PINTEREST FACEBOOK TWITTER

KYRA DAVIS

New York Times bestselling author of Just One Night

  • Home
  • About
  • Books
    • Deceptive Innocence (Pure Sin series)
    • Just One Night series
    • Sophie Katz Mysteries
    • So Much for My Happy Ending
  • Blog
  • Press & Events
  • Contact
KYRA DAVIS

BLOG

Paterno & Spanier's Mistakes Are Horrific...And Common

On Wednesday night I watched Anderson Cooper interview a man named Troy Craig. As a child he had often taken car rides with Jerry Sandusky and every time they were in the car alone together Sandusky would put his hand on Craig's thigh. Although he said it never got to anything "overtly sexual," it felt very inappropriate.

"I experienced no touch like that...from any other adult man in my life. I didn't know at the time...exactly what about it made it so weird and strange. I just knew...it wasn't like, you know, the touch of another adult man in my family..."

After talking to Craig, Cooper spoke with CNN's legal contributor, Sunny Houston, who used to prosecute child sex crimes. She explained that Sandusky's behavior with Craig was pretty much text-book for the child molester.

"...child predators groom their victims. And it usually does start with that sort of uncomfortable touching and then the boundaries get pushed and pushed and pushed."

While listening to Craig and Houston it was impossible for me not to be reminded that I had once been in Craig's shoes. In my case the predator had been a man who I not only looked up to but had purposely and decidedly chosen as a father figure. He was also a man whose care I was often placed in. While this happened to Craig when he was a preteen it happened to me when I was about 8. At first this guy would just put his hand on my knee but eventually he started putting his hand high up on my inner thigh, which of course would involve his hand going slightly up my skirt.  And as was the case with Sandusky and Craig, the touch wasn't overtly sexual. It was just on my thigh...and yet I knew it wasn't right. What made my situation different is that Craig says he didn't really understand what was going on or why the touch was weird. But in my household sex had never been a taboo subject. I knew all about it and I knew where those touches would lead if I didn't do something.

So I told. I went to people who were required to help me.

And they didn't. I was basically told that when I was with him I should stay more than an arm's length away. This was an important person I was accusing. He was needed. So it was explained to me that I was to keep quiet about what had happened. No one confronted him.

So to make this clear, at the age of 8 I was put in charge of protecting myself and I was to do so in a way that involved so much subtlety that the other adults who were around wouldn't know that there was any kind of problem.

The funny thing is, the same individuals who shrank from their responsibilities were also the people who had told me in various ways, several times over, that even as a child, I had rights. Yes, I was expected to follow most adult rules but if any adult tried to violate my rights I was not only allowed to defend those rights I was obligated to. I had internalized that message and so I did protect myself. It wasn't always easy. There was one evening when I was put in a situation where fully protecting myself was an impossibility. After that I confronted one of the adults I had told (by then I was nine). I explained  that my continued silence would come at a price. Basic protection. At the very least I had to be assured that I would never again be put in a position where keeping his hands off me would be excessively difficult. I can't recall the exact words I used or the words used by the adult I was confronting. I do remember the look of pain, guilt and absolute distress on that individual's face. What I didn't understand then is that this person hadn't been able to fully grasp or handle the information I had given them before. They hadn't been able to make it into the right shape to fit it into their brain and so even though they didn't exactly think I was lying they also hadn't fully been able to accept the truth of it. But after that conversation things did improve for me. I was still sworn to secrecy but I was never again put in a position where this man had a serious advantage over me.

But several years later this guy tried to get close to me again and that brought everything to a head. The people I had told spoke with individuals they admired and asked for advice. In other words the complaint was kicked up the chain of command. Eventually this man was confronted and he chose not to confirm or deny my allegations. And no on pushed it. He was important, he was needed, and to be honest, he was loved. And because I had done such a good job of protecting myself my complaints just didn't sound so bad. "He would never have really hurt you," I was told. "He just never loved anyone before and he didn't know how to appropriately express that love."

I swear to God, I'm not making that up. Those really were the words that were used.

