{"id":482,"date":"2026-06-02T16:15:00","date_gmt":"2026-06-02T16:15:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/thecenterforwellbeing.org\/?p=482"},"modified":"2026-06-02T16:15:02","modified_gmt":"2026-06-02T16:15:02","slug":"healing-and-growth-after-childhood-assault","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/thecenterforwellbeing.org\/en\/healing-and-growth-after-childhood-assault\/","title":{"rendered":"Exploring the process of meaning making in healing and growth after childhood sexual assault: A case study approach"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<p><em>Sheryle Vilenica*, Jane Shakespeare-Finch and Patricia Obst<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>School of Psychology and Counselling,<br>Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Australia<\/em><br><em>(Received 14 August 2012; final version received 3 September 2012)<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>Childhood sexual assault (CSA) is one of the most devastating of all<br>traumatic experiences, with population studies documenting survivors<br>experiencing higher levels of pathology than survivors of other traumatic<br>experiences. Yet, recent research has demonstrated that far from being<br>permanently crippled by their experiences, many adult survivors of CSA<br>manage to heal and move forward in their lives to experience a rich and<br>fulfilling existence. In this article, two case studies are presented to provide<br>a detailed account of how people who have experienced CSA may find a<br>pathway to healing. Our data demonstrate that meaning making, spiritual<br>or otherwise, is a pivotal part of acceptance of CSA and ensuing growth.<br>The case studies amplify the unique journeys of two women along with<br>underlying similarities in their pathways to healing. Clinical implications<br>of the research are discussed and specific strategies for encouraging healing<br>and growth are outlined.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>Keywords: child sexual abuse; child sexual assault; post-traumatic growth;<br>meaning making; healing<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>Introduction<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>Sexual assault in childhood is one of the most personally impactful traumas that<br>an individual can experience (Frans, Rimmo \u0308,A \u030a berg, &amp; Fredrikson, 2005; Hapke,<br>Schumann, Rumpf, John, &amp; Meyer, 2006). After exposure to a traumatic event,<br>many people experience initial, short-term post-traumatic symptoms that in most<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>cases abate with time, with only a minority of people going on to develop post-<br>traumatic stress disorder (PTSD; Bonanno, 2004). For those who experience child<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>sexual abuse (childhood sexual assault (CSA)) however, the trajectory for post-<br>traumatic symptoms in general, and PTSD in particular, are significantly different.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Those who experience CSA are not only more likely to develop PTSD at some stage,<br>compared to survivors of other sorts of trauma, but also more likely to endure<br>lifelong PTSD symptoms (e.g. Rodrigues, Vande Kemp, &amp; Foy, 1998), a testament<br>to how powerfully impactful sexual trauma can be.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>The negative sequelae following CSA are wide-ranging and highly idiosyncratic.<br>Oft-reported concerns include major depression (Nelson et al., 2002), sexual<br>dysfunction (Gold, Lucenko, Elhai, Swingle, &amp; Sellers, 1999), anxiety (Calam,<br>Horne, Glasgow, &amp; Cox, 1998) and suicidal ideation and attempts (Belik, Stein,<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Asmundson, &amp; Sareen, 2009). Perhaps the most devastating of outcomes associated<br>with CSA is the negative impact on one\u2019s intrapersonal connection and sense of self.<br>People with a history of CSA report often holding long-standing, negative<br>core beliefs about themselves, which include perceptions of the self being \u2018\u2018wrong,\u2019\u2019<br>\u2018\u2018damaged\u2019\u2019 or somehow separate relative to others (Isely, Isely, Freiburger, &amp;<br>McMackin, 2008; Zinzow, Seth, Jackson, Niehaus, &amp; Fitzgerald, 2010). These<br>negative core beliefs have been reported by both those who have endured repeated<br>and sustained abuse over many years as well as by those who have experienced one<br>intrusive contact sexual abuse act (Isely et al., 2008; Molnar, Buka, &amp; Kessler, 2001).<br>Contributing to the development of negative core beliefs is an inherent dynamic<br>of CSA, which often involves feelings of complicity and responsibility for the<br>abuse, as well as deep feelings of shame and guilt on behalf of the child (Coffey,<br>Leitenberg, Henning, Turner, &amp; Bennett, 1996). All of these factors, compounded<br>by the occurrence of this particular trauma during the formative years, have the<br>potential to be profoundly devastating to a child\u2019s developing sense of self.<br>Current theories of coping after trauma emphasise how traumatic events can be<br>powerful enough to shake the foundations of belief systems, the fundamental<br>assumptions people hold that provide a sense of predictability and meaning<br>in life (Calhoun &amp; Tedeschi, 2006; Janoff-Bulman, 2006). Janoff-Bulman (1989)<br>conceptualised these fundamental assumptions in three primary areas. These include<br>beliefs that people are basically good, helpful and kind; world view assumptions such<br>as \u2018\u2018people get what they deserve\u2019\u2019 (i.e. good things happen to good people, bad<br>things happen to those who deserve bad things) and, beliefs about the self, based on<br>the self-perceptions of people as good or worthy individuals (Janoff-Bulman, 1989).<br>These fundamental assumptions, or core beliefs, are threatened because of the<br>experience of traumatic events, due to the dissonance between previous experience<br>and current reality. Healing, then, becomes a process of learning to integrate<br>new knowledge about the unpredictability of life, malevolence and senselessness<br>into a transformed understanding and framework of reference regarding oneself<br>(Calhoun &amp; Tedeschi, 2006; Janoff-Bulman, 2006).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>When trauma occurs during childhood and adolescence, the life stages where the<br>formation of assumptive worlds begin, the impact appears to be less on the shaking<br>of established foundations and rather on the shaping of emerging foundations.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Based upon these emerging foundations, people create suppositions about them-<br>selves, others and the world. A child or young person who suffers sexual trauma,<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>a crime most frequently committed by a known and trusted adult, experiences the<br>unpredictability and senselessness of life, and the malevolence and disregard of often<br>important others, during influential and formative stages of life. Many healed and<br>healing survivors of CSA, both men and women, report that only later in life, at the<br>point where they acknowledged how deeply the abuse experiences had negatively<br>affected the way they saw themselves and their world, did the real pain and real<br>healing begin (Bogar &amp; Hulse-Killacky, 2006; O\u2019Dougherty Wright, Crawford, &amp;<br>Sebastian, 2007; Woodward &amp; Joseph, 2003).