T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
462.1 | | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, you bet. | Thu Oct 18 1990 21:11 | 11 |
|
As awful as it is to live through the cycles involved in an
abusive relationship, it helps to recognize the pattern.
My friend found some comfort in knowing that the flow of
events in her abusive relationship were part of a larger
phenomenon.
It helped her to do what she needed to get the abuser out
of her life.
|
462.2 | Should be "IS not helpless" - in the second line... | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, you bet. | Thu Oct 18 1990 21:16 | 8 |
|
By the way, I like to use the word "target" instead of "victim"
because the person on the receiving end of abuse in not helpless,
as a lifetime condition.
The abuse can be stopped if the pattern is recognized (and other
steps are taken.)
|
462.4 | eap for...? | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, you bet. | Thu Oct 18 1990 21:51 | 9 |
|
By the way, as closely as most abusive relationships follow
similar patterns, it makes me wonder why?
Are these patterns learned (if so, from where?)
Can these patterns be broken after being established between
the same sets of people (if the abuser gets help?)
|
462.5 | | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, you bet. | Thu Oct 18 1990 22:06 | 8 |
|
It's also occurred to me that these patterns can appear in more
than just a husband/wife relationship. Perhaps some people here
witnessed this in their parents' or siblings' relationships or
in other places and times?
What is the source of this pattern, I wonder?
|
462.6 | cyclical indeed | DCL::NANCYB | targets, not victims | Fri Oct 19 1990 00:23 | 19 |
|
Suzanne,
2 weekends ago I talked with a woman who is (IMO)
the "classic" battered woman.
She described her experiences as "cyclical" as well,
and she specifically talked about the "build-up" leading
to another attack after a sugery make-up from the prior
one.
(I think you described that as "stage 2").
She had such fear in her eyes. It was a bit overwhelming to
hear. (her ex- has made death threats; she has restraining
orders, she _is_ separated from him now, etc...)
nancy b.
|
462.7 | | DCL::NANCYB | targets, not victims | Fri Oct 19 1990 00:46 | 6 |
|
-- edp,
I can't believe you said that.
nancy b.
|
462.8 | Thanks. | SANDS::MAXHAM | Snort when you laugh! | Fri Oct 19 1990 10:25 | 8 |
| Suzanne,
Thanks for providing the information in .0.
I think it's important information for all of us, including
targets (good word choice).
Kathy
|
462.9 | just another intrusion... | WFOVX8::BRENNAN_N | | Fri Oct 19 1990 10:36 | 8 |
| nancy b
I can believe it....
he's messed up every other conversation, why not this one....
(said in a *very* sarcastic, wry, and sick to death tone)
|
462.10 | pointers | LEZAH::BOBBITT | COUS: Coincidences of Unusual Size | Fri Oct 19 1990 10:47 | 18 |
| Please see also:
Womannotes-V1
109 - domestic abuse and judges
456 - battered women
460 - why do battered women stay
660 - need info: support gorup for abused women
754 - battered women's hotline in Mass.
Womannotes-V2
220 - physical abuse
841 - a long questiona bout emotional abuse
Human_Relations
803 - what can I do when a friend is being abused
-Jody
|
462.11 | more on cycles | CONFG5::WALKER | | Fri Oct 19 1990 11:46 | 14 |
| I never had a chance to talk to my mother about the battering against
her that I witnessed, from her second husband. I had distanced myself
from her in interest of my own survival, and didn't live with her after
I was 9.
This question of cycles is one that I learned in 1978 in a series of
classes at a women's shelter.
But one thing I wonder about: it seems to me that, following
battering, there is a feeling of very close intimacy, and that the
desire for this intimacy may be a part of why the battering is
permitted to go on.
Briana
|
462.12 | | POETIC::LEEDBERG | Justice and License | Fri Oct 19 1990 12:33 | 14 |
|
From my experience it would seem that after the battering, one
needs some sort of comfort from a person you love - who happens
sometimes to have been the one who battered you. This leads to
a confusion of who to trust and who not to trust. This is
espcially true if the other people you love (parents, friends,
or even children) don't know about the battering or will not
believe it is happening and so are not a source of comfort.
This then tightens the cycle, making it even more dangerous for
the target.
_peggy
|
462.13 | Family and friends most often ADD to the abuse unwittingly... | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, you bet. | Fri Oct 19 1990 12:47 | 40 |
| RE: .12 Peggy
Good point!
Your note reminded me of something else - the worst hell about
being the target of abuse:
The target tries to stay calm and not react during the final stage
before the violence (hoping to hold off the confrontation, perhaps
permanently.) But it doesn't work.
The longer the target ignores the nipping and tries to stay calm,
the longer this stage (approaching violence) will last. Then,
when the blow-up does happen, the target still gets the full dose
of abuse (plus recriminations about whatever the target did that
could not be classed as perfect calm behavior.)
Meanwhile, the target also begins to be subject to severe abuse
from any family and friends who see the target at this point
(without understanding the dynamics about why the target is
angry or upset.)
Sometimes the abuse heaped on the target by family and friends is
almost as bad (emotionally, at least) as the violence of the
abuser. Most people treat the targets of violence as if they
asked for it - and condemn the targets no matter what they do
in response to being abused.
The main thing the abuser wants is a reaction from the target -
but if the target withholds the reaction, the awful nipping
behavior goes on that much longer (making the end abuse even
worse.)
Thus, it's a Catch-22 for the target - as abuse is heaped from
all sides and the target feels trapped waiting for the next
round of the cycle to begin.
In the end, the target usually ends up looking worse than the
abuser to almost everyone (except the few people who really
understand the dynamics of the experience.)
|
462.15 | | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, you bet. | Fri Oct 19 1990 13:43 | 17 |
| RE: .14 Herb
Sure, but keep in mind that most targets are already considered
abusive by their abusers (and many of their family and friends
who don't understand the dynamics of the situation.)
