Saturday 8 October 2011

Support


Support

This page is concerned with support for victims/survivors and supporters (people who support survivors in the many ways one does from therapy to friendship). It first describes the types of face to face support for victims/survivors whether it be one to one counselling and/or support groups. Secondly, it gives the names, telephone numbers and Internet addresses of counsellors, counselling agencies and support groups known to be helpful with ritual abuse at Australia. It then provides the titles of recommended books and webpages concerned with ritual abuse for reading. Also it includes supportive information for specific aspects of ritual abuse such as rape. It also addresses the necessary aspect of being safe and how to obtain safety from perpetrators.



One to One Counselling

 One to one counselling is talking to a single person as different to a group. The word counsellor is the main term to describe a psychologist, psychiatrist, psychotherapist, doctor, therapist, social worker, etc. Counselling is talking to someone about the abuse. Counsellors are very important. First of all a counsellor is someone whom you can trust. S/he likes you and you like him/her. They are someone to tell your story to. They are someone who knows what you’re talking about or who will read up on the abuse to be informed. S/he is someone who will listen and validate. S/he is also someone who can act on your behalf with police, social security, etc, and someone who will talk to family and friends about the abuse and your concerns. For ritual abuse survivors and supporters, the issue is not generally talked about and accepted, and so we especially need someone to assist us by validating the abuse. S/he needs to have some basic understanding of ritual abuse and believes it exists, is willing to educate him/herself about the abuse, and has an awareness of Dissociative Identity Disorder and Complex Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. 

Counselling is either by those who are specifically trained and/or experienced in ritual abuse counselling, or are general counsellors with no training and experience but are willing to learn. A specific counsellor has attended workshops dealing with ritual abuse and/or has many ritual abuse clients. S/he is very knowledgeable. A general counsellor is open to accepting it, is willing to be educated and uses their general knowledge of abuse and recovery. Both types of counsellor, both specific and general, can help the survivor. What is important is that they believe that ritual abuse exists and will educate themselves about it.

Many counsellors have said that they believe ritual abuse exists in order to please the survivor, but in reality do not believe. They think the survivor is “delusional” and “goes along” with the supposed “delusion” in order to “help them”. One soon finds out that the counsellor is not really believing and it is a horrible shock for the survivor. The cults lie about “not being believed” has therefore happened and the survivor has to deal with this. Be sure you are talking with someone who really believes you.

By talking to a counsellor you are not putting anybody else at risk. A counsellor is someone where the information you tell him/her will stay only with that person. You do not need to worry that it will go to the police or another professional if you don’t want it to.



Specific Ritual Abuse Counsellors

Specific Ritual Abuse counsellors are mainly found within sexual assault agencies, religion based counselling agencies, and counselling for Dissociative Identity Disorder. They can be found anywhere though as they maybe in private practice and have an interest in helping a ritual abuse survivor.

Sexual assault agencies are either within government health departments or are community based eg a rape and incest crisis centre. Sexual assault counsellors can sometimes be the first that ritual abuse survivors call upon as the first memories are usually sexual. Religion based counsellors eg Centacare, Careforce, etc are concerned about ritual abuse as it is so destructive to positive religions such as Christianity. (You also do not need to be religious to go to a religion based counselling service.) DID counselling agencies are also concerned about trauma and dissociation. The survivor/supporter therefore rings the counselling agency and asks if they have a counsellor who works with ritual abuse. Some agencies may not have a specific counsellor, but will refer to another that does. 


There are also many individual counsellors who are specifically concerned about the issue, and who work in a wide range of agencies and institutions outside of sexual assault, religion based etc. They may work at a university as a counsellor or as a religious support worker, etc. When looking for a counsellor, you will find a supportive information network that will recommend someone who is experienced. For example, you may ring a sexual assault agency and they may say "No we don’t have a person here who is experienced in ritual abuse, but we know that this person at this place does and we recommend her/him". Specific counsellors may also work in private practice, by themselves, and have a concern with the issue. They are referred by an agency or long term survivor. 


Caution

It is important that the agency or a long term survivor recommends a private practice or public (eg hospital, community agency) counsellor as this situation is open to cult abuse. A cult member maybe posing as a counsellor in order to continue or reactivate the programming, reprogram itself and continue the abuse. 
I have had two horrible experiences with cult members in public hospitals. One psychiatric ward in a public hospital south of the river in Perth has a main psychiatrist who reprograms you with awful torture. He did so at the hospital and takes you back to his house using an ambulance (and a cult member posing as an ambulance driver) and his own car with a swap over at a shopping centre. At the hospital he tortured me late at night with other cult members who are staff. Also, at a psychiatric ward north of the river, a nurse late at night came into my room and switched me into a programmed state by touching my left back shoulder blade, and demanded that "I get over problems" so that I wouldnt remember and discharge awful memories at the hospital. Ive also been reprogrammed by counsellors who worked at TAFE in NSW.
There has also been a tendency for some counsellors to be very fixated on external issues to ritual abuse. For example, some see being gay as being the “bad result of ritual abuse”. Be wary of any counsellor who has fixed thoughts related to ritual abuse. Another concern, especially with counsellors who work with the medical model/cognitive behaviour therapy, is “accepting that ritual abuse” occurs only to befriend the victim/survivor. They think the victim/survivor is delusional and will only say they believe it exists so that the victim/survivors feels like “s/he is believed” when in reality s/he isn’t. The counsellor may have good intentions because the counsellor genuinely wants to help the victim/survivor, but in effect is detrimental because its not really supportive. Sooner or later the truth about what the counsellor really believes ie that ritual abuse doesn’t exist, will come out and it can be devastating for the victim/survivor. One needs to talk with the counsellor from the beginning to see if s/he is genuine, and/or get a referral from a survivor or a counselling agency who know that the counsellor is genuine.


General Counsellors

General counsellors, or those that are not knowledgeable and experienced with ritual abuse, can be found almost anywhere. The counsellor needs to be open minded and can see that ritual abuse could exist as with any criminal organization. Most importantly, s/he does actually believe that it exists. S/he will educate her/himself about the issue by reading books and the Internet, and if possible talk with counsellors who are experienced with the issue. If the counsellor is outside a counselling agency, a survivor or supporter definitely needs a recommendation from another survivor or legitimate counselling agency as this situation is again open to cult abuse.


