Son And Mom Has Sex In Therapist's Office

Son And Mom Has Sex In Therapist's Office




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Son And Mom Has Sex In Therapist's Office



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Phillips' incest claim draws attention to taboo
Story Highlights Actress said she had sexual relationship with her father for years Experts: Incest is one of the most under-reported and least discussed crimes Real healing after incest is possible, Phillips says

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© 2022 Cable News Network. A Warner Media Company. All Rights Reserved. CNN Sans ™ & © 2016 Cable News Network.
(CNN) -- After actress Mackenzie Phillips spoke about her sexual relationship with her musician father, online and telephone calls to an anti-sexual assault hot line surged.
Mackenzie Phillips told Larry King that incest survivors are "incredibly underrepresented."
Her interviews in the past few weeks brought a spotlight to an uncomfortable topic.
Incest, a common but highly stigmatized form of sexual abuse , often leaves the victim ashamed, isolated and unable to tell others what's happening, because the perpetrator is someone related to him or her, mental health experts said.
"For any survivor of sexual trauma, it's challenging, and it takes a lot of courage to come forward," said Jennifer Wilson, director of the National Sexual Assault hot line. "With incest survivors, it's particularly difficult, because not only is there social stigma pressuring them to stay quiet, but also there's pressure that's within the family to stay quiet."
The Rape, Abuse & Incest National Network, which calls itself the nation's largest anti-sexual assault organization, said it had seen an 83 percent increase in activity on its online hot line and a 26 percent increase on its telephone hot line after Phillips' interview with Oprah Winfrey aired last week.
Survivors of Incest Anonymous 12-step self-help recovery program for adult survivors of child sexual abuse

National Domestic Violence Hotline Hot line for victims of domestic violence and those calling on their behalf Source: Office for Victims of Crime

"Unfortunately, it's something we hear everyday in our hot line, so to have somebody speak aloud about it was empowering to a lot of victims and survivors who went through similar situations," Wilson said.
Phillips spoke about the taboo nature of incest in her interview with CNN's Larry King.
"There's very little in this world that is taboo today, but this subject is still, like, shove it under the carpet, sweep it away, protect the abuser, deny the reality. ... You're just on your own," the former child star said.
This makes it one of the most under-reported and least discussed crimes, experts said.
A U.S. Bureau of Justice Statistics report found that of the 60,000 sexual assault cases reported in 12 states in 2000, about a quarter were perpetrated by family members. About half of the sexual assault cases with victims younger than 11 involved family members.
At times, a victim may feel unable to tell other family members what's happening. And if he or she tells a relative, that family member may have "a knee-jerk reaction," refusing to believe it. Relatives may try to protect the offender in order to keep the family together or to avoid the shame and stigma, Wilson said. This takes a devastating toll on a victim.
"Their sexual selves are damaged. Their emotional selves are damaged, because 'who do I trust?' " said Debra Laino, a sex therapist and counselor. " 'My father did this. My mother did this. Who can I trust if I can't trust my family?' "
Sometimes the reluctance to report the crime comes from the victim, because he or she doesn't want to see the family member in jail.
Although Phillips called the sexual relationship with her famed father, John Phillips, "wrong," she said, "I don't want bad things to happen to him, but I also don't want bad things to happen to me as a result of this. And I was convinced to let it lie."
Her father , a co-founder of the Mamas & the Papas, died in 2001.
Father- or stepfather-daughter incest is the most common form, although it also occurs between mother and child, according to the National Center for Victims of Crime.
A sexual assault victim could suffer physical effects of the crime such as sexually transmitted infections, genital trauma and urinary tract infections.
They could also experience many mental health effects: social withdrawal, isolation, post-traumatic stress disorder and regressive behavior such as bedwetting and thumb sucking. Some become hypersexual and engage in destructive behaviors, experts said.
Humans "have an instinct for avoiding incest or inbreeding," said Debra Lieberman, an assistant professor of psychology at the University of Miami (Florida) who researches incest. But alcohol, drugs and mental illness may disrupt that instinct.
"Under the heavy influence of cocaine or heroin or whatever else you're taking, your mental boundaries are skewed, essentially," Laino said.
The offender's sexual frustrations could also contribute to inappropriate actions.
"It also depends on his other mating opportunities," Lieberman said. "What is the quality of his current relationship with the female's mother? Is she around? What is the ability for the guy to attract other mates?"
The perpetrator, frustrated by the absence of suitable sexual partners, may turn to whomever is around -- even if it's kin.
Recovery from incest can occur, but it often takes years. A victim of incest has to understand that it's not his or her fault and get professional help, Wilson said.
"It doesn't make you broken," Phillips said. "It doesn't make it so that you can't go on and be -- once you deal with honestly and realistically what you've been through, it doesn't mean that you can't be counted on or you can't be well enough to be a part of the world."







