Adult-Child
Sex: Abuse or Misuse?
• A quick fix to a complex problem
By Nancy Faulkner, Ph.D
In a
New York Times article, reporter
Frank Bruni wrote about assigning
child responsibility in adult-child
sex. According to Bruni, experts
believe that in some adult-child sex
incidents "the victim helped
foster the abusive relationship and
allowed it to continue over time,
apparently taking some comfort or
pleasure in it" (11/09/97).
In a society of sexual freedom, are
promiscuous children and teens
initiating sex with adults? Should
we revise the way we interpret and
describe adult-child sex? There are
some child advocates and
professionals who have replaced the
term "sexual abuse" with
"sexual misuse." The
rational is that we may be
overreacting and further damaging
children.
In his article "In an Age of
Consent, Defining Abuse by
Adults," Bruni reviews two
highly publicized adult-child sex
cases. Bruni cites these cases as
examples that a child might be
responsible for sex with an adult,
and as justification for replacing
the term "sexual abuse."
One example by Bruni is the highly
publicized case in which a teenage
boy, Sam Manzi, was reportedly
victimized by an adult who lured him
through the Internet. Subsequently,
young Manzi abused and murdered a
younger neighbor.
Did Sam Manzi take solace in a
sexual "relationship" with
an adult male as a result of their
meeting on the Internet? Bruni
suggests that might be the case,
since Manzi "smashed the
recording device" when the
"authorities tried to get the
teen-ager to gather evidence against
the man."
Let's assume that Manzi was seeking
"comfort." Is that what he
ultimately received? Did Manzi's
behavior suggest he had been the
contented recipient of
"comfort" when he
subsequently abused and murdered his
younger neighbor ?
If Sam Manzi was safe and secure in
"comfort," wouldn't he
have been more likely to lovingly
and openly pass on that
"comfort" to someone else?
Or, does Manzi's behavior sound more
like that of someone violated and
internally enraged, who turned his
anger into destruction of the
"recorded" reminders and
"evidence" of the
degrading betrayal?
Was Manzi in a state of contentment
from some kind of distorted
"comfort" bestowed through
adult-child sex when he killed his
young neighbor? Or did Manzi
ultimately, in self-defeat and total
frustration, vent his rage through
what he had learned, -- the
exploitation and abuse of another
young innocent?
The other case Bruni used as an
example in his article was a
13-year-old male student who was
reportedly sexually abused by his
35-year-old female teacher. The
teacher pleaded guilty to sexual
abuse; but the young student
defended her in court when he said
he initiated the adult-child sex.
Is the teacher blameless because her
student assumed responsibility for
feelings he had for his teacher? And
aren't there notable differences
between a 13-year-old and a
35-year-old? If the young student
was infatuated with his teacher
(which happens), wasn't it the
responsibility of the 35-year-old
teacher to help guide the young
person's emerging fantasies into
more appropriate channels? Aren't
teachers supposed to do that --
develop and re-channel youthful
exuberance?
Did this student and Sam Manzi
"allow it to continue over
time," -- and are they thus
responsible for what happened -- or
at least for allowing it to
continue? Are these two cases
examples of children who promote and
"foster" sex with adults?
Child predators would quickly align
with those who share this
perspective.
If we, as mental health and juvenile
justice professionals, diminish the
term "abuse" and do not
hold adults accountable, don't we
send the clear message to children
that they are responsible? If we
even casually suggest that a child
is responsible for adult-child sex
because of some
"initiated" inappropriate
behavior, are we not alleviating
adults of the responsibility to be
the guardians who guide children
toward healthy development?
What about the references in Bruni's
article to children receiving
"pleasure" from
adult-child sex? In many cases that
is in fact true. The world
population would not be exploding if
pleasure were not a factor in
reproduction. In other words, sexual
touching generally feels good.
Ironically, that same innate
reaction of "pleasure" is
also the cruel source of guilt for
victims, -- and for adult survivors
trying to overcome the aftermath of
their victimization. "Pleasure
guilt" is best summarized in
the self-condemning statement made
by sexual abuse survivors --
"It felt good, so I must be
bad."
