How Child Molesters Select & Gain Access to Their Victims

Why do we keep teaching our children about โ€œstranger dangerโ€ when 90% of sexually abused children are exploited by someone in the immediate or extended family, or by someone close to the family?

How do child molesters gain access to their victims?

While some sexual abuse is purely opportunistic, most children are groomed and lured into situations where they are vulnerable to abuse.

Contrary to common “Stranger Danger” warnings, child molesters are rarely strangers; at least 90% of sexually abused children are exploited by someone in the child’s immediate or extended family, or by someone close to the family.

Common grooming strategies include:

1. Befriending parents, particularly single parents, to gain access to their children.

Ninety percent (90%) of sexually abused children are victimized by a parent, close family member or family friend, so thereโ€™s no need to โ€œbefriendโ€ the parent(s), theyโ€™re already in your inner-circle.

2. Offering babysitting services to busy parents or guardians.

3. Taking jobs and participating in community events that involve children.

4. Becoming a guardian or foster parent.

5. Attending sporting events for children.

6. Offering to coach children’s sports.

7. Volunteering in youth organizations.

8. Offering to chaperone overnight trips.

9. Loitering in places children frequent – playgrounds, parks, malls, game arcades, sports fields, etc.

10. Befriending youngsters on social media (Snapchat, Instagram, Facebook, etc.) and online gaming platforms.

When and where do most sexual assaults usually happen?

Most child sexual abuse occurs in the home of the victim, the home of the offender, or another residence.**

Eighty-one (81%) of all child sexual abuse occurs in one-on-one situations: one-offender/one-child.

Wherever youth are physically or virtually alone with someone is a potential place where they can be subjected to sexual misconduct or abuse.

With incidents involving juvenile offenders, 1 in 7 sexual assaults occurs on schooldays between 3pm-7pm, with a peak from 3-4pm, right after school. This speaks to the importance of safe after-school care and close supervision of multi-age groups of youngsters.

How do child molesters target their victims?

Early grooming efforts by sexual predators seek to determine if the child has a stable home life, or if the family is facing challenges like poverty, divorce, illness, drugs, homelessness, etc.

Children lacking stability at home are at higher risk for sexual abuse, as there is usually more access to the child and opportunities to abuse the child.

Child molesters will also target kids who are loners, or who look troubled or neglected. Youngsters who smoke, vape or use drugs and alcohol are seen as risk-seekers lacking adequate supervision, and therefore easy targets.

Single moms are often targeted, as they are more likely to be overwhelmed by parenting duties and vulnerable to offers to babysit and/or drive kids to school, practices, lessons and other activities.

Final Thoughts:

Child molesters are family members, relatives, neighbors, coaches, teachers, preachers, friends and our children’s peers. Knowing this – and knowing that adults cannot be with children every moment of every day – it is essential to talk openly with children about personal boundaries and personal safety.

Teach children, age-appropriately, how to recognize and evade the lures used for generations by sexual predators of every kind.

Thankfully, both children and adults are beginning to more readily report sexual abuse and harassment, saying boldly and loudly that these crimes are no longer acceptable.

Child Abuse and Neglect Reporting Numbers By State (Child Welfare Information Gateway)

A listing of phone numbers by state to call and report child abuse.

Childhelp (1.800.4ACHILD)

Provides 24/7 assistance in 170 languages to adults, children and youth with information and questions regarding child abuse. All calls are anonymous and confidential. 


Source: https://childluresprevention.com. Accessed, October 14, 2019.

Adult Survivor: Itโ€™s Never Too Late to Begin the Process of Recovery

If you are an adult concerned for a friend or loved one who you know or suspect has experienced sexual abuse as a child, your support and understanding can be critical to their recovery.

Adults who have had experiences of sexual abuse as children need and deserve a chance to speak about their experiences with those who understand and can help.

Survivors of child sexual abuse can also play a critical role in the prevention of further abuse to other children. If you or someone you love needs support to recover, now is the time to reach out for help. Find the support you deserve.

If you are a survivor of sexual abuse as a child, it is very important to seek professional support and guidance for your recovery.

The impact of sexual abuse by another child, teen or adult can change over time. The changes unfold as a young person grows into adulthood and continue throughout a lifetime.

Even if you were offered support and resources earlier in life, if you are feeling the need for support at this time, we encourage you to seek the help you need and deserve. You can find resources and support here.

Are you concerned that the person who abused you will harm another child?