The abuser very often feels justified in committing abuse ("She
really knows how to piss me off" or "She's a bitch") - and the
family/friends see the results of abuse (which make the target
look crazy and/or as if the target really did cause the abuse.)
If the power levels are equal in a relationship, mutual abuse is
possible (but the dynamics are far different.)
The cycles described in the basenote are about relationships where
one person has some level of power over the other (even if others
don't always realize that this disparity exists.)
|
462.16 | Difficult situation | COLBIN::EVANS | One-wheel drivin' | Fri Oct 19 1990 19:05 | 11 |
| I have often wondered why women stay in abusive relationships.
"Heck," I thought, "Leave! Get out! What's the *matter* with ya?!"
I think I understand a little better, now. It must be very difficult,
when the only support you get is from others who are abused also. Until
one can get advice from someone who *was* in the situation and
successfully got out of it, one has a difficult time envisioning more
than The Problem. The Solution seems pretty nebulous.
--DE
|
462.17 | Precisely! | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, you bet. | Fri Oct 19 1990 20:08 | 5 |
|
RE: .16 Dawn
Bingo.
|
462.20 | Witnessing abuse is horrifying,too.(Dedicated to my friend Paula.) | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, you bet. | Sat Oct 20 1990 16:38 | 35 |
| Getting back to the basenote...
One of the instances of abuse that I witnessed myself (and there
were many other people present, as well) - this happened years
ago (when I was good friends with the wife of a man who worked
with my husband up in Denver)...
My friend was 8 1/2 months pregnant and not feeling well. Her
husband wanted to go to a party and wouldn't take no for an answer
when she asked to stay home. She was pleasant at the party, but
very quiet. She didn't even say much to me.
After awhile, her husband start nipping at her for being too quiet
- he said she was being "a drag" and was ruining the party for
everyone else. No one really minded if she was quiet - but he kept
telling her that she was being a drag. She tried to smile and start
a conversation with me - but he was already mad. She'd been a drag
already, so it was too late to change it, in his mind.
He started wrestling with her (in a seemingly playful way) on the
couch - he was laughing and held her arms behind her back. She
was obviously uncomfortable - he was leaning heavily on her 8 1/2
months pregnant stomach during the wrestling and she was in very
quiet tears. I reached over to touch her arm, and my own husband
pulled me back - "Stay out of this." No one else at the party said
anything.
They left shortly after that.
My friend had the baby two days later. She turned 17 years old
three weeks after that.
Her husband (my husband's friend) never stopped telling the story
about how much he hated the fact that she could be such a drag at
parties. He often left her home alone for this reason, he said.
|
462.21 | | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, you bet. | Sat Oct 20 1990 16:52 | 9 |
|
By the way, the reason why my descriptions of the various stages
of abuse *carefully* avoid mentioning the sex of the abuser (or
specific forms of abuse) most of the time is that I don't want
to be accused of insulting a specific sex.
Thanks for everyone's patience while reading language that is
sometimes cumbersome.
|
462.22 | It helps to know that there's a definitive pattern in abuse. | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, you bet. | Sat Oct 20 1990 19:56 | 9 |
|
As a former target of violent abuse myself (from my ex-husband,)
I remember how much it helped me to discover that the dynamics of
my relationship were part of the larger problem of abuse - with
the same patterns many, many, many other targets had experienced.
It was the first step (for me) on the road to forgiving myself
for having lived as an abused person in that situation.
|
462.24 | | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, you bet. | Mon Oct 22 1990 08:58 | 22 |
| Getting back to the basenote...
Is it possible to break the patterns of abuse (when the target
is still within the reach of the abuser?)
One way to break a link in the pattern is to refuse to buy into
the "kiss and make up" stage (even though it means a temporary
end to the violent attacks.) This is a tough one, because the
abuser's behavior becomes much more difficult to predict - and
the abuse can continue for some time this way.
Studies have shown that the only sure way to end the pattern of
an abusive relationship is to end it. The abuser must be put in
a position where the target is no longer within easy reach.
Most violent/abusive relationships involve marriage and/or children,
so it's not a quick or easy fix. But in most cases, it's the one
with the best odds for success.
Of course, abusers sometimes go back looking for targets long after
restraining orders and divorces have gone through - in some cases,
the abuser succeeds in killing the person who was formerly abused.
|
462.25 | | POETIC::LEEDBERG | Justice and License | Mon Oct 22 1990 12:52 | 19 |
|
One of the worst things about being a target, is that you are
one for life, at least in the eyes of that abuser. You can
never be sure that "they won't try to get you" for leaving,
for calling the police, for not talking on the telephone, you
live with this for ever or until they are dead.
One of the reasons for not ending a relationship that is abusive
is that the target can not be sure that the abuse will end with
the relationship. The target loses any control over the abuser
that they might have had.
_peggy
(-)
|
Without options there are no choices
|
462.26 | the pattern in small | DECWET::JWHITE | sappho groupie | Mon Oct 22 1990 13:32 | 17 |
|
i know that whenever i have fallen into this pattern (yes, as the
abuser....pretty low level stuff, not violent, but still abusive)
it was important for my partner and i to discover (and it really
was a discovery, though it seems obvious) that i was primarily
seeking attention and was being manipulative in asking for it.
i was, in effect, asking her to be a mind-reader and assuage my
feelings in the exact way and time that i wanted- without telling
her that's what i wanted. of course, all these vague 'nips' elicited
a confused rejection from her, that incited me to more outrageous
outbursts (and more evasive- and resentful- behaviour from her)
until i exploded (usually hysterically, much broken china, and
usually about something else all together). the answer was for me
to say, 'i need you to pay attention to me'. which allowed her to
say, 'ok' or 'aha! can you give me a few minutes?' or eventually,
'no, i can't help you right now'.
|
462.27 | | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, you bet. | Mon Oct 22 1990 18:13 | 14 |
|
Although I was thinking specifically of violent abuse when
I wrote the basenote (per my words "the recognizable patterns
of abuse in violent relationships" and "Abuse works in cycles,
so it's hard to know where to begin, but I'll start with the
aftermath of a violent attack:")...
