About Me

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Atascadero, CA, United States
I am an adult survivor of child abuse. I lived for over 13 years of my childhood with physical, mental, and sexual abuse, at the hands of a brutal Step Father, and Mother who put Mommy Dearest to shame, she thought it was normal to beat you until you were bleeding, and scared for life. This is my story, it's time to unmask the true horrors that plagued my world. So many children suffer and die from child abuse. Someone needs to stand up for them, become a follower and join me in the fight against Child Abuse. I am not a Dr., lawyer or, anyone special, just a SURVIVOR.

Sunday, January 24, 2010

Abused- Why do you suppose?





Why do you suppose, with all the child abuse in America today, that it is the least talked about subject there is? Why is it that over 2,400 cases of child abuse, per day is reported, and it still continues to plague our children. Any time someone tries to talk about it, they are quickly hushed or intimidated not to talk about it? Why is there so much fear associated with this crime when it should be exposed more than any other cause? I see people looking for money to feed hungry children in other countries, and the out pour of funding is phenomenal, yet we still have children in this country abused, 2,400 per day! and trying to raise money for it is like pulling teeth with out anesthesia!

 Breast cancer has become one of the widest talked about and supported causes, world wide, right along with Aids, and the Gay rights movement, and Lord knows what other movement you want to invent these days....Don't get me wrong. These are all wonderful causes and worth every second spent on them, my problem is, why is Child abuse put to the bottom of the list, Why don't we have more celebrities out there pushing to stop this horrible crime! Why isn't there a benefit for these kids. Even Jerry's kids get a benefit once a year. Why not our lost and abused children many have died for this cause, how many more children have to lose their lives before America wakes up!





Why do you suppose we are still the richest country in the world?  Especially when we waste so much money, our government spends billions every year on frigging paper products!! Something is very wrong when we spend that much on paper to make a hundred copies for every department in the universe, yet year after year there is not enough money to put into social services to hire enough people to handle the case loads of children who come in battered and abused. 2400 A DAY! Were are this country's priorities! Children are losing their lives people, WAKE UP AND SMELL THE COFFEE!

Why do you suppose people are so wrapped up in their nose jobs, laser surgeries, liposuction, and breast enhancements , tummy tucks, anorexia, diet pills and obsessions with who knows what, that they can't spend a single waking moment thinking about why they are doing those things to their bodies?
 What makes you hate yourself so much that you mutilate yourself? Do you suppose you were abused in some way and made to think you were less than perfect?  Is that why you do what ever you can to change the outside, do you feel that bad about who you really are? Are you afraid to find out? Are you brave enough to expose the real you or are you in fear someone wouldn't like you the way you really are? Something to think about isn't it?

I am a survivor of Child abuse. I have spent an entire life time of trying to get over the fact that one day I was just an innocent child and the next day I was forced into doing the things that would make a Call Girl shutter. I have been scared for life by a man who was a SEXUAL PREDITOR. Not the caring father, he tried to portray to the rest of the world. Oh he was caring alright, what he cared about most was that his secret was kept quiet. Putting a loaded shot gun to my head several times surely did the trick. Oh and lets not forget kicking, punching, beating me with extension cords, threats against me and my family, and what ever else he felt like doing to shut me up. Do you suppose for one moment anyone cared about what was going on with me?

I was 17 the night my mother walked in, she was faced up front for the first time of what she saw, was I fighting him off?  No I wasn't, because for 13 years he had been doing this same thing to me, I had no more fight left in me, I had no more soul, because it had been stolen a long time before that day, I submitted because it was just easier than getting a brutal beating again.

Funny, when I first saw her face,  I saw, shock, horror, and reality finally sinking in, she was horrified, but the only thought still going through my head was; "finally it's over, my angel has come to save me." Little did I know my hell had just become magnified far more than I could have ever imagined. After the screaming and yelling had settled, and him hiding in the locked bath room like the coward he truly was, she called me to her and asked, what was going on!? I told her, he was raping me, and with out even blinking  she then slapped me across the face and said, git out of my house! Those words still scream in my head to this very day. Words that can never be taken back...My heart fills with pain every time I think of them, she was the one person who had the power to make this hell release me. The turn of events that took place after that, well lets just say, it wasn't over.




Words are just as abusing as the worst beating. They can take your breath away harder than any blow to the gut. They can bring you to your knees with sorrow. They can leave scares that last a life time. Words also can bring you to tears in a different way, they can fill your heart with love and joy, give you comfort and take away all fears. They can blow you over like a feather brushing across your face and fill you with contentment, giving you the will and strength to carry on. Words are powerful!