If you feel that the person who abused you currently poses a risk to a child or teen, it is important to share your concerns with others who can be allies to you in taking steps to protect this young person. We can help you find allies who share your concerns.

Perhaps you are recognizing signs of risk in the child or the adult. Maybe this child is near the age when you yourself suffered abuse. We urge you to trust your intuitions and act on your instincts by speaking to other adults who can take steps to protect this child.

There are many steps that can be taken before a child is harmed. You donโ€™t have to wait until there is โ€œproofโ€ that abuse has occurred to act.

As a survivor, your experience can help everyone involved.

Learn about the statute of limitations in your state for reporting child sexual abuse. Filing reports about your own abuse (with the support of a counselor) can be a step to take if you believe that the same person who harmed you may have abused someone who is now a minor.

If others are already concerned, your coming forward can help ease the burden of disclosure the child or teen may be facing.

I know an adult survivor.

Care enough to take the risk and talk about it. If you are an adult concerned for a friend or loved one who you know or suspect has experienced sexual abuse as a child, your support and understanding can be critical to their recovery.

There are many resources that can help you to better understand what an adult survivor may be experiencing now and how the recovery process evolves over time. Sharing the resources you find here with the person youโ€™re concerned about is a great place to start.

Support resources for family, friends and partners are important as well โ€“ by acknowledging how a loved oneโ€™s abuse can personally affect you, you are taking a step in becoming a safe adult for those who experienced sexual abuse.

Source: Stopitnow.org. https://stopitnow.org/help-guidance/online-help-center/adult-survivor. Accessed- September 19, 2019

Alarming number of children sexually abusing other children, study shows

Peer-on-peer abuse is often undetected by parents, who assumed their kids are safe around other kids.

The national survey commissioned by Act for Kids revealed a staggering 24% of child abuse cases involve another child.

It also showed peer-on-peer abuse was often undetected by parents, who assumed their kids are safe around other kids.

Act for Kids released the research ahead of Child Protection Week (September 1-7) to urge parents to take the necessary steps to protect their children online and learn more about the warning signs of problematic sexual behaviors.

The survey of 2,000 people living in Australia revealed, while three quarters blame access to adult content for problematic behaviours, two-thirds of parents still fail to secure their devices and one in two allow their children unsupervised access online.

While there are a number of places children might learn problematic behaviors, easy access to age-inappropriate content is a major factor in influencing these young minds.

Act for Kids program manager Miranda Bain said the survey findings were both surprising and scary,

“There is a lack of knowledge amongst parents of what constitutes problematic sexual behaviours in children and how these behaviors have the potential to lead to more harmful peer-on-peer abuse,” Ms Bain said.

“While there are a number of places children might learn problematic behaviors, easy access to age-inappropriate content is a major factor in influencing these young minds.”

Act for Kids Executive Services Director and Psychologist, Dr. Katrina Lines said, it was vital parents take the necessary steps to protect their children online and learn more about the warning signs of problematic sexual behaviors.

Dr. Lines explains, “Some steps parents can take to protect their kids is making sure they understand normal child sexual development and curiosity and share accurate facts and information about sexuality with their children,”

Source: www.illawarramercury.com.au/story/6361787/alarming-number-of-children-sexually-abusing-other-children-study-shows/

A Legacy of Abuse

Reporting my brother to Child Protective Services was the first step in ending a decades-long cycle. *9 minute read

By Emily Miller, Human Parts

Content Warning: Graphic depictions of sexual and physical abuse.

1. A Deathbed Confession, 1997

Mom unburdens herself only weeks before she dies. She tells me about Mikeโ€™s* abuse against his children. Her revelations confirm what Iโ€™ve known since childhood: My brother Mike is dangerous. Mom tells me about the inexplicable holes in walls throughout Mikeโ€™s house, how he and his wife ignore the cries of their baby, and how roughly they handle their toddler. What frightens her the most, she confesses, is that when she dies there will be no one left to look after her grandbabies. She doesnโ€™t ask me to replace her, but I can take a hint.

2. Home for the Holidays, 1999

โ€œYou fat pig!โ€ Mike yells as he tries to lift his sweaty, four-year-old son from the shopping-cart-like metal basket at the front of the pedicab.

My nephew cries and grabs hold of the sides of the basket, refusing to budge. Mike yanks him once more, only this time a spoke catches my nephewโ€™s bare thigh and punctures it.

