Sequelae
It is important to keep in mind that each individual will have a different response to abuse. Each person experiences abuse differently, and is able to cope with abuse in different ways depending on their circumstances. While one person may suffer greater consequences as a result of abuse than another, there should be no shame involved in how little or much impact is suffered.
People have little control over whether they are abused, and little control over how that abuse impacts them. What people do have control over is their choice to seek help, and to make the commitments necessary to help themselves recover.
While some abuse victims develop diagnosable mental health or medical disorders, the majority of abuse survivors will end up with less severe outcomes that might be best described as sub-clinical (e.g., not sufficient to meet criteria for a disorder) post-abuse issues. These issues may include:
· Difficulty developing or sustaining healthy, long-term intimate relationships
· Sexual dysfunction or discomfort with sexual intimacy
· Low self-esteem
· A tendency towards self-blame.
· Difficulty expressing anger appropriately; a tendency to have a bad temper
· A tendency to put everyone else's needs before your own
· Anxious, panicked, or depressed feelings
· Suicidal thoughts
· Disordered eating habits
· Problems with alcohol and/or illicit drugs
· Promiscuity
· Troubling memories about past abuse
· Moments of dissociation (where you mentally "space out" for a while)
· Difficulty trusting others
· Chronic pain in specific parts of your body
· Self-inflicted harm, such as cutting or burning yourself
· Involvement in a relationship as an adult with someone who abuses you
· Abusing your own children
Though such issues may not qualify for a formal diagnosis, they are still troubling and can make life quite miserable. It is very much worth working with a trained mental health therapist or other counsellor to help resolve such issues