Morgan Steiner has published two books and made good money on this issue so she wants to perpetuate the false propaganda. Her story concerns a man who was mentally ill. There are mentally ill women in equal numbers but we don't hear about that. If you look at the data at domesticviolenceresearch (just google) you will find that half of perpetrators are female. If you watch an academic expert make a presentation (just google Dr Donald Dutton) you will find that half of perpetrators are female. DV mainly occurs in areas of poverty and/or drug use. DV has become a money making industry which seeks to paint males as perpetrators and females as victims. This false narrative is a big part of a larger money making scam. Almost all of government money goes to aid women only. If you listen to this video again you will find numerous references to women and girls as victims or mothers and daughters; as victims. Count the number of times you hear her talk of fathers, boys or sons as victims. Male victims are mentioned as if they don't matter and rarely occur. She also gives outrageously false percentages.
@@stevegcq it is a fact that half of perpartrators are women, and the other half are men. Then there are other kind, women and men who are equaly as good, communicating and collaborating with each other for greater success without the drama and wars. I am for that other kind of beings who come to resolution without arguments and fighting. Thank you
@@somyan8540 Well done. It is difficult for many people because the education system is indoctrinating females to believe in an imaginary evil patriarchy that is trying to oppress women. This is false of course, most men are subservient to women. I researched to find out why feminism is so extreme and why they have so much power. The answer is explained in the video showing Breitbart talking about the Kalergi plan, the title is, *Andrew Breitbart on the Frankfurt School of Cultural Marxism (Jun 14 ,2011)* (mWgkYv-JOGA)..
The part where she said she didn't think of herself as a victim; she was a strong, independent woman who was helping a troubled man...I think I just woke up to my current situation.
+d sar Not all abuser are the typical thug type though.... My abuser was a total nerd and, at first, a nice guy. No one deserves to be beaten by someone they love, by someone that claims that they love you. For me it was so hard to leave because i thought like you, that only bad boys abuse, and this guy was a nice guy, but now i have scars that constantly reminds me of how wrong i was... Also, the majority of abusers are people you trust, and like she said in the video, the violence comes after a while, when you no longer have the strength or bravery to leave...
My best friend finally got enough courage to pack her bags and leave her abusive husband. He shot her to death before she reached the door. If you are in an abusive relationship please make a safe plan to leave and never speak a word of it to him. Leave when he is not home and never go back. The most dangerous thing you can do is let him know you want to leave
Make sure there is no trace of you on social media. If staying with parents make sure doors windows and such are barred up with camera systems. And consistently change your number. And have hope that person will stop. Knowing they can’t have what they had before. They move on to another which in my case she married and karma is still biting her in the butt. I thank god that it finished after 14 years of being together. Tho she may have won the battle and the war she didn’t get my wil l to move forward and experience my new life in a whole light.
My husband said he turned violent because I made him mad. And this was my fault for making him mad. I was confused once but now I understand that every act of violence is a choice, and I’m not responsible for his choice of actions.
Morgan Steiner has published two books and made good money on this issue so she wants to perpetuate the false propaganda. Her story concerns a man who was mentally ill. There are mentally ill women in equal numbers but we don't hear about that. If you look at the data at domesticviolenceresearch (just google) you will find that half of perpetrators are female. If you watch an academic expert make a presentation (just google Dr Donald Dutton) you will find that half of perpetrators are female. DV mainly occurs in areas of poverty and/or drug use. DV has become a money making industry which seeks to paint males as perpetrators and females as victims. This false narrative is a big part of a larger money making scam. Almost all of government money goes to aid women only. If you listen to this video again you will find numerous references to 'women and girls' as victims or 'mothers and daughters' as victims. Count the number of times you hear her talk of fathers, boys or sons as victims. Male victims are mentioned as if they don't matter and rarely occur. She also gives outrageously false percentages.
That not asking the right questions hurts plenty, abusers continue to elude accountability and the victim shaming is perpetuated when the wrong questions continue to be asked.
Work! We all should give one another the space and safety to speak honestly about abuse. Especially those of us who experienced it in childhood and deserve therapy to help us navigate the trauma we might continue to hold onto. Because while we might not get into abusive relationships, untreated trauma can manifest itself in damaging ways and perspectives as adults.
SUZANNE Arena -all too true....emotional violence and all the other titles under the banner of family violence these days are equally and sometimes even more dangerous and are so destructive to the very depth of one’s being and through also being largely hidden and designed in such a specific was that it creates a self actualising self perpetual destruction of a person on every single part of what makes them who they are- pure evil - I cringe to think of what kind of trauma a person has themselves suffered that they have reacted by delivering this kind of malicious intention towards anyone.....
Women are not taught to just walk-away. We are taught to stay, work it out because the unknown is scary. We are taught that the things we have are so much more important than the way we feel.
Ashley Powers - for generations... why are we not taught to trust our feelings, our gut and our intuition? Why is it “reasoned” out of us... to discount what your body and spidey sense and intuition are telling us ? I think it is a way to make us lower our defenses, so we are wide open for exploitation and abuse for those who cash in on that. How do you know that you raised your daughter (or son) right ? They will not give people more than one or two chances maximum - no more benefit of doubt BS after that. Protecting yourself is praised and held up. And follow your gut when you don’t trust someone.
@Josh M i agree however, if u cant work it out.....WALK AWAY.....yes its hard to let go bc of feelings but A HAPPY LIFE deserve so much better bc it begins with a HEALTHY LIFE'S JOURNEY
True, but as Leslie said, leaving also puts you in mortal danger and you have to keep the practicalities in mind. In abuse situations, the woman often has no money at all, and she may not have a car. How is she going to get away, where is she going to go to and how is she going to survive without instantly putting herself at risk of abuse by someone else, when she needs a place to stay and income. Also, Leslie told everyone about the abuse one day, and apparently everyone believed her, but what happens very often is that nobody believes the woman because "he is such a wonderful guy" in public. "And even if he ever did raise a hand, well, then she must have provoked him."
This video is a video that has been permanently ingrained in my mind for the past two years. Two years ago when I first watch this video I was in an abusive relationship. This video played a major role in giving me the courage to leave, and for that I will be forever grateful, watching this video was a major turning point in my life.
dana holtzman I’ve been happy for a month but I had a slip up last night. I came back to this video because it was this video that made me realize why I stayed before
In my experience, domestic violence is a cycle. A husband attacks, is sorry, and in that sorrow you get a glimpse of the man you love. Then the tension starts and the violence is repeated. By the time you are battered, you have no friends, no job and are trapped in the destructive circle of trying to please the impossible. Nothing you ever do will be right, so round and round you go until something breaks. Die or find the strength from somewhere to get out.
