We can talk about making the choice about reporting or not tomorrow, if you'd like -- how that can go, the pros and cons, and figuring out what you really want for yourself, not just to protect others (which is a big deal, but you're the biggest deal here, so it'd also have to be something that you felt okay doing).
For tonight, though, since I'm only here for a brief evening shift, I'd like to focus on this:
I don't know if you're familiar with terms like victim-blaming or rape culture, but if not, putting those into a search engine will give you some good places to get started. You can also start with a couple pieces relevant to those concepts on the site here, if you like:With all that said, why do I still feel like this is my fault?
• Dealing With Rape
• http://www.scarleteen.com/article/abuse ... _so_guilty (You may find some other things in this answer, particularly, that I think are very relevant to you: this user also didn't feel able to be honest with her parents, and her partners also reacted very poorly)
• Please Stop Calling Rape Sex
• http://www.scarleteen.com/who_are_rapis ... _on_myself
The long-story short is that a lot of, if not most, people who survive abuse or assault (especially sexual, but not only) feel like abuse must be their fault because while our world has been gradually getting better about this area of human behavior, it still overall, tends to blame victims of abuse or assault, especially when they're women and especially when it's sexual abuse or assault, for those things instead of the people who actually choose to do them to people, whose fault those behaviors always, always are.
Too, if and when someone is raised in a way where their life experiences have included the normalization of abuse, and victim-blaming, as it sounds like at least some of your home life has, that makes it even harder to put the blame where it belongs. You said that had what you told your father been true, for example, you would have deserved the physical abuse he chose to do to you.
But that's just not true. NO ONE deserves abuse, and abuse is never some kind of right or rational response to the behavior of a victim, or a victim not doing what someone who abuses them wants. Abuse is about power and control, and wanting all of it, or at least way more than someone's fair share. If abuse comes from a place of anger, anger is something people can both experience and manage without abusing someone else, and managing our anger WITHOUT doing others harm IS the only right response to those feelings, wherever they come from. However, people who abuse others, in any way, tend to make part of that convincing people they abuse they did deserve it so that they don't have to take responsibility for their own behavior and also can keep getting away with abuse because they do not want to lose all the power and control over others it gives them.
Because of both those things up there, especially when both are in play, it often takes people who have survived abuse both a long time to learn to stop self-blaming, but also tends to involves some real effort and work, often with the help of people who job it is, and who have the training and education to do that job well, to help survivors heal.
So, both given time, getting further and further away from ANY kind of abuse, and your own work over time to heal yourself, this feeling that any of this is your fault will be something you feel less and less. But even with getting and staying away from any kind of abuse -- be it rape or abuse within a family -- and doing that kind of work, it may take a while, so it can help to just try and be patient with yourself, just gently reminding yourself as best you can each time it feels like your fault that, nope, it isn't. If someone walks up to someone else and punches them in the face, the only person whose fault that is is the person doing the punching. The same goes here.
(I am bummed your Star Wars experience got lost in this, though. That stinks!)