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>Finding a new way of seeing one\u2019s self has been reported by men and women as<br>paramount in healing from CSA. Changing old self-beliefs, accepting and connecting<br>to the impact of the CSA on their lives and sense of self, changing self-views<br>(Bogar &amp; Hulse-Killacky, 2006) and developing a kinder intrapersonal relationship<br>(Woodward &amp; Joseph, 2003) have all been reported as essential components of<br>wellness and closure in the journey of healing from sexual trauma in childhood.<br>40 S. Vilenica et al.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Studies that investigate salutary outcomes in those who have experienced CSA<br>provide a deeper understanding of how healing is achieved after the experience<br>of such a trauma, rather than the traditional focus on pathological outcomes and<br>symptom reduction. Further, these studies bring welcome acknowledgement of the<br>fact that even after suffering such a potentially damaging trauma, the human<br>capacity for healing, growth and transformation is clearly evident.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>The active process of transformation, or reconstruction of inner global views, has<br>been termed \u2018\u2018meaning making\u2019\u2019 (Joseph &amp; Lindley, 2005; Park &amp; Ali, 2006) and<br>appears to be an important component of wellness and growth after trauma in<br>general (see Park, 2010 for review). Meaning making refers to a process of active<br>cognitive engagement to restore or resolve ruptures or dissonance within one\u2019s global<br>sense of meaning after the experience of a life shattering event such as trauma<br>(Park, 2010). In action, meaning making may manifest as a new way of<br>understanding a particular situation; reforming beliefs one holds of self, the world<br>and others; or, gaining internal consistency between beliefs and goals (Park &amp; Ali,<br>2006). The catalyst for meaning making to take place is a facet of reality being<br>appraised in a way that is incongruent with one\u2019s global meaning (Park, 2010),<br>a contrast between what is and what was always thought to have been. Meaning<br>making then is an active process involving deliberate and sustained cognitive<br>attention, otherwise known as volitional rumination, to restore congruency and<br>equilibrium within one\u2019s self.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>Recently, Cann, Calhoun, and Tedeschi (2010) have shown how the active and<br>deliberate process of rumination is an important factor in overcoming disruption to<br>core beliefs after traumatic or highly stressful life events. In addition to confirming<br>that post-traumatic growth (PTG) can be an outcome of the shattering of<br>assumptions that accompanies highly stressful life events in adulthood such as<br>trauma, greater PTG was found in those with higher levels of deliberate rumination.<br>Further support was found in this study for the role of meaning making in growth<br>and healing after trauma, particularly if the trauma disrupted deeply held core<br>beliefs (Cann et al., 2010). Volitional rumination has been previously shown to play<br>a crucial role in PTG outcomes, the positive changes that people often report<br>in the wake of struggling to cope with trauma, including positive changes in self, a<br>strengthening in relationships with others and a change in spirituality or philosophy<br>in life (Calhoun &amp; Tedeschi, 2006). The importance of volitional rumination to these<br>PTG outcome domains shows how essential active cognitive engagement and<br>understanding is to healing and growth after adversity.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>Joseph and Linley (2005) have proposed a PTG process model that includes<br>meaning making as one of the four primary components. The first theoretical<br>principle is termed the \u2018\u2018completion tendency,\u2019\u2019 which postulates that adjustment<br>to trauma comes from an innate, human drive to integrate dissonant experiences<br>into a coherent self-narrative. The second principle is cognitive accommodation,<br>or changing worldviews to accommodate new information, versus assimilation, or<br>incorporating new information into existing mental schemas. Both processes are<br>necessary for wellness, but an emphasis is placed on the need for accommodation<br>to be present for growth to be possible as this presence signals the emergence<br>of new worldviews. The third principle concerns the importance of meaning and<br>asserts that meaning has two components: comprehensibility and significance.<br>Comprehensibility is being able to make sense of why a particular event or trauma<br>has happened. However, it is \u2018\u2018meaning as significance\u2019\u2019 \u2013 the impact the trauma has<br>Counselling Psychology Quarterly 41<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>on one\u2019s world views, philosophies, or the way in which one leads one\u2019s life \u2013 that is<br>of particular importance in growth outcomes. Finally, the fourth principle considers<br>the difference between eudaimonic versus hedonic well-being. Hedonic well-being, or<br>subjective well-being, relates to subjective feelings of happiness and life satisfaction.<br>In contrast, eudaimonic well-being, or psychological well-being (PWB), incorporates<br>states of greater self-awareness, spiritual connection and closer connections with<br>others. The model proposes that PTG is more likely to stem from PWB, in that a<br>person may not necessarily be happier but is sure to be wiser as a result of working<br>through trauma. The focus on the processes of transformation presented in this<br>model provides a descriptive account for the currents of change in the growth process<br>(Joseph &amp; Linley, 2005).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>In this article, we provide a process-focused, in-depth analysis of the ways in<br>which two women experienced the effects and personal impact of serious childhood<br>sexual abuse, and more importantly, how these women found pathways to healing<br>from the sexual trauma. We also present the outcomes of their healing journeys on<br>their sense of self, with particular emphasis on changes to their core beliefs. We hope<br>the narratives of the healing journeys that these two women undertook will provide<br>a deeper understanding of how healing occurs after such a devastating trauma,<br>and will articulate the human ability to change, grow and even flourish through the<br>process of an active engagement in healing.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Method<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>Participants<br>The two women discussed in the case studies we examine in this article are<br>participants in a larger ongoing research project conducted by the authors,<br>examining pathways to healing and growth after sexual assault in childhood.<br>Participation in the study was based on self-selection on three primary conditions.<br>First, the sexual assault must have involved physical contact. Second, participants<br>must have deemed their experiences to be traumatic. Last, participants had to<br>consider themselves to be either healed from the sexual trauma or believed they were<br>well into their healing journey. The women whose stories are told in this article were<br>52 (Participant 1) and 44 years of age (Participant 2) at the time of interview.