Emotional abuse isn't cyclical. It's daily. And you don't even get a honeymoon phase, because the abusive behavior is never acknowledged to have taken place. Or it happened, but it wasn't that bad.
Yes. That's my situation. Add to that my age, being disabled, very little money, and no place that has room. It terrifies me that the only place I have to go right now is the streets. So I just stay back in my room, which serves as my domestic violence shelter 💔😞😭
When I was splitting with my ex husband, I was seeking advice from a police officer friend of mine and he said “I don’t care what he says or what he tries to make you think, NEVER be alone with him. Not even in a parked car at a shopping center. Nothing is private enough. Remember, he is a wounded dog and even wounded dogs bite their owners”. It saved my life. My ex tried everything to get me alone, even pointing out how public certain places were when technically they really weren’t.
That's great. When I went to the police to get a restraining order from my violent ex, he said I should be nice to him and not make him angry. He said that there are too many people leaving marriages too quickly! So I went to another police station, but couldn't even get past the front desk to speak to the DV unit, because the person said they don't give out restraining orders "willy nilly". So I went to another, who said I should just call the police if he comes to the front door and refuses to leave. No help.
@@Tamarahope77 my first 2 attempts at restraining orders were denied with a similar attitude. Some officers are good with DV, but many aren't. They need better training for starters. Are you doing ok now?
@@Tamarahope77 hopefully its better now. I know a lot of cops are jaded with dv because a lot of women return to an abusive relationship and there's nothing they can do about it.
I walked away from my husband when he began physically abusing me and I never went back. I credit my father. From a very young age, my father taught me that a man who hits a woman is not a man. Those words have stuck with me throughout my life. I think all fathers should teach their daughters this lesson.
What happens when the abuser is your father? He has been physically abusive to me and my mother for years but his best act is that he's great at abusing me verbally, manipulating me financially/mentally and I am constantly living with the fear that he will throw me out of the apartment if I don't behave the way he wants me to. I have to stay quiet, always locked in my room. It feels like I am always walking on egg shells, always on the edge of being yelled at or just slapped. After every fight he buys a lot of food, acts overly nice and leaves me alone for a while, this lasts for around two weeks, then he's back at his usual self, which is violent, crazy eyes, and passive-aggressive behavior. And the worst part is that in public he displays an extremely charming, overly polite and funny personality. You wouldn't even think he's actually capable of this.
I have two daughters. I started telling them from a very young age that there is no such thing as "three strike rule". The rule is, even if you just think he might hit you, leave now, not tomorrow, not next week, don't stop to "talk it out", and never believe protestations of "it won't happen again". Get out now.
Morgan Steiner has published two books and made good money on this issue so she wants to perpetuate the false propaganda. Her story concerns a man who was mentally ill. There are mentally ill women in equal numbers but we don't hear about that. If you look at the data at domesticviolenceresearch (just google) you will find that half of perpetrators are female. If you watch an academic expert make a presentation (just search for *Dr Donald Dutton)* you will find that half of perpetrators are female. DV mainly occurs in areas of poverty and/or drug use. DV has become a money making industry which seeks to paint males as perpetrators and females as victims. This false narrative is a big part of a larger money making scam. Almost all of government money goes to aid women only. If you listen to this video again you will find numerous references to 'women and girls' as victims or 'mothers and daughters' as victims. Count the number of times you hear her talk of fathers, boys or sons as victims. Male victims are mentioned as if they don't matter and rarely occur. She also gives outrageously false percentages.
Because she gendered a nongendered issue. The founder of the first domestic violence shelter for women Erin Pizzey said 2/3rds of the women in her shelter were AT LEAST as violent as the men they left.
@Charlie Hunt do you feminists just spin a wheel of villains to randomly select which group you hate to blame? I understand why you'd assume sock accounts, basic projection... but of all groups why would you blame incels? They are the branch of the manosphere who'd most approve of this woman's message. Incels, BY DEFINITION, aren't committing domestic violence and as such have no reason to take this talk personally. Further more while they take psychological injury from the fact that they are rejected en mass, the real insult is that stacy would rather be with an abusive Chad than them. Incels would appreciate efforts to get women to stop dating abusers. If you want to presume a group of men for the ratio, it'd make much more sense to blame the PUAs. But here is a crazy thought, rather than just blindly brush off everyone who doesn't agree with you, maybe try GENUINELY LEARNING what other than (insert evil assumption here) could possibly motivate their disagreement.
That part where she said she didn't think of herself as a victim; she was a strong, independent woman who was helping a troubled man...RELATEABLE. I cried, listening to that, because that, that was me. I thought my love would help him, would conquer all; I was wrong. So much of her story, sadly, sounded familiar.
Same here. When I escaped my abuser - literally running to the train with my baby to flee to another city while he had left the house, praying that he wouldn´t come home earlier - I felt totally guilty for not having been able to help him breaking free of his violent habits ..... it´s incredible how abusers mess with your head and prey on your love, your good heart and willingness to help.
You’re too real for the majority of these people in the comments @Marcos Martinez. I always say it takes a certain kind of woman to end up in these situations. A common trait I notice is that they are DELUSIONAL. How can they claim to want to help someone and they aren’t a trained person to do so? They actually stay for their ego and many are low key masochistic. Most actually think they are special or can control others’ bad behavior. How can they not see they are being lied to?? If someone takes money out of your purse in front of your face and then tells you they aren’t a thief and would never want to see you without money, would you believe them or would it be obvious that they are scamming you??? They are slaves to the rhythm of ‘love’ 🙄 (MJ song). These men use these women’s delusions of ‘love’ to abuse them and these women are too blind to see it. It’s a very expensive mistake to make since it usually costs these women their health (mental, emotional, financial, physical) and even their lives! I would rather live in a cardboard box than live with an abusive man. These women come up with all kinds of excuses, as you can clearly see in these comments, and attack you for thinking critically about their situation because they clearly lack any critical thinking ability themselves and see THAT as abusive lmao! It’s not victim blaming, it’s called EMPOWERMENT. When you can see where you have the power to change your situation then you can get out of it, but many here try to silence any talk of having control over their own actions. They need to ask themselves if this is the life they dreamed for themselves as a little girl. They need to leave for her and make her proud, if not for anyone else. I say all of this out of my love of finding solutions to hard problems, not out of insensitivity. Caring too much about another’s feelings and putting ‘sensitivity’ above common sense is usually what get these women into these kinds of situations with these horrible men who end up abusing them in the first place, so please keep this in mind!
