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Managing The Pain Of Abusive
RelationshipsHow many times
have you said, “I didn’t have a choice?” This is a phrase
that is uttered by many to justify their behavior or
complain about their life circumstances. Surely, we can
continue to believe there are no choices, but it is my
belief that kind of thinking is what greatly contributes to
our frustration and limits the strength and amount of
personal power we experience.
Whenever you are in a situation where you believe there is “no
choice”, remember that there are always at least three choices.
Every situation has at least these three possible solutions:
you can leave it, change it, or accept it. Each option will
look different in every situation.
Let’s examine the options of a woman in an abusive
relationship. I am concerned that women in abusive
relationships have no safe place to seek help or to talk about
their issues. There is an embarrassment about sharing what is
happening in their lives. An abuser will convince his victim
that she is in some way to blame for his abuse. This, often,
will cause a person in an abusive relationship to suffer in
silence. I want to provide a safe place forum for women needing
to share and to learn that they are not alone.
I, in no way, mean to imply that there are no men living in
abusive relationships. This can create a seriously demoralizing
situation for a man. How does a man explain to his friends that
his wife or girlfriend beats him up or is constantly verbally
and emotionally abusive? I believe there are many more men in
such relationships than we think. Because they carry a special
stigma if they admit what is happening in their lives, most
stay silent. There can also be domestic violence in same sex
relationships. However, for the purpose of this article, I am
writing as if the perpetrator is a male and the victim is a
female.
The first choice in a situation such as this is to attempt to
change the situation. Many women will try to have everything
perfect for their spouse or partner. They walk around on egg
shells, believing that if only they are better, more loving,
more submissive, quieter, more invisible, then their man will
not hurt them. Many women in abusive relationships are willing
to put in a lifetime attempting to change their partner’s
behavior. Of course this is a futile attempt because people do
not change for someone else. They change when their current
behavior stops working for them and sometimes not even then. I
might ask a woman, “How long are you willing to wait for him to
change? You’ve already spent 10 years, are you willing to spend
10 more?” This is a question only the woman can answer because
she may be willing to wait her entire life. It is not for me or
anyone else to decide what is best for another person. After
all, we are not in her skin. We can only presume what we may do
in the same situation but the right answer for us may not be
the right answer for the person going through it.
The second possible outcome is to leave it. In an abusive
relationship, this would mean ending the relationship. Many
women in abusive relationships are afraid to leave because they
believe their partner will hunt them down and possibly kill
them or at least claim their “property” and force the woman to
return. Statistics tell us that more women are killed in
abusive relationships who remain in the relationship than who
leave but tell that to the family of the one woman who left and
was killed by her husband. Statistics don’t do much then.
Again, it is easy for us to decide it would be best for a woman
to leave her current situation but do we really know what’s
best for another person? Do you want to be the one carrying
that responsibility? Leaving is definitely a viable option but
it should only be made by the woman who is in the relationship.
There are organizations set up to help victims of domestic
violence escape the violence of their situation but the laws
become very tricky when there are children and custody
situations involved. Some women stay because they won’t leave
their children. Many stay because they are committed to their
wedding vows that said, “In sickness and in health. Till death
do us part.” No one can decide for another person that she must
forsake her vows if keeping them is her highest value. I might
ask a woman if she has considered all of her options and
thought of the consequences of each choice. Then, I would ask
if she believes that leaving is the best option and is she
willing to pay the possible consequences of that choice. Is
paying the possible consequence of leaving preferable to
staying in the current situation? Is the risk worth it? For
some, it definitely is.
The final choice is to accept it. Accepting it is different
from the other two options. In the first two choices, the woman
is changing external circumstances. When she is attempting to
change it, she is trying to change her partner’s behavior. When
she is leaving it, she is changing her circumstances. But
acceptance involves staying in the situation and understanding
and accepting that the other person will not change and finding
a way to be all right with that. The woman in an abusive
situation would decide that she is not going to leave and
realizes that her husband may never change but decides to stay
anyway. This may, for some, actually be their best option.
For those of us who love the woman in this situation, we have
the same three choices to go through. We can leave it---this
would most likely mean ending our relationship with the woman
because we can’t stand to see her in an abusive situation. We
can attempt to change it by trying to convince her to leave the
man. This is what many friends and family do and sometimes the
woman decides to leave you. She may decide she can’t live with
your disapproval, either stated outright or silently. Out of
loyalty to her partner, she may decide it’s not right to listen
to your statements against him anymore. What she needs is your
support, not judgments and coercion to get her to leave someone
she may love. Or the third choice, we can accept it. This means
we come to realize that this woman has her own life decisions
to make and that she will do the best she can with the choices
that are available to her. You will be her friend and support
her and her decisions, realizing that you can’t change her or
him, for that matter.
If you or someone you care about is involved in domestic
violence, please come to www.therelationshipcenter.biz. There
are safe ways there to discuss the situation and some are
f-r-e-e. Email Kim Olver at kim@therelationshipcenter.biz,
enter her chat room during scheduled chat times, which are
posted on her events calendar or call her at
708-957-6047.
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Please report any
broken links to: info@endlessrelationships.com
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