A Good Counsellor

Finding the right counsellor is important. The major considerations are: do you get on with this person and like them, how much do they cost, will they be stable eg not move, have lots of children, not go on holidays a lot, etc. Will they fulfill most of what is expected: validate, act on your behalf, find information, etc. Some counsellors may bring in their wrong beliefs and are pushy. This may include "saving the survivor and supporter from the devil", seeing "men or women as the enemy", etc. Travel is also a major consideration. In metropolitan areas, survivors and supporters have many counsellors available. In rural areas, there is a shortage of counsellors and so the survivor generally needs to find someone they can relate to locally or travel. Gender is also another consideration. Most community based services such as rape and incest survivor agencies are for women and children only. Men may need to talk to a government or religious counselling agency.

Cost  

From my latest information, these are the costs in counselling. They are general estimations. They may differ because of individual services and with rising costs. You/the survivor needs to check with the service. Counselling with a government sexual assault centre is free. Community based sexual assault services are also generally free. Counselling at a government mental health service is usually free also. Religious based counselling ask for a small percentage of the income which is sometimes not insisted upon. Some sexual assault community based agencies may ask for a low cost fee (and give concessions) as they are not fully covered by government funding. Doctors and psychiatrists in private practice can either bulk bill (cost nothing) or ask for the 15% Medicare levy. They can sometimes assist by bulk billing if you/the survivor are on benefits, allowances, pension or a low wage. Private psychologists cost and are the most expensive. Most do a sliding scale depending upon if you are on benefits, allowances, pension or low wage. Some health insurance companies cover counselling as similar to natural therapies and dental work, but they may have provisions stopping this eg. that you have suffered from depression before and therefore cannot claim it as a new illness. However, health insurance companies are now becoming more flexible, but there is still a need to check with the health insurance company first. You/the survivor can see the cost as a consideration and not the total one. The most important consideration is liking and trusting the counsellor. 

A Recovery Bill of Rights for Trauma Survivors 

If you are unsure of your rights as a person getting counselling here is a Bill of Rights of what should happen in counselling. If these do not occur you can point out to the counsellor what should be happening, or find a counsellor who can fulfill these rights. http://ra-info.org/resources/billrights.shtml


Finding a Counsellor This is an excellent webpage about finding a counsellor. It is geared for an American reader and concerned with counselling for sexual abuse, but there is much that is relevant.

http://www.snapnetwork.org/choosing_a_therapist


Talking to Someone About Being a Ritual Abuse Survivor

 It seems hard at first to talk to someone about ritual abuse. The survivor has lots of threats and violence supposedly against them. It also seems as if the survivor is the only person who knows about it. It is really important therefore to really trust someone. From my and other survivors experience, counsellors and people who have heard about ritual abuse will believe the survivor and will really support them. They will not call you a liar or betray your trust. This only happens with cult members or innocent family who are themselves lied to. I have always been treated with respect and acceptance by counsellors and concerned people and this helped me to talk about it. The cult also lies that “the counsellor will be killed or hurt if they help the survivor”. I have not heard of a counsellor being killed or hurt by counselling a ritual abuse victim/survivor in nearly nineteen years I have been a victim/survivor.


Counselling Agencies


Publically and Community Funded Counselling Agencies

 Below is a list of publically and community funded and run counselling agencies that have talked to Beyond Survival magazine (a well respected survivor magazine during the nineties), have been recommended by survivors or I have had counselling with. They accept it exists and have an awareness of ritual abuse. They also have crisis numbers. There are also many others that are community based, government or religious that for reasons of time and energy have not advertised their services with the magazine and are still able to offer an appropriate service. Ring your local sexual assault centre and ask to talk to someone who knows about ritual abuse. The centres usually are aware that it exists and will help you directly, or refer you to someone they know can help a ritual abuse victim/survivor. 

If known, they are categorised in terms of gender they see (men, women, both) and availability. If you could not talk to the agencies or support group, it is best to ring your local sexual assault centre who generally are familiar with ritual abuse and who can then refer. The services are ongoing. This can be on a weekly, fortnightly, etc basis. Some agencies can only see people for a short period eg. only six to eight weeks, and then one needs to find another counsellor. Some services cost and some are free. It is best to check with the counselling agency at the beginning what the costs are.


Western Australia

Perth Sexual Assault Referral Centre (both genders) 93401820, 93401899 24hrs; Six to eight sessions only.
Incest Survivors Association (both genders) 08 9227 8745 (9-4) (Small cost, concession price) Webpage http://www.isa.asn.au/
There is an Incest and Ritual Abuse Library at 114 South St, Freemantle, Western Australia. It is open only on Fridays, 1-4pm. Telephone: 9335 8214
WA country Sexual Assault Referral Centre (both genders) 1800 199 888 (local call) 24hrs 

South Australia  

Adelaide Womens Statewide Health Services (women) 08 8267 5366 (9-5, Mo-Fr)

Victoria

Melbourne  CASA House (both genders) 03 9635 3610 (9-5);
Vic country Telephone Service Against Sexual Assault (both genders) 1800 806 292 (local call) 24hrs
Western Victoria Stawell Community Health Centre 03 5358 3700 (9-5, both genders) 

New South Wales

Sydney Sydney Rape Crisis Centre (Women) 1800 424 017 (24hrs and local call for NSW country) Online counselling, please go to http://www.nswrapecrisis.com.au
Royal Prince Alfred Hospital’s Sexual Assault Service (Men and Women) (02) 9515 3680 Business hours, (02) 9515 6111 After Hours and also 24 hours.
Wollongong Sexual Assault Centre (both genders) (02) 4222 5408 9-5, (02) 4222 5000 (24 hrs)
Anglicare (both genders) 4229 7911 (9-5)

Australian Capital Territory

Canberra Rape Crisis Centre (women) (02) 6247 2525 (24hr) email crcc@rapecrisis.org.au
Sexual Assault Crisis Line (both), 02 6247 2525, (twenty four hours) 02 6247 1657 TTY (9-5) leave message;
Service Assisting Men Survivors of Sexual Assault- SAMSSA (men) 02 6262 7377, 0411 847 108, 02 6267 7388, email samssa@samssa.org.au

Tasmania

Hobart Sexual Assault Services (both) (03) 6231 1817; referral,( 24hrs)
Sexual Health (both) (03) 6233 3557 (9-5) or 1800 675 859 (toll free)
Launceston Laurel House (both) 03 6334 2740 (9-5), 0409 800 394 after hours crisis calls, 016 181450 after hours paging service, Email: counsellors@laurelhouse.org.au