There are lots of kinds of abuse - some very small, and other
not-so-small kinds of systematic abuse that spans across our
culture. Aside from being the targets of violent abuse, women
are often subject to the kinds of systematic cultural abuse
that most people don't acknowledge and/or recognize.
Thanks for all the helpful/interesting comments so far.
|
462.29 | | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, you bet. | Mon Oct 22 1990 18:27 | 4 |
|
Getting back to the basenote...
|
462.30 | Just acedemic knowledge here | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Mon Oct 22 1990 18:32 | 13 |
| Suzanne mentioned that the target, eventually goaded beyond
endurance, will strike back at the abuser. What she didn't mention
is that the target learns what sets off the abuser, and thus
learns what not to do, BUT also learns just what to do to
trigger the abuse.
This is the explanation for why so many abused children can behave
so absolutely fiendishly.
Ann B.
P.S. I read up on child abuse to deal with an adult friend who
had suffered from it since babyhood.
|
462.32 | insecurity/power/control/escape | DECWET::JWHITE | sappho groupie | Mon Oct 22 1990 18:39 | 9 |
|
when the target learns how to trigger the abuser, however, it
does not give them equal power in the situation. at best, it
allows them to decide *when* the explosion will happen and
occasionally to moderate the severity through that modicum
of control. unfortunately, the abuser recognises this as
manipulation on the part of the target and it eventually
infuriates them more.
|
462.34 | Comod Response | COGITO::SULLIVAN | Singing for our lives | Mon Oct 22 1990 18:42 | 8 |
|
We can't know what the motives are of any writer, and I think this
topic as outlined in .0 is an interesting one and seems to hold the
interest of other folks, as well. Please restrict replies in this
string to the topic of patterns of abuse. Other kinds of replies
will be moved elsewhere or deleted.
Justine
|
462.35 | | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, you bet. | Mon Oct 22 1990 18:45 | 13 |
|
RE: .30 Ann
Yes - it's true that targets do sometimes trigger the abuse -
usually it's done in the hope of getting the inevitable beating
over with (rather than living through the suspense of not knowing
when it is coming.)
A friend of mine (at a shelter for abused women) was very surprised
to find how common this is, in fact.
Sometimes, the psychological torture of knowing that violent abuse is
imminent is worse than facing the actual beating.
|
462.36 | | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, you bet. | Mon Oct 22 1990 18:46 | 16 |
|
One of the more positive things about our current society is that
the patterns of abuse are more visible now than they were years
ago. When abusers engage in their endless denials about their
actions, it's far more common in our society these days for the
characteristics of abuse to be recognizable.
A year or two ago, a couple was having a fight near a large car-
wash business - and I was quite heartened to see how many people
recognized what was going on (in spite of the man's repeated
assassinations of the woman's character - in public, no less.)
It was quite encouraging to see how quickly people saw the
situation for what it was.
A definite sign of hope.
|
462.37 | | YGREN::JOHNSTON | bean sidhe | Mon Oct 22 1990 18:56 | 36 |
| in re .0
You may have been thinking of violent physical abuse when this was written, but
the cycles/stages of the patterns you describe are a mirror of the relationship
between my mother and myself ... and she has physically struck me 7 times in
35 years of life. Her weapon of choice has always been refined emotional
torture.
Silence prolongs the waiting. The longer the interregnum, the more severe the
punishment. Failing to react in a way that allows her to broadcast my
inate evil has brought her to actually physically injure herself when she
finally cannot hold the hatred in any longer.
It's been more than two years since I have seen my mother. I do talk to her on
the phone fairly frequently, but I tend to cut conversations short when she
begins to settle in with a will to get me to hurt her feelings so that she
can punish me.
My mother in the 'aftermath' stage can be quite bountiful in her remorse and
contrition. Once she felt so bad for reducing me to quivering jelly that she
gave me my sister's car [yes, the parents held title but they'd bought it for
Wendy's use]. She has sent flowers, loving cards, and, once, 7 yards of antique
China silk.
My acceptance or acknowledgement of any gift, tangible or intangible, in this
stage allows her to repeat the cycle. It cost me a lot not to respond to her
loving or giving overtures because it seems heartless to refuse to acknowledge
a hand held out in friendship. Yet experience has shown me that it is only
a prelude to hurt.
I am not entirely happy in my decision to limit our interraction, but I've
certainly been happi_er_ since I made it and stuck to it. Yes, I can forgive
freely and without reservation, but I will not go back. If I did, I would find
it hard to forgive myself.
Annie
|
462.38 | | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, you bet. | Mon Oct 22 1990 19:04 | 13 |
|
RE: .37 Annie
Refusing to "buy into" the sugary times after abuse seems like
a definite step in breaking the cycle -
It's all the tougher to do when it's a family member -
The cycles do seem to hold up in a variety of abusive situations
(something I've noticed since I heard about them 10 years ago.)
Thanks for your reply!
|
462.39 | Timing is not controlling the situation | SPCTRM::RUSSELL | | Mon Oct 22 1990 19:58 | 19 |
| RE: Some back about the target being able to time the abuse.
I used to cause it when I was a kid and had planned something neat
to do. I knew that if I got it over with, I'd maybe be all healed
by the time the thing I wanted to do arrived.
For example, I did competition swimming which necessitated lots of
exposed skin (and therefore exposed bruises). I would not show for the
meets if the bruises were too embarrassingly visible. So, about two
weeks before a big meet, I'd purposely get caught doing something bad
(reading after 10, washing my hair, breaking a dish while doing the
dishes, getting the wrong grade) and take the inevitable beating. If I
was lucky, it wouldn't be too bad (nothing would get broken) and the
bruises would fade in time to swim.