Blood bubbles to the surface of my nephewโ€™s stocky leg, then runs down it before soaking into his little white sock. I use my hoodie to try to stanch the bleeding. It wonโ€™t stop. โ€œCall 911!โ€ I shout. I try to calm my nephew by singing the Alphabet song. It holds his attention only so far as L-M-N-O-P, so I switch to the Barney song, โ€œClean up, clean up, everybody everywhereโ€ฆ โ€ Mike pushes me aside. The boys and I look on, saucer-eyed.

Edges blur, leaving but one pulsating truth at the center: Mike has gouged a hole in his sonโ€™s leg.

We drive home to Los Angeles. I donโ€™t speak of the incident with my boys, pretending that theyโ€™re okay, and so am I. Until Iโ€™m not. A few days later, at work, I kick the snack machine in the breakroom because โ€œIt wonโ€™t release my goddamned Doritos.โ€ My coworkers look up from their sandwiches and stare. I slink back to my desk.

I see a therapist. I tell her about the snack machine, about my nephew, and all the stories I can think of from my childhood โ€” beginning with the original sin.

3. A Story I Was Told About the Child I Replaced, 1962

After adopting two boys, Mom wants a girl. Dad grants Mom her wish, just as he might purchase a diamond bauble she admires in a jewelry store window. They name the baby Sarah*. All seems in order except Sarahโ€™s skin is โ€œruddy,โ€ this being the word Mom used the one and only time she told me the story, when I was 10. It means โ€œhaving a healthy reddish color.โ€ I know this because I looked it up in the student edition of Merriam-Webster that I keep atop my molded acrylic desk.

โ€œNot to worry,โ€ a nurse says to my parents. โ€œThe pressure in the birth canal can sometimes cause discoloration. Her skin will even out over the next few days.โ€ Dad expresses some concern that the baby appears to be Black. โ€œBut the birth certificate says โ€˜Caucasian,โ€™โ€ counters Mom.

Over the course of the next few months, Sarahโ€™s skin doesnโ€™t lighten. It darkens. Mom and Dad ask questions of the pediatrician, who confirms Dadโ€™s suspicion that the baby is Black. Mom is as shocked as Dad by the news, but she has bonded with her first daughter, and so tries to downplay the plot twist. Dad insists that raising a Black child in an all-white community recently rattled by racial violence would be too much of a hardship for the family and Sarah to bear. Dad arm-twists Mom into giving Sarah up for re-adoption. My brothers, Mike and Andy*, watch as their baby sister is peeled from Momโ€™s arms by social workers. Their five- and eight-year-old selves fear they, too, will be repossessed.

After Iโ€™m adopted โ€” replacing Sarah โ€” my brothers hide me under blankets from anyone who enters our home. I am an adult before it dawns on me that I was adopted into a grieving, frightened home that harbored a humiliating secret.

4. A Belt by Any Other Name, 1966

I wake up to a snap followed by a scream. Is it Andy or Mike this time? Snapgoes the belt again.

โ€œAAAAH!โ€

Itโ€™s Mike.

5. A Memory, 1968

Iโ€™m coloring at my child-sized pink and white desk that Grandpa made when Dad appears in the doorway with a suitcase in one hand and the black and red machine he polishes his shoes with in the other.

โ€œWhere are you going, Daddy?โ€

โ€œIโ€™m leaving, sweetheart.โ€

โ€œWhen will you be back?โ€

โ€œI wonโ€™t be back. Come give Daddy a hug.โ€

6. My First Blow Job, 1969

Mom goes out to dinner with her new boyfriend, and leaves Mike in charge. He invites me into his bedroom. Iโ€™m excited because heโ€™s never let me in his room before tonight. โ€œHave you ever seen a penis?โ€ he asks. The way my heart thumps tells me somethingโ€™s not right about this question. Still, I donโ€™t want to be banished from my big brotherโ€™s inner sanctum so I say, โ€œNo. Iโ€™ve never seen one.โ€ He unzips his pants. My first impression is that penises are ugly, especially when long and hard with big veins everywhere, like Mikeโ€™s is now. I resist what happens next but Mike is 16, and a wrestler. I am seven, and a ballerina. He pushes my face closer and closer to the throbbing organ I know is there but canโ€™t see because my eyes are closed.

โ€œSwallow,โ€ he says, when finished. I gulp. โ€œDonโ€™t tell anyone or Iโ€™ll kill you.โ€ I nod, my whole body trembling as I back out of his room.

