The Best Strategies to Prevent Sexual Assault

Posted by Tautokomai on December 16th, 2020

Sexual assault can happen to both men and women of any age and include groping and inappropriate touching; vaginal, anal, or oral penetration; rape and attempted rape; and child molestation. Sexual assault and abuse can also include more subtle actions, such as derogatory name-calling, refusal to use contraception, deliberately causing unwanted physical pain during sex, and deliberately passing on sexual diseases or infections. indecent assault

Traditionally, rape was defined as the forceful act of sexual intercourse against a person's will or consent. However, some states have expanded the definition to include forcible sexual penetration, which includes sodomy and oral sex.

But sexual assaults are not limited to attacks by strangers. A significant number of sexual assaults are perpetrated by acquaintances; current or former intimate partners, relatives, and family friends. It can also be your spouse, which is why marriage is no longer a shield for rape. However, enforcement of spousal rape is not always straightforward, and depending on where you live, victims often face additional legal hurdles to prosecution not present for other victims of rape. Rape Victim Support 

For as severely traumatic rape by a stranger is, research suggests spousal or partner sexual abuse is even more emotionally and physically damaging. Rape by a stranger is a one-time event and is clearly understood by the victim and society as rape. Rape or sexual assault or abuse by a spouse or long-term sexual partner can be an ongoing trauma and is typically part of a greater pattern of family violence that includes other types of abuses. The victim may also feel less inclined to report the abuse either out of fear they won't be believed or that their children will be endangered.

Adult victims of sexual abuse can experience symptoms similar to post-traumatic stress disorder, including frequent nightmares, eating disorders, depression, severe anxiety, and inability to hold a job. How to Help Rape Victim

The single most important way to prevent sexual assault within an intimate relationship is to leave at the first sign of emotional or physical abuse. The following controlling behaviors are also red flags:

Degrading jokes or language

Insistence on making all of the "important" decisions about the relationship or date

Extreme jealousy, possessiveness

Strong belief in sex role stereotypes

a history of violent behavior

Rape is an act of violence and aggression, and while it involves the act of forced sexual contact it not about sexual pleasure or passion. Rape and sexual assault have nothing to do with caring or love. It is a crime in which the attacker has the need to feel as if they are in control and more powerful than the victim.

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Tautokomai

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Tautokomai
Joined: February 18th, 2020
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