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Thread: When to leave an abusive husband?

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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Location
    The Golden State
    Posts
    761
    Quote Originally Posted by sparks19
    .

    it is a very touchy situation and I always wondered how someone could possibly stay in a situation like that and not see what is being done to them.... after being in a abusive relationship (not physically but verbally and emotionally) you don't really KNOW it's happening.... they brainwash you to believe it is your fault.... and you believe them.

    So just be there for her and gently alert her to what is going on but ultimately she has to wake up and see the light in her own mind.
    I think you're right. She kept telling me that had she stop talking back at him & left the room before he could get to the point of hitting her, she could have prevented it from happening. She thinks she must have provoked him somehow, otherwise he wouldn't be hurting her.





    Thanks ~Jessie~

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Oct 2001
    Location
    Iowa!
    Posts
    13,130
    Quote Originally Posted by M&M's Mommy
    I think you're right. She kept telling me that had she stop talking back at him & left the room before he could get to the point of hitting her, she could have prevented it from happening. She thinks she must have provoked him somehow, otherwise he wouldn't be hurting her.
    That is common thinking from battered women, as I understand it. That is incorrect, also. No one can make someone do something else unless it's predisposed in themselves. If she doesn't get out of the relationship, more than likely she'll end up dead.

    Quote:
    Victims often go through a period of blaming themselves for their partners’ violence. In reality, we are each responsible for our own behavior. In their efforts to avoid responsibility for their actions, batterers can be quite adept at deflecting blame onto the victim, telling her and others how things she did or failed to do “made” him do it. Unfortunately, there are some traditional cultural ideas that support his reasoning and that are still embraced by some members of our society. That such notions exist in the culture at large, makes it easier for the victim to internalize blame and harder to fight the deflection of responsibility, especially when other people echo the batterer’s excuse-making. Besides being illogical and profoundly unfair, victim blaming traps the victim in a cycle in which she keeps trying (and failing) to avoid abuse by satisfying, and even anticipating, the abuser’s every whim and mood. She fails, of course, because only he is responsible for his behavior. End Quote.
    From here: http://www.wcwonline.org/joomla/inde...622&Itemid=208

    9/3/13
    I did the right thing by setting you free
    But the pain is very deep.
    If only I could turn back time, forever, you I'd keep.
    I miss you


    I hear you whimper in your sleep
    I gently pet you and say, no bad dreams
    It will be alright, to my dog as dark as night.

    Fur as dark as the night.
    Join me on this flight.
    Paws of love that follow me.
    In my heart you'll forever be.
    [/SIZE]



    How I wish I could hold you near.
    Turn back time to make it so.
    Hug you close and never let go.
    11/12/06




  3. #3
    Join Date
    Mar 2003
    Location
    Desert Southwest
    Posts
    1,362
    Quote Originally Posted by M&M's Mommy
    She kept telling me that had she stop talking back at him & left the room before he could get to the point of hitting her, she could have prevented it from happening. She thinks she must have provoked him somehow, otherwise he wouldn't be hurting her.

    Ah...........the common misconseption of a battered person: "If only I had............"

    No matter how hard you try, it will never be good enough for them.

    She needs to get out now, and fast.
    Bunny & Kitties:

    Taz - F (7); Majerle - M (4) & Loki - M (8 months)
    (pronounced: Marley).

  4. #4
    I am sorry to hear of your friends pain. In all my years I have never heard of an abusive husband or wife stopping the abuse. The only way I have ever heard of it ending is one one or both are dead. Lets hope your friends wises up and leaves today.

  5. #5
    My dad wasn't always the greatest dad.. when he got mad, he got really mad.. he never hit us, but his yelling was scary...

    He didn't know his anger was out of control, until mom kicked him out... He went to the dr. for help & they gave him some meds to calm him down... they worked for a few years, then he started again.. I freaked on him & called him a psycho... He went back to the dr. & has been the bestest dad in the world!!!

    Sometimes nice people have something loose in their heads that can be fixed with medication...

    Its the people who are always mean are the ones that medication wont help.

    Pass this on to her, as it might be the cure to his strange temper.

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