7. Shock Therapy, 1970

I stand with my back against the wall as Mike, wielding a butcher knife, chases Andy up the stairs. I run after them down the hallway and enter the guest room as Andy jumps from the second story window into our snowy backyard. When the police arrive, Iโ€™m being looked after in the basement by my โ€œAuntโ€ Grace*, but can hear the voices in the kitchen. Mike tells the police that Andy is on LSD. Mom is crying. Andy is shouting curse words as the police force him to come with them.

The next time I see Andy, heโ€™s much calmer. When I ask Mom whatโ€™s happened to Andy, she mumbles, โ€œIt must be the shock therapy.โ€ I nod, even though I donโ€™t know what shock therapy is.

8. California Scheminโ€™, 1971

Mom sits at the kitchen table with a wooden ruler and a foldout map of the United States. โ€œWhat are you doing?โ€ I ask.

โ€œIโ€™m trying to figure out which city is furthest from your dad: Los Angeles, California or Portland, Maine.โ€

The answer is Los Angeles.

After we move, Mom doesnโ€™t help me get ready for school or make me breakfast anymore. She sleeps instead. Mike still wants blowjobs, and Andy gets thrown out of school a few months after we arrive.

9. Our Little Secret, 1976

โ€œWhatโ€™s the matter, honey?โ€ Mom asks. โ€œPlease tell me, why are you are crying like this?โ€

It is five years since the last blow job โ€” so many years itโ€™s conceivable that Iโ€™ve dreamt it all. I donโ€™t intend to break my oath to Mike, until he calls me โ€œEmily Big Buttโ€ under his breath at the dinner table. Itโ€™s anyoneโ€™s guess why I crack open this time when I hadnโ€™t all the other times he teased me. I jump up from the table and run to my room. Mom finds me sitting on the edge of my bed. Everything spills out of me in great, heaving sobs. She holds me in her arms until I calm down, then presses her hands into my shoulders, looks me in the eyes and says, โ€œLetโ€™s just keep this our little secret. Okay?โ€ Too upset to consider my options, I sniffle and say โ€œokay.โ€ Mom hugs me again.

10. Karma, 1980

I spread out the map on my bed and figure out which college is farthest away from my family.

11. Truth, 1985

The next time I mention Mikeโ€™s abuse to Mom, Iโ€™m in graduate school. Iโ€™m standing in the kitchen of my Manhattan railroad apartment. Itโ€™s a stiflingly hot summer day and I open windows, trying to create a cross breeze. Mom calls to check on me for the umpteenth time that week. I tell her Iโ€™m still depressed only this time I go one step further and share with her my recurring nightmare. The one where Mike is holding a revolver to the back of my head and I wake up when I hear the click.

A while after I hang up, the phone rings again. I hear a small voice on the other end. It takes a second before I realize it belongs to Mike. He explains that heโ€™s calling to apologize for what he did. I have often fantasized about this moment and the verbal vivisection Iโ€™d unleash if it ever came to pass. Yet all I feel now is relief. Relief that it wasnโ€™t a dream after all.

I hang up and stare out the kitchen window, watching steam float up from the vents of the Chinese restaurant three floors below. For a moment, I float too, on a cloud of truth, finally visible.

12. The Therapistโ€™s Instructions, 1998

As the session draws to a close, the therapist offers a few healthy coping tips to last me until our next session, which we schedule for the following week. As I gather my belongings, she stops me. โ€œThereโ€™s one more thing,โ€ she says. โ€œYou should report your brother to Child Protective Services for harming his son.โ€

โ€œIf you donโ€™t, I will,โ€ she adds.

Now Iโ€™m the snack machine, and the therapist has just kicked me. I sit on the sofa holding her steady gaze. The seconds tick by as she waits for my conscience to drop into place.

Before it does, I propose a compromise. โ€œHow about I confront Mike,โ€ I say. โ€œIโ€™ll demand he treat his children better or Iโ€™ll report him.โ€

The therapist is kind. She patiently explains how I am not going to change my brotherโ€™s parenting, and that heโ€™d likely feel attacked and resentful if I try. โ€œIn order for him to change,โ€ she says, โ€œheโ€™ll need counseling to understand his own pain and the reasons why he hurts his kids and why he hurt you, Andy, and who knows how many others.โ€

โ€œYouโ€™re not equipped to offer him solutions,โ€ she tells me. โ€œEven if you were, in the time it would take, your nephews would continue to be at risk.โ€

I finally concede. โ€œIโ€™ll call,โ€ I tell her. โ€œItโ€™s my duty, not yours, to protect my nephews.โ€

She directs me to a local agency. When I call, a social worker walks me through the process as I jot down notes on the back of an envelope that I keep to this day. But when I mention that my brother is out of state, she informs me that the agency has โ€œno standingโ€ to file a report. I must contact Child Protective Services in my brotherโ€™s home state. I hang up, exhausted, but call the next agency.