Queensland

Gold Coast Sexual Assault Service 07 5591 1164 (women, 9-5, weekdays);
Men Affected by Rape and Sexual Assault (MARS) Franc Hayes 0412 600 022
Sexual Health Clinic (both, 9-5 weekdays, except Wednesday 9-12) 07 5576 9033, Email: sexualhealthgc@health.qld.gov.au
Cairns 07 4031 3590 (women, 24hrs)
Sunshine Coast Crisis Centre 07 5443 4334 (women, men referral, 9-5 weekdays);
Qld Country Crisis Centre 1800 012 023 (women, men referral, 24hrs);
Brisbane Rape Crisis Centre (Women) 3844 4008 (24hrs); Gladstone Rd Medical Centre. Men Affected by Rape and Sexual Assault (MARS) Dr Wendell Rosevear (07) 3857 1222 (9-5, Mon-Fri)

Northern Territory

Alice Springs Sexual Assault Referral Centre (9-5) (08) 8951 5880
Katherine Family Link (9-5) (08) 8971 0777
Tennant Creek (9-5) (08) 8962 4364
Darwin Ruby Gaea Centre against Rape (Women) (9-5) (08) 8945 0155, Darwin Sexual Assault Referral Centre (both, 9-5) (08) 8922 7156 Crisis Line (both) (24hr) Free call 1800 019 116

Private Practice and Reductions In Payments

Some counsellors who are familiar with ritual abuse, and can counsel on it, are in private practice. Just like a doctor they have their own private counselling agency. They have to charge as they do not receive any public and/or community funding. If they are covered by the GP Mental Health Scheme you can have up to eighteen sessions per year with them. Their counselling availability is in terms of six sessions per allotment ie you can get three allotments of six sessions per calendar year ie the eighteen sessions can only fall within say 2010. One needs to talk with the counsellor and see if s/he is covered by the GP Mental Health Scheme and then talk to your GP (doctor). Your GP then draws up a plan of counselling with the counsellor. It is financially covered by Medicare and therefore the cost is dependant upon what status you hold with Medicare rebates, and also how the counselling agencies charge. Some agencies bulk bill directly (ie no charge) if you are on a pension or health care card as similar to bulk billing at the doctors; others will charge fully upfront and you get a rebate from Medicare, while others charge a small amount and you get a rebate from Medicare. It is best to check with the counselling agency what their payment methods are and how much you will receive from Medicare. Always tell the counselling agency if you are on a pension (disability or aged), have a health care card or is a student.
You can also take out an insurance plan that covers counselling and you can receive approximately fifty per cent back. You pay a certain amount each week. This is usually about five dollars depending on the company and the plan. There is a limit to how much the insurance company will refund you. Also some insurance companies wont refund if you have already have “shown” that you have a mental health issue. Be upfront with them as they will investigate whether you have had “treatment” before eg with a counsellor, been at a psychiatric hospital, etc. You will be paying money which you will not get back.

Community Groups Aware of Ritual Abuse

These are community groups that are concerned about issues that ritual abuse survivors suffer from eg dissociation and sexual assault, and are concerned about ritual abuse. They offer counselling, referrals and/or information. They can also be called upon in times of a crisis.

The International Society for the Study of Trauma and Dissociation has a list of counsellors at Australia. Many if not most counsellors who work with trauma survivors are aware of ritual abuse and possibly have clients. They can be found at http://www.isst-d.org/directory/memberlocator.asp and put Australia in the country youre looking for. These are private therapists and so will charge. They maybe obtained freely by use of a GP Mental Health Scheme as outlined above. It’s best to ring them and see if they see ritual abuse survivors as clients, and if they are covered by the GP Mental Health Scheme or what their costs are. They may do a sliding scale depending on income.


Living Well is a resource for men who have experienced sexual assault when as a child, an adult or both. It has a list of sexual assault services for men nationwide and you can ring/email the service to see if they can help with ritual abuse or know of a nearby service that does. http://www.livingwell.org.au/Counsellingandsupport/Australiawidesexualassaultservices.aspx


The Australian Centre for the Study of Sexual Assault has a Crisis information page at http://www.aifs.gov.au/acssa/crisis.html This lists crisis services for people affected by sexual assault in every state and territory regardless of gender. There is no need to mention that you are a ritual abuse survivor unless you wish to. The important issue for the counsellor and yourself is that you are in crisis and need help. Most sexual assault counsellors know about ritual abuse but may not be very familiar with it, so its best to work on the crisis.

Bravehearts is a national support organisation who are concerned about sexual assault, especially of children. They are mostly aware of ritual abuse. http://www.bravehearts.org.au/

Crisis Times

(From Beyond Survival magazine) Sometimes survivors get very stressed. These are mainly when remembering the abuse, telling others, when being told to return to cult activities, etc (eg Halloween for satanic survivors).
There are many things you can do to take the edge off the pain.
Breathe. Breathe deeply and wriggle your toes. Rub your arms and legs. Blink hard. Keep eye contact with something such as your pet.
Make a list of your reasons NOT to kill yourself. Read it. Give a copy to your friends to read out to you when needed.
Be safe and warm. Put a blanket around you and cuddle a teddy bear. Hold onto your pet.
Make a list of things you can do to make you feel better: go out for dinner, have a bath, read a book, suck on a dummy, go for a walk. Whatever works or feels right for you.
Write in a journal.
Ring a friend.
Tell yourself that you are worth being loved. You are good.
Be proud of having survived. The fact that you are still alive after all the torture shows what an amazingly strong person you are.
Ring a crisis number from those listed above, the national crisis counselling services of Life Line 13 11 14 (local call) and Kids Helpline Freecall 1800 551800, and talk to them. In case you/the survivor is concerned about being accepted as a ritual abuse survivor by Lifeline or Kids Helpline or anyone other counselling service, you do not need to explain that you are a survivor. What the listener/counsellor is concerned about during a crisis is your safety and that you do NOT harm yourself. 

Flashbacks

Flashbacks happen when the survivor/victim feels like she is back when the abuse occurred. S/he is not in the present and reacts as if the past trauma and programming are happening now. They need to be understood and worked on so that the survivor/victim isn’t acting out of past stuff. A good webpage on this is http://www.traumahealed.com/articles/flashbacks-experiencing-distress-in-safety.html

Safety

Being safe physically and psychologically is extremely important as the perpetrators do want the survivor back. The cults/organisations put a lot of money into the programming, they are sadistic and want people harmed and they don’t want the survivor to be telling authorities the name of the perpetrators.
This is a good webpage that includes many, if not all the safety tips needed for being safe. It also includes more tips from other webpages. 
http://endritualabuse.org/healing/ritual-abuse-and-torture-based-mind-control-reducing-and-preventing-re-contact-with-abusers/
 Media
The different forms of media (not necessarily television or radio channels, etc, but ways of providing information) are now responding well to revealing ritual abuse and helping victims/survivors. Survivors and our supporters are writing books, setting up webpages, have social media webpages eg Facebook, producing magazines and videos, etc. The Internet, with its "do it yourself" publishing capabilities has been particularly helpful. 


