Anonymous wrote:Suppositories or enemas to treat a health condition that if left untreated can have fatal results (blockage) is not sexual abuse. Unfortunately how the medical treatment was provided seems like it was traumatic for you. That can be the case for many invasive medical procedures. But it isn’t sexual abuse.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP I am a doctor and my dd had the same problem. I was aware of it becoming an issue so I was careful. There were times that I forced her into a sitting position on the toilet to help her push. I used tons of dietary fiber. Occasionally used laxatives. The time that she needed an enema I took her to the ER and a nurse did it. She actually loved the enema since it immediately relieved her problem. Since then I noticed that she’s kept the extra bottle they gave her that day so many years ago.
When I was in medical school, I saw a father who brought his toddler daughter in for phototherapy on her vagina. He would take her into the light box and hold her legs wide apart for the light to get to her labia. I found it to be odd. I hope that she’s ok now emotionally.
Omg that is horrific. What was the justification for that?? Aren’t they all mandated reporters in a medical facility? How did nobody care about that?
You're a doctor but took your DD to the ER to get an enema?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP I am a doctor and my dd had the same problem. I was aware of it becoming an issue so I was careful. There were times that I forced her into a sitting position on the toilet to help her push. I used tons of dietary fiber. Occasionally used laxatives. The time that she needed an enema I took her to the ER and a nurse did it. She actually loved the enema since it immediately relieved her problem. Since then I noticed that she’s kept the extra bottle they gave her that day so many years ago.
When I was in medical school, I saw a father who brought his toddler daughter in for phototherapy on her vagina. He would take her into the light box and hold her legs wide apart for the light to get to her labia. I found it to be odd. I hope that she’s ok now emotionally.
Omg that is horrific. What was the justification for that?? Aren’t they all mandated reporters in a medical facility? How did nobody care about that?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP I am a doctor and my dd had the same problem. I was aware of it becoming an issue so I was careful. There were times that I forced her into a sitting position on the toilet to help her push. I used tons of dietary fiber. Occasionally used laxatives. The time that she needed an enema I took her to the ER and a nurse did it. She actually loved the enema since it immediately relieved her problem. Since then I noticed that she’s kept the extra bottle they gave her that day so many years ago.
When I was in medical school, I saw a father who brought his toddler daughter in for phototherapy on her vagina. He would take her into the light box and hold her legs wide apart for the light to get to her labia. I found it to be odd. I hope that she’s ok now emotionally.
Omg that is horrific. What was the justification for that?? Aren’t they all mandated reporters in a medical facility? How did nobody care about that?
Anonymous wrote:Suppositories or enemas to treat a health condition that if left untreated can have fatal results (blockage) is not sexual abuse. Unfortunately how the medical treatment was provided seems like it was traumatic for you. That can be the case for many invasive medical procedures. But it isn’t sexual abuse.
Anonymous wrote:I think it sounds like you're conflating things.
Your mom sounds like you don't have the best relationship and that she is unkind and did not raise you in a loving and supportive household. And you sound like you clearly have a lot of resentment towards her.
You happen to have also had this poop issue as a child. The treatment for which was very invasive and required you to be treated by someone who you didn't trust very much (your mom).
As an adult you're working through this for some reason (did you just have children of your own? I had to do a lot of therapy to unpack trauma I thought I had long dealt with after I had kids, having your own really brings all this to the surface). So you likely see a lot of vague reasons for this relationship feeling unsafe, like your lack of trust, feeling like you were neglected, feeling like you were unsupported etc. And when you wonder why you feel this way you are examining events in your childhood. One large traumatic memory is this poop issue. And it is one that seems really clear cut and puts what could potentially be a really clear cut label of 'abuse' on your mother's behavior so you're latching onto it.
Like other PPs I don't think this was abuse. This was a mother dealing with a medical issue with her kid that can be life threatening in the way the child's doctors instructed and was commonplace at the time. I believe the whole situation was traumatic for sure but I don't think this was abuse.
But just because this was not abuse does not mean that you didn't suffer emotional abuse as a child. And just because you don't have some big event that you can easily point to and feel comfortable calling abuse doesn't mean you have to excuse your mother's behavior.
Therapy really helped me sort through my childhood, which sounds in some ways not dissimilar to your relationship with your mom.