But here's the thing, the people who had tried to keep this quiet and who made just so many bad decision in this area were actually good people. People with morals and ethics. People who had stood up against sexism, people who had stood up for me against racism. People who had always encouraged me to pursue my dreams.  So how could they have failed me in this one area so egregiously?

Well, they failed me because the subject of child molestation makes people so uncomfortable they don't know how to handle it. They don't want to believe it even when they're confronted with it, particularly if the person being accused is someone they love and/or need. No matter how many horrible stories we hear about the priest, the teacher, the coach, the uncle, the babysitter, the nice neighbor and so on we still cling to the idea that child molesters are these creepy guys who drive around in run down, dirty vans. So when confronted with the possibility that the charming guy who we have formed a deep connection with on a personal and/or professional level,  the guy who we have learned through experience to trust and confide in is actually capable of hurting a child we don't know how to deal with it. And because so many people have a tough time coming to terms with this they do whatever they can to just make the problem disappear. They don't want to talk to the police about it. They don't want to talk to anyone about it because that would make it more true and they just can't handle that.

Paterno says that Mike McQueary didn't tell him the full extent of Sandusky's assault on the boy in the shower. I believe that because if McQueary was so thrown off by what he had seen that he wasn't even able to compel himself to intervene then the chances of his giving anyone a detailed account of what had happened at that time is minimal. He probably told Paterno that he saw Sandusky sexually assault a young boy and Paterno chose not to ask him to define sexual assault. Of course it doesn't really matter whether he knew the details or not. The sexual assault of a child needs to be reported to the police, always. McQueary, Paterno and former Penn University president Spanier all should have known this. The people who failed me in regards to that man who tried to hurt me have long since seen the error of their ways and have sought my forgiveness which I've gladly given. Yes, the experience left a lasting and painful impression. Still I was able to keep this man from crossing certain lines and although their response was fundamentally wrong they really didn't have enough to go to the police with.  In contrast, Sandusky's crime as witnessed by McQueary was not ambiguous. And the consequences of McQueary, Paterno and Spainer's inaction led to the victimization of God only knows how many children. The firings were appropriate. There have to be consequences.

But before we simply assume that these men made these intolerable errors in judgement because they're really just monsters we need to take a look at how we, as a society, talk about and confront child sexual abuse. We need to make it a part of our national dialogue. We need to give people the tools they need to react appropriately to something they can't wrap their minds around...something they are so disturbed by they would do almost anything to avoid dealing with it.

We have to teach our kids that while they need to respect authority they do not have to surrender certain rights.

We have to create a culture where our children know they can talk to us about these things. And when they do talk to us we have to be prepared to respond with swift, immediate and powerful action. No matter how badly we want the situation to just go away.

Kyra Davis
Bestselling Author of:
The Sophie Katz Murder Mystery Series, 
and 
SO MUCH FOR MY HAPPY ENDING
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to Facebook

6 comments :

  1. AnonymousThursday, November 10, 2011 at 4:59:00 PM PST

    Kyra, your story was told clearly & with amazing clarity, revealing a painful memory of your childhood. Your little inner child, whose scars will never fade, had to face this mental anguish again. Unfortunately, your story is one of the common dirty little secrets of so many children who have to face this alone & unprotected while adults either look the other way or perfer to remain in denial. I did too.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
      Reply
  2. Leslie Q.Thursday, November 10, 2011 at 6:05:00 PM PST

    Oh, Kyra. I'm so sorry you had to face this but appreciate that you are sharing it. I hope your post does help people realize they must take action. Real action. Your note about notifying the police is so important; a child shouldn't be solely responsible for defending herself or himself. If a person knows of or suspects abuse it should be reported. Period.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
      Reply
  3. kyradavisThursday, November 10, 2011 at 6:52:00 PM PST

    Thank you, it was, by far, the most difficult post I've ever written and I suppose the little kid in me was still scared that I'd get in trouble for "telling." But now that I've published it I'm so very glad I did. I really want people to understand the complexities of this issues and to look inside themselves and think about how they would handle the situation if they discovered that a child was in danger of being sexually abused. We all THINK we know how we'd handle it but this is one those things that is so emotional, uncomfortable and discombobulating that you have to actually prepare yourself for it in the same way you prepare for a big earthquake. You hope it never happens but if it does you know what to do to keep everybody safe.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
      Reply
  4. Jessica RoachFriday, November 11, 2011 at 5:04:00 AM PST