Literature

There are now a large number of books on ritual abuse which help survivors. These are some very popular ones.

Books written by survivors

Breaking the Circle of Ritual Satanic Abuse: Recognizing and Recovering from the Hidden Trauma by Daniel Ryder. This outlines ritual abuse, gives a good understanding, has case studies and validation by counsellors.
Ritual Abuse: What it Is, Why it Happens, How to Help by Margaret Smith. This also outlines, gives a good understanding, has a survivor's perspective and explains escaping if you are currently being abused.
Safe Passage to Healing; A Guide for Survivors of Ritual Abuse by Chrystine Oksana is excellent.

Biographies

Breaking Ritual Silence An Anthology of Ritual Abuse Survivors Stories Editors: Jeanne Marie Lorena and Paula Levy Over fifty male and female survivors all over the world share their experiences of abuse and healing.
Michelle Remembers by Michelle Smith and Larry Pazder One of the first books written by a survivor (1980). Still powerful.

Articles

This a list of articles about ritual abuse and programming: http://childabusewiki.org/index.php?title=Satanic_Ritual_Abuse_Evidence_and_Journal_Articles




The following are literature by major counsellors and researchers in the field: Randy Noblitt, Ellen Lacter, Valerie Sinason and Alison Miller
 
Information on Randy Noblitt and His Research
https://ritualabuse.us/smart/randy-noblitt/ 

Noblitt, PhD, J. R. – An Empirical Look at the Ritual Abuse Controversy (2007) http://ritualabuse.us/ritualabuse/articles/an-empirical-look-at-the-ritual-abuse-controversy-randy-noblitt-phd/

Fran’s Day Care – Keller Case – Randy Noblitt, PhD
https://ritualabuse.us/ritualabuse/articles/frans-day-care/

On Page 170 (first edition), of Cult and Ritual Abuse – Noblitt and Perskin (Praeger, 1995) states “One of the best sources of evaluative research on ritual abuse is the article “Ritual Abuse: A Review of Research” by Kathleen Coulborn Faller (1994)….in a survey of 2,709 members of the American Psychological Association, it was found that 30 percent of these professionals had seen cases of ritual or religion-related abuse (Bottoms, Shaver & Goodman, 1991). Of those psychologists who have seen cases of ritual abuse, 93 percent believed that the reported harm took place and 93 percent believed that the alleged ritualism occurred. This is a remarkable finding. Mental health professionals are known to be divergent in their thinking and frequently do not agree with one another regarding questions of the diagnosis and etiology of psychiatric problems…this level of concurrence in a large national sample of psychologists…would be impressive…the similar research of Nancy Perry (1992) which further supports (the previous findings)…Perry also conducted a national survey of therapists who work with clients with dissociative disorders and she found that 88 percent of the 1,185 respondents indicated ”belief in ritual abuse, involving mind control and programming” (p.3).”

Dr. Randall Noblitt conference powerpoint from the 2014 Annual Ritual Abuse Conference – Cult and Ritual Abuse https://ritualabuse.us/smart-conference/2014-conference/cult-and-ritual-abuse/

Noblitt, J.R.; Perskin, P. S. (eds) (2008). Ritual Abuse in the Twenty-first Century: Psychological, Forensic, Social and Political Considerations. Bandor, OR: Robert Reed, 552. ISBN 1-934759-12-0.

Ritual Abuse in the Twenty-First Century contains articles from two dozen international authors who write about the psychological, forensic, social and political consequences and ramifications of ritual abuse in modern times.
The book explores cross-cultural reports of abusive ritual life-threatening ordeals. It includes information on diagnosis, controversy, cult brainwashing, satanic abuse, police and media handling, prayer, inner healing, patterns in mind control, and therapy. Its chapters discuss current issues including ritually based crime and civil suits involving allegations of ritual abuse. Ritual trauma for diagnostic and treatment applications are also discussed
http://childabusewiki.org/index.php?title=Ritual_Abuse_in_the_Twenty-First_Century

Noblitt, JR; Perskin PS (2000). Cult and ritual abuse: its history, anthropology, and recent discovery in contemporary America. New York: Praeger. ISBN 0-275-96665-8. http://books.google.ca/books?id=zJkTTpfyJ-8C&printsec=frontcover&source=gbs_summary_r&cad=0  Chapter 6 – Empirical Evidence of Ritual Abuse

Cult and ritual abuse discusses the idea that ritual abuse is an age-old phenomenon and it is found in many cultures throughout the world. It explores the many specific psychiatric symptoms caused by ritual abuse, including dissociative identity disorder. The book gives suggestions for effective ways to deal with the legal and social problems that can result from this severe form of abuse. A new diagnosis “Cult and ritual trauma disorder” is proposed in this edition. Cult and ritual abuse was first published in 1995 with a revised edition in 2000. http://childabusewiki.org/index.php?title=Cult_and_Ritual_Abuse

Noblitt, R. (2008).  Rituals: The Good, the Bad and the Ugly. In Ritual Abuse in the Twenty-first Century: Psychological, Forensic, Social and Political Considerations, J.R. Noblitt & P. S. Perskin (Eds), pp. 17-20. Bandon, Oregon: Robert D. Reed Publishers.

Noblitt, R. & Perskin, P. (2008). Redefining the Language of Ritual Abuse and the Politics that Dictate It. In Ritual Abuse in the Twenty-first Century: Psychological, Forensic, Social and Political Considerations, J.R. Noblitt & P. S. Perskin (Eds), pp. 21-30. Bandon, Oregon: Robert D. Reed Publishers.

Noblitt, J.R. (1995). “Psychometric measures of trauma among psychiatric patients reporting ritual abuse”. Psychological Reports 77(3):743-747. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8559911

 Information on Valerie Sinason and Her Research
https://ritualabuse.us/smart/valerie-sinason/

Valerie Sinason, PhD PGTC MACP M Inst Psychoanal Director, Clinic for Dissociative Studies
Valerie Sinason is a poet, writer, child psychotherapist and adult psychoanalyst. She is registered with the BPC, ACP and UKCP. She specialises work with abused/abusing and dissociative patients including those with a learning disability in disabilty and has been used as an expert witness in court cases.

