to relax and be soothed, and power, the effects of OSA are potentiated and complicated. Sexuality is embodied, so experiences with touch are particularly important when working with OSA. A three-color Body Map technique which assesses stored associations to touch is provided. The concept of developmental sexual trauma (DST) is introduced as a way to label traumagenic family events which potentiate OSA or negatively effect sex but which are not explicitly sexual in origin. Strategies to assess and treat OSA are reviewed. Body Maps are recommended to assess and treat sexual trauma.Entities:
Keywords: Body Map; Developmental sexual trauma (DST); Emotional neglect; Family of origin; Family violence; Milestones of Sexual Development; Overt sexual abuse; Sexual compulsivity; Touch; Trust
Year: 2015 PMID: 25999803 PMCID: PMC4431707 DOI: 10.1007/s11930-014-0034-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Sex Health Rep ISSN: 1548-3584
Fig. 1Body Maps
How To Use Body Map to Screen for Hidden and Stored Trauma ©Aline P. Zoldbrod
| Color key: green = please touch; yellow = it depends; red = no! | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Possible trauma condition | Typical color scheme | Issues to treat | Example |
| Typical man with no trauma | Almost entirely green, perhaps small areas of red and yellow | • Explore any yellow or red areas; may indicate injury, illness, uncomfortable feelings about body parts. | Adam |
| Typical woman with no trauma | Almost all green. Breasts, pudendum, and anus typically yellow Note: women often color primary erogenous zones yellow because they prefer to become aroused with whole body touches before having primary erogenous zones touched. Small amounts of red and yellow may be present. | • Explore as above. • Be sure to decode any red or yellow areas—may indicate having been touched in an unpleasant way, pain or injury, or body image issues. | Avery |
No trauma. But family sex-negative. Family did not touch. | Green and some yellow. Perhaps small red areas | • Hans actually has become much more comfortable with touch as an adult. In his drawing of himself as an adolescent, his genitals were yellow. His wife taught him about the pleasures of being touched. His red areas are where he is ticklish. | Hans |
Physical, emotional and verbal abuse (DST) No OSA | Often not much green. Lots of yellow. Red often (but not always) in areas of physical abuse. Much smaller green areas relative to red and yellow areas than in patients with no trauma. | • Where you see large areas of red, or large areas of yellow, be mindful, cautious. • Do not open up trauma memories before you have worked to give patient inner resources to handle upsetting sensations. • It is not unusual to see red on womens’ abdomens without physical abuse there. May mark dislike of belly fat. • Bonnie was treated very harshly and her mother scratched her face on several occasions. • Patty was hit occasionally, and received constant emotional and verbal abuse. • Frannie had physical and emotional abuse and physical neglect. • Thom was constantly emotionally abused and hit on face and shoulders. | Bonnie Franny Patty Thom |
Idiosyncratic Body Map: emotional neglect, physical and emotional abuse (No OSA) | The red on his genitals is unusual for a man with no OSA history. | • Danny came from a home with alcoholism and physical violence, but his mother was loving and affectionate. He feels insecure about his weight and his penis size. He has low desire and avoids sex. | Danny |
Witness of family violence toward other family members (No OSA) | Mixed green, yellow, and red | • The patient bears witness to violence done to the other family member, often by holding trauma in the same body area where other person was assaulted. • Trudi’s mother was beaten by father repeatedly throughout Trudi’s childhood. Mother stayed in relationship far too long. • Note that genitals are red even without OSA. Trudi has profound ambivalence about being a sexual woman in relationship with a man. She does not want to identify with the gender of the victim of violence, her mother. | Trudi |
| OSA and DST | Red on genitals from OSA. | • Yolanda had intrafamilial sexual abuse that continued for a long time, as well as physical and emotional abuse. | Yolanda |
Other possible explanation: Gender microaggression outside of family | Mixed color scheme not accounted for by any intrafamilial trauma | • Person receives demeaning sexual, gender or body-focused comments. • Preadolescent girls whose breasts develop early and adolescent girls with large breasts are targets of hostile, sexual, objectifying comments. • Boys targeted because of height or penis size. • GBLT adolescents are targets of shaming, hostile comments about height, gait, gender-variant appearance. • For all, resulting feelings of shame and confusion are stored in body. | No example provided in Body Map graphic |