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Definition
of Domestic Violence
Domestic Violence is when two people
get into an intimate relationship
and one person uses a pattern of
coercion and control against the
other person during the relationship
and/or after the relationship has
terminated. It often includes
physical, sexual, emotional, or
economic abuse.
All the information below is
provided as either a link to a Web
site or as a downloadable PDF file.
For information on Statewide
statistics for domestic violence and
sexual assault, please visit the NC
Council for Women's Website at: http://www.nccfwdvc.com
COMMON
MYTHS AND WHY THEY ARE WRONG
Domestic violence only happens to
poor women and women of color.
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Domestic violence happens in all
kinds of families and
relationships. Persons of any
class, culture, religion, sexual
orientation, marital status,
age, and sex can be victims or
perpetrators of domestic
violence.
Some people deserve to be hit.
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No one deserves to be abused.
Period. The only person
responsible for the abuse is the
abuser.
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Physical violence, even among
family members, is wrong and
against the law.
Alcohol, drug abuse, stress, and
mental illness cause domestic
violence.
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Alcohol use, drug use, and
stress do not cause domestic
violence; they may go along with
domestic violence, but they do
not cause the violence. Abusers
often say they use these excuses
for their violence. (Michigan
Judicial Institute, Domestic
Violence Benchbook, 1998, p. 1.6
- 1.7)
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Generally, domestic violence
happens when an abuser has
learned and chooses to abuse.
(Michigan Judicial Institute,
Domestic Violence Benchbook,
1998, p. 1 - 5)
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Domestic violence is rarely
caused by mental illness, but it
is often used as an excuse for
domestic violence. (Michigan
Judicial Institute, Domestic
Violence Benchbook, 1998, p. 1 -
8)
Domestic violence is a personal
problem between a husband and a
wife.
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Domestic violence affects
everyone.
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About 1 in 3 American women have
been physically or sexually
abused by a husband or boyfriend
at some point in their lives.
(Commonwealth Fund, Health
Concerns Across a Woman's
Lifespan: the Commonwealth Fund
1998 Survey of Women's Health,
1999)
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In 1996, 30% of all female
murder victims were killed by
their husbands or boyfriends.
(Federal Bureau of
Investigation, 1997)
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40% to 60% of men who abuse
women also abuse children.
(American Psychological
Association, Violence and the
Family, 1996)
If it were that bad, she would just
leave.
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There are many reasons why women
may not leave. Not leaving does
not mean that the situation is
okay or that the victim want to
be abused.
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Leaving can be dangerous. The
most dangerous time for a woman
who is being abused is when she
tries to leave. (United States
Department of Justice, National
Crime Victim Survey, 1995)
MANY VICTIMS DO LEAVE AND
LEAD SUCCESSFUL, VIOLENCE FREE
LIVES.
Signs to Look
for in a Battering Personality
Many women are interested in ways
they can predict whether they are
about to become involved with
someone who will be physically
abusive. Usually battering occurs
between a man and a woman, but
battering also takes place in
same-sex relationships. Below is a
list of behaviors seen in people who
beat their partners; the last four
signs listed are battering, but many
women do not realize that this is
the beginning of physical abuse. If
a person exhibits several of the
other behaviors, say, three or more,
there is strong potential for
physical violence. The more signs a
person has, the more likely the
person is a batterer. In some cases,
a batterer may have only a few
behaviors that the woman can
recognize, but they are very
exaggerated (for example, will try
to explain the behavior as a sign of
love and concern); a woman may be
flattered at first. As time goes on,
the behaviors become more severe and
serve to dominate and control the
woman.
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JEALOUSY. At the
beginning of a relationship, an
abuser may say that jealousy is
a sign of love. Jealousy has
nothing to do with love. It is a
sign of possessiveness and lack
of trust. The abuser may
question his partner about who
she talks to, accuse her of
flirting, or be jealous of time
she spends with family, friends,
or children. As the jealousy
progresses, he may call her
frequently during the day or
drop by unexpectedly. He may
refuse to let her work for fear
she'll meet someone else, or
even engage in behaviors such as
checking her car mileage or
asking friends to watch her.
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CONTROLLING BEHAVIOR. At
first the batterer will say this
behavior is due to his concern
for her safety, her need to use
her time well, or her need to
make good decisions. He will be
angry if the woman is "late"
coming back from the store or an
appointment; he will question
her closely about where she went
and who she talked with. As this
behavior progresses, he may not
let the
woman make personal decisions
about the house, her clothing,
or even going to church. He may
keep all the money or even make
her ask permission to leave the
house or room.