Valerie was Consultant Child Psychotherapist at the Tavistock Clinic from 1987 to 1999; Consultant Psychotherapist at both the Anna Freud and Portman Clinics from 1994 to 1997 and Consultant Research Psychotherapist/Psychoanalyst at St George’s Hospital Medical School, University of London, from 1994 to 2006. Valerie is Honorary Consultant Psychotherapist to the University of Cape Town’s Child Guidance Clinic.
Valerie is president of the IPD, Institute of Psychotherapy and Disability, patron of the Dorchester Trust and the Centre for Action on Rape and Abuse, acting chair of trustees of the Nieu Bethesda Arts Foundation and a council member for Norwood.

Her extensive writing includes over 100 published peer-reviewed papers, chapters and books. She has written over 12 books and 100 papers and lectures nationally and internationally.    http://valeriesinason.co.uk/index.html

All Publications by Valerie Sinason  http://valeriesinason.co.uk/allpublications.html


The Clinic for Dissociative Studies was established in 1998, and is one of the few national centres of specialist expertise in the care and treatment of people with dissociative disorders.  http://clinicds.co.uk/

Treating Survivors of Satanist Abuse Valerie Sinason Routledge, 1994 – Psychology
Disclosing satanist abuse often meets with disbelief and denial. Professionals, working with the problem, join together in providing essential information and practical advice for others working in this disturbing field.
https://books.google.com/books?id=cOKTQgAACAAJ&dq

Treating Survivors of Satanist Abuse discusses the clinical issues around the treatment of survivors of ritual Satanist abuse. Authors from the United States and the United Kingdom look at the historical foundations of ritual abuse and clinical accounts from children and adults. The book has definitions of ritual Satanist abuse. It discusses issues in psychotherapy involving clients suffering from ritual abuse. http://childabusewiki.org/index.php?title=Treating_Survivors_of_Satanist_Abuse

Attachment, Trauma and Multiplicity: Working with Dissociative Identity Disorder
Valerie Sinason Routledge, Dec 9, 2010 – Psychology
This Revised Edition of Attachment, Trauma and Multiplicity investigates the subject of Dissociative Identity Disorder. With brand new chapters on police work and attachment theory it has been fully updated to include new research and the latest understanding of patterns of attachment theory that lead to dissociation.

With contributions from psychotherapists, psychiatrists, psychoanalysts and service users this book covers the background history and a description of the condition along with the issues of diagnoses and treatment. It also looks at:
the phenomenon of DID
the conflicting models of the human mind that have been found to try and understand DID
the political conflict over the subject including problems for the police
clinical accounts and personal writing of people with DID.

Attachment, Trauma and Multiplicity, Second Edition will prove essential reading for therapists and mental health workers as well as being a valuable resource for graduates and researchers.
https://books.google.com/books?id=7f2rAgAAQBAJ&printsec=frontcover&source=gbs_ge_summary_r&cad=0#v=onepage&q&f=false

Trauma, Dissociation and Multiplicity: Working on Identity and Selves
edited by Valerie Sinason
https://books.google.com/books?id=J3ZPzOLDTbIC&printsec=frontcover&source=gbs_ge_summary_r&cad=0#v=onepage&q&f=false

I Share My Body With 20 Personalities
Kim Noble Oct 11, 2012
Fourteen of whom are highly successful artists with distinct styles. It was — difficult — to accept….
And finally I could get going with my weekly meetings with Valerie Sinason and monthly appointments with Dr. Hale at the Portman Clinic.
http://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2012/10/i-share-my-body-with-20-personalities/263471/

I was raped at 13 by Jimmy Savile in satanist ritual
A VICTIM of Jimmy Savile’s satanic abuse told yesterday of her sheer terror as she was tied to an altar and raped by the depraved star during a black mass.
http://www.express.co.uk/news/uk/371936/I-was-raped-at-13-by-Jimmy-Savile-in-satanist-ritual

Jimmy Savile was part of satanic ring
JIMMY SAVILE beat and raped a 12-year-old girl during a secret satanic ritual in a hospital.
The perverted star wore a hooded robe and mask as he abused the terrifi ed victim in a candle-lit basement.
He also chanted “Hail Satan” in Latin as other paedophile devil worshippers joined in and assaulted the girl at Stoke Mandeville Hospital in Buckinghamshire. The attack, which happened in 1975, shines a sinister new light on the former DJ’s 54-year reign of terror.
Savile, who died aged 84 in October 2011, is now Britain’s worst sex offender after police revealed he preyed on at least 450 victims aged eight to 47.
The girl kept her torment hidden for nearly 20 years before finally opening up to therapist Valerie Sinason.
Dr Sinason told the Sunday Express she first spoke to the victim in 1992. “She had been a patient at Stoke Mandeville in 1975 when Savile was a regular visitor.  Dr Sinason told the Sunday Express she first spoke to the victim in 1992. “She had been a patient at Stoke Mandeville in 1975 when Savile was a regular visitor.
http://www.express.co.uk/news/uk/370439/Jimmy-Savile-was-part-of-satanic-ring

Dissociative Identity Disorder  http://valeriesinason.co.uk/3.html



Information on Ellen Lacter and Her Research
https://ritualabuse.us/smart/ellen-lacter/

Common Forms of Misinformation and Tactics of Disinformation about Psychotherapy for Trauma Originating in Ritual Abuse and Mind Control By Ellen Lacter, Ph.D. December 18, 2012. This page on my website seeks to expose a number of common forms of misinformation and tactics of disinformation about psychotherapy for trauma originating in ritual abuse and mind control.  http://endritualabuse.org/activism/misinfo/  http://childabusedata.blogspot.com/2016/02/common-forms-of-misinformation-and.html

Brief Synopsis of the Literature on the Existence of Ritualistic Abuse By Ellen P. Lacter, Ph.D., Psychological and legal evidence of the existence of ritual abuse is substantial and rapidly growing.
http://endritualabuse.org/evidence/brief-synopsis-of-the-literature-on-the-existence-of-ritualistic-abuse/

Publications on Ritual Abuse and Mind Control in 2008
from End Ritual Abuse – The Website of Ellen P. Lacter, Ph.D
http://endritualabuse.org/evidence/publications-on-ritual-abuse-and-mind-control-in-2008/