Totally bizarre coping mechanism, I realize as I write this. You'll
be glad to know that as soon as I was old enough to get working
papers at 15, I left home.
|
462.40 | Stop the FIRST abuse! | VFOVAX::DUNCAN | | Tue Oct 23 1990 17:09 | 24 |
|
I have also read that one of the ways is to stop abuse before it gets
too bad..that is stop it the first time.
Very early in my marriage, my husband slapped me. I screamed out really
loud, loud enough for neighbours to hear (we lived in an apartment),
then went to the phone to call the police and he stopped me.
I waited until he fell asleep, then I called the police. They came
and asked me if I wanted them to take him away. I said YES.
As he was leaving, he said." You love me and you're doing this to me"
I replied." You love me and you hit me"
To this day...after 8 years of marriage, he has NEVER hit me again.
Also, local statistics here in Maryland show that first offenders of
spousal abuse who are arrested most often do not abuse again.
To this day..after almost 10 years of marriage, he has NEVER hit me
again.
|
462.41 | Noters: Pls hit next unseen if descriptions of violence offend. | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, you bet. | Wed Oct 24 1990 15:39 | 53 |
| RE: .40
Stopping the abusive cycles from starting in the first place *does*
work sometimes - you're quite right!
A problem with it, though, is that the abuser can sometimes find
targets other than the main target to hurt - it's the "If I can't
can give you the pain directly, I'll hurt someone you care about to
draw you into the cycle." It's not very uncommon to see an abuser
redirect the abuse to someone else as a way to manipulate (through
emotional blackmail) the ultimate target.
In my case, when I started withdrawing from the cycle of abuse in
my marriage, my ex beat up my 10 year old son very badly - including
pulling large chunks of hair out of his head and causing both eyes
(and the face below his eyes) to be quite blackened with bruises.
I was too deeply entrenched in the cycle to call the police - now,
it seems so clear to me that it was the first thing I should have
done. At the time, the only thing I could do was to tend to Ryan's
wounds and to call my ex's father to tell him what had happened (so
that my ex's family would stop trying to claim the abuse wasn't
true.) My ex's father came by to see Ryan and could barely keep
from crying (even though Ryan happened to be in a happy mood at the
moment.) The condition of Ryan's face was a picture worth a 1000
words to him. I'd never let them see me in this condition.
The marriage ended about two weeks after Ryan's one beating - I never,
ever left Ryan alone with my ex again after this first/last assault.
I wouldn't even go to my bedroom while my ex was in the apartment
at large - I kept myself somewhere in the physical space between
my ex and Ryan at all times (even if it meant waiting hours to go
to the bathroom.)
The next time my ex *did* threaten Ryan, I stood in front of my
child and challenged my husband to kill me - I told him that the
only way he would ever get to Ryan was by stepping over my dead
body. I sent Ryan on a flight to my parents in Hawaii the next
day. My ex knew I'd contacted a lawyer - he moved out the night
my son left - my ex's father came over to make sure there was no
problem during the move (and kept my ex's best friend from stealing
my television and other assorted items.)
While it may be enough to know how to defend yourself from violent
attack, sometimes the situation develops into something more
difficult - what to do when the attacks are directed at others
when you aren't conveniently vulnerable. Make no mistake - the
attacks are still against the primary target (evident by the
fact that the abuser still blames the primary target for "causing"
the abuse against ALL the various targets.)
Watching the abuser turn the abuse on alternate targets is one of
the more difficult aspects of the experience (as a target.)
|
462.42 | | WMOIS::B_REINKE | We won't play your silly game | Wed Oct 24 1990 16:26 | 10 |
| Suzanne
Some weeks back I was home sick and happened to be bored enough to
watch a t.v. talk show. The subject was exactly what you mention
in your last note, the abuser finding other targets. The featured
guests were a woman who had been abused by her ex-husband and
the woman's mother who had been raped by the ex when he couldn't
find the daughter.
Bonnie
|
462.43 | re: alternate targets | RAVEN1::AAGESEN | is it nov 16th yet?? | Wed Oct 24 1990 16:36 | 7 |
|
re. -1,-2
or the man who murdered his own daughter because she wouldn't devulge
her mothers whereabouts...
|
462.44 | | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, you bet. | Wed Oct 24 1990 16:48 | 16 |
|
Another (famous) example of alternate targets... (an extreme one.)
Formfeed provided for anyone who doesn't wish to read about this
case of multiple murder:
Does anyone remember the man in wine country in northern California
who got some court papers served to him by his ex-wife (for failing
to pay child support) so he killed a man at work, went home and
killed his current wife, kidnaped his three small daughters, then
killed his mother-in-law, his 12 year old sister-in-law (I believe she
was also raped before being killed,) then disappeared.
They found the three daughters at a garbage dump ravine the next
day - all three of their throats were cut, but miraculously, the
three year old daughter survived. When asked who hurt her and
her sisters, the three year old said, "Daddy."
|
462.45 | | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, you bet. | Wed Oct 24 1990 17:06 | 12 |
|
By the way, when they caught the man who committed the murders
described in my note, I saw an interview with him on the plane
back to northern California.
Although his defense is that his violence was induced by cocaine,
the video of his interview was quite revealing.
He smiled at the camera - when asked if he had any regrets about
the murders, he said, "Not really." The casual nature of his tone
and demeanor was one of the most chilling things I've ever seen.
|
462.46 | | FRAGLE::WASKOM | | Wed Oct 24 1990 17:35 | 31 |
| I'm another who stopped the abuse at the first instance. My ex left
the house within a half hour of the first time he tried to hit me, at
my suggestion, and we never occupied the same space at the same time
from that moment forward.
I've often wondered where I would have ended up if *at that moment* I
had been without any of the following, all a result of the women's lib
movement of the late '60's:
A job with sufficient income to support me and my son *without* any
contribution from my ex.
