Because it was delicate in nature?

Coach Mike McQueary’s testimony in a preliminary hearing regarding the recent Penn State scandal is so hard to read.  He said that he didn’t go to the police when he saw Sandusky and a seeming 10 year-old boy in the shower, and “it was very clear that it looked like there was intercourse going on.”  He looked in on them “several times.”  He thought it was a crime; he didn’t go to the police because “of the delicate nature” of what he saw.

Did I read that correctly?

What message did McQueary send to that child?  What might have been going through that child’s mind.  Might he have been desperate for this horrific encounter to end?  For someone to come to his rescue?  That boy might have believed, “Nobody will help me;”  “If someone saw this and walked away, it must be OK.”

Would he have left that child to bleed to death if Sandusky had been stabbing him with a knife?  We can do better than this for our children.

For all of the children brutalized by someone you loved and trusted:  hear THIS message.  This is not normal; this is not your fault; you are not damaged; you can heal.  We are outraged; we mourn for your sorrow.

May you find the strength to work through your pain and grief; may you find peace.

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Raising Awareness

This week, I visited two parent groups at, quite literally, opposite ends of Dallas County – north and south.  Despite the distance between these groups, the differences in the neighborhoods and the make up of the audiences, one thing was abundantly clear:  we all want what is best for our children.

We want to be better parents.  We want our children to grow and thrive and be all that they can be.  Some ideas that we discussed in these groups:

  • Parents can do so much for their children just by healing themselves.  We are all wounded at some point along our path, and seeking care to help ourselves is a great first step.  If you are a survivor of abuse and have never told anyone, it’s time.  We all need to process through our grief.
  • Children need to know that we love them, that we would lay down our lives for them.  They need to know that they are the most precious and special people in the world to us.
  • We need to teach our kids the proper names of their body parts — all of them.  Any other messages sends a signal to our kids that some parts of their body are shameful and not to be discussed.
  • We need to be active and engaged in our kids’ lives.  Those who want to rob our houses will go on to the next house if we have a dog barking in our house.  We need to be the barking dog for our own children.  We need to show up for our kids, attend the events they are engaged in, and show them (and all around them) that we know what is happening in their lives.
  • We need to be brave enough as parents to discuss any topic of conversation with our kids.  If something is perceived as “taboo” for discussion, they will seek out adults elsewhere to talk to, or they will not speak when something is uncomfortable.
  • We can minimize or eliminate one adult/one child situations.  If a child must be alone with an adult, we can watch the child’s behavior afterward.
  • We can ask to see the child protection policies in the schools, day cares and places of worship that serve our children.  These should include policies that are in congruence with the law, should include training requirements for all staff and volunteers as well as regular background checks for anyone working with children.
  • We need to know how to respond if a child makes an “outcry” to us.  Remain calm.  Don’t react emotionally.  Don’t make promises you can’t keep.  Make a report.
  • We can empower ourselves and our children by becoming educated about the realities of child abuse in our community.

There is much we can do!  Our agency will come out and talk to parent groups, church groups, etc. and help raise awareness and discuss how to protect kids.  We just need an invitation.

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Would you know what to do?

Would you know what to do if you suspected a child was being abused?  Would you know how to respond and what to do next if a child disclosed abuse to you?

Here’s a call out to all parents and leaders in places of worship, parent groups, schools, day cares — pass along this link for free online video-based training to everyone you know.   Once on our free training campus, the video entitled Recognizing and Reporting will help you understand how to respond if a child discloses to you and what to do to make a report.

Do you know if you are a mandated reporter?  If you are an adult in Texas, you are mandated to report.  The laws vary by state but can be found here in a state-by-state review of the mandated reporting laws.

Empower yourself with knowledge about what to do.  Be ready to respond.  You just might be the one called upon to speak on behalf of a child.

Please pass this message along to your friends and family, to the leaders in organizations that care for your children:  places of worship, schools, day cares, sports organizations, media outlets, social networking sites, etc.

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Beautifully said

This is an excerpt from a slate.com post is says it all.  This is in response to the recent events at Penn State:

…many have painted this story as one fundamentally about Penn State or college athletics. At the Sports Law Blog, for example, Alan Milstein asked whether, were the perpetrator an assistant professor of biology and the witness a graduate student, there was “any doubt the perpetrator, if aware he had been seen, would immediately stop, the witness would intervene, the cops would be called, the professor would be put away, and the university and its president would not be implicated in the least?” In Milstein’s mind, there was no doubt: The big money in college football is the reason Jerry Sandusky’s abuse was not reported.

This is wrong. There is absolutely a doubt about what a graduate student would do in these circumstances. Graduate students are as highly dependent on faculty advisers for their futures as graduate assistant coaches (like Mike McQueary) are on their superiors. For the same reason, I have significant doubts about what an associate at a law firm (or a junior person at Goldman Sachs, or an intern in Congress) would do if he witnessed a sexual assault. Because this is not about a problem at some other institution; it’s a reflection of a universal human tendency to look out for oneself, and to preserve hierarchical institutions about which one cares and upon which one is dependent. It’s also a reflection of the nearly boundless capacity to ignore inconvenient facts and to make excuses for those within our own circle. Think about the Catholic Church. Predators flourished in parishes for years, not simply (and probably not even primarily) because higher-ups worried about financial exposure. They flourished because many otherwise good people could not bring themselves to believe or to act upon information that their priest was a rapist.