Data on Survivors of Ritual Abuse, Mind Control, and Healing Methods   Results of 2007 “International Survey for Adult Survivors of Extreme Abuse”
http://endritualabuse.org/about/eas-data-on-survivors-of-ritual-abuse-mind-control-and-healing-methods/

Ritual Abuse Evidence with information on the McMartin Case http://endritualabuse.org/evidence/ritual-abuse-evidence-with-information-on-the-mcmartin-case/

Mind Control: Simple to Complex  Ellen P. Lacter, Ph.D.    Organizations with a wide range of political and criminal agendas have historically relied on coercive interrogation and brainwashing of various types to force submission and information from enemies and victims, and to indoctrinate and increase cooperation in members and captors.  http://endritualabuse.org/about/mind-control-simple-to-complex/

Ritual abuse diagnosis research – excerpt from a chapter in: Lacter, E. & Lehman, K. (2008). Guidelines to Differential Diagnosis between Schizophrenia and Ritual Abuse/Mind Control Traumatic Stress. In J.R. Noblitt & P. Perskin(Eds.), Ritual Abuse in the Twenty-first Century: Psychological, Forensic, Social and Political Considerations, pp. 85-154. Bandon, Oregon: Robert D. Reed Publishers. quotes: A second study revealed that these results were unrelated to patients’ degree of media and hospital milieu exposure to the subject of Satanic ritual abuse. “In fact, less media exposure was associated with production of more Satanic content in patients reporting ritual abuse, evidence that reports of ritual abuse are not primarily the product of exposure contagion.” Responses are consistent with the devastating and pervasive abuse these victims have experienced, so often including immediate family members. http://ritualabuse.us/ritualabuse/studies/ritual-abuse-diagnosis-research-2

Lacter, E.; Lehman, K. (2008). “Guidelines to Diagnosis of Ritual Abuse/Mind Control Traumatic Stress“. Karnac Books Ltd. Issue Volume 2, Number 2 / July 2008 Pages 159-181

A Coloring Book of Healing Images: For Adult Survivors of Child Abuse  Ellen Lacter, Robin Baird Lewis, Jen Callow
https://books.google.com/books?id=1rDTrQEACAAJ&dq=A+Coloring+Book+of+Healing+Images:+For+Adult+Survivors+of+Child+Abuse&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwiUtPabx4rMAhWCQSYKHV4fC0gQ6AEIHTAA  

Wikipedia Blacklisted Four Important Websites on Ritual Abuse on July 18, 2009
By Ellen P. Lacter, Ph.D.  http://endritualabuse.org/activism/wikipedia-blacklisted-four-important-websites/

(Date of this article is July 27, 2009)
On July 18, 2009, at about 9:30pm Pacific time, Wikipedia blacklisted the following important websites on ritual abuse:
http://abusearticles.wordpress.com
http://extreme-abuse-survey.net
http://ritualabuse.us
http://endritualabuse.org

My website is endritualabuse.org

I have attempted to get information from Wikipedia on why my website was blacklisted and to get it de-blacklisted. I have been stonewalled on both counts.

Since February, 2008, on Wikipedia’s page on “Satanic Ritual Abuse,” Wikipedia’s staff has been suppressing and deleting credible posts from credible sources (including my posts- I am a licensed California psychologist) that have documented substantial criminal and psychological evidence of criminal ritual abuse, and instead has completely discounted the existence of ritual abuse. As of July 27, 2009, Wikipedia’s page on “Satanic ritual abuse” begins as follows: “Satanic ritual abuse (SRA, sometimes known as ritual abuse, ritualistic abuse, organised abuse, sadistic abuse and other variants) refers to a moral panic that originated in the United States in the 1980s, spreading throughout the country and eventually to many parts of the world, before subsiding in the late 1990s.”

Wikipedia has now escalated its censorship of all information supporting the existence of ritual abuse by blacklisting four important websites about ritual abuse on July 18, 2009.     https://ritualabuse.us/ritualabuse/articles/ritualabuse-us-blacklisted-by-wikipedia/

It is clear that Wikipedia refuses to consider any documentation about the existence of ritual abuse.


 Information about Alison Miller and Her Research                                  

Books
Miller, Alison (2011). Healing the Unimaginable – Treating Ritual Abuse and Mind Control  is a practical, task-oriented, instructional manual designed to help therapists provide effective treatment for survivors of these most extreme forms of child abuse and mental manipulation. Paperback: 978 1 85575 882 7 Published: October 2011 Publisher: Karnac Books http://us.karnacbooks.com/product/healing-the-unimaginable-treating-ritual-abuse-and-mind-control/30026/ https://books.google.com/books?id=On8cKGyrnfcC&printsec=frontcover&dq=Healing+the+Unimaginable:+Treating+Ritual+Abuse+and+Mind+Control+By+Alison+Miller


Miller, Alison (2014). Becoming Yourself: Overcoming Mind Control and Ritual Abuse  In contrast to the author’s previous book, Healing the Unimaginable: Treating Ritual Abuse and Mind Control, which was for therapists, this book is designed for survivors of these abuses. It takes the survivor systematically through understanding the abuses and how his or her symptoms may be consequences of these abuses, and gives practical advice regarding how a survivor can achieve stability and manage the life issues with which he or she may have difficulty. The book also teaches the survivor how to work with his or her complex personality system and with the traumatic memories, to heal the wounds created by the abuse.
A unique feature of this book is that it addresses the reader as if he or she is dissociative, and directs some information and exercises towards the internal leaders of the personality system, teaching them how to build a cooperative and healing inner community within which information is shared, each part’s needs are met, and traumatic memories can be worked through successfully. http://us.karnacbooks.com/product/becoming-yourself-overcoming-mind-control-and-ritual-abuse/34803/ https://books.google.com/books?id=o3B_AwAAQBAJ&printsec=frontcover&dq=Becoming+Yourself:+Overcoming+Mind+Control+and+Ritual+Abuse+By+Alison+Miller


Conference Presentations

Dr. Alison Miller conference PowerPoint
Overcoming Mind Control: Keys to Recovery https://survivorship.org/documents/OvercomingMindControl.pptx

Alison Miller’s Second Conference Workshop 2015
Building Internal Cooperation https://survivorship.org/documents/DevelopingInternalCooperation.pptx


Alison Miller’s conference presentation outline
Overcoming Mind Control: Keys to Recovery https://ritualabuse.us/smart-conference/2014-conference/overcoming-mind-control-keys-to-recovery/


__._,_.___
Books written by supporters eg counsellors
Satanic Ritual Abuse: A Therapist's Handbook by Dee Brown A warm, encouraging introduction to the treatment of adult survivors written for therapists beginning work in this area.
Ritual Child Abuse: Discovery, Diagnosis and Treatment by Pamela Hudson A survey of symptoms of child survivors of extra-familial ritual abuse and a discussion of therapy with both agitated and 'frozen' children. Kind, respectful, and well written. 