Parental support for leaving a relationship which was causing me to
be fearful for my own safety.
Social codes and mores which told my ex that he *did not* own me or
my reactions.
Property and assets of my own, which I could use without the
permission, signature or input of my ex.
My own credit rating, and ability to negotiate contracts.
Social acceptance of divorce as a viable way of dealing with some
kinds of marital problems.
Sometimes we need to recognize and give credit to the changes in the
social milieu which have made it possible for targets to even
contemplate stopping the violence, at any stage.
Alison
|
462.47 | | NRUG::MARTIN | GUN-CONTROL=Holding it with both hands | Wed Oct 24 1990 21:55 | 3 |
| Classical ALLTIME low.
WOW!
|
462.48 | | GNUVAX::QUIRIY | Note with the sisters of Sappho | Thu Oct 25 1990 01:11 | 5 |
|
I stoppped the pattern by moving out in the middle of the day while he
was at work.
Cq
|
462.50 | How's that again? | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Thu Oct 25 1990 09:48 | 8 |
| The reader is welcome to re-read and compare replies
.3, .18&.19, .23, .28, .31, and .49.
I find the contrasts between .28 and .3 and between .28 and .23
especially poignant.
Ann B.
|
462.51 | | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, you bet. | Thu Oct 25 1990 10:05 | 20 |
|
Getting back to the discussion yesterday about the murders...
When you're the target in an abusive situation, how do you know
the lengths to which the abuser will go to "win" against you -
in other words, is the abuser capable of killing you?
This is a difficult thing to know for sure. The dynamics of
abuse are such that the abuser has a strong need to establish
or maintain power over the target (often through intimidation)
- if the intimidation doesn't work, the abuser could resort to
life-threatening measures that could continue even after the
target has managed to leave the immediate proximity of the
abuser.
It's important to keep this in mind when confronting an abuser
- especially if there are children in the family.
There's no way to know what kind of danger the whole family is
in when an abuser goes to the limits of his wrath.
|
462.52 | I had NO job! | VFOVAX::DUNCAN | | Thu Oct 25 1990 11:54 | 25 |
|
re..not knowing what lengthss the abuser will go to.
I think that that is sufficient reason to let the abuser know from
the first abuse that ..I am not going to take this.. The longer the
target stays, the abuser decides that he/she owns the target, so
if the target leaves after a time, then the abuser's attitude is
" How DARE he/she...he/she is MY PROPERTY.I will NOT give it up"
In reply to the abuser seeking an alternate target, we did not have
a child then, as I said it was early in the marriage. However,
my husband KNOWS that he's better off touching me than ANY of my
close relatives, and children are about as close as you can get.
It would be CURTAINS for him, believe me.
Also, in response to someone who said that having a job was a factor
in being able to stop the abuse, I must mention that when I called
the police on my husband, I had NO job, I had a college degree, but
i was not eligible to work in this country, and my eligibility totally
depended on my husband signing some papers. Regardless of all this,
I called the police, because I was so mad that he had the nerve to
hit me that as far as I was concerned, anything else that happened
to me HAD to be BETTER.
|
462.53 | Not disagreeing with you. | POETIC::LEEDBERG | Justice and License | Thu Oct 25 1990 12:45 | 16 |
|
.52 Please remember that what worked for you is based on who
you are and may not work for someone else because it is based
on who they are. There are other reason why one is not able
to call the police the first time it happens or even any time
that it happens. Also remember that a number of women are
killed by someone they have called the police on previously,
and who they have a restraining order against. There is a
lot more involved in stopping abuse than one action in most
cases.
_peggy
(-)
|
Walk gently on damaged feet
|
462.56 | | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, you bet. | Thu Oct 25 1990 14:23 | 17 |
| RE: .53 Peggy
Good point! Stopping the abuse by calling the police the
first time isn't an option for everyone - nor does it always
work.
The abuser's wrath can unleash in strange and illogical ways
(including trying to have the target arrested and/or simply
killing the target upon release from jail.)
It's wise to remember that we're not talking about a rational
process here - the abuser can justify anything and everything
in the pursuit of abuse. It doesn't have to make sense when
it's backed by an increasing level of intimidation and physical
brutality.
In the abuser's mind, might makes right. There's nothing else.
|
462.57 | Winning is the only thing. | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Thu Oct 25 1990 14:36 | 12 |
| "In the abuser's mind, might makes right. There's nothing else."
This isn't a *perfectly* true statement. To the abuser, might
used against the abuser is wrong. (It is also the initial attack;
the abuser never did anything that could possibly be construed
as having lit the fuse. Gee, this sarcasm is pretty think. Can
you still read through it?)
How about, "In the abuser's mind, anything that makes the abuser
look like the winner is right. There's nothing else."?
Ann B.
|
462.58 | | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, you bet. | Thu Oct 25 1990 14:58 | 5 |
|
RE: .57 Ann B.
Agree 100%.
|
462.59 | It's the SUN!! | VFOVAX::DUNCAN | | Thu Oct 25 1990 15:05 | 36 |
|
I may be wrong..so no flames please..but I still think that reacting
in an agressive manner the FIRST time makes a difference. If he/she
is the type to kill you, he/she will kill you if you react the first
time or the 10th time, so at least you save yourself 9 more beatings
before death.
Example..A MALE friend told me that the first time he hit his wife,
she went after him with such fury..throwing ALL the kitchen stuff
including knives, at him that he backed away and never hit her again.
A female friend said that with her husband it started with a slap..
she cried..then 2 slaps..she cried.then about 3 slaps and a kick.
I told her that the next time she should pick up a machete..in the
Caribbean, we all keep machetes.. and go after him, because he was
going to kill her eventually anyway.
So, the next time, she picked up the machete and went after him
he ran into the bedroom, she totally lost her temper and started
hacking at the bedroom door..the lock gave and she went after him.
