Signs of an abusive relationship
There are many signs of an abusive relationship. The most telling sign
is fear of your partner. If you feel like you have to walk on eggshells around your partner—constantly watching what
you say and do in order to avoid a blow-up—chances are your relationship is unhealthy and abusive. Other signs that
you may be in an abusive relationship include a partner who belittles you or tries to control you, and feelings of self-loathing,
helplessness, and desperation.
To determine whether your relationship is abusive, answer the questions
below. The more “yes” answers, the more likely it is that you’re in an abusive relationship.
| SIGNS THAT YOU’RE
IN AN ABUSIVE RELATIONSHIP |
| Your Inner Thoughts and
Feelings | Your Partner’s Belittling Behavior |
Do
you: - feel afraid of your partner much of the time?
- avoid certain topics out of fear of angering
your partner?
- feel that you can’t do anything right for your partner?
- believe that you deserve to
be hurt or mistreated?
- wonder if you’re the one who is crazy?
- feel emotionally numb or helpless?
| Does your partner: - humiliate or yell at you?
- criticize
you and put you down?
- treat you so badly that you’re embarrassed for your friends or family to see?
- ignore
or put down your opinions or accomplishments?
- blame you for his own abusive behavior?
- see you as property
or a sex object, rather than as a person?
|
| Your Partner’s
Violent Behavior or Threats | Your Partner’s Controlling Behavior |
Does your partner: - have a bad and unpredictable temper?
- hurt you, or
threaten to hurt or kill you?
- threaten to take your children away or harm them?
- threaten to abuse
or abuse your pets?
- threaten to commit suicide if you leave?
- force you to have sex?
- destroy your
belongings?
| Does your partner: - act excessively
jealous and possessive?
- control where you go or what you do?
- keep you from seeing your friends or family?
- limit your access to money, the phone, or the car?
- constantly check up on you?
|
Physical violence is just one form of domestic abuse
When people think of domestic abuse, they often
picture battered women who have been physically assaulted. But not all domestic abuse involves violence. Just because you’re
not battered and bruised doesn’t mean you’re not being abused.
Domestic abuse takes
many forms, including psychological, emotional, and sexual abuse. These types of abuse are less obvious than physical abuse,
but that doesn’t mean they’re not damaging. In fact, these types of domestic abuse can be even more harmful because
they are so often overlooked—even by the person being abused.
Emotional or psychological abuse
The aim of emotional or psychological abuse is to chip away at your feelings of self-worth and independence. If you’re
the victim of emotional abuse, you may feel that there is no way out of the relationship, or that without your abusive partner
you have nothing.
Emotional abuse includes verbal abuse such as yelling, name-calling,
blaming, and shaming. Isolation, intimidation, and controlling behavior also fall under emotional abuse. Additionally, abusers
who use emotional or psychological abuse often throw in threats of physical violence.
You
may think that physical abuse is far worse than emotional abuse, since physical violence can send you to the hospital and
leave you with scars. But, the scars of emotional abuse are very real, and they run deep. In fact, emotional abuse can be
just as damaging as physical abuse—sometimes even more so. Furthermore, emotional abuse usually worsens over time, often
escalating to physical battery.
Sexual abuse
Sexual abuse is common in abusive relationships.
According to the National Coalition Against Domestic Violence, between one-third and one-half of all battered women are raped
by their partners at least once during their relationship. Any situation in which you are forced to participate in unwanted,
unsafe, or degrading sexual activity is sexual abuse.
Forced sex, even by a spouse or intimate
partner with whom you also have consensual sex, is an act of aggression and violence. Furthermore, women whose partners abuse
them physically and sexually are at a higher risk of being seriously injured or killed.
Economic or
financial abuse
Remember, an abuser’s goal is to control you, and he will frequently use money
to do so. Economic or financial abuse includes:
- Rigidly
controlling your finances.
- Withholding money or credit cards.
- Making
you account for every penny you spend.
- Withholding basic necessities (food, clothes, medications,
shelter).
- Restricting you to an allowance.
- Preventing you from working or choosing your own career.
- Sabotaging your job (making
you miss work, calling constantly)
- Stealing from you or taking your money.
It Is Still Abuse If . . .
- The incidents of physical
abuse seem minor when compared to those you have read about, seen on television or heard other women talk about.
There isn’t a “better” or “worse” form of physical abuse; you can be severely injured as a result
of being pushed, for example.
- The incidents of physical abuse have only occurred one
or two times in the relationship. Studies indicate that if your spouse/partner has injured you once,
it is likely he will continue to physically assault you.
- The physical assaults stopped
when you became passive and gave up your right to express yourself as you desire, to move about freely and see others,
and to make decisions. It is not a victory if you have to give up your rights as a person and a partner in exchange for not
being assaulted!
- There has not been any physical violence. Many women are
emotionally and verbally assaulted. This can be as equally frightening and is often more confusing to try to understand.
Source:
Breaking the Silence: a Handbook for Victims of Violence in Nebraska (PDF)
Violent and abusive behavior is the abuser’s choice
Despite what many people believe, domestic
violence and abuse is not due to the abuser’s loss of control over his behavior. In fact, abusive behavior and violence
is a deliberate choice made by the abuser in order to control you.
Abusers use a variety of tactics to manipulate
you and exert their power:
- Dominance – Abusive individuals need to feel
in charge of the relationship. They will make decisions for you and the family, tell you what to do, and expect you to obey
without question. Your abuser may treat you like a servant, child, or even as his possession.
- Humiliation
– An abuser will do everything he can to make you feel bad about yourself or defective in some way. After all, if you
believe you're worthless and that no one else will want you, you're less likely to leave. Insults, name-calling, shaming,
and public put-downs are all weapons of abuse designed to erode your self-esteem and make you feel powerless.
- Isolation – In order to increase your dependence on him, an abusive partner will cut you off
from the outside world. He may keep you from seeing family or friends, or even prevent you from going to work or school. You
may have to ask permission to do anything, go anywhere, or see anyone.
- Threats
– Abusers commonly use threats to keep their partners from leaving or to scare them into dropping charges. Your abuser
may threaten to hurt or kill you, your children, other family members, or even pets. He may also threaten to commit suicide,
file false charges against you, or report you to child services.
- Intimidation
– Your abuser may use a variety of intimidation tactics designed to scare you into submission. Such tactics include
making threatening looks or gestures, smashing things in front of you, destroying property, hurting your pets, or putting
weapons on display. The clear message is that if you don't obey, there will be violent consequences.
- Denial and blame – Abusers are very good at making excuses for the inexcusable. They will
blame their abusive and violent behavior on a bad childhood, a bad day, and even on the victims of their abuse. Your abusive
partner may minimize the abuse or deny that it occurred. He will commonly shift the responsibility on to you: Somehow, his
violent and abusive behavior is your fault.
Reasons we know an abuser's behaviors
are not about anger and rage:
- He does not batter other individuals - the boss who does not give
him time off or the gas station attendant that spills gas down the side of his car. He waits until there are no witnesses
and abuses the person he says he loves.
- If you ask an abused woman, "can he stop when
the phone rings or the police come to the door?" She will say "yes". Most often when the police show up, he
is looking calm, cool and collected and she is the one who may look hysterical. If he were truly "out of control"
he would not be able to stop himself when it is to his advantage to do so.
- The abuser very
often escalates from pushing and shoving to hitting in places where the bruises and marks will not show. If he were "out
of control" or "in a rage" he would not be able to direct or limit where his kicks or punches land.
Source: Mid-Valley Women's Crisis Service