<br>The following two case studies were chosen for: (a) their representativeness of the<br>themes reported by the majority of the participants in the broader study; (b) the<br>clarity with which the women reported their healing journeys and (c) their disparity<br>in terms of the onset and duration of offences (one experienced on-going abuse from<br>an early age through to adolescence, while the other experienced two assaults in<br>adolescence). Both women experienced invasive, contact sexual abuse; both women<br>were raped. Participant 1 was raped in early childhood by a non-relative and sexually<br>assaulted for many years by older brothers, as well as suffering further assaults<br>during adolescence. Participant 2, at age 14, was raped by a man who was known to<br>her. She experienced a second rape at age 15.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Procedure<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>Participants in the larger project were recruited via a general public invitation. The<br>first author was interviewed on a state-wide radio station and women were<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>encouraged to contact her via email or phone if they fit the research criteria and<br>wanted to contribute their story to the project. Participation involved a 90-minute<br>semi-structured phone interview that covered a brief history of the assault, the initial<br>and later effects of the abuse, what contributed to their healing, as well as any<br>potential benefits participants felt to have come out of their healing journeys or<br>their experiences. Prior to the interviews, participants were provided the research<br>questions, to give them time to reflect on their answers. Each interview was then<br>transcribed verbatim.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>Exploration of the data was conducted using interpretive phenomenological<br>analysis (IPA), an idiographic approach where each participant\u2019s narrative is<br>individually analysed before any generalisations are made to other cases<br>(Langdridge, 2004). The IPA process involves an initial reading over of the<br>transcripts searching for meaning, garnering reflections and observations from<br>the text and identifying themes or patterns that emerge. For rigour and validity<br>of identified themes, the second author also analysed a number of transcripts, a<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>process that yielded high inter-relater reliability. Identified themes were struc-<br>tured into various inter-related clusters and from this a master table was<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>constructed.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Results<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>Following are the narratives of the women describing how the CSA was experienced;<br>its impact on their core beliefs of self, others and the world and, the role of<br>dissociation in managing their distress. Their healing pathways are also discussed,<br>and the processes of meaning making are explored with a particular focus on<br>narratives of change processes to their core beliefs.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>Global beliefs<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>Participant 1 describes how seismic the first rape was and the indelible change that<br>occurred at the core of her being as a result:<br>I died, meaning the person I was or was developing into was no more. That person<br>still isn\u2019t here today. That person was shattered the moment of that first abuse. I didn\u2019t<br>know who or what I was. I became segregated within myself. It was like being, my whole<br>soul had been splintered into thousands of pieces and I didn\u2019t know how to put it<br>together again. (Participant 1)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Beliefs about self<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>Here the women reflect on the self-beliefs they held before the process of their<br>healing began:<br>I didn\u2019t have any \u2026real values or beliefs, because it didn\u2019t matter what you<br>believed in or what values you had, because they could be taken away from<br>you \u2026There was always in the back of my mind the idea that I wasn\u2019t good<br>enough, that I was guilty for what had happened to me or what I let happen, so<br>nothing good should happen to me unless I pay for it. And I felt my life would<br>always have dramas and I would always be completely overwhelmed by them but<br>that is what I deserved \u2026I believed I was guilty \u2026 because I was raped when<br>I was 5. (Participant 1)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Counselling Psychology Quarterly 43<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>And similarly the second participant said:<br>I couldn\u2019t handle being less than perfect, I just had to be. If I was less than perfect<br>then I was that hideous slimy creature that I thought I was because I had been raped.<br>So less than perfect was, I couldn\u2019t stand the thought of being flawed \u2026I was terrified<br>they would find out I was a real dummy and throw me out of Uni, so I worked really<br>hard \u2026 What I couldn\u2019t articulate at the time was really profound shame. I felt I had<br>to get away from anyone that knew me\u2026from the person I thought everyone thought<br>I was, and the person I thought I was too. (Participant 2)<br>The sexual assault had a profound impact on the way the women came to view<br>themselves. Beliefs of being unworthy, guilty or hideous stem from deep feelings of<br>shame and perceived guilt over the assaults, incorrectly internalising the assaults as<br>something they contributed to and for which they were responsible. Both women<br>portrayed the powerlessness that comes with CSA in their narratives of control, one<br>feeling she had no control over herself or her life, the other feeling the need to always<br>be in control, but both based on a deep belief of being wrong \u2013 the epitome of shame.<br>Beliefs about the world and others<br>Both women spoke of holding global negative beliefs about others, the world and<br>their place in the world as a result of the trauma. Here the women describe the<br>experience of holding such beliefs:<br>I trusted no one, the moment it happened the first time. I didn\u2019t believe in role models<br>because of my belief that everyone had something bad happen to them. I believed all the<br>men were going to abuse me \u2026 Sex was nothing to me, and even if I didn\u2019t want it to<br>happen I still allowed them to, because I had that mental chain around me that had<br>been put there by the first abuser\u2026 being so much stronger and bigger than me.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>(Participant 1)<br>So after those two events I had a really weird idea of what my value was in the world.<br>I assumed that my value to boys and men was sex, and so I had way, way too many<br>sexual relationships with people because I thought that is what boys want and they are<br>going to take it so I might as well give it to them, this is just the way the world works.