The social worker takes a โ€œgood faithโ€ report over the phone and asks if I have witnessed physical abuse or a pattern of โ€œboundary violations,โ€ or received a disclosure of abuse from a child. I explain what I witnessed while returning the pedicab. I also share everything Mom told me before her death.

13. Legacies, 2019

After one too many glasses of white zinfandel, Momโ€™s youngest sister, Aunt Cindy*, lets it slip that Mom was raped by a half-brother I never knew about. Grandpa had chased his son off the farm with a rifle, and the incident was never mentioned again. Deprived at last of the oxygen Iโ€™ve fed it all these years, my burning resentment of Mom extinguishes. Sometimes all we know is what weโ€™re taught.

If Mike is contacted by Child Protective Services, he never lets on. I donโ€™t witness further abuse toward his children โ€” only toward his wife who silently absorbs barbs about her weight and clothing, and threats that heโ€™ll leave her if she ever cuts her hair short.

As I learn more about the patterns of abuse, my best self can make out that Mike is simply a scared person hiding inside a scary person. I think back to the belt lashings and wonder, Who abused Dad? I tell myself Iโ€™ve finally broken the cycle of abuse โ€” unless I count the times some benign misstep by one of my children triggered a disproportionate response from me.

I ask my boys, now men, โ€œWhat was it like for you as a child, when I would get crazy angry?โ€ The intellectual one answers, โ€œWhich manifestations of your reactivity are you referring to?โ€ We unpack that. The sensitive one replies, โ€œI was scared at times, and didnโ€™t want to upset you because I felt like I would get ripped apart.โ€

I hadnโ€™t intended to mention this last part, about my fits of rage. But now that I have, should anything happen to me, could you, from time to time, check in on my grandbabies?

*Names have been changed.

If you or someone you know is suffering from abuse, depression or suicidal please review this list of national resources.

By: Emily Miller. Source: humanparts.medium.com/a-legacy-of-abuse-57dab89dde83

The Most Missed Signs That a Child Has Been Sexually Abused

In the United States, government authorities respond to a child sexual abuse report every 9 minutes. Recognizing the signs of abuse is the first step in protecting a child who’s in danger. Unfortunately, the signs aren’t always apparent.

Ninety-three percent (93%) of child sexual assault victims already know their abuser. Sexual predators are usually close to the family and in positions of trust, which means that parents and caregivers already have their guards down. It’s hard to fathom that someone in your inner-circle could be capable of violating a child.

Six child sex abuse signs that can be easily missed:

#1. The grooming stage.

One thing abusers have in common is their effort to gain trust.

Those efforts may include: gift giving without occasion or reason, allowing the child to witness them giving elaborate gifts to others (attempt to impress), taking the child out to eat, movies, being overly complimentary to the parent and/or child, extra time with one-on-one tutoring or coaching (alone time) trips out of town, and more.

Single moms beware! Initially you may be flattered that this person has taken a special interest in your child, but in reality the abuser sees you and your child as an easy target.

Keep your eye out for the grooming stage!

#2. Common misconceptions.

At least 1 in 6 men have experienced sexual abuse or assault, whether in childhood or as adults.  Don’t be blindsided!

Research on male childhood sexual abuse concluded that the problem is common, under-reported, under-recognized, and under-treated.

Parents, we must remain as diligent with protecting our sons as we are with protecting our daughters.

MYTH: Men who abuse boys are gay. FALSE.

Studies suggest that men who have sexually abused a boy most often identify as heterosexual and often are involved in adult heterosexual relationships at the time of abusive interaction. 

#3. Bedwetting or resuming behaviors they have grown out of.

Resuming behaviors of a younger child such as thumb sucking or wetting the bed are red-flags.

If you have a pre-teen or teenager, don’t dismiss bedwetting as just an isolated incidence. Pay attention!

#4. Unexplained bruising or spots on the sheets.

When children play outside and are involved in sports, a little blood here and there may not be cause for alarm. If you have boys, cuts and bruises are the norm and won’t even warrant a second look.

But, as we now know, any unexplained stains on the sheets or clothing is worth a mini-investigation.

#5. Sexual behavior that is inappropriate for the childโ€™s age.

Other warning signs include; excessive talk about or knowledge of sexual topics, asking other children to behave sexually or play sexual games.

