#Metoo movement prompting sexual-assault survivors to break silence to family
It was just this past Christmas that a prickly family conversation about the burgeoning #metoo movement led one Nova Scotia woman to do something she didn’t expect: speak out about her own traumatic experiences decades earlier.
Having suffered in silence for most of her life, she told her stunned parents she had been sexually assaulted three times in her adolescence, including once in their presence during a family trip.
“You take on the burden of the shame and guilt for so many years, you kind of assume that it’s something that you’ve done wrong,” said Fiona, who asked that her last name not be revealed to protect her privacy.
“Well I now discovered it’s not remotely uncommon.”