@@likemycommentifyouwantareply While we should always remember to be sensitive, it's more important to be SENSIBLE. So many of the narratives posted in reply to these types of videos are, as you said, deluded and intellectually dishonest. It's alarming because it shows a lack of understanding as to how these predicaments begin and proceed. Even more troubling, after so many of them escape, the lessons learned, if any, are emotionally shallow and not introspective or self-reflective. Empowerment, as you said, should be our goal, not the regurgitation of excuses and platitudes.
Sadly victims don't always get help when they try to get it. I was in a relationship much like hers, and when I started telling my coworkers because I was finally done with it, one of my co-workers came over to me and told me to keep my business to myself and people didn't need to hear what I was going through. So I say, if someone comes to you, don't shush them, help them.
That is awful! Nobody should ever say that to a victim! I’m so glad and lucky that nobody said that to me when I was going through it. I’m so sorry hun!
Society has a problem with turning it's back on people in need and trying to sweep things under the rug that they don't have answers for. Please don't let that keep you silent. If people choose to treat you that way do your best to tell them that you wouldn't treat them the same way if they were in need and you apprecaite them not telling you, or anyone else for that matter, to be quiet simply because they don't have an answer readily available and therefore it makes them uncomfortable. We, as a society, need to learn how to help people, not shut them out in the cold and simply turn our backs so that we don't have to see them starving, suffering, dying, and feel badly about it. The same thing goes for all victims and all people suffering, whether it's from illness, poverty, inequality, addiction, etc. Compassion is a dying trait that needs to be resuscitated. There ARE people who do care though. I hope you have been able to free yourself completely from your past relationship and are moving on mentally.
I once shushed a fellow female worker going through domestic violence abuse to protect her from the nastiness and malice of other envious bitches working there, as this abuse victim was very pretty and I knew the male workers would have loved to pounce on her if they knew her relationship was disintegrating. She was younger and I felt the need to care for her. I took her to the Ladies when it was deserted, powder our noses and chat about "female hassles" and she told me everything and I was able to help her get out of this hopeless abusive relationship with absolutely no future. She kept arguing she loved him and his family wanted her in it and that he was always sorry after each bout of violence, proclaiming everlasting true love, blah, blah, romantic bullshit and that he was very handsome and a great lover, with heaps of girls who wanted him and that she did not want to waste five years of courtship now that he had just bought her an expensive engagement ting he had worked endless overtime in some slum factory slave job to buy her. I asked her whether she thought that pretty ring was better then her, worth more. She looked confused then replied that it was. So I left her to enjoy what she seemed to prefer. It was pointless trying yo persuade her to quit such a toxic relationship because some women seem to enjoy such relationships and who are we to intrude on their idea of "domestic bliss" and "true love". I have seen so many such women....You throw them a life line but they reject it. Some will even turn on you and abuse and accuse you when the relationship is going all rosy, on again. I steer clear of domestic abuse cases and refuse to be drawn into taking sides. Not my problem but theirs.
Your local women's shelters are ready and willing to carry you down this terrifying road.....their knowledge and Love will light the way...They will Give you their Strength until you Find your Own.....I usedto tell mine I was seeing a dr....actually seeing counselors and advocates setting up an escape.....But ground zero was my personal physician...she promised it would be over....and it was....God Bless You...You are strong enough...And created to Be Outstanding💖💖💖💖💖☔☔☔☔☔
I was in the hospital after almost being killed by a man and my friend came to see me. The first thing she said was “what did you do to make him do this to you.” I told her to get out and not to bother coming back or calling me again.
What a terrible thing for her to do and say. From experience, and growing up in a toxic home myself, I missed the signs of abusive traits in others. Was hurt by atleast a handful of people who were supposed to love and protect me, care for me the way I had always cared for them. After 30 years God finally led me to the truth and ugliness of abuse and down the road to knowledge, power in understanding and knowing, and eventually healing. That last part takes a lot of time but it does come when we are ready. I’m so sorry you went through this, I pray you got out and life has been so much better to you. You deserve nothing but the best and to experience love and happiness. Xoxo
That's because being called "creepy" doesn't have quite the impact that being beaten within an inch of your life by someone who claims to love you, every single day does. "Men fear that women will laugh at them. Women fear that men will kill them."
ESPSAlita What is the context of this last phrase you said? "Men fear that women will laugh at them. Women feat that men will kill them." Are you saying a man that is a victim of domestic abuse is only concerned wih the humiliation he's in?
there are medical signs abusive relationships. looking faces of boxers the effects of constant beating. brow ridge gets thicker cheeks along the side get buffer along the cheek bones less nerves in in the face less facial muscle. and others signs along the body of pest constant brosing
teacup3133 and because abusers are very good at manipulating and brain washing their victim. They gaslight their victims into thinking that everything is okay and that they did nothing wrong. I watched it happened to someone I cared about for years and was forced to live in that situation for six years.
I was mentally abused for 30 years. He was my only man I dated and married at 19. I had no idea what I was getting myself into. He would deny me affection freedom family visits took away from me what I cared about, threw out my dog, cat, budges flushes down the toilet our son’s fish . Told him he would not amount to anything instead of helping him with homework. He didn’t love himself and never told our child that he loved him. I though I was strong enough to overcome his bad moods , and support him as a wife . I though I will make him happy . I never heard I love you after we got married. I didn’t hear you are beautiful my dear wife . Actually, he once said that he had married me because he though I was unattractive, so no other men would look and lust me . That was his way to keep me at his site . He would not talk to me for months at a time . He would not eat my dinner and if I didn’t make anything he would be moody . If he had to do things alone as I was working more and more, he complained that e feels like a widower, no support from me . The abuse was escalating and I didn’t know what to do . I stood up to him few times , worked more hours to avoid his behaviour, started traveling alone to visit my family . The last time he didn’t talk to me was for 7 months . I had tried at first to ask what’s wrong, why aren’t you talking to me .? - i should know why !!! When he took our son to a Christmas vacation without me knowing anything about where and how long they will be there I ended my marriage right at the security gate of the airport wishing a Marry Christmas! 2 years later I’m trying to rebuild my self respect self worth. Struggling but I know I did the right thing .
