Hamilton teen says she experienced years of pain after being pressured to send nude photos - Action News
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Hamilton

Hamilton teen says she experienced years of pain after being pressured to send nude photos

A Hamilton teenager was only 12 when she was pressured into sending revealing photos of herself. Experts say adults have to stop blaming the victims and pretending these incidents don't happen.

Experts urge adults to stop placing blame on victimized youth

A Hamilton teen says she approached police after revealing pictures of her were circulated around the city. But instead of receiving help, she said she was scolded. (Aaron Amat/Shutterstock)

Keira Van Der Kolk of Hamilton remembers back to when her vulnerability was plastered over social media without her consent.

Pressure to send revealing photos started when she was a 12-year-old girl. It felt then, she said, like a "regular, normal" thing for teens to go through.

Then came years of threats for more pictures, and the harassment when those were leaked to others.

When she appears on social media now, the 19-year-old shares thoughts close to her heart in the form of poetry. That intimacy is on her own terms.

"Expressing myself with words is the best thing I've ever dove into," she said.

Keira Van Der Kolk says it took years for her to realize what happened in elementary school wasn't her fault. She wants kids going through similar situations to feel supported by adults. (Submitted by Keira Van Der Kolk)

Van Der Kolkwas in Grade 7 when she began getting pressured to send naked photos of herself to older teens. Her age, she said, didn't seem to matter to them.

"I felt very empowered. Loved. But I was just actually easily manipulated because of my innocence and my vulnerability," she said.

"How could anything bad come from feeling loved?"

But those photos ended up being seen by people across Hamilton, she said. Cruel "prank calls" started, she said some urging her to take her own life. Shestarted skipping school.

When she was later assaulted, she said, she blamed herself for taking the photos in the first place.

"I doubted everything," Van Der Kolk said. "As I grew older, I realized that everything that happened to me was not my fault,and it was very real."

'The education has to change'

Faye Mishna, a professor at University of Toronto's Factor-Inwentash Faculty of Social Work, said that "one of the problems to this day is that we still blame the victim" while the perpetrators are often "invisible."

Mishna also noted that adults seem to have a merged understanding that various actions all count as "sexting." But non-consensual or unsolicited pictures, she said, is a serious form of harassment and should be perceived and talked aboutdifferently. That's difficult when adults are hesitant to acknowledge this is even happening.

It's a mistake not to discuss the issue,she said, or to stick to a dismissive message.In her research, when a girl says no to requests, Mishna said she's blocked by the person on the other end a form of punishment. Meanwhile, boys are pressured to collect images as part of their"social status."

"We need to go into that world and recognize the different pressures that they're all feeling, and then help them deal with it. But the problem is saying, 'don't do it' and 'you should have known better,'" she said.

"The education has to change. Just telling [youth] not to do it doesn't help give them tools."

A teen texting
Mishna says adults need to acknowledge that teens are regularly sharing images, and conversations about consent have to be at the forefront. (CBC)

'Nobody evernoticed that I needed help'

When Van Der Kolk spoke to liaison police officers at her school in 2014, she said, she felt "penalized."Police scolded her for sending photos in the first place, she said, and told her she could be liable for child pornography. She didn't pursue anything further.

The Hamilton Police Service says an officerwrote in a report that there was an "extensive conversation" with Van Der Kolk about the "dangers and severity of taking inappropriate photographs and putting them on social media."

The service saysthe individuals involved were "educated" due to their age.

Police also say that anyoneunder the age of 18 who has or takes an image that can be classified as child pornography including of themselves and distributes it"technically couldbe charged as the distributor of child pornography."

In the case at Van Der Kolk's school, police say a safety plan was discussed and counselling options raised because shewas being bullied.

'It's not hopeless'

Van Der Kolksays there should bea different approach.

"Nobody ever noticed that I needed help," shesaid. "People would tell me I should have known better, even though nobody taught me better because who expects a 12-year-old girl to over-sexualise herself and get caught up with these types of people?"

Noni Classen, director of education with the Canadian Centre for Child Protection, said there's been a more than 88 per cent increase in reports of sexual exploitation coming into their two tip lines in the past year and a half.

Classen said a common misconception isthinking the harm to kids is "minimized" if an interaction happens online versus in person. But thetrauma, she said, is very much real.

"Many [kids] assumeresponsibility for what happened, and it's not their fault," she said. "They need to know where they can go for help It's not hopeless."

Fear of disappointing adults

Both Classen and Mishna noted that kids may be afraid to tell adults in their lives for a variety of reasons: not just fear of punishment, but of disappointing them or adding stress to their lives.

Whileadultsmight be "alarmed" or "upset,"Classen said, it's important to recognize those feelings, but manage them on their own in order to help kids in that situation.

Ongoing conversations between adults and youth and not just a crash course are "critical," Classen said, especially when there's24/7 connectivity between people online.The centre'swebsite has age-appropriate resourcesfrom four to 17-years-old to guide conversations about personal safety both on and offline.

Van Der Kolk has since worked with doctors and therapists to address her mental health.She was diagnosed with borderline personality disorder, she said, and was suicidal.She wishes someone was there, she said, to tell her that she didn't need to bully herself.

"I want to move on and I know that I deserve to move on. And even though no actual justice was given, and it might never be, forgiving myself is the most important thing that I need to do."

'Healing doesn't have a time limit'

Van Der Kolk started writing as an outlet in her teens, just for herself, when she was in tough spaces.She gravitates toward the form of poetry as a way of "self expression, real and raw."

One of herpoems on TikTok got an"overwhelming" 2.4 million views.She says it's a way to process a balance of conflicting emotions her own frustration with not having healed by now from her trauma, but understanding that it's a journey.

"Healing doesn't have a time limit," she said.

"That's why I'm going to school for social work...just to help in whatever way I can and give kids my age that type of security that I never had."


If you're experiencing sexual exploitation, you can get help at Cybertip.ca or Needhelpnow.ca.

If you're experiencing suicidal thoughts or having a mental health crisis, there is help out there:

  • The Canada Suicide Prevention Service: 1-833-456-4566. Also available by texting45645 from 4 p.m. to midnight ET. More resources available atcrisisservicescanada.ca

  • Kids Help Phone: 1-800-668-6868. You can also text CONNECT to 686868 and get immediate support from a crisis responder through the Crisis Text Line, powered by Kids Help Phone. Live Chat counselling is available atkidshelpphone.ca

  • COAST Hamilton: 905-972-8338 and more resources available atcoasthamilton.ca.

  • In Hamilton, you can visithamilton.ca/CYmentalhealthfor resources or call Contact Hamilton at 905-570-8888.

  • Canadian Association for Suicide Prevention:Find a 24-hour crisis centre.