When was the last time you ever apologized to your child for your angry words? Did you mean it? Did you hug your child and give them the encouragement they need? Have you ever put your arms around your child who was hurt by someone else, and try to make their heart feel just a little better?
If you haven't don't you suppose you should?



help me in my fight to stop Child Abuse
http://rainnmakers.rainn.org/coletteabused
join rain makers and help a worthy cause.

Saturday, January 16, 2010

Abused-I will never give up Video

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National Sexual Assault Hotline

1.800.656.HOPE
Free. Confidential. 24/7.
this  is why I will never give up!    Thank you Linda you are super for giving this video post.

Abused- I will never give up


Sorry my fellow followers, for keeping quiet for the past few days. I have been going through a few struggles with my life lately. I have had a few people telling me that I need to stop writing my blog,  for reasons I at this time will not disclose, because, I will not stoop to the levels that they have, to stop me.

   But guess what?
I WILL NOT GIVE UP WRITING THIS BLOG!

You see the cute couple to the left, well that is me and the best part of me, sitting to my left. He is my inspiration and the driving force in my life. He is my encouragement, my joy, and the light inside of me. He told me in his very best, broken English way, to stick with it that he is totally behind me. He said if writing this blog helps me, and others like me, then do not give up, stand strong!

   One thing I have learned about myself over the years is that I have allowed myself to be intimidated by others. Some people in general have it down like an art form, they know  how to intimidate, or guilt others into doing things they really didn't want to do. If what they have doesn't work then they turn others against you, to pour on more intimidation and guilt. They Push and push until they have their way. It almost worked on me with this blog.  I did take a time out, and became depressed over it. It was my only release, it made me feel a little stronger, for once I felt alive and like I was helping others, and you know what, I was! I have received many e-mails from others who have been abused. After reading my blog they felt like there could be hope for them to recover. Oh God, I hope and pray they do, because this feeling of loss inside is very real, and crippling to some.  I owe it to those readers who need me, to continue, to tell the truth, and to expose child abuse for what it is. I will not leave a stone unturned to expose abuse! I will not be intimidated by my abusers.  They say that strength comes in numbers. Support help is out there for you, people don't be afraid to expose truth. The truth is (Strength) truely does comes in numbers, and there are a lot of people out there waiting to stand with you.You can contact me at coletteabused@gmail.com and I can forward helpful information to you. All e-mails will be kept anonymous, please let me know a little about you so I can turn you on to the right sites. It's time to take back your soul! Stand Tall, you can do it I know you can.
Love and hugs,
Cj

National Sexual Assault Hotline

1.800.656.HOPE
Free. Confidential. 24/7.
or visit http://www.rainn.org/

Sunday, January 10, 2010

abused-untold secrets


Secrets, secrets, everyone has them, I remember way back when my little sister would want to tell me a secret, she would put her ear to my ear and tell me her little secret, it was the cutest thing, she could never get the concept of your mouth goes to the other persons ear, if you can picture it, you would smile as I always did. She loved telling me secrets, and it was most unfortunate I could never tell her mine.

I have been reading other blogs similar to mine and I am finding there are many people out there who have gone through almost the exact same thing as me. They kept their abuse secret for far long too, and they still to this day have trouble talking about it. In my research on survivors of abuse, I found thousands of people suffer ever day with the after effects of child abuse, and no one has reached to out them. They are crippled in many areas of their life, so much so that these innocent people feel lost and hopeless. Doctors, hospitals, pills, dysfunctional family life, some have grown up to be abusers themselves and can't seem to break the cycle. Others live just merely existing struggling to survive the day to day routine of just staying alive. Some continue to suffer because they marry into abuse and suffer at the hands of a spouse, who beats them for no good reason. We hear about this on TV everyday!

 After going through a few struggles of my own over this blog, I can see how and why people keep it a secret. It isn't bad enough we had to go through it as children, but now we have to just live with it and try to get over it alone as adults. It is a private family matter not to be discussed among strangers, and a real shame on me, for sharing it on the net. Then who can we tell? Do we not have the right to heal? Do we have any rights? We sure didn't seem to when we were abused, and it would seem that we don't have any now either.