I was stupidly so depressed because stuff didnt go how I wanted with my baby daddy. I hoped and prayed and then when we finally tried he threatened to hurt me, even kill me, I think I had to see for myself so I could let him go. I'm sorry you went through that. It's your time of peace now, like the rainbow after the storm. God wants you to feel happy. You didn't lose him just your idea of what you thought he'd be! Well for me that's how I think of it. Hope your day is going well.
@@toeachitsown2050 Thanks. He started to be a lot nicer and we had a good two weeks and then he broke up with me because he didn't like what I wore. I am just thinking if it's meant to be it'll come to me in a way that's good for me and my kid. But I am just enjoying my kid and my time and my freedom.
Yes, it’s real! Just left a 48 year marriage…far too late. Took my purse only and two years from then finally stand alone and happier. Subsidized housing for a senior helped a lot. When I left, he put out a smear campaign to my only child, family and past friends saying I’m unstable and caused many problems. What could I prove being silent so long?, Still in grief, but I’m safe, breathing and hopeful ;it’s very okay to be alone. Peaceful,no fear. It takes practice but it’s worth that kind of work, day by day affirming what’s real, who you really are, and letting it all go. You’ll find the path you are to be on, just believe it. You are valuable, a unique human being with a purpose. Please hang in there! Bless you greatly for strength and love. Sincerely, Robin
Hang in there. I would suggest to make a bullet point of the abuses (physical & mental) for yourself, police, and the children. Little at a time, you can start to write/type more details about each point of abuse. I think, personally, that our children need to know about the levels of abuse bcuz the men can be master manipulators and turn the children against...mine has!
you’re not alone. good for you that even after all that time, you got out. you did the right thing and i’m so happy to hear you speak about peace. i can relate 💯 percent. i still hear my ex’s voice in my head criticizing me or something i was doing, but now i just tell that voice to f off. wounds don’t heal completely but strength increases exponentially. i have tried to help others and encourage them to find the courage to leave but mostly i say thank you to my God for bringing me through it. enjoy every day as if it’s your birthday because you’ve won the lottery by walking away. peace.
If you managed to leave & survive then you’re not too late. I appreciate the length of time it took to realise may be frustrating, & the path forward daunting & unknown but you gave yourself the option for something different. Nothing is wasted, all manure for the rose 🌹 garden…these things can serve to make us more compassionate people even if it’s learning compassion for yourself, that alone is a significant life lesson many people only grasp at, some people never have the realisation & never leave. On difficult days I find just recalling where I am & how it lead to me recognising my own vulnerability, power & freedom. I hope that doesn’t seem too patronising, I can relate & appreciate what you say & hope you might feel some reassurance, that you’re not alone. Wishing you the best 🙏💖✨
truest words on this....once they hit, they will hit again...threaten, verbally and mentally abuse and HIT. The abuser is rotten and ruined to the core. Get away!!
Those who haven't been in an abusive relationship won't get it. The person u are with slowly breaks u and makes u feel crazy. It is complicated but THE ONLY way to be happy is to LEAVE. Anyone going through this U CAN BE HAPPY and you will. U have to get away from this person for good as hard as it is emotionally.
I couldn't agree more, I'm a victim of domestic violence, he breaks me and makes me feel like I'm the crazy one. I having a hard time moving on, I'm trying so hard. But everytime he come back and sweet talk, it makes me feel weak and loved but I know in my heart , it's just his crazy self saying it to make me weak.
@@amaadav6529 Okay Amaada I’m gonna tell you exactly how I got out… after he did things that were so bad I was embarrassed to tell anyone I knew.. I kept up hope for a REALLY long time that he would change, we would have really good times in between. But it comes to the point that you realize: this man DOESNT ACTUALLY even like me, much less, love me (this was the hardest thing to accept)…… it defies everything I thought in the beginning, but the way he was treating me, it was 10000% true. Once I accepted that, and grieved the relationship silently (I was sad A LOT and cried a lot) I moved in temporarily with relatives, just to put some space between us. Slowly I got comfortable with being away from him. I finally broke up. He tried everything to get me back, he said he started going to therapy (A LIE - even if he did it was TOO LATE, my mind was made up 100%) when I came to get the rest of my stuff he had written down a LIST of things he said I had done wrong and he almost started crying saying he was “so hurt” by me. I said nothing got my stuff and left. I drove to a parking lot and proceeded to block him on all social media, delete pics of us and block his number. When he created other accounts to talk to me I didn’t read and blocked immediately. That was 5 years ago. He created another one last year I immediately blocked. My only regret is staying as long as I did. Ever since, I have felt the most unshakeable pride in myself that I gathered the strength to leave. I used to cry EVERYDAY and I finally was able to trust myself and be happy. GOOD LUCK
@@amaadav6529 Gross. Edit: This response, though sincere when written, was meant to convey a dismay at the capacity for self-reflection and awareness shown by the OP, only to read about their subsequent counter-logical choice to remain and sentimentalize their victimhood.
I came here because my friend told me I’m in a dangerous situation. And they got concerned because I was "defending my abuser", that was a big eye opener for me.
It's clear from Karen's comment that she survived a specific, personal experience of abuse at the hands of a man. Countering that affirmative determined comment with "but why aren't we talking about FEMALE ABUSERS and MALE VICTIMS tho" is just ridiculous, maddening! Yes. Men suffer abuse in silence as well. The statistics demonstrate an imbalance and that women deal with this more often, but we should be working to help everyone. But how, exactly, does commenting on someone's personal testimony that happens to fit the most frequent pattern, and complaining that they're not personally including all other varieties of violence which they didn't experience, help anyone?
Karen Sefcovic My mother is to. I'm a child of an abusive man and I have several horrible memories. This video hit really hard and I'm glad to see another survivor. It's me, my sister and my mom and we all experienced it. I feel empowered whenever I see stories like these and hearing about other survivors. I'm glad your out✊
In year 27, the day I escaped, I ran upstairs to look up "battered housewife" on the computer. I was astounded and right then decided this was the day I would give up everything I ever had in my life, even to go homeless. 12 years later I am still being taken to court by this psychopath, but even though destitute, no longer homeless, I am free. Thank you for speaking out to all of us. Big hugs, lady. God Bless you. ❤
@@toniawerchan9360 that's his goal. YOU can leave, just be ready to lose your "things." Your life and happiness is more important than possessions; those can be replaced. 🙂❤
I;m glad you are better now and so sorry for what happened to you. I wonder, did you notice people around you refusing help or looking the other way? this lady (selling her book) said: " I got out because you all helped me" I wonder if thats true or whether society, friends even family are indifferent or see you differently after what happened.