By this time, he, hearing her hacking at the door and screaming like
a banshee had broken the bedroom window and jumped through, telling
the entire neighborhood that she had gone crazy.
I still laugh when I remember.
To make a long story short, they are still married and he has never
hit her again.
Maybe we Caribbean women are a little hot-blooded..maybe its the
sun ..it gets really hot down there( just a touch of humor!!!!)
As I said previously, I may be wrong and as someone pointed out
it may NOT work for everyone. Your SO has to know that you are
perfectly capable of expertly wielding a machete, and that when
the need arises, you can conjure up a temper to match a 95 degree
sun.
|
462.60 | Do Whatever You Can! | POWDML::FALLON | | Thu Oct 25 1990 16:20 | 18 |
| .59
I agree totally. Those were the ground rules I established the first
time with my ex. He slapped me once and is still wearing the scars of
my reaction on his face. After that situation calmed down, he wanted
to talk with no violence, our conversation concluded with my statement
of "I will not be abused by you or anyone, if you think you want to hit
me, you'd better kill me because if you fall asleep in the same house
with me, you'll wake up frying from the boiling oil I throw on you in your
sleep.", and he knew I meant it. From that day on he would bite his
finger til it bled rather than risk hitting me. Also, I didn't find out
until about 3 yrs or so after that incident, that he had abused and
terriorized his former wife and children. This was told to me my his
children who were shocked to see him bitting his finger or punching a
wall, when his previous reaction would have been to physically beat
everyone in sight when his temper was riled. I'm not saying this will
work for everyone or that anyone has to agree with my tactics but it
worked for me.
|
462.61 | | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, you bet. | Thu Oct 25 1990 16:48 | 29 |
| If spousal/SO abuse can be stopped by a shock the first time it
happens, that's wonderful! It's good to know that it seems to
be more effective than I'd realized.
When I was in the violent situation in my marriage, I had no
concept that the first time was only the beginning of a pattern
of abuse - it never occurred to me.
By the time I realized that the abuse would never stop until I
was able to remove my ex from close proximity to me, I was so
deeply entrenched in the mindset of a target that I had to do
some pretty serious adjustments to get him out. I never did
call the police during his attacks.
His second wife (after me) had the police at their apartment
almost every time he abused her. My ex went to jail over and
over and over again - and it didn't change a thing. When she
finally got a restraining order to keep him away, he was
arrested for breaking in to her apartment to terrorize her
during their separation.
Some abusers are so obsessed with their targets that they can't
do anything but strike out at the one person. It's as if there
is nothing at all in the abuser's life except the will to pound
on this one woman - furiously and relentlessly - until she either
disappears, or he kills her, or until he finds a new target.
Then it's the new target's problem - and it starts all over again
for her.
|
462.62 | It takes strength to fight back | SAGE::GODIN | Naturally I'm unbiased! | Thu Oct 25 1990 17:06 | 10 |
| I hope that those who advocate fighting back at the first sign of
violence are aware that there are many people (who seem to invite
violence) who lack the feelings of self-worth and self-esteem required
to counterattack. Targets who have gone from an abusive childhood home
into abusive adult relationships are frequently accused of "asking for
it," not only by the abuser, but also by society. Rather than joining
in the condemnation of such targets, we need to explore how and where
they can find the self-worth they need to make a change in their lives.
Karen
|
462.63 | | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, you bet. | Thu Oct 25 1990 18:27 | 8 |
|
Let's agree that the dynamics of abuse are so complex that
there's no simple answer to stopping it (either before the
fact or after it.)
Thanks to all of you for the interesting discussion about
this topic.
|
462.64 | If I singe anyone, I apologize. | CAESAR::FOSTER | | Thu Oct 25 1990 18:30 | 30 |
| re .62 (Mild flame. You hit a hot button. Its not just you, please
don't take this personally.)
Karen, I didn't read anything about condemnation. I read examples of
courage shared by women who were probably pretty scared at the time,
but determined not to be beaten. I think we should encourage women to
share their stories of courage. And on top of that, I think we should
instill in every young woman we meet the knowledge and the belief that
she should fight back with everything she has, including police
protection, from day one.
Its true that not every woman has the inner strength to do what Desryn
Duncan or Ms. Fallon (Phyllis?) did. In fact, knowing both of them, I
could speculate that black women have an edge on inner strength, but I
have too little data!
In the black community, I have noticed that when someone stands up and
does something courageous, instead of giving them great recognition and
applause, we scorn them for their strength and start patronizing and
excusing those who don't have that strength. Well, I'm sick of seeing
it in the black community, and I don't want to see it here, either.
Put these women's stories up for the rest of the community to see.
Don't shoot them down. Let other women know that it can be done. Help
them to build self-esteem. Don't excuse them for not having any. Making
excuses for a woman who is being abused does not help her one d*mn bit.
Lauren Foster
(a black woman)
|
462.65 | Some thoughts... | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, you bet. | Thu Oct 25 1990 22:06 | 19 |
| Let's keep in mind that courage can take a lot of different
forms for a target - and that whatever the target does can
be seen as "bad" in our culture.
If the target doesn't fight back - "Oh, you *LET* him abuse you."
It's considered the target's fault for staying and "letting" it
happen.
If the target *does* fight back - "Oh, then you abused him, too"
or "You goaded him into hurting you." Like women who have been raped,
the most creditable targets are the ones who can claim the most
innocence.
If you leave the marriage at the first sign of abuse - "You gave
up awfully quickly."
We need to keep in mind that there's a strong cultural tendency
for targets to receive these sorts of judgments (even in the 1990s)
- it's another aspect of the situation that needs to be changed.
|
462.66 | Only slightly singed | NUTMEG::GODIN | Naturally I'm unbiased! | Fri Oct 26 1990 10:15 | 28 |
| Lauren (.64)), I think we're in violent agreement here. In my note I
wasn't saying that anyone here had "condemned" anyone yet. In fact,
I'm hearing those who have fought back and those who have not sharing
their experiences and, I hope, learning from each other's experience.