Well I have good news, for those of you that suffered as I did, we have rights and can expose the truth with out fear. You know how I know? See the first amendment, regarding freedom of speech, religious freedom, freedom of the press, freedom of assembly and right to petition!! Wow we have a lot of freedoms, that's why I love America, I can stand and say what, I have to say with out fear!  I refuse to live with the secrets any longer, I will not be made a captive of my inner self any longer, I need light, love, compassion, understanding, healing, and most of all, ...and... MOST OF ALL...I want child abuse in this country to be exposed for what it is and to make it STOP.   I am finding this to be the hardest thing I have ever done in my life, because it has exposed what is in my past.  I am a respected business woman, and well known in my working community, I can only hope as the blog progresses, that anyone who reads it, will indeed know I was a victim, and will help me by joining the fight against this type of crime.  I am finding so many of you out there, who are afflicted by your abuse, and you can't seem to speak out, you are held captive and imprisoned by your affliction.

 What if so and so finds out?    What will it do to my family?    How will it affect me in my personal life?

 These are questions I still ask myself and all I can come up with is...IT'S NOT YOUR FAULT, YOU DIDN'T GIVE YOUR LIFE AWAY, IT WAS STOLLEN, YOU WERE ABUSED BY SOMEONE WHO KNEW THEY COULD GET AWAY WITH IT!

It's time to break the cycle, there is light, hope and inner peace, I am finding it, and so can you. There are many sites you can go to to for help. Just get on that Internet and start by merely typing in ABUSE, find one you can relate to, talk to someone, a pastor, friend, stranger, any one who will listen, talk to God he is pretty good about listening. But break the cycle, begin to heal and release to become a healthier you.
I  love ya and my arms are around you. Draw from you inner strength and you go with it.

Here a few sites you can visit.
http://www.childhelp.org/
http://childabusesurvivor.ning.com/

Wednesday, January 6, 2010

Abused-cleaning house


  I have lived with my history of abuse for over 50 years, after seeking the help from a Help Center for Women, I was encouraged to write down my thoughts, fears and my life experiences. Each week when I would go back with my writtings, my counsler and I would discuss what I had written, we seemed to be making a lot of progress in the department of cleaning house.  In the first of many visits, he stated to me that our bodies are like a house. First there is the full living quarters, kitchen, living, and dinning, rooms, bathrooms, etc. These rooms in your house usually get cleaned all the time as these are the rooms people see. But what about the attic and the basement. These are the rooms that rarely get noticed and usually a great place to store things you don't want to throw away. Eventually it becomes cluttered with storage and creepy crawlers, spider webs and sometimes, rodents, bats, mice etc... Both places need cleaning and it never seems to get done. Till one day there is so much build up, and no place else for the stuff to go, and it begins to spill over into other areas of the home that were once clean.  Eventually the home becomes cluttered and filled trash, and garbage is every where. Have you ever seen a hoarder who won't trow anything away, eventually it totally over takes that life? It consumes them to the death and giving up even a piece of paper is unthinkable. This is what I was in side, a hoarder! I harbored feelings and pains from the past for so long that it began spilling over. I needed help and I knew it. Going to the Help Center helped me to realize everything I was supressing, was putting me in a constant state of depression, and giving me suicitle tendencys. I was on the road to complete self distruction.

I found that writting down my experiences were a real form of healing for me, and my life started changing for the better. I was learing to understand why I was doing the things I was doing, and why I was feeling the things I was feeling. My writting began to open my life up to new experiences and helped me to take a stand against abuse including my own. I started writting a book about my paint horse Shennandoha, I wrote about all our adventures together and when I was finished I put the book in a drawer and stopped writting, thinking I was good to go, and on top of the world.

When I stopped writting, I continued along thinking I was ok, and my house, little by little, began to fill up all over agian, depression set in and feelings of self distruct, were running rappid with life. Before it got to far, I began remembering the words of my counsiler. I could hear his words of wisdom in my mind, and  I decided enough was enough, it was time to take my life back again. If it means telling my life like it was, then this is what I will do. If it helps ease my pain of the past and I just happen to help someone with theirs, then my mission to the road of recovery is working.


I truely feel if I help just one person, to think, before they strike a child, then I have done a good thing. I must admitt I am ruffling a few feathers for writting the truth, and I am sorry anyone is offened, but I am not sorry for writting what I write.  Children are so precious they can't stand alone against their abusers.  If I help one child, or person that has suffered at the hands of an abuser, then I did what I set out to do, and it is worth every line I write, and every person I offend.
I will continue my fight to help children. I challange all my readers to help me with this fight against child abuse, don't leave a child to suffer or die alone.
Who could they tell? Who will help them? Join me in my fight agians Child abuse

1-800-4-A-Child (1-800-422-4453) or go to http://www.childhelp.org/

donations can also be made to   http://www.childhelp.org/

Friday, January 1, 2010

happy New Year! one and all

      

         Happy New Year to all my readers!

