Quote:I'm deathly afraid of the polygraph and cvsa. I have concluded that they are BS, but I have a guilty conscience on things beyond my control and in an act I did not commit.
I have been married for almost a year now and my wife has a daughter which is my new step-daughter; she was 3. I was kind of dropped into the roll of dad immediately and found myself doing things I've never had to do before. All of a sudden I am wiping her after she goes to the bathroom if her mom is not available and helping in giving her her baths. At first it was a very strange experience and I am seeing things I've never seen before on a young girl. Thoughts go thru my mind about people and priests who fondle and molest children and I feel guilty just wiping her. I also had a dream in which I lightly fondled her and I feel like total crap for this although this is not something I would EVER do in real life but I can't control my dreams.
Has anyone else had to deal with this? It's hard for me to even think about this subject but I'm afraid I'll be labeled a pedophile in a polygraph. Thanks.
Guest,
Despite Polycop's obvious attempt to make himself feel superior to
somebody, dreams are not crimes. Nor are they necessarily indicative of what you actually want to do in real life, or what you would or will do. Don't sweat it. The very fact that you felt awful about even dreaming along those lines, and generally seem to have normal relations with people around you reassures me that you can be trusted with kids.
Unfortunately, these days our society seems to have gone a bit pedophile-phobic, and sees such behavior everywhere (probably both because we seem to need to have something to panic over, and seem to need to feel someone is lower than ourselves, and pedophiles qualify). It's important to remember that "pedophile" has a rather narrow medical definition:
A. Over a period of at least 6 months, recurrent, intense sexually arousing fantasies, sexual urges, or behaviors involving sexual activity with a prepubescent child or children (generally age 13 years or younger).
B. The fantasies, sexual urges, or behaviors cause clinically significant distress or impairment in social, occupational, or other important areas of functioning.
C. The person is at least age 16 years and at least 5 years older than the child or children in Criterion A.
What this means is that being a "pedophile" involves being primarily or strongly turned on by pre-pubescent children, and a lack of normal social relations with adults. It doesn't mean having an occasional guilt-ridden thought that shocks you. If the vast majority of your sexual fantasies, turn-ons and interests involve adults (e.g. grown women), then you're not a pedophile. Period.
It's important to remember, also, that a diagnosis of "pedophile" would involve a thorough psychological exam, interviews, etc. Genuine pedophiles are actually not that common. Just having occasional thoughts because of a wholly new situation doesn't generally qualify.
If you're feeling badly stressed by the whole deal, I wouldn't rule out counseling -- not because, from your description, I think you're a pedophile (I don't), but rather because stress over this seems to be affecting your quality of life. Of course, if the issue is fear of a polygrapher concluding something unwarranted about you, then that's a different matter -- one that can be resolved by refusing to submit to such nonsense. Polygraphers can and will conclude nastiness about you without any help from you or regard for what you've actually done, thank you very much.
I sympathize with you, since you appear to have a rather guilty conscience (I know how that goes). It took three polygraphs for me to conclude that the polygraph is not the time to look for absolution for real or imagined shortcomings, nor are polygraphers in any position to grant it or people from whom you want to win respect. They are some of the more dishonest, amoral people you'll run into. I guarantee you that whatever it is you think you're guilty of, any given polygrapher has likely done equally bad things. The difference is, they probably felt very little guilt or remorse about it.
The polygraph is baloney, its practitioners are hucksters and liars, and as George has mentioned, how you do on the "test" has little to do with actual guilt, innocence or honesty, no matter what sort of correlation you think you may see.
My advice to you would be to resolve your stress by going the "complete honesty" route regarding your polygraph knowlege, or refusing to submit to a polygraph in the first place. You don't need the added stress of worrying about getting a bad reputation, or believing you "failed" a polygraph because you did something wrong.
Skeptic