关于性暴力的最有害禁忌。
The most damaging taboo about sexual violence

原始链接: https://write.as/3k6gb4heu8whz

性暴力后,幸存者可能会经历令人痛苦、侵入性的幻想,这些幻想是从施暴者的视角出发的——这是一种已知的创伤反应,常被称为“认同侵略者”。这些*不是*隐藏欲望的体现,而是大脑为了应对极度恐惧和边界侵犯,通过内化施暴者视角的某些方面而进行的一种防御性尝试。这些片段可能会浮现,尤其是在压力大的时候或被创伤提醒触发时,有时会表现出性内容。 对这种症状的沉默是有害的,会助长自责、孤立,并可能影响育儿信心。然而,以创伤为重点的疗法可以有效地识别这些想法是源于创伤的,将它们与个人意图区分开来,并处理潜在的记忆。 提高公众意识至关重要,以减少羞耻感并防止再次受害。幸存者需要理解这些幻想是症状,而不是供词,从而打破有害的叙述,即他们“想要”这种虐待。认识到这一点能够带来解决,而不仅仅是“管理”一种被认为的黑暗欲望。

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原文

After sexual violence, survivors may experience intrusive fantasies from a perpetrator’s perspective. Outside clinical settings, this is rarely discussed. In trauma psychology, however, it is a known phenomenon: the internalization of the perpetrator’s stance, often described as "identification with the aggressor" or "perpetrator introjects". These experiences are *not* evidence of hidden desires. They are trauma symptoms — distortions produced by extreme boundary violation, fear, and coercion. ## Why this happens Sexual violence can fracture normal memory and meaning-making. To survive, the mind may adopt elements of the aggressor’s perspective — power, intent, or blame— as a defensive strategy. Later, these fragments can reappear as (lustful) intrusive images or fantasies, especially under stress or when cues resemble the original situation. A particularly vulnerable period can arise for mothers when their children reach an age similar to that at which the abuse occurred. At that point, suppressed memory fragments may resurface in distorted form, sometimes with sexualized affect. Shame and fear often intensify, which makes disclosure less likely. ## Why silence is harmful Because these thoughts feel taboo, many survivors do not speak about them. This silence is costly. It reinforces self-blame, increases isolation, and can escalate anxiety or compulsive avoidance. In rare cases, untreated distress can impair parenting confidence and increase fear of harming one’s children—despite there being no intent to do so. The problem is compounded when clinicians lack trauma-specific training and misinterpret the symptom, or avoid the topic altogether. ## Treatment works! Trauma-focused therapies can address this effectively. The clinical task is to: - identify the intrusive thoughts as trauma-derived, - separate them from intent or identity, - process the underlying traumatic memory, - and dissolve perpetrator introjects. ## Why public awareness matters Clear public information reduces shame and prevents re-victimization—internal and external. Survivors need to know that intrusive perpetrator-perspective fantasies are symptoms, not confessions. Naming this openly helps dismantle the enduring lie often implanted by abuse: “You wanted it.” Fantasies are symptoms—not intentions! And they don't need to be "managed" as a "dark desire" — they can be resolved. ## Some sources ### Intrusive sexual thoughts after trauma - **Riemer, K. et al. (2020)** *Sexual Trauma, Cognitive Appraisals, and Sexual Intrusive Thoughts and Their Subtypes: A Moderated Mediation Analysis* — shows that people with a history of sexual trauma report more distressing sexual intrusive thoughts and dysfunctional appraisals, linking trauma exposure to severity and distress of intrusive sexual cognitions. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32914249/ ### Identification with the aggressor — theoretical and empirical work - **Ferenczi (conceptual basis)** *Ferenczi’s concept of identification with the aggressor* explores how trauma can lead victims—especially children—to automatically absorb the perpetrator’s perspective as a psychological defense. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24603172/ - **Lahav et al. (2022)** *Identification With the Aggressor and Inward and Outward Aggression in Abuse Survivors* — finds that higher levels of identifying with the perpetrator’s experience and aggression are associated with inward and outward aggression among abuse survivors. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32659159/ - **Lahav, Talmon, Ginzburg & Spiegel (2019)** *Reenacting Past Abuse – Identification With the Aggressor and Sexual Revictimization* — shows components of identification with the aggressor relate to aspects of sexual revictimization beyond PTSD severity. https://cris.iucc.ac.il/en/publications/reenacting-past-abuseidentification-with-the-aggressor-and-sexual/ - **Lahav, Cloitre, Hyland et al. (2025)** *Complex PTSD and identification with the aggressor among survivors of childhood abuse* — evidence that identification with the aggressor contributes to PTSD/CPTSD symptom severity and may reflect deep trauma impact on self-representation. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39700595/

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