May God bless you all the year thru.  Let this be the year of recovery and happiness to one and all....Love ya! XXOO

Abused- what about the elderly

Abuse takes on may forms not just child abuse but abuse of animal and the elderly. Working with seniors in my job I have seen over and over again the neglect that can take place and it infuriates me. I did a search on the internet about it and I have a strong article on the subject that I would like to share with you. You all must know by now that I am a strong advocate for anyone who is being abused. I just hate it and it needs to come to everyone's attention. I have included the site where I found my article, they deserve credit for there work in trying to stop these horrible crimes against human life. You can search helpguide.org for help.

http://helpguide.org/mental/elder_abuse_physical_emotional_sexual_neglect.htm

Your elderly neighbor

There’s an elderly neighbor you’ve chatted with at civic meetings and block parties for years. When you see her coming to get her mail as you walk up the street, you slow down and greet her at the mailbox. She says hello but seems wary, as if she doesn’t quite recognize you. You ask her about a nasty bruise on her forearm. Oh, just an accident, she explains; the car door closed on it. She says goodbye quickly and returns to the house. Something isn’t quite right about her. You think about the bruise, her skittish behavior. Well, she’s getting pretty old, you think; maybe her mind is getting fuzzy. But there’s something else — something isn’t right.

What is elder abuse

As elders become more physically frail, they’re less able to stand up to bullying and or fight back if attacked. They may not see or hear as well or think as clearly as they used to, leaving openings for unscrupulous people to take advantage of them. Mental or physical ailments may make them more trying companions for the people who live with them..

Tens of thousands of seniors across the United States are being abused: harmed in some substantial way often people who are directly responsible for their care

More than half a million reports of abuse against elderly Americans reach authorities every year, and millions more cases go unreported.

Where does elder abuse take place?

Elder abuse tends to take place where the senior lives: most often in the home where abusers are apt to be adult children; other family members such as grandchildren; or spouses/partners of elders. Institutional settings especially long-term care facilities can also be sources of elder abuse.

The different types of elder abuse

Abuse of elders takes many different forms, some involving intimidation or threats against the elderly, some involving neglect, and others involving financial chicanery. The most common are defined below.

Physical abuse

Physical elder abuse is non-accidental use of force against an elderly person that results in physical pain, injury, or impairment. Such abuse includes not only physical assaults such as hitting or shoving but the inappropriate use of drugs, restraints, or confinement.

Emotional abuse

In emotional or psychological senior abuse, people speak to or treat elderly persons in ways that cause emotional pain or distress.

Verbal forms of emotional elder abuse include

intimidation through yelling or threats

humiliation and ridicule

habitual blaming or scapegoating

Nonverbal psychological elder abuse can take the form of

ignoring the elderly person

isolating an elder from friends or activities

terrorizing or menacing the elderly person

Sexual abuse

Sexual elder abuse is contact with an elderly person without the elder’s consent. Such contact can involve physical sex acts, but activities such as showing an elderly person pornographic material, forcing the person to watch sex acts, or forcing the elder to undress are also considered sexual elder abuse.

Neglect or abandonment by caregivers

Elder neglect, failure to fulfill a care-taking obligation, constitutes more than half of all reported cases of elder abuse. It can be active (intentional) or passive (unintentional, based on factors such as ignorance or denial that an elderly charge needs as much care as he or she does).

Financial exploitation

This involves unauthorized use of an elderly person’s funds or property, either by a caregiver or an outside scam artist.

An unscrupulous caregiver might

misuse an elder’s personal checks, credit cards, or accounts

steal cash, income checks, or household goods

forge the elder’s signature

engage in identity theft

Typical rackets that target elders include

Announcements of a “prize” that the elderly person has won but must pay money to claim

Phony charities

Investment fraud

Healthcare fraud and abuse

Carried out by unethical doctors, nurses, hospital personnel, and other professional care providers, examples of healthcare fraud and abuse regarding elders include

Not providing healthcare, but charging for it

Overcharging or double-billing for medical care or services

Getting kickbacks for referrals to other providers or for prescribing certain drugs

Overmedicating or undermedicating

Recommending fraudulent remedies for illnesses or other medical conditions

Medicaid fraud

Signs and symptoms of elder abuse

At first, you might not recognize or take seriously signs of elder abuse. They may appear to be symptoms of dementia or signs of the elderly person’s frailty — or caregivers may explain them to you that way. In fact, many of the signs and symptoms of elder abuse do overlap with symptoms of mental deterioration, but that doesn’t mean you should dismiss them on the caregiver’s say-so.

