The Impact on Our Patterns of Coping for Reclaiming Myself after Child Sex Abuse
This book was written with female survivors of child sexual assault/abuse (CSA) therefore we have used the feminine pronoun throughout this text when speaking about CSA survivors. That is not to say that much of the…
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This book was written with female survivors of child sexual assault/abuse (CSA) therefore we have used the feminine pronoun throughout this text when speaking about CSA survivors. That is not to say that much of the work covered in this book would not be useful and appropriate to males as well. We believe all survivors will find benefit in working through this book, but males will have to alter the feminine pronoun as they read. There may be additional issues that male survivors need to face and deal with and these would not be covered in this resource. We have spoken about the perpetrator of the CSA as ‘he’ because in most cases the offending perpetrator was a male. That is not to say that women do not perpetrate sexual abuse, or that males are not the victims of child sexual abuse/ assault.
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