Please believe me when I say that this is not a story about Penn State or some other corrupt organization. Characterizing what happened in State College, particularly the failures of so many adults to report the abuse, as the product of some morally bankrupt institution is a way of convincing ourselves that we are outsiders to these sinister forces. It is no different from calling Sandusky a “monster.” That is soothing, I realize. But it also lets us off the hook too easily, allowing us to avoid asking hard questions about what happens, or can happen, in our own backyards. The Penn State cover-up could have, and undoubtedly has, happened at many other institutions, including those you most care about. Don’t content yourself with demanding something of Penn State, or big-time college sports. While that might make you feel better, it won’t prevent the next tragedy.

Read the full article.

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Free Online Training for Parents and Professionals/Volunteers

As part of our mission, we at the Dallas Children’s Advocacy Center provide free online training for parents:  Keeping Your Children Safe from Harm and for professionals or volunteers who work in schools, places of worship and other child serving organizations:  Recognizing and Reporting Child Abuse.

These can be found online at our Training Campus:  http://dcac.trainingcampus.net/

Register as a new user, and then go to My Activities to see the available courses.  You will take a pre-test to assess your current knowledge base, then watch the 25-30 minute video (each course), and then take a post-test to see what you’ve learned.

Now is a great time to do this.  Take less than an hour out of your day to learn how to protect our kids.  Please spread the word!

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Thanksgiving – adapted from one of our staff

Graduation of clients in our building is a beautiful rite of passage.  Remember that a “client” for us is typically a 10 year-old little girl who has been sexually abused by someone she knows and trusts. “Graduation” means that one or more of  these children have reached a milestone in their healing and are ready to, at least for the time being, leave the therapeutic process and move on with their young lives.  It is a joyous event for the staff and partners who work in our building – to see that hope and healing can and does occur — to remember why we are here — to remember to be thankful.

When it is time for graduation, detectives, CPS professionals, therapists, forensic interviewers, administrative staff, educators, development officers, and really anyone who is in the building at the time, stop for a few moments to honor the progress of these children.  All of the staff and partners line both sides of the hallway on our main floor.  A therapist will bring one or more clients to the hallway, introduce the clients and talk about how proud they are for their success in completing therapy.  The children then walk through the group, with all adults high-fiving and clapping and speaking words of encouragement — “Way to go!”  “You’re awesome.”  “Good job.”  It is a blissful moment in the middle of work that is often heartbreaking beyond belief.

Recently, three of our therapists graduated a “3 day group,” which is an intensive, three days of group therapy to help clients overcome the effects of abuse.  They stood ready to graduate, alongside their caregivers who came to show them support. One by one, the therapists read notes the children had written to the staff. They thanked their therapists and everyone else at DCAC for helping them to heal and become survivors. After their notes were read, each of the caregivers took a moment to thank everyone involved in the healing process. Occasionally pausing to swallow tears, they taught us a little bit about what thankfulness is all about:

“Thank you to the Detective who handled our case, who made me struggle a bit and work, but who gave us a chance to get better.”

“Thank you—you all have helped me provide for my family when I wasn’t able to, even financially helping me.”

“Thank you, especially to the therapists, for taking the time to talk to us, they didn’t have to.”

“Thank you—because of you, because of CPS, the therapists, all of you, [we] have gone from being victims to survivors.”

“All I can say is thank-you… I have no words for how you have helped my family. You have given us so much…”

There is nothing more humbling than these proclamations of thanks. It is a moment when we realize that our cause is so much greater than any one of us, and the need is so much greater than what any one of us can solve. We realize that thankfulness may be somewhat about being grateful for what we have, but it is even more about the realization of what we have to offer.

These precious families see DCAC and its partners as heroes, but, we could never be a hero to any of these children and their families unless there were countless others who support our work, like you.

So, in the spirit of Thanksgiving, we’ll say what these were not able to:

“THANK YOU, for remembering these families by supporting DCAC. We could not do this without you.”

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Talking to Our Kids

Even very young children can understand simple messages about self protection.  Parents can create an environment of caring and concern from early on and build upon these messages over time as children grow.  Make this kind of dialogue a part of normal, every-day discussions as your child develops.

“My job as your parent is to love and protect you  and to help you grow into all that you can be.  You are the most important thing in the world to me.”

“Your body is special.  The parts of your body that your bathing suit covers (front and back) are your private parts.  I want to know if anyone ever tries to touch you there.”

“If someone makes you feel icky or uncomfortable, I want to know about that.  If someone hurts you or tries to hurt you, hurts your feelings or your body, I want to know about that.”

“You don’t have to give hugs and kisses to anyone if you don’t want to.  It’s your choice.”

“If someone tells you not to tell me something, I want to know about that.”

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