Books on related topics There are also books on related issues such as sexual assault, mind control, cults, multiple personality, satanism, etc. These are the major ones and sometimes refer to ritual abuse:

Sexual assault
The Courage to Heal Book by Ellen Bass and Laura Davis for women survivors.
Victims No Longer by Mike Lew for men survivors
The Courage to Heal Workbook by Laura Davis for male and female survivors.
Mind Control- Government Development
Virtual Government : CIA Mind Control Operations in America by Alex Constantine Gives an understanding of how secret service agencies develop and abuse mind control.
The Search for the Manchurian Candidate: The CIA and Mind Control by John Marks. A classic book that uncovers the US government's (and western countries) development and abuse.
Freedom from Mind Control- Therapy
Combatting Cult Mind Control by Steven Hassan
.
Buying books, magazines, cassettes, etc
Feminist, Christian and quality bookshops are the main places to order and buy books. Each capital city has Feminist and Christian bookshops some with toll free numbers.
Quality national bookstores such as Angus and Robertson and Dymocks, and individual stores such as Gleebooks in Sydney etc may either have the book or can order it.
Some libraries may also have these books, particularly the related ones eg sexual assault. Libraries also usually have their catalogues online. If a member of a metropolitan library, a borrower can usually order a book from another metropolitan library
Amazon Books is an Internet book ordering service and is excellent on ritual abuse and related topics. They have over one hundred titles on ritual abuse including those mentioned here. It may take six weeks to get it from the U.S.
Video and Audio cassettes have also been produced by ritual abuse survivor services. You can get or order them at many Feminist and Christian bookshops. Each capital city should have Feminist and Christian bookshops and some with toll free numbers.


Internet- Webpages, Email and Search Engines

Webpages
There are many webpages on ritual abuse. 
 For Australia, there is also Pedophiles Down Under , written by a survivor who uses the Internet quite well to expose ra, organised pedophilia and mind control.
They are mostly based in the United States where the recovery movement is larger due to the larger population and a greater emphasis on personal growth. They are not specifically U.S. focused and are for the ritual abuse and mind control survivor internationally. The pages are the result of community groups and individuals (both survivors and supporters) showing their concern and providing support. They are mostly within a broad ritual abuse context, and some also offer support for specific types eg Perverted Masonry
A very good example of a broad webpage is The Ritual Abuse, Ritual Crime and Healing Page or the similarly well written one at Survivorship. These two also list the main webpages, literature and resources for ritual abuse generally.
Ritual abuse survivors were abused by horrific torture in the brainwashing process. Governments, the military/defence forces, espionage and "security" agencies, etc developed and also employed these same methods to experiment with and reproduce programmed civilians and personnel. The mind control developed by these organisations is also the same one abused in ritual abuse cults. The cults either brought it from these organisastions, or the cult and the organization are the same such as the Illuminati. Many ritual abuse survivors were also tortured within these organizations for illegal activities of the governments and military.
These are well written and researched webpages concerned with mind control by ritual abuse cults and other organizations.
On the CIA and the development of mind control, A Nation Betrayed: The Chilling True Story of Secret Cold War Experiments Performed on our Children and Other Innocent People http://my.dmci.net/~casey/
SMART Stopping Mind Control and Ritual Abuse Today http://ritualabuse.us provides information about ritual abuse and mind control.
This is another webpage on mind control that was developed at Canada (Montreal) by the CIA http://www.rense.com/general69/mind.htm
Another well respected webpage on ritual abuse and mind control is http://www.endritualabuse.org/
And another well respected webpage on ritual abuse, government abuse and mind control focused on North America is the North American Freedom Foundation http://naffoundation.org/ Even though for North American survivors, it does still have relevant information on ritual abuse, mind control, government abuse, etc.
There is also a webpage on recovery for Canadian survivors at http://www.victoriousheartinc.ca The general information about ritual abuse can also be used for Australian survivors as with any overseas webpage.
For a Christian perspective this can be found at http://www.hispresenceonline.org/

Search Engines such as yahoo.com and google.com can take you to where there are other webpages. Subject headings can include: ritual abuse, satanic ritual abuse, ritual abuse torture, organized sadistic abuse, mind control, government mind control, satanism, organized pedophilia, "snuff movies", etc.


Emailing

Emailing other Survivors Directly Some of the webpages have the opportunity to email the webpage writer who is usually a ritual abuse survivor.
Email and Newsgroup List Support Groups These are support groups where people email. They are different to chat groups where people are talking at the same time. Some are publically advertized while others are private. They usually are very safe as the list facilitators are particularly concerned about safety. A selection of publically advertized email lists for ritual abuse survivors is at http://onelist.com. Just type in ritual abuse in the subject search. An example of a good email list is psl ritual abuse
Caution is needed. Even though list facilitators and contributors generally are very safety minded and indeed safe, emailing other survivors (both facilitators and contributors) can go outside safety measures. There can be very little information with knowing who they are and not having other people for feedback. This could lead to being revictimized. There are actual cases of revictimisation through email and the internet. Most survivors however have got a lot out of this support. I personally have not come across any revictimisation. Use your intuition, and whether you have benefited from the discussions.

Support For Supporters of Victims/Survivors
Supporters are very important for victims/survivors and our recovery. They validate, sometimes in a very alienating world, and provide emotional, spiritual, financial, physical (in times of sickness or need of housing), informational, educational, legal, etc support. Supporters can be co-survivors who are fellow ritual abuse survivors, other abuse survivors eg sexual assault survivors, counsellors, friends, non offending family, workers such as within the media or police, etc.
The important consideration for supporters and victim/survivors is that both people are striving for an independent and a self empowered life. Think of ways that provide support and not dependence.
Resources for supporters are not limited to the ones specifically suggested on this page. Ones recommended for victims/survivors are just as useful. Please see above.