That's great, and I hope we continue.
My note was prompted by a realization that victims of abuse cover the
full spectrum of possible personality types. There are those who can't
and won't EVER stand up for themselves, and at the opposite end there
are those who most definitely invite the abuse by being abusive
themselves. (NOTE: I'm not attributing either of these extremes to
anyone here, but I have personally known representatives of both
extremes.) And, of course, there are all degrees of difference in
between. As has been mentioned already in this string, there has been
a tendency on the part of many of the people around an abuse victim to
blame the victim, REGARDLESS OF THE ACTION THE VICTIM TAKES.
And, too often for me to sit by silently, I've seen abuse victims blame
other victims for "not responding appropriately."
I just want to make my plea for understanding, even if acceptance is
too much to ask. I can understand and applaud fighting back. I can
also understand, because I've been there, the feeling that fighting
back is inappropriate AT THAT TIME. I only hope that others will
attempt to be as understanding.
Karen
|
462.67 | | LEZAH::BOBBITT | COUS: Coincidences of Unusual Size | Sat Oct 27 1990 13:20 | 41 |
|
I am posting this for a noter who wishes to remain anonymous.
-Jody
=============================================================
re .40
> I have also read that one of the ways is to stop abuse before it gets
> too bad ... that is, stop it the first time.
I'm sitting here at my keyboard, applauding your note and your actions.
Good for You! You learned a hell of a lot faster than a lot of us.
In my family, we learned "peace at any price" before we could read. My
father got his way with everyone because he had permission to rant and
rave and make everyone else miserable. It was the duty of everyone
else to remain silent and collapse in the face of his current whim.
The first eight or ten years of my marriage were the same. My husband
would rant and rave and throw stuff: books, newspapers, small stuff. I
would collapse.
A few years ago - who knows why - he started a rant and rave cycle, and
this time I ranted and raved too. I threw stuff. I hollered. Slammed
doors. Threw valuable *breakable* stuff. He stomped upstairs and I kept
hollering for a while.
He still rants and raves occasionally but he never throws stuff any
more. Not since I learned how. He is a wonderful person, and I
appreciate him immensely, but I've made up my mind if he ever lays a
hand on me or goes on a serious rampage in our house, I will too. And
since I've made this internal decision, things are much more adult.
> .64
> Put these women's stories up for the rest of the community to see.
> Don't shoot them down. Let other women know that it can be done.
Right On. Every time I hear one of these stories, I feel better. More
in control. Thanks, Ren.
|
462.68 | Sometimes you feel you MUST fight back - in spite of the cost. | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, you bet. | Sat Oct 27 1990 16:36 | 28 |
| RE: .67
Enjoyed reading your note - thanks!
> In my family, we learned "peace at any price" before we could read.
The families of abusers are often burdened with the job of keeping
peace - and, of course, if things do get out of hand, it's regarded
as the family's fault (not the abuser's.) The family will take the
heat for not doing what it was "supposed to do" in the face of abuse.
> My father got his way with everyone because he had permission to
> rant and rave and make everyone else miserable. It was the duty of
> everyone else to remain silent and collapse in the face of his
> current whim.
Exactly - the abuser has "permission" to do what he does - if the
family has the gall to use the same words he uses or to yell as
loudly as he yells, it's an abomination. Suddenly, the abuser is
the innocent person and the family is inflicting some horrible
travesty on him. The family *never* *ever* has permission to
stand up against the abuser - unless you give yourself permission.
The abuser and those who think the family should never fight back
- be damned! Sometimes the family has to do what it thinks best
no matter how many others may not like it.
Thanks again for your note!
|
462.69 | Back to the Original Topic... | HENRYY::HASLAM_BA | Creativity Unlimited | Mon Oct 29 1990 11:00 | 5 |
| Not to upset the status quo here, but the base note is not always
true. The notes about fighting back are not always true. I know.
I've been there.
Barb
|
462.70 | | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, you bet. | Mon Oct 29 1990 11:04 | 8 |
|
RE: .69 Barb
There's no "status quo" here - we're all just talking about our
own observations from having been there, too.
Your observations are welcome, too.
|
462.71 | I,too was there | VFOVAX::DUNCAN | | Mon Oct 29 1990 12:38 | 10 |
|
re .69
I don't know what you really mean by "the notes about fighting back
are not true"
Mine was TRUE. I've been there. It happened to ME. Also, the note
about my girlfriend with the machete was TRUE. I was there. I
lived 2 doors away.
As I said, I"VE BEEN THERE.
|
462.72 | Before we get into a misunderstanding here... | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, you bet. | Mon Oct 29 1990 12:44 | 5 |
|
RE: .71
She said, "not always true," actually.
|
462.73 | Sorry | VFOVAX::DUNCAN | | Mon Oct 29 1990 16:06 | 4 |
|
Sorry......
|
462.76 | Ask Dr. Joyce | AKOV13::LAMOTTE | J & J's Memere | Tue Oct 30 1990 07:16 | 18 |
| re .75
edp if I were you I would ignore notes that I felt were abusve.
This strategy in the the past has earned the respect of other noters
and has usually stopped the interaction.
I would debate ideas....and philosophies...not people.
And I would study the audience...I would study notes that might have
the same ideas as you have and determine if there is a different
presentation that might be more effective then the one you are using.
Bottom line the only person ou can change is yourself. And it is
sometimes amazing how a different attitude creates change not only
in our happiness but how others view us.
|
462.77 | Edited to correct typo | IE0010::MALING | Life is a balancing act | Tue Oct 30 1990 12:13 | 18 |
| Re: .75
You can't stop anyone from doing anything. Each of us controls only
ourselves. If a person is abusing another, the abused cannot stop the
abuser. It's sad and it's frustrating and it hurts to be in that
position and IT'S NOT FAIR. But, the only thing a person can do is to
try not to put themselves in a position which allows the abuse to
continue.