General signs of abuse

The following are warning signs of some kind of elder abuse:

Frequent arguments or tension between the caregiver and the elderly person

Changes in personality or behavior in the elder

If you suspect elderly abuse, but aren't sure, look for clusters of the following physical and behavioral signs.

Signs and symptoms of specific types of abuse

Physical abuse Unexplained signs of injury such as bruises, welts, or scars, especially if they appear symmetrically on two side of the body

Broken bones, sprains, or dislocations

Report of drug overdose or apparent failure to take medication regularly (a prescription has more remaining than it should)

Broken eyeglasses or frames

Signs of being restrained, such as rope marks on wrists

Caregiver’s refusal to allow you to see the elder alone

Emotional abuse In addition to the general signs above, indications of emotional elder abuse include

Threatening, belittling, or controlling caregiver behavior that you witness

Behavior from the elder that mimics dementia, such as rocking, sucking, or mumbling to oneself

Sexual abuse Bruises around breasts or genitals

Unexplained venereal disease or genital infections

Unexplained vaginal or anal bleeding

Torn, stained, or bloody underclothing

Neglect by caregivers or self-neglect Unusual weight loss, malnutrition, dehydration

Untreated physical problems, such as bed sores

Unsanitary living conditions: dirt, bugs, soiled bedding and clothes

Being left dirty or unbathed

Unsuitable clothing or covering for the weather

Unsafe living conditions (no heat or running water; faulty electrical wiring, other fire hazards)

Desertion of the elder at a public place

Financial exploitation Significant withdrawals from the elder’s accounts

Sudden changes in the elder’s financial condition

Items or cash missing from the senior’s household

Suspicious changes in wills, power of attorney, titles, and policies

Addition of names to the senior’s signature card

Unpaid bills or lack of medical care, although the elder has enough money to pay for them

Financial activity the senior couldn’t have done, such as an ATM withdrawal when the account holder is bedridden

Unnecessary services, goods, or subscriptions

Healthcare fraud and abuse Duplicate billings for the same medical service or device

Evidence of overmedication or undermedication

Evidence of inadequate care when bills are paid in full

Problems with the care facility:

- Poorly trained, poorly paid, or insufficient staff

- Crowding

- Inadequate responses to questions about care

Risk factors for elder abuse

It’s difficult to take care of a senior when he or she has many different needs, and it’s difficult to be elderly when age brings with it infirmities and dependence. Both the demands of caregiving and the needs of the elder can create situations in which abuse is more likely to occur.

Risk factors among caregivers

Many nonprofessional caregivers — spouses, adult children, other relatives and friends — find taking care of an elder to be satisfying and enriching. But the responsibilities and demands of elder caregiving, which escalate as the elder’s condition deteriorates, can also be extremely stressful. The stress of elder care can lead to mental and physical health problems that make caregivers burned out, impatient, and unable to keep from lashing out against elders in their care.

Among caregivers, significant risk factors for elder abuse are

inability to cope with stress (lack of resilience)

depression, which is common among caregivers

lack of support from other potential caregivers

the caregiver’s perception that taking care of the elder is burdensome and without psychological reward

substance abuse

Even caregivers in institutional settings can experience stress at levels that lead to elder abuse. Nursing home staff may be prone to elder abuse if they lack training, have too many responsibilities, are unsuited to caregiving, or work under poor conditions.

The elder’s condition and history

Several factors concerning elders themselves, while they don’t excuse abuse, influence whether they are at greater risk for abuse:

The intensity of an elderly person’s illness or dementia

Social isolation; i.e., the elder and caregiver are alone together almost all the time

The elder’s role, at an earlier time, as an abusive parent or spouse

A history of domestic violence in the home

The elder’s own tendency toward verbal or physical aggression

In many cases, elder abuse, though real, is unintentional. Caregivers pushed beyond their capabilities or psychological resources may not mean to yell at, strike, or ignore the needs of the elders in their care.