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QUICK INVOLVEMENT. Many
battered women dated or knew
their abuser for less than six
months before they were married,
engaged, or living together. He
comes on like a whirlwind,
claiming, "you're the only
person I could ever talk to", or
"I've never been loved like this
by anyone." He will pressure the
woman to commit to the
relationship in such a way that
later the woman may feel very
guilty or that she's "letting
him down" if she wants to slow
down involvement
or break off the relationship.
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UNREALISTIC EXPECTATIONS.
Abusive people will expect their
partner to meet all their needs.
He expects a perfect wife,
mother, lover, friend. He will
says things such as "if you love
me, I'm all you need, and you're
all I need." His partner is
expected to take care of
everything for him emotionally
and in the home.
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ISOLATION. The abusive
person tries to cut his partner
off from all resources. If she
has male friends, she's a
"whore." If she has women
friends, she's a lesbian. If
she's close to family, she's
"tied to the apron strings." He
accuses people who are the
woman's supports of "causing
trouble." He may want to live in
the country, without a
telephone, or refuse to let her
drive the car, or he
may try to keep her from working
or going to school.
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BLAMES OTHERS FOR PROBLEMS.
If he is chronically
unemployed, someone is always
doing him wrong or out to get
him. He may make mistakes and
then blame the women for
upsetting him and keeping him
from concentrating on the task
at hand. He may tell the woman
she is at fault for virtually
anything that goes wrong in his
life.
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BLAMES OTHERS FOR FEELINGS.
The abuser may tell his
partner "you make me mad," "you
're hurting me by not doing what
I want you to do," or "I can't
help being angry ." He is the
one who makes the decision about
what he thinks or feels, but he
will use these feelings to
manipulate his partner. Harder
to catch are claims, "you make
me happy," or "you control how I
feel.”
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HYPERSENSITIVITY. An
abuser is easily insulted,
claiming his feelings are
"hurt," when in actuality he is
angry or taking the slightest
setback as a personal attack. He
will "rant and rave" about the
injustice of things that have
happened, things that are just a
part of living (for example,
being asked to work late,
getting a traffic ticket, being
asked to help with chores, or
being told some behavior is
annoying).
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CRUELTY TO ANIMALS OR
CHILDREN. Abusers may punish
animals brutally or be
insensitive to their pain or
suffering. An abuser may expect
children to be capable of things
beyond their abilities (punishes
a 2-year old for wetting a
diaper). He may tease children
or young brothers and sisters
until they cry. He may not want
children to eat at the table or
may expect them to be kept in
their rooms when he is home.
Studies indicate that about 60%
of men who
physically abuse their partners
also abuse their children.
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"PLAYFUL" USE OF FORCE IN
SEX. An abuser may enjoy
throwing the woman down or
holding her down during sex. He
may want to act out fantasies
during sex where the woman is
helpless. He is letting his
partner know that the idea of
rape is exciting. He may show
little concern about whether the
woman wants to have sex and uses
sulking or anger to manipulate
her into compliance. He may
begin having sex with the woman
while she is sleeping or demand
sex when she is ill or tired.
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VERBAL ABUSE. In addition
to saying things that are
intentionally meant to be cruel
and hurtful, verbal abuse is
also apparent in the abuser's
degrading of his partner,
cursing her, and belittling her
accomplishments. The abuser
tells her she is stupid and
unable to function without him.
This may involve waking her up
to verbally abuse her or not
letting her go to sleep.
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RIGID SEX ROLES. The
abuser expects his partner to
serve him. He may even say the
woman must stay at home and obey
in all things-even acts that are
criminal in nature. The abuser
sees women as inferior to men,
responsible for menial tasks,
and unable to be a whole person
without a relationship.
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DR. JEKYL/MR. HYDE
PERSONALITY. Many women are
confused by the abuser's sudden
changes in mood. She may think
he has some sort of mental
problem because one minute he's
agreeable, the next he's
exploding. Explosiveness and
moodiness are typical of men who
beat their partners. These
behaviors are related to other
characteristics, such as
hypersensitivity.
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PAST BATTERING. The
abuser may say he has hit women
in the past, but blame them for
the abuse ('~hey made me do
it"). The women may hear from
relatives or ex-partners that he
is
abusive. A batterer will abuse
any woman he is with if the
relationship lasts long enough
for the violence to begin~
situational circumstances do not
make one's personality abusive.
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THREATS OF VIOLENCE. This
includes any threat of physical
force meant to control the
partner: "I'll slap your mouth
off," "1'11 kill you," "I'll
break your neck." Most people do
not threaten their partners~
abusers will try to excuse their
threats by saying "everybody
talks like that."