    Kyra,
    As a mother it is horrifying to think that there are horrible people out there & good people who are willing to look the other way. My daughter is only 10 months old but I still already look at everyone with a fine tooth comb before letting them go near her. There are only a couple members of my family who I even trust to babysit her. People need to come to grips with the fact that the world is a scary place & many people can't be trusted. If a child ever comes to you & confides in you they need you to help them. If my daughter ever said something happened to her I wouldn't question it for a second; she would never see that person again. More parents need to watch the people in their children's lives more closely.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
      Reply
  5. azusmomFriday, November 11, 2011 at 5:03:00 PM PST

    Thank you, Kyra! I'm so, so sorry you had to go through that!
    When I was 13 my uncle committed suicide. I knew he'd been in and out of hospitals his whole life, and that he had serious mental health issues. It wasn't until 10 years later that I found out he'd been molested by a priest when he was a child, in the 1950's, when NO ONE talked about it.
    Yes, we are more aware and vocal about child abuse today, but we still have a LONG way to go. The fact that we STILL expect children to defend themselves tells us just how far we haven't come. The fact that many people believe that a child will "forget" or "get over" the abuse shows us how little we understand.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
      Reply
  6. AnonymousSaturday, November 12, 2011 at 2:29:00 PM PST

    We live right in the midst of my husband's family: mother, father, sister, brother and many cousins.

    The eldest, and most esteemed of the cousins, is married to a man who fixes and created computers.

    For some reason, this man, "Joe" decided that my daughter was in need of a computer. She was about 13 at the time.

    I told him that she would not be allowed a "private computer." He insisted. He even offered to set it up, in her bedroom, and wire up the internet for her. I continued to refuse. He continued to create her a computer, and fixed it all up for her, at his place. I suggested to my husband that this didn't feel right, but he told me that I was too sensitive, and had a bad habit of reading into others' good intentions.

    Finally, Joe took my young daughter, wrapped her up in his arms, and told her that she owed him a big kiss for creating her computer. My daughter was able to get away from him, and came to me. I then went to her father with my concerns.

    I was, again, told that I was too sensitive, and he would not confront him. As the leaf against the tide, I could not confront this man. He is, after all, married to the most honorable of all the cousins. Settled, physically, in the center of all of "the family" if I was to make any sort of claim, I would be turned upon. It has happened before, on matters much less important, and I couldn't do anything public.

    However, I did forbid my daughter, and the rest of my children, from attending any family functions without supervision. This man has never been permitted to speak to her again, because I won't allow it. The computer never came to my home.

    You see, I was also abused as a child. My voice had equally been silenced with adults who did not stand up for me. And now, I am married to someone who reminds me that I am insignificant and that my opinions and feelings don't matter. It is really easy to tell someone to stand up for your child, until you are that person who stands by herself with nobody to stand with her.

    My daughter is now 18, and is fiercely independent. As frustrated as I can get with her, I am confident that she will not allow herself to get into a relationship where she has to beg another to validate her. I only wish I could have been the voice to castrate this man.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
      Reply
Add comment
Load more...

Newer Post Older Post Home
Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

BUY NOW







ALSO BY KYRA DAVIS

Just One Night Trilogy

More Info

Seven Swans A'Shooting

More Info

So Much for My Happy Ending

More Info

Lust, Loathing
and a Little Lip Gloss

More Info

ABOUT KYRA DAVIS

I'm the internationally published author of the Sophie Katz mystery series, and So Much For My Happy Ending. My first Erotic Fiction Trilogy will be released in January 2013.

Aside from that, I'm a single mom; I'm addicted to coffee and True Blood (the show, not the drink). I'm happy with who I am yet I’m always striving to be better; I have more bad hair days than good ones, I love a challenge but I am not fearless, I’m….well…just me.

HOME ABOUT BOOKS BLOG NEWS AND EVENTS CONTACT PRIVACY POLICY
Powered by Blogger.