Abuse survivors tell us that one of
the problems that lingers into
adulthood and that keeps the secret
intact for years, is the child's
feeling that they were somehow to
blame, and as a result, they are
"dirty" or
"soiled." Sex offenders
are smart. They know about
"pleasure guilt" and may
even emphasize it to keep the sordid
secret, -- "If you tell anyone
about this, they'll think you're
bad."
In this light, did Sam Manzi smash
the recording device because he was
trying to protect the older man who
lured him through the Internet? Or,
like other victims, did Manzi feel
the excruciatingly painful,
misplaced, internal guilt? Guilt for
experiencing pleasure. Guilt for
feeling dirty. Guilt for feeling
responsible.
When Sam Manzi smashed the
"recorders," could he have
been trying to destroy and erase any
remaining traces of what had
happened to him? Or, is it possible
that Manzi could not stand to have
others hear the horrible details of
the violations he was trying so hard
to forget? Is it also possible that
he could no longer bear to hear the
continuing "recorded"
reminders? And, was Manzi feeling
responsible for his own
victimization because he felt that
he, in Bruni's words, "allowed
it to continue"?
Take a minute to think about it.
You're a young child. An adult has
engaged you in sex. If you tell, --
and if the adult is not responsible,
-- then who is? It's bad enough to
have to repeat and relive the
heartbreaking details, -- but to
feel responsible, because the adult
was just a little irresponsible?
Isn't that adding insult to injury
-- literally?
Sex offenders very cunningly weave
the web of abuse and secrecy. The
snare is cast ever so slowly under
the guise of a "loving"
relationship. By the time many
children realize something is wrong,
the violation has begun, and the
stench of the self-deprecating
feelings has already emerged into
their too young and too terrified
reality.
What kind of additional burden are
we inflicting when we tell children
they are responsible for allowing
the abuse to continue? Do we leave
it up to our children to identify
and stop the abuse? If we do, we
impose on an innocent child the
responsibility to recognize their
abuser's subtleties, and then with
their small voice, -- try to make it
stop.
To further argue for alternative
terms for "abuse," Bruni
appears to resort to black and
white, all or nothing logic when he
says, "parents and legal
authorities frequently (assign)
ironclad roles of villain and
victim."
Perhaps it really is as simple as
Bruni suggests -- villain and
victim.
Villain -- "trickster,
deceiver, criminal."
The adult who presumes sex on a
child is "deceiving" the
child into believing that it's okay,
"tricking" the child into
trusting that it's a loving
relationship, and engaging in
"illegal criminal"
behavior. Whether the adult is a
parent who gives birth to and raises
a child, a teacher who has the
admiration of a child, a coach who
has the respect of a child, or a
priest who has the confidence of a
child, -- it is still illegal.
Bruni contends that, "At times
this simplification of the truth can
actually worsen wounds caused by the
imbalance of power and betrayal of
trust inherent in a sexual
relationship between an older adult
and a much younger child."
Bruni suggests that placing full
blame on the adult "negates a
teen-ager's own perception of
events, sowing further confusion
about what happened."
Who is confused? The offenders? No.
They know it's wrong; that's why
they keep it a secret. The children?
Yes. They are confused; and we
contribute to their confusion by
continually trying to rename,
redefine, and patch it up with magic
solutions. Children don't always
know when they are being abused;
they sometimes don't know what to
call it. To add to their confusion,
like inconsistent parents, we keep
sending them more and more
conflicting messages.
We can't have it both ways --
"misuse" and a crime.
Do we want to de-criminalize sexual
abuse? Would that make it easier for
children to come forward? Maybe.
Then what? We give sex offenders a
slap on the wrist for
"misusing" children?
Something equivalent to a parking
ticket?
What are the real issues here?
This seems like just another attempt
to find an oversimplified,
single-factor solution to a complex
problem. Too often we want a
quick-fix. A single golden key that
unlocks the door. People in search
of a magic key with a hyped-up name,
who are chasing the proverbial pot
of gold at the end of the rainbow.