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Summer in Summit County



by Jay Hamburger OF THE RECORD STAFF
The boy stood still as he held his sign up to passing traffic on Thursday, realizing what had transpired earlier that day and why his mother forced him onto a sidewalk in Prospector as punishment.
Just 10 years old and a fifth-grader at a local elementary school, the boy a few hours before had tried to steal a digital camera and another piece of electronics from the Linens ‘n Things store at Kimball Junction.
A manager caught him, and the boy’s mother wanted to punish her child. She understood the boy has difficulty with urges to steal. The Linens ‘n Things episode was not his first. In the past six months, he has tried to swipe goods from Rite Aid, 7-Eleven, Wal-Mart and Albertsons, she said.
She asked a Summit County Sheriff’s Office deputy to take her boy to jail, but the deputy declined, saying her son is too young to be put behind bars. Instead she huddled with her boss to devise a punishment.
The boy was soon left steps off the roadway, in a small grass patch on Prospector Avenue near the woman’s office. His mother hung a sign on his neck that told pedestrians and drivers he steals.
"I am a thief I will steal from you! Caution" the sign said in big magic-marker letters, repeating the message in Spanish. In smaller letters, the sign listed the stores where his mom said he has stolen goods. Smith’s, the Nike store at Tanger Outlet Center and KB Toy Outlet, also at Tanger, lost goods to the boy. The merchandise was returned.
"I’ve tried everything else. He’s been caught stealing numerous times," the mother said.
The boy’s spirits seemed OK through the middle of the afternoon, but he appeared to become upset as the day lingered and he drew attention. He admitted he took the goods, and he pledged he would not continue.
"I don’t want to steal anymore. I think it’s bad to steal because, it’s hard to explain," he said, adding, "I feel a little embarrassed because I don’t want anybody to know."
Onlookers started to mill about, and the authorities, including Sheriff Dave Edmunds and Phil Kirk, a captain in the Park City Police Department, soon arrived.
The episode unfolded just outside the Park City Chamber/Bureau offices and as afternoon traffic started to pick up on busy Prospector Avenue. The mother said she put him there at about 12:30 p.m., and she wanted him to stay until 5 p.m. She had planned to put the boy there all day on Friday.
Kirk said she agreed to take him inside at about 3:30 p.m. on Thursday.
"If he doesn’t learn early, what’s going to happen is, if he does do it, he will go to jail," the mother said.
A state official who responded from the Division of Child and Family Services, Lee Robinson, said the mother would not face charges and she would retain custody of the child.
Kirk called the boy’s punishment a "tough-love approach" and a "rather unusual approach." The boy told officers he was fine, and the police determined he was not in danger, noting he was wearing a coat in the chilly temperatures.
"A little public humiliation is what they’re looking at," Kirk said.
Some passing drivers slowed down or pulled over when they saw the boy. Chris Augustine, who lives in Prospector, spotted the boy at about 3 p.m., stopped and called the police on a cell phone.
He said the boy was crying at that point and told Augustine he did not want to be there any longer. Augustine said the treatment should be considered child abuse, and he wonders what sort of family conditions led to the boy’s stealing.
"The kid doesn’t want to be here," Augustine said. "He’s a human being, period."
Therapist: humiliation might worsen boy
A child and family therapist worries a mother’s idea to humiliate her 10-year-old son after he was caught stealing might make the boy feel worse and lead him to commit more thefts.
Nancy Sutton, a therapist with an office in Prospector near Thursday’s episode, says the mother’s decision to make him stand just off Prospector Avenue with a sign around his neck advertising himself as a thief could aggravate the boy’s problem.
In an effort to try to make himself feel better, Sutton says, he might steal again. Sutton, who observed the boy on Prospector Avenue on Thursday, says kids like him should be helped quickly.
"The older the child gets and the more ingrained the habit becomes, the harder it is," she says.
Sutton says therapists would have to challenge the boy’s thoughts about stealing, ask how he justifies his tendencies, probe what triggers him to steal and learn about his hobbies, friendships and strengths.
Then, she says, they would attempt to "uncondition" the behavior through consequences. If he stole habitually, he could be brought to visit a jail, he could talk to a police officer at his house or he could be made to apologize to the store in person, she says.
Habitual stealing, a condition known as kleptomania, is uncommon in adults and kids, according to Sutton. However, she says, it is common for kids to attempt to steal something once. The behavior usually is stopped quickly, perhaps after one instance, Sutton says.
The meeting was part of HUD’s Our Way Home initiative. The program allows stakeholders to share their challenges and brainstorm solutions with HUD officials, who, in turn, share what they’ve learned from other communities facing similar issues.