"I never once thought of myself as a battered wife. Instead, I was a very strong woman in love with a deeply troubled man, and I was the only person on Earth who could help Connor face his demons." That literally described my first marriage. Thankfully I was able to come to my senses and had people supporting me who helped me get out.
This describes my recent relationship and to a T. Most of her speech sounds too familiar. Only hitting was a rare thing. All other forms of abuse were almost daily. It’s been a week yesterday since he actually left me. He didn’t like that I was seeking therapy. Even though I never told my therapist anything about how he was to me. I told her he was supportive and safe... he didn’t know that. Still today when he comes home I welcome him as his wife. I grieve daily for him and miss him and love him deeply. The comment you posted is exactly what I still feel. I am struggling but I now know that what I am living is still dangerous. I am doing well to control taking him back each time he comes home and tells me how perfect I am. All I can do is say a prayer and wait for the healing to happen in my heart as I get stronger.
That's me but with 0 support and 5 kids. I was trying to homeschool them and raise them all sweet but I am now going to be forced to put them in the horrible public schools we have here and work like a mule. To leave and survive with my kids.
I just left a man who had abused me for 16 years.I went to my local social services and all they could do is give me two bus passes and a bed over 30 miles away.I have no car and can't walk much from my disability,s.Ive tried my local DV center.All the beds are full bc they rolled out the red carpet for the afghan refugees seeking asylum.I am now homeless carless hungry and hopeless in Albany ny
There is another sad answer to the question "why doesn't she just leave?". By the time the abuser starts intensifying their abuse, the victim has so much invested in the relationship; physically, spiritually, financially and emotionally. Breaking up a relationship is very hard because you've shared so much with somebody, even if the relationship is a toxic one. It happened to my mom. She's smart, funny, sweet and kind and she was trapped in an emotionally and verbally abusive marriage for 32 years. By the time her husband's abuse really got underway, she had two small children and was living in a foreign country as part of his job. When times were good, they were very good. He would surprise us with presents, took us on trips, told us how much he loved us and always sided with Mom whenever she and I argued. But he was also the man who criticized us, belittled us and made us feel worthless. He cheated on Mom twice with two of the women who worked for him. During one instance, he told my mom that he was going to leave her (this is when we were still living out of the states) and take her children away from her. Mom was horrified at that prospect and fought hard to keep her marriage and her children (who she loved more than anyone else). After they got their issues worked out, he and Mom were discussing renewing their vows. The first time Mom realized that the marriage was bad was after he had left her for a younger woman. Mom was heartbroken and, once again, tried everything to make the marriage work. It was during couple's therapy that the therapist pulled her aside and told her that she was in an abusive marriage. Like Ms. Steiner, Mom never believed that she was being abused and was shocked at the allegation that her husband and father of her two now-grown children had harmed her. But with time and counseling, she's accepted this and has moved on. She's now working her dream job and is now free. I'm very proud of her. The sad fact of the matter is that unless you've been through it yourself, you're never going to fully understand just what abuse does and why victims feel trapped and unable to escape.
+janeyrevanescence12 You seem to be telling your mother's side of the story. Your father might have a different story. Children grow up listening to their mother in their formative years and as a result they favour the mother. Mothers are quite willing to demonise the father when in fact the father is a good man. Women can be very manipulative and deceptive in this way. This happens because the father is out working and providing for his family. Males and females are both good and bad. Badness is not the domain of the male. Fifty percent of the time the father is a better and more caring person than the mother, yet the mother is favoured about 90% of the time because she is at home while the father works. Even abusive mothers can be favoured by children over a good father who is out working during the day. The following is probably what happened, hope you can handle the truth.
When your mother met your father, she considered him as a capable man who would be a good provider. She used her feminine charms to attract him and they married. Much biology and human evolution needs to be explained but there is no time. When your mother became pregnant, your father followed normal male responsibility procedure and worked hard to provide for woman and child. The pregnancy process repeated and one more child resulted. Your father worked even harder to provide. He progressed with his skills and he obtained promotion. In this typical situation where the woman looks after the home and children, she controls the finances because she purchases the food and has a major say in the purchase of the car, the home and other major purchases. Women have more time for this and fathers allow control to go to the mother. That is why the market cater to women. That is why women are the main consumers in society and why advertising focuses on women. As children grow older, they become able to get themselves to school, feed themselves and clean their own rooms. The mother supervises more. The father continues to work hard so that the mother can supply the childrens needs, the children have a room to themselves, a desk, a bed, a computer. The mother controls the home and controls the home content and the home management. The children see this. They ask for things and the mother provides. She gets all the credit for buying them things, and all the credit for helping with their problems and their needs. The father is out working, he does many more things and helps many more people with far more complex situations, he gets home tired and doesn't have always have the patience for advice and care to the children. At home, he gets credit for nothing. For this reason, children think the mother is number one, especially male children. (You are lucky in that you didn't have an abusive mother, such mothers are very bad for children because the father is not home to protect them from her.) Your mother had had a much easier life than your father. Looking after the home with two children means that she had much more free time and much less stress. Your father paid all the childrens comforts and fun - but he got no credit. At his workplace however he attained respect from his work ethic and his income increased. Younger women recognised him for his talent and work ethic, in later years these younger women could see that he had an older, overweight, nagging wife and that his children were becoming independant.
Steve M While my father never dared raise a hand to my mother....he had no qualms about hurting my younger brother and me. He choked me once when I talked back to him and he flipped my brother onto his back during an argument, nearly smacking his head onto the table as he did so.
+janeyrevanescence12 You have never reacted in anger? Or your brother or mother? Sounds like when you use the word "once" and "nearly" your father was a very nonviolent man overall. It must have taken an amazing amount of provocation to make him react like that. Think of all his work for your family over two decades. It sounds like you thanked him by treating him very disrespectfully. It could be that it was a result of years of indoctrination from your mother - not deliberate perhaps, but it had a great effect on your subconscious. Obviously I can't completely judge an individual case like yours but when you write: "Mom never believed that she was being abused and was shocked at the allegation that her husband and father of her two now-grown children had harmed her. But with time and counseling, she's accepted this and has moved on." ... it sounds like the counselor was a rabid feminist. Your mother wasn't harmed at all. From your own description it sounds like the exact opposite. You have to realise that feminism tries to spread the myth that males are perpetrators and females are victims. Very false and very negative. I advise you, very sincerely, to listen to Professor Janice Fiamengo who has made 20 short, easy to listen to, videos on feminism and as you have been indoctrinated by this negative ideology it would do you much good. UA-cam search for: ♣ Fiamengo File ♣.