Prevention programs haven't been the
solution. Megan's Law and sex
offender registers haven't been the
solutions. Better investigations
haven't been the solution. Public
awareness hasn't been the solution.
Research, a better understanding of
the issues, and improved therapeutic
approaches have not been the
solutions. But they have all
contributed to working toward
solutions.
So maybe it's black and white, --
and maybe it isn't.
Is adult-child sex a crime? Yes.
Should it be a crime? Yes. Does
adult-child sex damage children?
Yes. Does it damage all children the
same way and to the same severity?
No. Is "abuse" the same in
every case? No. Should every victim
be treated the same in therapy? No.
Is every offender the same? No.
Should every offender be treated the
same in the court system? No.
Bruni hits on the stereotyping
mindset when he degrades the
intelligence of the reader by saying
that at the thought of child sexual
abuse, "the kind of image that
creeps to mind is a depraved adult
taking muscular advantage of an
8-year-old's rag-doll frailty,
strangling an incipient cry of
protest with threats or
promises." Have we only
traveled that far from the dark
ages? Do we still believe that child
molesters wear trench coats and live
in the gutters?
It only takes a quick scan of the
headlines to see that sex offenders
come in a variety of shapes and
sizes -- principals, teachers,
coaches, doctors, lawyers, scout
leaders, ministers, priests,
neighbors, relatives -- the butcher,
the baker, and the candlestick
maker.
Long ago debunked is the concept of
sex offenders as primarily strong
armed monsters who overcome their
victims with sheer brute force.
Convicted sex offenders have been
telling us for years about their
patient and devious selection and
grooming of their prey, sometimes
for more than a year prior to the
actual abuse -- and sometimes
grooming the prey's family in the
abuse preparation process.
Bruni casually refers to adult-child
sex as "relationships." Is
Bruni correct in assigning the term
"relationship" to
incidences of adult-child sex? I'm
not sure what Webster would say, but
"relationship" seems to
suggest something that two people
engage in willingly, -- and with
well-informed intent. By definition,
there are "bad
relationships" and "poor
relationships," so adult-child
sex could be loosely construed as a
"relationship." But it all
sounds like one more way to avoid
saying what it is, --
"ABUSE."
Bruni quotes a noted psychiatrist as
saying, "It makes a lot more
sense to say that somebody cared
about you and loved you, but didn't
do it in the right way." If
this is true, why is the adult so
careful to keep the "loving
relationship" a secret? If the
adult having sex with a child truly
believed it to be a "loving
relationship," why would it be
so cautiously and cleverly guarded?
Certainly describing adult-child sex
as a "relationship" and
depicting it as "loving,"
or "misuse," would make it
so much easier for the offender. But
what will it do for the victim?
Does it make sense to say that we
add further confusion by
acknowledging that abuse was
"abuse"? If we were to
start telling children who have been
the objects of adult-child sex that
they were simply unintentionally
misused, would they feel better?
Would children then believe that the
secrets behind closed doors were
simply a mistake of loving intent,
-- and instantly the questions of
trust, guilt, self-blame, and
betrayal would disappear?
We know from survivors that the
aftermath and effects of sexual
victimization can last well in
adulthood, and frequently a
lifetime. Is that because we call it
"abuse"? Or is it because
it is "abuse"?
When the people of the Midwest were
devastated by floods in '96, were
they distressed because we called it
"floods"? Or were they
troubled because they were under
water? If we had called the floods
"misdirected moisture,"
would they have been less damaged by
the raging water? How would they
have felt about having their ordeal
diminished and defined as some kind
of unintentional precipitation?
By suggesting that innocent children
not place blame squarely where it
belongs, -- on the adult, -- are we
turning back the clock to the days
of telling rape victims that they
"asked for it"? If we
don't place the responsibility on
adults -- aren't we confirming what
child victims are already saying to
themselves, -- "It must be my
fault."
If we dismiss "abuse" as
"misuse," and tell
children that they were simply a
part of misguided love, aren't we
sending more confusing messages?
Will we then drive the secrets
further into the night?
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