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More stories to check out before you go
I am a third year student in campus. I have some confessions to make. My mum and my step-dad have a daughter together. My mum loves him very much and she has always favoured my step-sister over me and this has made me develop a lot of anger towards her.
We are very close with dad and I always thought he often made passes at me but did not make much out of it. Recently, we were watching a movie and ended up getting intimate and now I can't get him off my mind. He also seems to have the same problem and I think he has fallen in love with me.
I love him but I know that this will only bring trouble if my mum was to find out so I am looking for a way to end this. This is becoming difficult because I like him and the fact that we see each other daily worsens the situation. Please advise...
Now that you have gone to bed with your mother’s husband, how do the two of you behave when she is around? Even if he is your step-dad, it is still weird and unimaginable. Yes it is less weird than if it was your actual father but it is just inappropriate. I cannot even begin to imagine what I would feel if I was in your position. End this now please!
I think you are looking for a sugar daddy to spoil you by giving you money and other things. However, be in the know that you are looking at the wrong man. Suppose it was you whose daughter was sleeping with your husband? How would you feel? What would you do to your daughter? That very answer is what your mother will do when she finds out about this. And that liking and favouritism she has for your sister will increase ten times when she finds out.
Imagine getting a child with someone you are calling a father? A man who has slept with your mother? Why do you want to break her heart? This man could be having other affairs outside and could infect you even with HIV. Sleeping with somebody you call your dad is a curse to you. If you got a child with him, what would that child call your mother? Stop thinking like a girl who has never stepped inside a school, you are a Third Year student in the university. Concentrate on your studies as this man is only wasting your time.
By law, he is and remains to be your father. Your story is a bit ambiguous because it is not the resentment to your sister but the intimate love you have with your dad. The African culture and tradition do not support this and history will judge you harshly. Someone who sees your mother naked should never do that to you and at the very age you are. This is incest and an abomination. There are many single unmarried men that can date you. He is not the only remaining man on earth. Stop this to be at peace with yourself and with others.
This is one of those things in life that are just unacceptable. It is probably the highest form of betrayal you have both exposed your mother to and without a doubt, you ought to find a way to deal with this. I believe this is why you have shared your issue with us so before I give you some pointers as to how you could deal with this, let's put your sit uation in the right context.
The first and very solid fact is that no "love" can exist and grow between a girl and her father. Real dad or step dad, that man is your mother's husband
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