Reporting elder abuse

If you are an elder who is being abused, neglected, or exploited, tell at least one person. Tell your doctor, a friend, or a family member whom you trust. Other people care and can help you.

You can also call Eldercare Locator at 1-800-677-1116.

The person who answers the phone will refer you to a local agency that can help. The Eldercare Locator answers the phone Monday through Friday, 9 am to 8 pm, Eastern Time.

How do I report suspected elder abuse?

The 500,000 to 1,000,000 reports of elder abuse recorded by authorities every year (the vast majority of which are proven to be true) are only the tip of the iceberg; according to data from different states, for every case of elder abuse reported, another 12 or 13 are not. Accordingly there’s a great need for people to report suspected abuse.

In every state, physical, sexual, and financial abuses targeting elders that violate laws against assault, rape, theft, and other offenses are punishable as crimes. With some variation among states, certain types of emotional elder abuse and elder neglect are subject to criminal prosecution, depending on the perpetrators' conduct and intent and the consequences for the victim.

States differ on who is required to report suspected elder abuse (there’s no federal standard), though the categories of mandatory reporters are expanding. Typically, medical personnel, nursing home workers, peace officers, emergency personnel, public officials, social workers, counselors, and clergy are listed as mandatory reporters, and that responsibility is spreading to financial institutions and other entities that work with seniors.

While it’s important for elders to seek refuge from abuse, either by calling a local agency or telling a doctor or trusted friend, many seniors don't report the abuse they face even if they’re able. Many fear retaliation from the abuser, while others believe that if they turn in their abusers, no one else will take care of them. When the caregivers are their children, they may be ashamed that their children are behaving abusively or blame themselves: “If I’d been a better parent when they were younger, this wouldn’t be happening.” Or they just may not want children they love to get into trouble with the law.

The first agency to respond to a report of elderly abuse, in most states, is Adult Protective Services (APS). Its role is to investigate abuse cases, intervene, and offer services and advice. Again, the power and scope of APS varies from state to state. However, every state has at least one toll-free elder abuse hotline or helpline for reporting elder abuse in the home, in the community, or in nursing homes and other longterm care facilities. In addition, information and referral are also available from the national Eldercare Locator: 1-800-677-1116

Preventing elder abuse and neglect

We can help reduce the incidence of elder abuse, but it’ll take more effort than we’re making now. Preventing elder abuse means doing three things:

Listening to seniors and their caregivers

Intervening when you suspect elder abuse

Educating others about how to recognize and report elder abuse

What you can do as a caregiver to prevent elder abuse

If you’re overwhelmed by the demands of caring for an elder, do the following:

Request help, from friends, relatives, or local respite care agencies, so you can take a break, if only for a couple of hours.

Find an adult day care program.

Stay healthy and get medical care for yourself when necessary.

Adopt stress reduction practices.

Seek counseling for depression, which can lead to elder abuse.

Find a support group for caregivers of the elderly.

If you’re having problems with drug or alcohol abuse, get help.

And remember, elder abuse helplines offer help for caregivers as well. Call a helpline if you think there’s a possibility you might cross the line into elder abuse.

What you can do as a concerned friend or family member

Watch for warning signs that might indicate elder abuse. If you suspect abuse, report it.

Take a look at the elder’s medications. Does the amount in the vial jive with the date of the prescription?

Watch for possible financial abuse. Ask the elder if you may scan bank accounts and credit card statements for unauthorized transactions.

Call and visit as often as you can. Help the elder consider you a trusted confidante.

Offer to stay with the elder so the caregiver can have a break — on a regular basis, if you can.

How you can protect yourself, as an elder, against elder abuse

Make sure your financial and legal affairs are in order. If they aren’t, enlist professional help to get them in order, with the assistance of a trusted friend or relative if necessary.

Keep in touch with family and friends and avoid becoming isolated, which increases your vulnerability to elder abuse.

If you are unhappy with the care you’re receiving, whether it’s in your own home or in a care facility, speak up. Tell someone you trust and ask that person to report the abuse, neglect, or substandard care to your state’s elder abuse helpline or long term care ombudsman, or make the call yourself.

Finally, if you aren’t in a position to help an elder personally, you can volunteer or donate money to the cause of educating people about elder abuse, and you can lobby to strengthen state laws and policing so that elder abuse can be investigated and prosecuted more readily. The life you save down the line may be your own
for more information contact helpguide.org

http://helpguide.org/mental/elder_abuse_physical_emotional_sexual_neglect.htm