Met my ex at 19 yrs old. I’m now 24. Finally had the courage to leave today. Just keep in mind if he/she hits you once, they’ll do it again. Wish I realized this sooner, but I’m free and that’s what matters 🙏 Sending so much love to ALL domestic violence victims and those who are planning/ wanting to leave. We all deserve to be loved THE RIGHT WAY. ❤️
Please don't ever go back!! I did and now I'm trapped here with him. My bedroom serves as my domestic violence shelter. I'm completely hopeless and I pray to die every night before I go to sleep
My cousin was killed by her husband. She ran away and he followed her. Killed her, the friends that were hiding her, and then himself. Don't doubt yourself, get out while you can and never look back. If you even have to wonder if it's abuse, it is. Be careful and stay safe.
The threat of murder is very real, 🥶🥶🥶 and I’m glad you shared your incredibly tragic story. 😭😱😭 My dad threatened to kill everyone when my more tried to leave. He had his gun out. I didn’t get child support for 16 years because I believed my ex could kill me or our kid. He was violent & wacked in many ways. I say get out, but only when your escape is fool proof, as in safe, and the violent abuser can’t find you, ever. 🌷🌸💕🌸🌷
"I told everyone (about the abuse).. Abuse thrives only in silence. You have the power to end domestic violence simply by shining a spotlight on them. Show abuse the light of day. Recast survivors as wonderful, loveable people with full futures." Thank you, Leslie Morgan Steiner... ❤❤
@@hamsandwichindahouse She didn't have three kids with her abuser. She had three kids with her second husband. Have you watched the video? Also, before signs of killing showed up, she always thought she's in love and she's helping a troubled man. It's okay to not understand, but did you TRY to understand?
Hamsandwichindahouse Valuable or not, just scroll down the comment section and see how people say they’re inspired or “waking up to their situation” because of her words. Unless you think helping one person isn’t helping, then that’s “valuable” to me. The psychological problem of some victims IS worth exploring, but this speaker chooses to talk about the abuser side of the problem, the signs and patterns. What’s wrong in that? If you’re genuinely interested in the mental health of victims, I’m sure there’re plenty other talks and articles. Why not research and read? I’ll be very happy to hear your findings. Sincerely.
Hamsandwichindahouse Moral Obligation? Seriously? I was intentionally avoiding to press the “victim-blaming” charges on you earlier but man you are seriously asking the victims to PREVENT and BE RESPONSIBLE for the damage instead of the abusers? You’re wrong about your clever suggestion. To learn more about the psychological problems that trouble the victims is exactly for the purpose of empathizing with them more, so that we, outsiders, can know how to effectively help them get out. The REAL SOLUTION to stop kids being beaten is to send the beater into fucking jail. I don’t even bother to mention how many mental problems of the victims are CAUSED by the abusers in the first place. Just google gaslighting if you don’t already know. “No sane people would stay” is just an arrogant assertion. Show me your reference then? One last time, ask what’s wrong with the abuser’s head and what can we do to prevent THEM from beating people, not the other way around.
Yes it does . I hated my mother a long time for staying . Hearing/ seeing your parents fight can be traumatized. That’s one of the main reasons why I say leave . And I hope I don’t sound harsh . If Marting Luther King said he wasn’t going to fight for equal opportunities for everyone because someone might kill him . We will probably still be segregated. Stop worrying about the future take control of the now . And go . Thanks for pointing that view out . Lots of typeos
@Josh M What you are saying is correct. Look up the CDC, studies from 2014. If you want names and details, listen to Paul Elam's video Domestic Violence - Women are half the problem.
I called that period in the beginning the "Cinderella syndrome", back when I thought all he needed was a loving woman to care for him, what he was doing was grooming me to be abused. Won't ever fall for the " .... and they lived happily ever after " again.
Such a clear message, especially about staying because who else will help him? Leaving was the hardest thing I have ever done. Raising four great kids as a single parent wasn't a cake walk either. I never remarried. Had opportunities, but It took me years to figure out how "my one great love" had become "the crazy love." By then I had become independent enough to be happy living a safe and single life. I'm nearly 80 now, but one marriage was enough.
How were you able to pull yourself and a clan of humans with you? I really would like to know. I feel like I've always been worthy of nothing but scraps. How did you re-find your self-worth?
@@SouchiMousy Well, as you just stated, you've never really had much self-worth. Probably not since you were very young and lost it to trauma. Still, you do express wanting more for yourself and that's a good sign that all hope is not lost. What you have to understand and then decide, is are you going to give yourself the chance for more and better, knowing you will have to go it alone, or are you going to stay and live your current life until you die? Whatever last bit of self-worth you have, girl, SUMMON it up and JUST DO IT!
@okayjackson587 thank you for sharing your story. It’s comforting to know that I’m not alone in being okay with and desiring to be alone moving forward.
Yes, we especially shouldn't pity grown women who choose violent relationships. They are grown adults and at least half the problem in any bad relationship
Wurmo no you certainly won't get laughed at if you phoned a domestic abuse helpline these people on the phones would be only to happy to help male or females who are being abused? Why say this.
Sandy DiVa I've been free for 5 years and 3 months. Leaving was the scariest thing I had ever done. It will always be a part of our lives. But it doesn't define us. You are so strong❤️
You're right you'll be more aware of the warning signs and be smarter the next time around. He took some of your innocence but now you're a survivor and can move forward. With the help of a therapist someone you could talk to and walk you through what happened giving you clarity. You're right you won't be the same but you gained so much more, you're wiser and stronger. And what he did to you will only destroy him, tell your story its yours to share now.
@@Emmah1243 I'm happy to have helped. Sometimes the things we don't understand now end up being the things that build us up and gives us character makes us stronger. That only comes from experience and glad you survived through it to inform and help others.
Morgan Steiner has published two books and made good money on this issue so she wants to perpetuate the false propaganda. Her story concerns a man who was mentally ill. There are mentally ill women in equal numbers but we don't hear about that. If you look at the data at domesticviolenceresearch (just google) you will find that half of perpetrators are female. If you watch an academic expert make a presentation (just google Dr Donald Dutton) you will find that half of perpetrators are female. DV mainly occurs in areas of poverty and/or drug use. DV has become a money making industry which seeks to paint males as perpetrators and females as victims. This false narrative is a big part of a larger money making scam. Almost all of government money goes to aid women only. If you listen to this video again you will find numerous references to women and girls as victims or mothers and daughters; as victims. Count the number of times you hear her talk of fathers, boys or sons as victims. Male victims are mentioned as if they don't matter and rarely occur. She also gives outrageously false percentages.
