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Are
you a Victim of Domestic Violence?
1. Is your
partner threatening or violent towards you or the children?
2. Do you
find yourself making excuses or minimizing your partner's behavior?
3. Do you
feel completely controlled by your partner?
4. Do you
feel helpless, trapped, alone, and isolated?
5. Do you
blame yourself for the violence?
6. Does your
partner blame you and tell you that you are the cause of all his
problems?
7. Do you
blame the violence on stress, on drugs/alcohol, or a bad childhood?
8. Does your
partner constantly accuse you of having affairs when he can't
account for 100% of your time? Does he tell you jealousy is a
sign of love?
9. Do you
fear going home?
10. Are you
limited in your freedom like a child? (Go to the store and come
straight home. It should take you 15 minutes.)
11. Do you
find yourself lying to hide your partner's real behavior (for
example, saying you fell down the stairs when actually you were
pushed)?
12. Are you
embarrassed or humiliated by your partner in an effort to control
your behavior, especially in public?
13. Does your
partner abandon you, leave you places, or lock you out?
14. Does your
partner hide your keys, mail, or other important papers?
Progression
of Domestic Violence
PHASE 1: Pre-battering
violence: verbal abuse, hitting objects, throwing objects, breaking
objects, and making threats; increased tension, anger, blaming
and arguing. When abusers hit or break objects or make threats,
almost 100% resort to battering.
PHASE 2: Beginning
levels: pushing, grabbing, restraining.
PHASE 3: Moderate
levels : slapping, pinching, kicking, pulling hair.
PHASE 4: Severe
levels : hitting, choking, beating with objects, use of weapons,
and rape by intimidation, threat or force.
PHASE 5: Calm
Stage: Abuser may deny or rationalize the violence, apologizing
or promising not to repeat the abuse.(may decrease over time)
The progression
of domestic violence may alternate from tension building, where
the victim is walking on eggshells to avoid abuse, to the apologetic
and remorseful abuser after a violent incident has taken place.
Each relationship is different.
Sweet Baby
Syndrome (How he gets to come back)
1. Honeymoon
Syndrome : any bribe that will get her to return to him. (also
known as "Hearts and Flowers")
2. Super Dad
Syndrome : he tells her that he will be a great dad if she returns.
This works especially if he has neglected the kids in the past.
3. Revival
Syndrome : this is not really a valid revival or salvation since
he has probably only gone to church only a few times. "I
have been going to church every Sunday since you left." I
have accepted Christ into my life." He puts the responsibility
for his battering on God.
4. Sobriety
Syndrome : "If he can stop drinking he will stop beating
me" Drinking does not cause beating--if it did, then they
would beat strangers on the street.
5. Counseling
Syndrome : "I have gone to counseling, I won't do it anymore."
Long term counseling is needed and less than 1% voluntarily go
into counseling.
Help for the
abuser (Signs that treatment may be effective)
1. He accepts
responsibility for his violence.
2. He goes into treatment without victim.
3. He goes into treatment with no strings attached. ("I'll
go if you will come back")
No one deserves
to be abused. The abuse is the responsibility of the batterer.
There are several programs available for abusers to determine
if treatment is necessary. Frequently, the court requires that
batterers seek treatment. Change does not happen overnight. Just
like the behavior took time to learn, it takes time to change.
However, batterers must want to change. Some batterers will never
change.
Once the violence
occurs, the chances are great that it will occur again, unless
there is some kind of intervention. Abusers must learn to accept
responsibility for their behavior. This is only possible with
outside help.
Common Characteristics
of Battered Women
1. have low
self esteem
2. believe all the myths about battering relationships
3. be a traditionalist, believing in family unity and feminine
sex-role stereotype
4. accepts responsibility for the batterer's actions
5. suffers from guilt, yet denies the terror and anger she feels
6. have severe stress reactions with psychophysiological complaints
7. use sex as a way to establish intimacy
8. believe that no one will be able to help her resolve her predicament
Batterered
women come from all races, ages, socio-economic classes, religious
affiliations, occupations, and educational backgrounds.
Common Characteristics
of the Batterer
1. have low
self esteem
2. believe
all the myths about battering relationships
3. be a traditionalist,
believing in male supremacy and the stereotyped masculine sex
role
4. blame others
for his actions
5. be pathologically
jealous
6. present
a dual personality
7. have severe
stress reactions during which he uses drinking and battering to
cope
8. frequently
use sex as an act of aggression to enhance his self-esteem
9. does not
believe his violent behavior should have negative consequences
10. uses threats
and violence as a control mechanism
11. experienced
or witnessed abuse when growing up
12. has been
abusive to previous partners
Batterers come from all races, ages, socio-economic classes, religious
affiliations, occupations, and educational backgrounds.
Behavior of
The Batterer in Court
Batterers
frequently present themselves in the following ways:
The "real"
victim in the family.
Trying to
keep the family together.
May acknowledge
"family problems" but will deny any violence.
When confronted
by his assaultive acts he may respond by saying: "She bruises
easily," "She was hysterical" or "She was
drunk/high," I had to restrain her."
May make a
complaint to the police department against his partner to counter
the complaint she has made regarding his assaultive acts--uses
the system.
May make multiple
Children's Protective Service reports alleging that his partner
is neglecting or abusing the children.
May change
lawyers, and aks for continuances to delay court hearings to increase
his partners' financial hardship.
May prosecute
her when she has acted in self-defense, or will use the threat
of prosecution to get her to return to him.
May assert
that he knows key people in the criminal justice system, and that
there is no way that she will get justice (reinforcing her helplessness.)
May give erroneous
information about the criminal justice system to his partner to
confuse her or to prevent her from acting on her own behalf.
May call her,
before she is going to testify against him in a criminal case,
to tell her it has been postponed or his attorney said she doesn't'
have to testify.
Separation
Violence
Many, perhaps
most, people believe that battered women will be safe once they
separate from the batterer. They also believe that women are free
to leave abusers at any time. We have all heard, "All she
had to do was leave. She brought it on herself." However,
leaving does not usually put an end to the violence. Batterers
may, in fact, escalate their violence to coerce a battered woman
into reconciliation or to retaliate for the battered woman's perceived
rejection or abandonment of the batterer. Men, who believe they
are entitled to a relationship with battered women or that they
"own" their female partner, view women's departure as
an ultimate betrayal which justifies retaliation. Evidence of
the gravity of separation violence is overwhelming. One study
revealed that 73% of the battered women seeking emergency medical
services sustained injuries after leaving the batterer. Another
study showed that over 1/4 of the women killed by their male partners
were attempting to end the relationship when they were killed.
Although leaving
may pose additional hazards, at least in the short run, the research
data and experience demonstrate that ultimately a battered woman
can best achieve safety and freedom apart form the batterer.
Leaving requires
planning and legal intervention to safeguard victims and their
children. Victim advocates and battered women must work in partnership
to assure that the risk of violence is minimized during the separation
process. Getting out of an abusive relationship is not easy, but
it can provide an opportunity for you and your children to live
a life free of violence. Seeking counseling and support when you
end a violent relationship is crucial for you and your children.
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