A toddler masturbating or mimicking adult-like sexual behaviors with stuffed animals, toys or other objects is a strong sign of sexual abuse.

#6. Typical pedophilia behavior: Tries to be a childโ€™s friend rather than filling an adult role in the childโ€™s life.

– Abusers are often in a positions which give them access to children (i.e. church, coaching, mentoring) either as a career or volunteer.

– The abuser may often talk with children about their personal problems and relationships.

– They may vocalize how much they “love kids” and have several relationships with children outside the scope of their professional realm.

Typical Signs in adolescents:

  • Self-injury (cutting, burning)
  • Inadequate personal hygiene
  • Drug and alcohol abuse
  • Sexual promiscuity
  • Running away from home
  • Depression, anxiety
  • Suicide attempts
  • Fear of intimacy or closeness
  • Compulsive eating or dieting

Violations of trust are betrayals that have lasting effects. Parents, this is a matter of life or death, you can’t be too cautious. Remember, you are not alone. If you suspect sexual abuse you can talk to someone who is trained to help.

National Sexual Assault Hotline at 800.656.HOPE (4673) or chat online at online.rainn.org.

Online Prevention Training- https://www.stopitnow.org/prevention-training-on-demand

References: Rainn.org, Stopitnow.org, 1in6- https://1in6.org/get-information/the-1-in-6-statistic/

Male Sex Abuse Survivors Delay Disclosure For Twenty Years On Average

At least 1 in 6 men and boys have been sexually abused or assaulted.

Talking about any type of abuse takes a lot of strength. Today, female victims of sexual assault and abuse may be more comfortable speaking publicly about their experiences and because of that, we’re having the conversation more often. But is it the same for male survivors?

Being a male survivor of child sex abuse is still very taboo and greatly under-reported.

According to 1in6.org and the Center for Disease Control, At least 1 in 6 men and boys have been sexually abused or assaulted.

I’m embarrassed to say that the assault of men and boys, honestly wasn’t on my radar as much as the abuse of girls. Now, I’m laser-focused on prevention so that parents (especially single-moms) aren’t blind-sided.

Four practical ways to help protect your child from pedophiles:

#1 – Have the conversation more than once

Sexual abuse may be an uncomfortable subject for many parents but its literally a matter of life or death. Just because you had ‘the talk’ with your son when he was eight, don’t assume he’d be completely comfortable telling you right away if something happened.

For males, the shame can be unbearable and not worth being judged or not believed.

Keep talking about it! Use various resources if you have to, educational videos and books are still a thing.

The purpose of having the conversation several times, is to make it a familiar, common subject in your household. If something ever happened, your son will know that it’s not his fault, which will help him get past the shame and disclose an incident sooner than later.

#2 – Beware of misconceptions

I was always concerned that while teaching my children to respect their elders, they might perceive that rule as; never question an authority figure or adults are always right. Which we all know is definitely not true!

Psychologists say, the abuser/predator is usually someone close to the family. Help your child understand that not all adults mean them well.

Male survivor.

#3 – Don’t ignore red-flags

It can be easy to miss typical warning signs because depressed individuals are great at hiding their feelings.

Parents, if you have a fleeting thought or inkling that something could be wrong… GO WITH THAT. Get nosey, don’t wait until something happens to comb through your childโ€™s phone and tablet.

It may be helpful to teach your child (of any age), that whenever a person says, don’t tell anyone; they’re either about to do something wrong or have already done something wrong.

When it comes to our children, it’s better safe than sorry. No one gets an automatic “trust badge” just because they’re in a noble profession.

Male survivor.

Remember, no one is a pedophile until they’re caught and convicted.

#4 – Never judge a book by its cover

Don’t be caught off guard! Just because someone has a noble title such as; Bishop, Doctor or Police Officer doesn’t automatically make them trustworthy. We would like to think-so, but we don’t live in a perfect world.There are good and bad people in every city, country, religion, ethnicity, and so-on.

Letโ€™s forget credentials, forget the squeaky clean background check, forget that he was once voted mentor-of-the-year, never mind that he’s a former NFL player and now coaches your son.

I’m not saying you should be paranoid, but realistically, things can happen when we least expect it.

Here’s a quick reminder of a few abuse cases that made headline news:

FACT: At least 1 in 6 men have experienced sexual abuse or assault, according to leading research. Read about the statistic, find helpful information, chat with a trained advocate through the 24/7 national helpline, join a weekly online support group, view male survivors’ stories, etc. You’re not alone. Visit: https://1in6.org/

Male survivor.