I know from having been the target of abuse that there is a strong
desire to "punish" the abuser or to get someone else to "punish" them
to get them to stop. Sometimes a good swift "kick" knocks some sense
into them, usually only temporarily though. If it doesn't work, you
have to try something different. Getting out of harm's way is a good
strategy, IMHO.
Mary
|
462.78 | | IE0010::MALING | Life is a balancing act | Tue Oct 30 1990 12:25 | 9 |
| Re: .74
> Any similarity of any part of this description to
> anyone (other than myself) noting here is unplanned . . .
Oh, Brian! The similarity though unplanned, validates the experiences of
myself and others. Thank you so much for a very well composed note!
Mary
|
462.79 | | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, you bet. | Tue Oct 30 1990 13:53 | 21 |
| RE: .74 Brian
Very well written note, Brian. You struck so many familiar chords
about my ex-marriage that I don't have the words to list them all.
These particular passages took me back a decade or so (to some days
worth forgetting while married):
> Because the abuser is holding out approval as the goal the victim
> is to strive for, the abuser must of necessity invent failures on
> the part of the victim to explain the lack of approval. These
> failures may be pure invention, or may be arbitrary requirements
> imposed after the fact, or may be arbitrary requirements impossible
> of meeting; but it seems they are more often merely normal human
> imperfections magnified beyond recognition into something unbearably
> hideous.
> The abuser ascribes deep and powerful meaning to even trivial acts
> by the victim...
Yup. My ex-husband exactly.
|
462.81 | | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, you bet. | Wed Oct 31 1990 08:53 | 20 |
| Getting back to the basenote -
One of the most important things that a target of abuse needs to
remember is that it is not possible to make the abuser stop the
abuse (once it gets going) - as long as the target is within range
of the abuser.
It simply is not possible to change another person's behavior
and/or perspective. The only behavior a person can definitely
change is hir own. The abuser will change IF he wants to change.
The only solution is to put distance between yourself and the
abuser. Even this doesn't always work (since the abuser can come
looking for the target in spite of changes of address and/or
restraining orders) - but staying in the same domicile as the
abuser does not provide a way to end the abuse.
If the abuse is non-physical, it's possible to ignore the abuse -
but again, putting distance between oneself and the abuser is the
only sure way to stop *any* kind of habitual abuse.
|
462.82 | | SANDS::MAXHAM | Snort when you laugh! | Wed Oct 31 1990 09:57 | 10 |
| About putting distance between yourself and the abuser, I think
it's important to remember that that is a really scarey thing for
lots of people. And that we often get so caught up in our fears
that we become immobilized.
It would be helpful to hear about how some of you managed to overcome
the fears you had so that you were able to put distance between yourself and
your abuser.
Kathy
|
462.83 | Something to remember while acquiring the distance... | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, you bet. | Wed Oct 31 1990 13:02 | 24 |
| RE: .82 Kathy
> About putting distance between yourself and the abuser...
One thing to remember is that there is no such thing as "winning"
for the target in the scenario of abuse. "Winning" is the goal
of the abuser's game - but it's a mistaken concept. There is no
such thing.
If the abuser is "arrested," the target doesn't "win" - legal
methods don't guarantee to stop abuse, even if a restraining
order is involved. Arresting the abuser only takes the person
out of range for a small period of time.
If the target divorces the abuser, no one "wins" - divorce is
its own hell, regardless on which side of it you land.
If the target moves away from the abuser, this isn't a "win"
either - it only puts you out of reach of the abuser, but it
won't make the abuser truly sorry (and aware that the abuser's
actions were wrong.)
Accepting that there is no "win" to this situation is one of the
first steps to recovering from the effects of abuse.
|
462.85 | | CSC32::CONLON | Cosmic laughter, you bet. | Thu Nov 01 1990 08:45 | 12 |
|
RE: .82 Kathy
More ("About putting distance between yourself and the abuser")...
If my son had been in the position of having to remain with the
abuser after I'd left, I would not have been able to go - no
matter how intolerable the situation would have become.
My ex's proximity to someone I loved had a huge bearing on my
ability to walk away from him.
|
462.86 | I've found that it works | TLE::RANDALL | self-defined person | Thu Nov 01 1990 10:25 | 31 |
| re: .80
Erik,
I've found that ignoring the abuse in a situation where you can
ignore it -- job-related incidents, for instance, or phone calls,
or notes, or MAIL encounters -- almost always works. I've never
been in an abusive relationship, so I don't know whether it would
work in other circumnstances as well.
Someone making harrassing phone calls, for instance, is usually
trying to make your life miserable, trying to control your
emotions and reactions even when you're not there. If you just
hang up on them and go on cheerfully about your life, most of the
time that spoils the fun.
Similarly, at work, I find that if I always maintain a cheerful
professional attitude, no matter how abusive and unprofessional
the other person is being, I generally win in the long run.
In my experience, there's not much that normally happens in the
world of work that defuses a person faster than to have them make
a catty remark about the way I'm dressed, and have me reply
cheerfully, as if they meant it at face value, "Why, thank you!"
If I get insulted, then they've won.
Not that I'm always so saintly -- I do often lose my cool. But I
generally find that it's not nearly as effective as staying polite
and refusing to respond to the abuse. As my mother used to say,
you catch more flies with honey than with vinegar.
--bonnie
|
462.87 | distance is more than just miles. | SUZIE::LEEDBERG | Justice and License | Thu Nov 01 1990 12:36 | 10 |
|
What Suszane (did I get it right?) said about being willing to
except that concept of not winning is really important. The
target just has to accept that and get on with life. By getting
beyond the "need" to win gets the traget out of the game and
things can be veiwed clearly and action is easier since the
focus is on the self instead of the abuser.
_peggy
|