Experiences of sexual abuse can affect emotional well-being, relationships, trust, self-esteem, sense of safety, and overall quality of life. While every person's experience is unique, many individuals find that the effects of sexual abuse continue influencing different areas of life long after the abuse itself has ended.
Therapy helps individuals better understand the impact of sexual abuse while developing healthier ways of coping, healing, and moving forward. Depending on a person's goals and needs, therapy may focus on emotional regulation, trust, self-esteem, boundaries, trauma responses, relationship concerns, self-compassion, or processing difficult experiences.
Many people seek therapy because they feel confused by how widely the effects have spread throughout their lives. They may struggle with anxiety, shame, self-doubt, relationship difficulties, trust concerns, emotional numbness, hypervigilance, or a persistent sense that something is wrong even when they cannot fully explain why.
Therapy provides a supportive environment to explore these experiences at a pace that feels safe and appropriate. Over time, many individuals develop greater self-understanding, healthier coping skills, stronger relationships, and a renewed sense of personal agency.
The goal is not to erase what happened. The goal is to reduce the impact it continues to have on your life today.