Specific Support

Counsellors
There are many books on ritual abuse that are written for the counsellor. Survivors and supporters can also use them. Two well used ones are:
Satanic Ritual Abuse: A Therapist's Handbook by Dee Brown. This is a warm, encouraging introduction to the treatment of adult survivors written for therapists beginning work in this area.
Ritual Child Abuse Discovery, Diagnosis and Treatment by Pamela Hudson. This is a survey of symptoms of child survivors of extra-familial ritual abuse and a discussion of therapy with both agitated and 'frozen' children. Kind, respectful, and well written.
Both of these books can be ordered through Amazon books at Amazon.com or possibly through a bookshop such as Dymocks nationwide or Glebe Books at Sydney.
The Ritual Abuse, Ritual Crime and Healing Page has telephone training guidelines to assist counsellors talking to survivors. This is at http://ra-info.org/resources/ra_hotl.shtml

Supporters Generally

There is a wide selection of books and resources that are written for the supporter from any background or relationship to the survivor. These include:
Satanic Ritual Abuse: A Therapist's Handbook by Dee Brown
Breaking the Circle of Ritual Abuse by Daniel Ryder.
They can be ordered at Amazon books and from any quality bookshop.
Webpages such as The Ritual Abuse, Ritual Crime and Healing Page has information for the non survivor/supporter.
There are many journal and magazine articles on the net which can be accessed by doing appropriate searches by yahoo.com and google.com.
ASCA http://www.asca.org.au/displaycommon.cfm?an=2 can be emailed concerning finding more information about ritual abuse in Australia.

Innocent Friends and Family. All the literature listed is helpful for friends and innocent family. You need to understand what specifically is going on for a survivor, and incorporate this within the ways someone generally supports someone else. A book that is especially good about helping a survivor of sexual assault is Allies in Healing: When the Person You Love Was Sexually Abused as a Child by Laura Davis. She validates ritual abuse in the book and it is good as a guide for supporters. Laura's book can be obtained at any good bookstore or through ordering at Amazon.com

Counsellors can also talk with friends and non offending family of survivors if there needs to be education or other matters about the abuse. Some government, church and community counselling services sometimes hold workshops that are specifically for supporters.

Assisting During Crisis Periods

The major times survivors need support is during crisis periods. This is when they are becoming a survivor, remembering, disclosing the abuse, escaping, call back periods, anything else that triggers in a large way e.g. having to have to contact cult or innocent family as there is a death in the family, or experiencing trauma that is not directly cult related e.g. a miscarriage but will also set off cult triggers, etc. Please also see Crisis Periods at the Recovery Page for when survivors cope.
What is important is a genuine willingness to assist the survivor for a period of time. The survivor will generally know how long that period will be for. Some survivors only need a couple of days, some more. The supporter needs to know their abilities and limitations and be clear with this. It is really detrimental to have shaky support as it will only restimulate cult lies that "friends/counsellors/partners/family are not supportive". Survivors are also having a rough enough time that they cannot look after a supporters' inconsistency.


Australian Similar Resources

This section has website addresses for similar survivorship in Australia. Ritual abuse survivors sometimes like information about similar concerns and to talk to similar survivors of say sexual assault, etc.

General Survivor Pages

Advocates for Survivors of Child Abuse This survivor initiated community based agency provides support for survivors of all abuse including ritual abuse.

Sexual Assault

A webpage providing many sources of support for sexual violence victims/survivors of both genders with state and territory numbers is at http://www.wwda.org.au/portviol.htm
http://www.aest.org.uk/helplines/australian_new_zealand_support_lines.htm This webpage provides information for women and men survivors of sexual assault.

Self Injury/Crisis Information

Kids Helpline http://www.kidshelp.com.au or telephone the free number 1800 55 1800 This page has email counselling and telephone counselling information for children and young people.
National Child Protection Clearinghouse This Australian government agency is concerned about child neglect and abuse.
Lifeline. http://www.lifeline.org.au. Telephone131114. Twenty four hour help. Many counselors are aware of ritual abuse. Even if they are not they are concerned about your welfare and so there is no need to disclose if you don’t want to. The Lifeline counsellor is more concerned about your safety. 

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10 comments:

  1. I am not a victim of ritual abuse however my ex partner is and I have evidence that my children (WHO HE HAS MANAGED TO OBTAIN CUSTODY OF)are. Three years ago I tried to get help for my then 2 year old daughters sexual abuse by her father and grandfather through the police, the DCP, the church, the hospital and many other places. All that came of it, was that I was declared mentally incompetent, made an involuntary patient for many months and diagnosed with a disorder (which I do not have.) I have much circumstantial evidence about murders, including the Claremont Serial Killings and the disappearance of Lisa Mott (8 years of sge) in 1981. I know where there are houses that are used to perform illegal activities. (child abuse) and I know about some of he signs that indicate that a perpetrator is living in specific house. I know about members of our society that are involved including the most (past) senior member of the catholic church in Perth. For a long time I was afraid for my life and I am now very careful about how I function and who I talk to about things. I currently see my children on the weekends and my son is now showing signs of physically being abused. His school deputy is involved in the 'cult' which is difficult for me. I have a lot of difficulty knowing who to trust and what to do because I am aware of the power that this "cult" has in our society. I am currently writing a book and have already detailed a statement should something happen to me. If there is anyone out there that can indicate to me firstly that they are not involved in the 'cult' and finally that they can help me to help my babies escape the abuse that they are suffering then please please help me. I go through every day thinking and wondering if I can or if I will ever be able to help my children. My biggest fear is that these people will eventually dispose of my children if I get too close. One thing I will say is that I promise that if my children can be returned to me, I promise that I will not pursue what I know/or make publically available the peoples names that I know are involved. ( MISS Charlie (not real name)-Perth WA)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi Charlie, unfortunately you can hardly go two steps without bumping into these types of people. They are pretty much in every organisation; police, judges, and especially the 'professional help'. I think Perth is pretty bad with it. Having troubles myself.

      Delete
  2. Hi Charlie
    I have plenty of support and have given the names of the perpetrators to important people in my life - both personal and professional. Im actually waiting for a perp to do something wrong so that I can reveal a lot. The police want incidents and I can then provide them with the information.
    Im not involved and I encourage you to find professional support. I can only do so much and my life is about enjoyment now rather than surviving. So I cant 'take on" people in a supportive role. If you look at the support page for professional support in Perth these people will help you. I know because I have had support from them. I live in Perth and have had the good fortune to get support from them. They can help you with getting your children back. They believe that ritual abuse exists and help people affected such as yourself.

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  3. This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Sometimes very dubious "people" leave comments that are basically advertising their services, and usually these services support perpetrators. I can catch them because these comments are registered and I see them in my email. However, there maybe a time delay between when it's posted and when I see the email, so please dont respond to the service by clicking on its name. Thanks David

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