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>(Participant 2)<br>As was true for the vast majority of women within the larger study, both women<br>included in this analysis speak of an inability to feel they had the right to say no<br>to sexual contact in adulthood. Sexual assault violates the most personal of<br>boundaries \u2013 the physical boundary. The violation of a person\u2019s intrinsic right to be<br>respected, coupled with the intrusion of sexual acts a child is not yet prepared for,<br>and deep feelings of shame and responsibility for the assault, all converge. With their<br>internalisation and personalisation, their experience shaped beliefs of having no<br>rights in relation to others, particularly men.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>Avoidance\/dissociation from experience<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>As a way of coping as children, both women used avoidance and dissociation from<br>their experience. Evidence of this is reflected in the lack of connection to the trauma<br>the events experienced before they began to acknowledge what had happened to them:<br>In my 20s it didn\u2019t have an effect on me. Of course it did, but I believed that it was just<br>something I could tell people \u2018\u2018I was raped when I was a kid,\u2019\u2019 but it was like in the third<br>person. It was this little girl, but it wasn\u2019t me. (Participant 1)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>I hadn\u2019t given much thought to being sexually assaulted, it was just something that<br>I thought of as in the same way as I had been born \u2026I went to school and I was<br>sexually assaulted. It was all the same. I remember I was with a boy once and I told him<br>\u2018\u2018Look, someone forced me to do this once and I am not really comfortable with it.\u2019\u2019 and<br>that was the only time ever that I had said anything about it and that was the closest<br>I came to talking about it. (Participant 2)<br>The personal resources of these women were already taxed from the expenditure<br>of energy and emotional burden that comes with living with negative core beliefs of<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>self. Without the defence mechanism of dissociation, life could become overwhelm-<br>ing to the point of unbearable. Staying disconnected from the emotional intensity<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>of the trauma provided the women a measure of functionality in their daily lives<br>before they were ready to honestly accept their experiences.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>Healing<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>Turning points<br>For both women there came a time when avoidance of the depth of their experiences<br>could no longer be facilitated. Both were confronted with the necessity to accept the<br>truth of what they had been through. For both, this involved a process of turning<br>towards their fear; for one, turning inward and facing herself, while the other turned<br>towards the truth of her experience:<br>I suppose the biggest influence, I planned a trip around Australia \u2013 the first time I was<br>ever going to be alone in my life. It was pretty terrifying to think of that but I knew<br>I had to do that. I knew I had to get out of my life as it was and get away from it all to<br>be able to focus on being able to heal \u2026I loaded my trailer with a box load of self-help<br>books and headed off \u2026 And I never spoke to anyone for nearly six months. I knew<br>I had to do it to claim back my own sanity. (Participant 1)<br>I started to get a really intense horrible pain in my vagina \u2026 and I started to wonder<br>\u2018\u2018[Does] this have anything to do with that thing?\u2019\u2019 A GP \u2026 gave me the referral to a<br>really nice psychiatrist and \u2026 it was like Pandora\u2019s Box. Once this pain had started<br>it seemed to trigger a series of situations where I couldn\u2019t say it didn\u2019t happen<br>anymore \u2026It was exactly 10 years (after the first rape) that I acknowledged what had<br>happened and called it what it was. That was actually when it became really<br>overwhelming. To call it rape. It was like a pit of horror to take the lid off the box and<br>actually look inside. It was a really important stage for me to go through but it was<br>the worst, because it was the rawest. (Participant 2)<br>The active acknowledgement and emergence of acceptance of the trauma and its<br>effects began. Being no longer willing or able to continue avoiding themselves<br>or their experiences, the women in this study connected to themselves and their story<br>albeit with great emotional difficulty and turmoil. At this stage in their journeys,<br>the beginnings of their healing, both women describe experiencing intense emotions<br>of terror and horror at confronting themselves and their fears directly. And yet,<br>the necessity to turn towards their fear in order for healing to begin was stronger<br>than the desire for things to remain the same.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>Awareness of inner world<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>During this stage each woman talked about confronting insights or changes that<br>were occurring in their inner worlds:<br>Not only had I had the occasions of being raped but it was the 10 years where I lived<br>thinking those things about myself and cementing those ideas about myself and these<br>Counselling Psychology Quarterly 45<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>really weird survival skills, that emotional distance and disconnection, all of the things<br>you do. (Participant 2)<br>I learnt that I can be by myself and not be scared of being by myself \u2026 Accepting all my<br>faults and believing that I was a good person and it wasn\u2019t my fault and I wasn\u2019t guilty<br>of that happening to me \u2026 Mostly I did it by myself, reading the books and sitting<br>with myself, and learning how to meditate and just walking along the beach was one of<br>the most calming effects on me. (Participant 1)<br>In the above quote, Participant 2 reflected on how she began to understand the<br>destructive self-beliefs she held that underpinned her behaviours and reactions.<br>She also started to recognise how disconnected she truly was from herself and<br>her experiences. Participant 1 began changing shame-based beliefs by embracing<br>herself and beginning to accept her inherent goodness.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>Counselling<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>There naturally came a time for both women, many years after their turning points,<br>when each sought counselling to work on deeper issues stemming from the abuse.<br>The women spoke of the role of the person of the therapist and how important<br>positive rapport and trust was within that relationship:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>When I decided it was my life and I needed to take stock of it and sort myself out instead<br>of blaming everyone else and other people and circumstances, that I could change me,<br>to change my circumstances, then yeah, I started talking and seeing the counsellor.<br>Finding someone I trusted was a huge thing, because if you don\u2019t trust the person<br>you are talking to then you won\u2019t bring it out, you just won\u2019t, you will hide stuff.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>(Participant 1)<br>I went to a workshop and the woman who ran the workshop was a counsellor and<br>I asked her to take me on as a client. I went to see her for about three years, and that<br>was the process where I felt I did the healing part. She was a humanist counsellor,<br>but basically she was a gorgeous women and I would go to her house and talk for an<br>hour. There were no particular strategies or revelations; it was just the slow work of<br>healing. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>(Participant 2)<br>There was a natural readiness in both women to want to work through the<br>trauma and its effects that caused them to seek counselling with a trusted<br>practitioner. Having come as far as they could on their own, the process of<br>counselling paved the way for the beginnings of their new relationships with<br>themselves through the re-working of their long-held negative beliefs.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Meaning making: Reconstruction of self<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>Interestingly, both women reported that it was in the work with their counsellors<br>where they began to look at their core beliefs, the impact of these on their lives and<br>then learned how to create new, self-congruent beliefs. The following quotes<br>highlight the role of meaning making in the cognitive reconstruction of the internal<br>worlds of these women. Here the women spoke of the ways and means their core<br>beliefs were re-formed:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>Learning how to focus on me and not turn away from myself and what had happened<br>to me. And learning how to gradually change the way I was thinking, and change my<br>ideas and values and beliefs, because everything was negative \u2026I started looking at me,<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>and trying to find the real me, because I had lost that person all those years ago \u2026 and<br>I am still trying! <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>(Participant 1)<br>I suppose the healing was going through and looking at my world view and my view<br>of myself and unpicking it all and putting it back together again was the real nuts and<br>bolts thing. Looking at all the ripples that being sexually assaulted had caused in my life<br>and figuring out how to live my life not as a survivor or someone who has been sexually<br>assaulted. It was the process of becoming a whole person and not a rape survivor.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>(Participant 2)<br>Understanding the way their global views were shaped by their traumatic<br>experiences was deeply healing for both women. Here the active process of deliberate<br>rumination comes into play with talk of focusing on, not turning away from, the<br>truth. Negative beliefs of the self and world begin to change through the process<br>of first understanding what beliefs were held, knowing how they came to be and then<br>uncovering why they were untrue. This process opened the way for both women<br>to begin to see themselves as they truly were: whole.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>Self-disclosure<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>Although the idea of talking about the trauma through re-experiencing the abuse<br>acts was abhorrent to most women in the larger study, for some like Participant 1,<br>the need to externalise the abuse, to give voice to the content of their experiences,<br>was healing:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>Pouring out the full details of what had happened to me. I had never voiced it, it had<br>gone around my head a million times but I had never voiced it, so letting out all<br>that pent up fearfulness, hatred, betrayal, anger. Everything that was inside of me that<br>had been locked away from what had happened to me. I explained every detail that<br>had always been in my mind. I did go through a lot of years thinking the abuse didn\u2019t<br>happen. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>(Participant 1)<br>The self-disclosure here was a client-led process, with the healing component<br>being in the externalisation and validation of her experience, in contrast to<br>\u2018\u2018desensitising\u2019\u2019 her to the traumatic memory.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>Self-understanding and validation<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>Participant 2 gives a precise account of how her core beliefs were changed:<br>It was really about healing and coming up with different ways of being in the world, and<br>different ways of being. It wasn\u2019t like \u2018\u2018Oh God, this terrible thing has happened to me,\u2019\u2019<br>it was just a gradual unpicking of all the parts of my life that had been built up around<br>having been raped and looking at them one by one and seeing if I wanted to keep them.<br>I got to value the survival skills I put in place but also say goodbye to them as being<br>unnecessary in a really slow way. And it was hard. I remember sessions where most of<br>the session was just working through the anger I felt over everything and everyone.<br>(Participant 2)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>Again, the process of repeated, sustained and active rumination is visible. In this<br>quote, her meaning making \u2013 the transformation of her inner world \u2013 came through<br>a deep understanding of how her beliefs had been shaped in the first place,<br>understanding how they were intended to protect her, and why they were no longer<br>relevant.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Counselling Psychology Quarterly 47<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Transformation of self<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>Both women reflect here on the transformation of the process of their journey and<br>the integration and acceptance of the trauma. Both reported fundamental changes<br>from the beliefs they once held:<br>Now I just see me. I am not defined by the abuse anymore \u2026The abuse, although<br>traumatic, was just a part of my life, there is so much more to me. My life is my own,<br>I want to give, not take, and FEEL being a part of this world. (Participant 1)<br>It is like a scar that has healed, you can see the scar is still there but there is not a wound<br>there anymore. It is not a horrible disfiguring scar anymore it is a part of lots of other<br>things that have happened in my life that have all made me who I am now. It defines me<br>as much as any part of my life does, not anymore or any less because I have had a lot<br>of momentous things happen in my life, and being raped was momentous, but so was<br>travelling and having my children, and getting married, all of those are big life events.<br>(Participant 2)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>These quotes reveal the distinct change from their old self-beliefs. The assaults<br>have been assimilated into their being. No longer do they find themselves<br>unacceptable or the trauma overwhelming and defining. Instead, their experiences<br>have been accepted as part of a larger whole that they embody. Not only has the<br>abuse been accepted into their narratives of self, the whole self is seen as acceptable.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>Post-traumatic growth<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>Here the women spoke of how their lives were enriched by learning to work through<br>their suffering, and how their experiences have contributed to the people they are<br>today:<br>There is so much that has come good out of, dare I say, being abused. Nobody can say<br>how different they would be if it didn\u2019t happen. I can\u2019t say what sort of person I would<br>be if I wasn\u2019t abused, but everything that happened to me has eventually helped<br>me be the person I am today. It has helped prepare me for other parts of my life.