She did such a great job. I like how she outlines how dangerous it is to leave your abuser. That’s something we never think about, but she went about it the right way to tell everyone so she had a support group looking out for her.
My advice to new dates. Put a big boundary and if he react negative he is an abuser. At the beginning we always said yes to everything, tried to say No and see what happens.Narcissist don’t like boundaries. They think they are entitled to everything. Do you really need a partner?
Im leaving him in September....shshshsh im going quietly while he's at work...as peacful as I can...he will never find me again and talk me back to him... Im soooooo exhausted....he sucked the life out of me...he almost BROKE MY SPIRIT But GOD IS GOOD...the old me will Die And the new me will be born...im so excited and happpy n sad all at the same time. . ...but I UNDERSTAND...its time to move on.....💖💔💖
I understand where you are truly coming from. Here is a suggesting, it is up to you if you would like to do this or not. I would wait until he is at work, and slowly pack up your small stuff that he will not notice, rent a storage shed unit, slowly move your things in there a little bit at time. then I would go to the bank and set up a personal checking/savings account with just your name on it. ( if you do have a joint checking savings account. do a cash withdraw at the bank and then deposit into your own checking/savings account, go to the post office and get yourself a post office box for just you and your children only. On your last day that you are there and getting ready to move. If you have children have someone you trust watch them, well you and your family/friends move the big stuff out of there. You can also buy somethings at Walmart, Kmart, JcPenny's Sears for your new place. only things that you can replace. but keep your most valuable treasures, family treasures. when I am talking about buying new things I am saying like a coffeepot, toaster, can opener, microwave oven & etc; put it in your storage bin and do not tell anyone that you have as far as common friends, his family. Trust yourself and your own family... I really do understand what you are going through. Also get a prepaid debit card through GreenDot, NetSpend card. put money on there and keep it in a safe place.. I learned the hard way some people that I thought were my friends turned out to be people who stabbed me in the back... Needless to say I am no longer friends with them. I moved out of state to get away. I did move back to my home state, but only to a whole new part of the state where him/his family & his friends will not be able to find me. I am still in the planning stages of moving completely out of my home state for good. I am in the process of saving for it and getting me and my puppy out of here... Good Luck I really do hope that it works out for you..
You are very welcome.. I forgot to mention that you might want to buy food like your can & dry foods. ( the rest can wait until you are in your new place) also you might also want to stock up on your cleaning, personal, misc, laundry, pets, laundry supplies. you might even want to buy yourself a tool box and your own tools. just make sure you put all of this in your storage shed unit. if you would like to you can email me at kaylynn.connor@gmail.com I am glad that I could help . Good luck and take of yourself and your children/pets
You're strong, and you can do it. My dad is emotionally abusive to my sister, my mom and I. Everyone wants to leave, but we're scared and financially dependent on him.
Julia Dawnyel my boyfriend’s dad used to hit his mom and now my boyfriend has a bad temper... it’s scary that from seeing stuff like that it sticks with them and they see it as something normal :/
@@annngggxsame thing : my grandpa was abusive then my father too. My father abused us and mom especially so much.. and mom chose to stay because she saw nowhere to go, because the system then the 90' then the 2000 didn't show they'd do much- eventually some fines few months in jail and back to the same house so he can abuse some more.. He often abused me beating me in the head or head against the wall.. or broke my nose.. Once he strangled me in such fury.. he almost killed me.. I wanted to stop him hitting my mom. I was 18.. She never left and nowadays both me and my sis ( we're having our lives, we left house when we were in our early 20) have intensive anxiety and ptsd... My mom is a shiprek physically and psychologically ( emotionally) and recently ( last year) she was diagnosed with MS ( multiple sclerosis) with cerebral demielinisation... that's practically cerebral lesions.. i am so angry.. so so angry.. more than 30 years of narcissistic abuse.. I saw her often with head bruised ... Sigh.... Now she's 63.. and .. not sure how much she'll hold on.. He's still there, drinking like a pig and smoking. Even though he knows this is a nuisance to mom's health... And obviously "no one can intervene" as you're told by those in charge of protecting you.. because she didn't fill a complaint.. He abused her emotionally that she thinks she's nothing without him, or that she won't be able to manage the simplest thing without him... I rarely went back home since and I miss mom and we talk on the phone often. But I hurt so much because of all this and it's like she's not realising how much her decision or rather said nonnactuon ever since we were kids.. to leave him.. practically fucked up her life but also the life of her children. So my message to mothers and wifes and partners out there : don't stay " for the children" with an abusive partner, that's a cheap excuse. You need to address your doctor, police etc immediately when he hit you becaus eyou have proof, bruises and so on. Then and only then - unfortunately- the system can step up and do something. But dont stay until is too late. You deserve to be loved and have a peaceful life.. Take care of yourselves...
Fortunately, I got out before it escalated too far. But not without massive scaring. Scars you can’t see. The verbal abuse and isolation started long before the physical. I was told everyone thought I was dumb, and to keep my mouth shut even though I have two advanced degrees and he barely graduated high school. He was whittling away at my self esteem. From the moment we were married he stopped pretending he loved me. I was in a state of shock and kept thinking there was something I could do to “fix it”. That’s why I stayed. After all, I’d made a commitment in front of God and everyone. So I was determined to tough it out. I’m certain if I hadn’t left when I did though, I would have ended up in the hospital or worse. Wish I’d had more information and the internet back then. Thanks for your courageous message. 🥰
I had a similar experience. He also told me that I wasn't very pretty or smart and that I had no friends (I did have friends, thank God, and I have a degree in Math while he was still struggling with his first semester in college). He then started telling me "I want a divorce and I want you out of the house" and after hearing that several times a day for months, I wanted that too! I packed up and left - 3 "non friends" had given me copies of their house keys and said I could let myself in any time of day or night. He then fought the divorce. He refused to cooperate and tried to convince me that I couldn't divorce him without his signature. There was no internet in those days so I couldn't check to see if that was true, but I just couldn't believe that any society would force someone to stay in a marriage, so I had him served anyway, and got my divorce.
