A young boy carries the weight of a dark secret from his childhood, a secret that has haunted him in silence for years. Molested repeatedly by a trusted family friend, he battles the torment of fragmented memories and the paralyzing fear that his own mind might be betraying him. The pain is raw, vivid, and suffocating, yet he has kept it buried deep, afraid to face the truth and the consequences it might bring.
When he finally musters the courage to speak his truth to his mother, seeking understanding and solace, he is met not with comfort but with denial and accusation. His vulnerability is met with disbelief, and the very person he longs to trust questions his reality, leaving him isolated in his trauma. In this harrowing moment, the boy’s fragile hope for healing is shattered, exposing the cruel loneliness of a survivor unheard.

AITAH for accusing my mother of consciously allowing me to be abused?















As noted by psychologist Dr. Bessel van der Kolk, known for his work on trauma and the body, memories of severe childhood trauma are often fragmented, stored non-verbally, and can surface years later with intense physical reactions like nausea and light-headedness, which the 17-year-old is currently experiencing. This validates the OP’s intense physical symptoms as a genuine response to remembered violation, irrespective of memory clarity.
The mother’s reaction strongly suggests a complex pattern involving denial, minimization, and potentially self-protection mechanisms common when parents are confronted with evidence of abuse involving people they know, like a family friend. Her accusations that the OP is making up lies and bringing up the past to cause ‘shame’ are classic defensive tactics used to avoid accountability. Crucially, her recollection of the OP’s previous vague complaints about ‘yucky’ feelings and ‘secret games’ indicates she had prior information but minimized it, possibly due to cognitive dissonance or a belief that abuse ‘doesn’t happen to boys,’ as she stated.
The son’s actions in confronting his mother, while emotionally necessary for him, escalated the situation by directly accusing her of prior knowledge, forcing her into a corner where denial became her only defense mechanism. While the son was not wrong to seek the truth about her past inaction, the immediate environment (still living in the house) makes productive resolution difficult right now. The constructive recommendation is for the OP to prioritize his immediate safety and mental health by seeking external support—such as a mandated reporter or a trauma-informed therapist—to process the revelation and the parental rejection, rather than continuing to seek immediate validation from the source of the denial.
THE COMMENTS SECTION WENT WILD – REDDIT HAD *A LOT* TO SAY ABOUT THIS ONE.


















The young man is experiencing deep emotional distress, marked by self-doubt, lingering feelings of uncleanness, and physical sickness related to long-term childhood abuse. His central conflict arises from seeking validation and support from his mother, only to be met with denial, accusation, and deflection regarding her past inaction.
Given the mother’s alleged past dismissal of earlier reports and her current defensive reaction, is the son’s conclusion—that his mother must have known and chosen to ignore the abuse—a fair assessment of her behavior, or does his current trauma cloud the objective reality of her past response?