<br>(Participant 1)<br>It has made me an optimistic person, knowing that you do get better and that you can<br>survive really traumatic events. Going through the healing process gives me optimism<br>when talking to people who are going through hard times that things pass. And being<br>able to listen to other people who have trauma in their lives and being able to bring my<br>own experiences to bring compassion into their lives. (Participant 2)<br>Both women report feeling blessed by the lessons and growth garnered from the<br>active, sustained and challenging work of reconstructing their internal lives from<br>their suffering to emerge on a new side with a new level of understanding and being<br>in the world. The trauma, once an overwhelming burden, had been transformed into<br>growth.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>Discussion<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>The preceding exploration of the impact of CSA revealed how the experience of<br>sexual trauma shaped the fundamental, global beliefs of the women reviewed in this<br>article. Far from holding positive views of benevolence, meaningfulness of the world<br>and worthiness of self (Janoff-Bulman, 1989), both women reported that the sexual<br>trauma had a fundamentally negative impact on their emerging global views.<br>They also articulated how their experiences profoundly shaped how they came to see<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>themselves and their place in the world, as well as what they believed they could<br>expect from others. Further, both women held deep feelings of shame and<br>responsibility for the abuse as a consequence of the internalisation of their<br>experiences \u2013 findings often reported in the CSA literature (Coffey et al., 1996; Isely<br>et al., 2008; Molnar et al., 2001; Zinzow et al., 2010). Despite the offences occurring<br>at widely disparate times and differing in duration, the beliefs the women held were<br>remarkably similar. This finding highlights the critical effect that sexual trauma<br>exerts on emerging beliefs, regardless of whether the assaults occurred during<br>childhood or early adolescence. Researchers have previously found that negative<br>core beliefs can be shaped by the experience of one incident of intrusive contact<br>sexual abuse in childhood (Isely et al., 2008).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>The egocentric nature of childhood makes it easy to understand how deep<br>feelings of shame and responsibility for abuse becomes internalised, and why the<br>coping strategies of dissociation and avoidance become highly relied upon to<br>maintain the integrity of the personality structure. Unable to cognitively separate<br>themselves from responsibility for a non-consensual act, children or young people<br>assume accountability, either in part or in full, for the sexual assaults. Despite not<br>having the knowledge that what has occurred is a \u2018\u2018sexual assault,\u2019\u2019 survivors often<br>speak of intrinsically knowing the act was itself wrong. Therefore, with immature<br>reasoning, if the act is wrong, and they were a part of that act, then they must be<br>wrong. If the experience of shame (\u2018\u2018I am wrong\u2019\u2019) and guilt (\u2018\u2018I have done wrong\u2019\u2019)<br>that is inherently a part of CSA was not so abjectly internalised, cognitive<br>assumptions regarding the self, others and the world may not become so inherently<br>negative and critical. However, the frequency with which shame, guilt and negative<br>core beliefs are reported by those who have experienced CSA, shows that sexual<br>trauma during the formative years can be so powerful and so dissonant with<br>expected experience that it shapes the very foundations of emerging assumptive<br>worlds.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>Fundamental beliefs are the basic operating system people use to understand<br>their world and themselves, as well as being the blueprint for how they relate to<br>others. Therefore, holding beliefs such as \u2018\u2018I am wrong\u2019\u2019 (shame) and \u2018\u2018I do wrong\u2019\u2019<br>(guilt) will fundamentally colour the interpretation of subsequent experience, due to<br>the dynamic interplay between internal representational models and behavioural<br>experience (Carlson, Sroufe, &amp; Egeland, 2004). As childhood experiences are the<br>foundation for all subsequent personality development, disruptions and distortions<br>during these stages are sure to have ramifications into adulthood, as was clearly<br>evidenced in the narratives of the women reviewed here.<br>The role of meaning making becomes particularly relevant in healing sexual<br>trauma through the process of learning to see beliefs in a new light. Park and Ali<br>(2006) speak of the need for research to understand how trauma survivors change<br>their global beliefs, under what conditions beliefs become modified and what changes<br>occur to adjustment and well-being as a result of beliefs being changed. This study<br>shows that for these women who suffered CSA, the modification of beliefs occurred<br>when they understood what beliefs they held, understood how the beliefs historically<br>developed and then examined the validity of their beliefs. Through their counselling<br>experiences, both women began to understand the fundamental beliefs they held,<br>that formerly were out of their conscious awareness, because they were so entrenched<br>in their patterns of thought.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Counselling Psychology Quarterly 49<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>An important part of healing for both women was to understand why they held<br>the beliefs they did and to connect their beliefs to their internalisation of their trauma<br>experiences. A large part of this process involved active rumination, turning towards<br>themselves and the impact of the trauma, and really examining all the ripples that<br>being sexually assaulted had caused in their lives. This active rumination and the<br>process of meaning making is what made it possible for these women to come to a<br>deep understanding and acceptance not only of what had happened to them, but also<br>the damage caused through the shaping of their beliefs as a result of the sexual<br>trauma. Actively processing the trauma and its effects stands in contrast to the<br>intrusive rumination that occurs when one is still trying to manage trauma symptoms<br>by avoidance and non-acceptance (Cann et al., 2010). Deliberate, active rumination<br>was a critical component of how these women came to understand their existing<br>beliefs, which gave them the platform to be able to change them.<br>To answer other questions posed by Park and Ali (2006), the conditions under<br>which beliefs were changed for these two women appeared to be when the thought of<br>facing their fears became less frightening than continuing to live under them.