Talking about what happened can bring relief, create space to express feelings, and remind us we’re not alone. It can also help us reflect, find clarity, and take back a sense of control over our story. In the course of this guide, we’ll share ways to think through your options, prepare if you decide to tell someone, and care for yourself before and after the conversation.
This guide is for anyone who has experienced abuse, assault, or another form of harm and is thinking about sharing what happened. It’s for those who want to understand their options, explore what safety and support could look like, and make choices that feel right for them. You might feel unsure, ready but afraid, or somewhere in between. Whether you decide to tell someone now, later, or not at all, this guide can help.
If you feel able then we’d love to hear from you, whatever your thoughts. You’ll find a general feedback option at the bottom of every page, and we also provide the opportunity for more detailed feedback at the end of this guide here.
This guide covers a variety of considerations when deciding whether to talk about your experience, but we understand that different people will be at different stages of the journey. Our aim has been to design it so you can get to the information you need, when you need it.
We’ve structured the sections in this guide to cover different situations, so you can head straight for the content that applies to you. You can do that via the navigation options below, or you can use our What do you need right now? selector.
Each section of the guide is on a separate page, and there are a number of ways you can find your way around the guide as a whole:
At Chayn, we’ve developed our own set of trauma-informed design principles that we follow in everything we do. Experiencing abuse or harm of any kind can be deeply distressing, traumatic, and draining, so it can be helpful to take a pause before beginning and set an intention to approach this guide in whatever way feels comfortable. It might be to just read one section at a time, or to only read for five minutes before taking a break, or to explore the guide without putting any pressure on yourself to do anything with the information. It’s whatever feels right for you.
We have permission to go at whatever pace feels right for us. It’s okay to skip sections, come back later, or just focus on one small step at a time. Our wellbeing is the most important thing.
When dealing with difficult emotional issues, it’s important to take care of ourselves and our nervous system, and grounding exercises can help with that. Here’s one example that can be used over and over, but other breathing exercises, meditations, visualisations and more are available free on our healing platform, Bloom.
This is a simple, quick exercise we can do anywhere to calm your system and connect with our body.
In this exercise, we’ll take 3 deep, slow breaths. Find a comfortable spot, either sitting or lying down. Take your time. When you’re ready, close your eyes and start to notice the sensations in your body.
This guide covers different stages of deciding whether to tell someone about your experiences of abuse and how to go about doing so, and they may not all be relevant for everyone. You can skip straight to the part that resonates most with you, pick out a few to focus on, or read them all. Choose your starting point below.
These scams involve someone pretending to be a romantic partner in order to build trust and emotional closeness. Once that connection is established, they often ask for money, gifts, or intimate images. Some build relationships over weeks or months before making a request or demand.
Sextortion happens when a person is threatened with the release of sexual images or videos—real or created with AI—unless they meet certain demands. This may include sending more images, transferring money, or unwillingly staying in contact. In many cases, the scammer uses emotional manipulation, impersonation, or AI-generated media to appear more believable.
These may include fake investment opportunities, fraudulent business offers, or urgent pleas for help. Some scammers impersonate trusted figures or organisations. Others offer to ‘help’ recover lost money or images, in what are known as recovery scams—often part of the same cycle of abuse.
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