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BREAKING OR STRIKING OBJECTS.
Breaking loved possessions is
used as a punishment, but mostly
to terrorize the woman into
submission. The abuser may beat
on the table with his fist, or
throw objects around or near his
partner. Again, this is
remarkable behavior. Not only is
this a sign of extreme
immaturity, but there is great
danger when someone thinks he
has the right to
punish or frighten his partner.
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ANY FORCE DURING AN ARGUMENT.
This may involve the abuser's
holding the woman down,
physically restraining her from
leaving the room, or any pushing
or shoving. He may hold his
partner against the wall,
telling her "You're going to
listen to me!"
So Why
Do They Stay?
By Linda A. Osmundson
Slapping, hair-pulling, kicking,
biting…battered women relate a
litany of abuse experienced at the
hand of our intimate partners. The
results are bruises, broken bones,
black eyes, internal injuries,
sometimes and death. Always there
are broken hearts.
Yet, most battered women really do
not want to leave their abusive
partners. Many of the women who call
shelter crisis lines tell the staff
and volunteers that they just want
the abuse to end. We hope for
fantasy TV endings like the lives of
Claire and Heathcliff Huxtable or
Ward and June Cleaver.
So why do we stay? When the person
who had promised to love and cherish
us beats us, what makes us stay for
the second and third beating? When I
speak to community groups about
domestic violence, I am nearly
always asked this question. Often
women in the audience would exclaim,
"if my partner laid a hand on me, I
would be out the door!"
Imagine, for a moment, your own
family. Would you really be able to
walk out the door? Could you leave
your home, neighborhood and friends?
Where would you go? Could you, your
two lively children, plus the dog,
stay at your brother’s apartment on
his couch for an indefinite period
of time? What would his two
roommates have to say about that?
Could you stay with your parents who
live in one of those adults-only
condos?
I would not be surprised if the
first time it happened you would
help your partner rationalize why it
happened. Your partner was (tired,
stressed, angry, drinking, jealous,
upset about losing a job or worried
about expenses). Any excuse will
fill the blank! YOU (made a mistake,
came home late, disagreed with your
partner, bought lunch at the mall….)
fill this blank with the reason your
partner says you caused the abuse.
But abuse is not about reason. It is
about power. It is about control of
one’s partner. And it works. The
physical abuse is only the most
obvious. It is reinforced by a whole
spectrum of other kinds of abuse.
We’ve already mentioned the excuses,
the minimizing and blaming, saying
it was her fault or it really wasn’t
that serious. Abusers isolate their
victims and keep them from having
friends or family around. They
control what we do, who we see, what
we read and where we go.
Abusers abuse our psyche and
emotions by calling us unprintable
names, humiliating us, constantly
criticizing us.
Abusers are intimidating. I knew an
abuser who left a single bullet on
the kitchen counter! It takes only a
look, a threat, to instill fear.
Abusers are coercive, threatening to
leave, forcing us to participate in
illegal activities. Abusers make
sure we have no money, keep us from
getting a job, making us put our
check in to their account. Abusers
treat their partners like servants,
acting like "master of the castle,"
making all the important decisions.
Finally, abusers use the children by
making us feel guilty about them,
threatening to take the children,
using the children to relay messages
to their mother.
Abuse works because many of us
continue to pretend it does not
happen to "good" women. So anyone
who is abused must be "bad"! We
blame the victim for her own abuse
by calling her codependent. We
expect her to prevent the abuse
instead of why the abuser chose to
abuse. In short, we collude with the
abuser.
Abusers succeed because they are not
abusive all the time. In fact,
sometimes they are fun and charming.
They are almost always charming
around other people.
Battered women stay because we are
afraid. We are afraid no one will
believe the truth. We fear we will
lose our children. We are afraid we
will have nowhere to go. We are
fearful we will not be able to
support the children. We are afraid
our church or family will condemn
us. We are terrified the abuser will
hurt our friends or family.
Ultimately, we fear we will be
killed trying to leave.
All these fears are legitimate. Most
battered women, killed by their
abusers, have tried to leave. Some
die in the process of leaving and
many are killed trying to start
over. The blood of millions of
battered women is on the hands of
friends and families, social
workers, clergy, doctors, police,
attorneys, judges and anyone else
who failed to believe them, failed
to heed their pleas for help.
Maybe we should reverse that
question, "why does she stay?" and
ask, "So why does the abuser abuse?"
With all the obstacles in our path
the real question is, "How can we
possibly leave?"
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