<br>Both women spent many, many years actively avoiding the depth of their experiences<br>due to fear. Fear that their beliefs were \u2018\u2018true\u2019\u2019; fear they were only what they believed<br>they were and what they feared others believed they were; fear they were worth<br>nothing more than what they received and, fear of actually facing the truth of what<br>they had experienced. However, for both there came a time when these fears became<br>less of a threat to their integrity than the possibility of actively facing their fears,<br>and turning towards the pain and looking deeply at themselves. An important note<br>(and one echoed in the larger study) is that the conditions under which their beliefs<br>came to be changed almost exclusively arose via the assistance of another, most often<br>within a therapeutic relationship. This makes intuitive sense, as a key process of<br>therapy is to \u2018\u2018hold a mirror\u2019\u2019 for clients to help them see what may not be clear to<br>them due to habit and familiarity. Working within a trusted therapeutic relationship<br>that provides acceptance and non-judgement can provide individuals with the safety<br>required to look deeply at their often conflicted belief structures so that change<br>can occur.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>Finally, the effects that changing their global beliefs had on their adjustment<br>and well-being was marked, and the women themselves would say \u2018\u2018life altering.\u2019\u2019<br>What occurred as a result of re-working their beliefs of self, world and others was<br>a total change in their inner relationship, moving from hostile and negative to<br>connected and optimistic. Another fundamental change that occurred was how they<br>saw themselves in relation to the sexual assault. Both women reported a fundamental<br>change in their view of self; from once feeling defined by the abuse to now knowing<br>that it is but one part of the larger whole that makes up who they are. They accepted<br>the abuse as a part of the whole individual, rather than being the dominant or<br>defining feature of the whole individual. This was the process of becoming \u2018\u2018a whole<br>person.\u2019\u2019 Further, the change in their connectedness to themselves enabled them to<br>also connect more deeply with others in their lives, making their inner and outer<br>worlds more fulfilling.<br>The outcome and processes of healing and growth that we reported in this article<br>are highly congruent with Joseph and Linley\u2019s (2005) model of growth, with all four<br>theoretical principles of their model being covered in the narratives of these women.<br>The first principle is the completion tendency, which states we all contain an inner<br>drive towards equilibrium and the need to integrate dissonant experiences and ideas<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>into a coherent sense of being. This principle is seen strongly in the journeys of these<br>two women. A time came when both needed for their lives and their beings to be<br>different. Although their beliefs had been shaped by prior experience, and they had<br>lived their lives in accordance with those beliefs, there came a time when both women<br>knew this was not serving them well. Both strived to make difficult changes so<br>their beliefs and actions became more congruent with their inherent nature.<br>Liedloff (1977) also speaks of this point in her continuum concept theory that within<br>each life form is a tendency to evolve that is not random, but driven to further<br>one\u2019s own interests, directed towards greater stability and therefore greater<br>diversity, complexity and adaptability. Prior to healing, although both women<br>were \u2018\u2018functioning,\u2019\u2019 neither would have considered themselves as stable. However,<br>after healing, the diversity and complexity of their true nature was revealed,<br>providing both with newfound stability and adaptability within their lives.<br>The second theoretical principle was also evident; for these women both<br>assimilation and accommodation were necessary for growth. Accommodation was<br>indeed highly important, as their old global beliefs needed to change in order to<br>reflect the truth of their inherent nature. Assimilation was also present when looking<br>at the changes in the way they saw themselves in relation to their abusive experiences.<br>As echoed by a large percentage of women within the larger study, the abuse needed<br>to become assimilated into their story of self and accepted, rather than being<br>rejected. This acceptance included assimilating the fact that the abuse happened and<br>that they could have done nothing differently as a child, as well as acceptance of the<br>damage the sexual assault caused to their being, in particular how it shaped their<br>fundamental assumptions.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>The third principle, the role of meaning in growth, was a fundamental part of the<br>growth process for both women. Joseph and Linley (2005) mention that \u2018\u2018meaning as<br>comprehensibility\u2019\u2019 may not be as significant to growth as \u2018\u2018meaning as significance.\u2019\u2019<br>This was certainly true for these women, as trying to make sense of why the sexual<br>assault happened was not a point mentioned by either. However, understanding the<br>impact the trauma had on their global beliefs and the ways they lived their lives was a<br>crucial component in their healing and growth. Both women reported that a deep<br>understanding of the workings of their belief systems, and the impact this had on<br>how they engaged in their lives and with others around them, was an integral part<br>of healing and growth.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>Finally, the outcomes of growth evidenced in these women most surely fell more<br>precisely in the domain of eudaimonic or PWB. Both women reflected on major<br>changes that occurred in relation to greater self-awareness as well as deeper<br>connections with others. Although the women\u2019s narratives reported here touch<br>briefly on aspects of spirituality, within the larger study this principle is more<br>strongly represented, but not in a religious capacity. A different way of looking<br>at spirituality, divergent from a religious perspective, is the understanding of<br>spirituality as a deep self-connection and connection to earth, spirit, energy or<br>particularly intuition. The importance of this spiritual connection is reported by<br>Liedloff (1977), who speaks of the personal significance of being connected to<br>intuition. When we are ruled by intellect or the mind, our inherent sense of what<br>is good for us can become distorted, and we lose our ability to distinguish between<br>intuition and distortion, reality and non-reality. Developing this deep, spiritual<br>connection not allows one to feel connected to a larger \u2018\u2018whole,\u2019\u2019 but can also be<br>a powerful ally against over-thinking, getting caught up in the mind or caught up<br>Counselling Psychology Quarterly 51<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>in constructed belief systems and reactive thinking. Developing this deep inner<br>spiritual connection can bring one back into the self and in touch with one\u2019s most<br>ancient and undiluted information sources \u2013 intuition.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Clinical implications<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>The clinical implications of our study point specifically to the crucial role that beliefs<br>play in one\u2019s perception of reality, and as a consequence, how people come to see<br>themselves, others and their world. Far from being static, negative beliefs can be<br>highly malleable and can be fundamentally changed through awareness; awareness<br>itself can be curative (Chodron, 1997). The role awareness plays in understanding<br>fundamental beliefs cannot be understated. In clinical practice, when working with<br>those who have suffered CSA, awareness needs to be raised concerning the existing<br>beliefs the individual holds of themselves, others and the world. Becoming aware of<br>what beliefs are held is the first step to being able to change them. After awareness is<br>brought to what beliefs exist, the beliefs then need to be placed into context by<br>linking them to the event or series of events that shaped the beliefs in the first place.<br>Being able to connect beliefs to a historical root creates the space for clients to see<br>that their existing beliefs are not chosen but instead have been shaped during a highly<br>influential and formative stage of their life.<br>Holding positive core beliefs should be a birthright. The inherent nature of<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>humans is fundamentally pro-social and self-fulfilling, as opposed to the discon-<br>nectedness and self-deprecating feelings that so often occur after CSA. Re-working<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>beliefs needs to incorporate an understanding of why the existing negative core<br>beliefs are false, as well as an exploration to uncover what the true beliefs of people<br>actually are \u2013 a reflection of their real nature.<br>Finally, when working with those who have experienced CSA, it is important to<br>acknowledge that this process takes time. Re-working fundamental beliefs that have<br>existed for years, and in many cases decades, is not a process that happens quickly or<br>easily. Both therapist and client need to be mindful of the fact that this process takes<br>time, effort, patience and above all, compassion, in order for lasting change to occur.<br>However, as is clearly evidenced here, change, healing and growth after CSA is not<br>only a possible, but perhaps an inevitable, outcome of re-working belief structures<br>and one that is vital to establishing a healthier, more authentic way of being.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Notes on contributors<br>Sheryle Vilenica is a registered psychologist in private practice, primarily working with<br>individuals who have experienced sexual trauma in childhood. Sheryle\u2019s current research<br>examines how individuals manage to heal and grow personally after experiences of early-life<br>sexual trauma. Sheryle is passionate about assisting in changing current societal views on how<br>child sexual abuse is portrayed and on broadening the methods or treatments used to assist<br>those affected, incorporating an holistic approach.<br>Dr Jane Shakespeare-Finch is an Associate Professor in the School of Psychology and<br>Counselling, at Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Australia. Posttraumatic<br>growth (PTG) is Jane\u2019s primary area of research and she has studied the PTG phenomena in a<br>wide variety of populations from emergency service personnel, to refugees, and adult survivors<br>of childhood sexual assault. Passionate about both proactive and reactive promotion of<br>mental health for trauma survivors, Jane has published approximately 20 books and book<br>52 S. Vilenica et al.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>chapters and dozens of peer-reviewed articles and is a regular presenter at national and<br>international conferences.<br>Dr Patricia Obst is a Senior Lecturer in the School of Psychology and Counselling, at<br>Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Australia. Patricia research interests have<br>focused on the area of applied social psychology in particular social identification, sense of<br>community and more recently the area of social support. Patricia\u2019s work focuses on the<br>relationship of theses variable with wellbeing in a diversity of populations. Patricia has over 30<br>publications in peer reviewed articles and conference papers.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>References<br>Belik, S.L., Stein, M.B., Asmundson, G.J.G., &amp; Sareen, J. (2009). Relation between traumatic<br>events and suicide attempts in Canadian military personnel. Canadian Journal of<br>Psychiatry, 54, 93\u2013104.<br>Bogar, C.B., &amp; Hulse-Killacky, D. (2006). 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Achieves of General Psychiatry, 59,<br>139\u2013146.<br>O\u2019Dougherty Wright, M., Crawford, E., &amp; Sebastian, K. (2007). Positive resolution of<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>childhood sexual abuse experience: The role of coping, benefit-finding and meaning-<br>making. Journal of Family Violence, 22, 597\u2013608.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Park, C.L. (2010). Making sense of the meaning literature: An integrative review of meaning<br>making and its effects on adjustment to stressful life events. Psychological Bulletin, 136,<br>257\u2013301.<br>Park, C.L., &amp; Ali, A.L. (2006). Meaning making and growth: New directions for research on<br>survivors of trauma. Journal of Loss and Trauma, 11, 389\u2013407.<br>Rodrigues, N., Vande Kemp, H., &amp; Foy, D.W. (1998). Posttraumatic stress disorder<br>in survivors of childhood sexual and physical abuse: A critical review of the empirical<br>research. Journal of Child Sexual Abuse, 7, 17\u201345.<br>Woodward, C., &amp; Joseph, S. (2003). Positive change processes and post-traumatic growth<br>in people who have experienced childhood abuse: Understanding vehicles of change.<br>Psychology and Psychotherapy: Theory, Research, and Practice, 76, 267\u2013283.<br>Zinzow, H., Seth, P., Jackson, J., Niehaus, A., &amp; Fitzgerald, M. (2010). Abuse and parental<br>characteristics, attributions of blame, and psychological adjustment in adult survivors<br>of child sexual abuse. Journal of Child Sexual Abuse, 19, 79\u201398.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Sheryle Vilenica*, Jane Shakespeare-Finch and Patricia Obst School of Psychology and Counselling,Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Australia(Received 14 August 2012; final version received 3 September 2012) Childhood sexual assault (CSA) is one of the most devastating of alltraumatic experiences, with population studies documenting survivorsexperiencing higher levels of pathology than survivors of other traumaticexperiences. Yet, recent [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":3,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"give_campaign_id":0,"_et_pb_use_builder":"off","_et_pb_old_content":"","_et_gb_content_width":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[14],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-482","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-resources"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.7 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Exploring the process of meaning making in healing and growth after childhood sexual assault: A case study approach - The CENTER for Wellbeing<\/title>\n<meta name=\"description\" content=\"Exploring the process of meaning making in healing and growth after childhood sexual assault: A case study approach\" \/>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/thecenterforwellbeing.org\/en\/healing-and-growth-after-childhood-assault\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Exploring the process of meaning making in healing and growth after childhood sexual assault: A case study approach - 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