+Southern Charm It takes supporting people in person to have one tell the story, obviously after many years of denial of even sharing a word... each story is a very complicated and peculiar one.
She was fucked up in her head, too. That's why she stayed, she's no victim. She should make a talk that says "I was so fucked up in my head that I was attracted to abusive men, I had daddy issues and fucked up self-esteem. It is my fault for not being able to see the signs and leave him at the first sign. I am responsible for my own safety and I did not act on my instincts". That would sound more like an empowered woman, and not a victim.
I grew up in a house where hitting, yelling, staying quiet, remaining submissive, and belonging to a man meant family, proper lifestyle, and love. And I believed it for the first 23 years. I still do sometimes. For most of my life...its was our little family secret.
I can feel you though I realized early how abnormal it was and wasn't normal as my mum always told. Keep knowing yourself more and you'll do good....wishes
Abusers are not always charming at first. They are signs that are overlooked because we are young with no experience of encountering controlling men, sometimes our self esteem is low, and the abusers manipulate us by making us believe that we are doing a lot of things wrong that make them angry. I have been there, I know what I am talking about. And yes, if you leave, make sure he/she is not around and run as far as you can...go to the police, call a friend or a family member for help right away.
It's more than just being young and inexperienced. There is a biological effect in the brain the prevents tou from seeing red flags in someone you are emotionally bonded with. abusers love bomb in the beginning, catalyzing pair bonding. By the tine tye abuse starts, you're already literally blinded by love.
This was one of the most informative lectures on domestic abuse that i've ever heard. This woman is absolutely brilliant, strong, and articulate. I just wanted to also add that abuse is by no means restricted to romantic relationships, can and does certainly happen in platonic friendships just as often (but is commonly overlooked). Abuse truly knows no bounds.
Connor had a bad experience. I don’t understand why someone would not leave a violent relationship. I left a relationship that I believe my boyfriend was a person who I didn’t want to marry and I am asexual.
@@laurieberry162 sometimes it's not always easy to leave an abusive relationship.. esp when the "victim" (for lack of a better word) is reliant on this person financially or can't let go of feelings of attachment to this person
@@Stigmatix666 Let's say that they make up 15%. That's still a significant portion. (BTW, I don't believe that there is any way to find a truly accurate statistic.)
@@Stigmatix666 Women are typically smaller than men, so there is a greater cost (getting beat up) to acting out on violent impulses. I'm sure that there is a disparity for this reason alone
@@boboloko I'm a bigger guy than my ex gf obviously. But that matters nothing when she hit me over the head with a log, stabbed me and proceeded to strangle me. .
This is my sister's story, too. Unfortunately, she and her husband hid his monstrous behaviour from us for over 20 years; we found out the real story after her death and we are devasted.
I can't let my family know. It's not their job to take care of my mistake in marrying an abuser. I feel they have happy healthy lives I can't bare to share this much pain with them and my beautiful grandkids
@@kareninman2865 please don't feel that you are a burden to your loved ones. I can see how breaking your story can make you feel like dead weight to the people you love but I'm sure they will not ignore you for being a victim domestic violence and they are willing to help you out. The cost of staying with your abuser is way greater and the pain and harm will continue way longer than you see. No one close to you wants to see you harmed but you will need to break your silence to get help. Please realize that your life is valuable and any harm or violence done to you is never justifiable no matter how big or small the actions are. No abuse is ever okay. If you want to let someone know, I suggest calling in a discreet location where the abuser isn't aware. There are many hotlines out there ready to assist you and emergency services will be there to help you, there should be many out there. There is not shame in hiding suffering from domestic violence. Also, if your in immediate danger, please call 911. I know this is a long read but I hope you have the strength to pull yourself out of the situation. Sending prayers.
@@kareninman2865 you only feel like you’re unworthy of help or love bc of the abuse. It's not true. You are worthy. The ppl who love you would *not* want you to suffer... if someone was abusing one of your grandchildren you would do everything you could to protect them. YOU are worthy of the same love and protection ❤
I loved this…I left my abusive relationship 6 months ago and thankfully I was able to get out safely. I like that she outlined the steps of abuse because I realize now that I was able to get out at the stage where he was introducing the threat of violence. He had a gun that he liked to flaunt and he had threatened to break my arm at one point. I didn’t know I was being abused because he had never laid a hand on me. This gave me clarity.
You weren't being explicitly abused but you were in a fucked up relationship with a borderline psychotic partner. Glad you left but you could have left a lot sooner, boo.
Juanita Richards couldn’t agree more. I’ve been in this situation all my life since it’s my own dad who’s a narcissist and sociopath.... it’s taken me 26 years to seek help.
Morgan Steiner has published two books and made good money on this issue so she wants to perpetuate the false propaganda. Her story concerns a man who was mentally ill. There are mentally ill women in equal numbers but we don't hear about that. If you look at the data at domesticviolenceresearch (just google) you will find that half of perpetrators are female. If you watch an academic expert make a presentation (just google Dr Donald Dutton) you will find that half of perpetrators are female. DV mainly occurs in areas of poverty and/or drug use. DV has become a money making industry which seeks to paint males as perpetrators and females as victims. This false narrative is a big part of a larger money making scam. Almost all of government money goes to aid women only. If you listen to this video again you will find numerous references to women and girls as victims or mothers and daughters; as victims. Count the number of times you hear her talk of fathers, boys or sons as victims. Male victims are mentioned as if they don't matter and rarely occur. She also gives outrageously false percentages.
Sure thing. And they love bomb the F out of you at first to get their hooks in real deep too, and then when they start devaluing you, it hits you like a ton of bricks.
its easier with a lover but In my situation where its actually my mother. My only option is staying calm acting nice and polite while keeping boundaries and refusing small things to keep at bay
I just recently went through a traumatic situation with my sons father he held me hostage for 3 days wouldnt let me leave my home he beat and strangled me the whole time my 3 children were in the home he pulled bleach on me and spit on me i thought he loved me and now i am in a position where im mentally overwhelmed depressed and full of anxiety i cant wrap my mind around the fact i could be dead me and my 3 children ran out of my apartment to the leasing office they called the police... I am so thankful to be alive today even tho i suffer from mental pain i am blessed
Email me if you need anything Lauren.stanley.82@gmail.com! Ill send u my # and u can text me if you need anything! Do you have family who is helping you or close friends? I can just just be a supportive friend to you especially while you are going through this just in case you need someone to talk to! Or just someone to lend an ear, or money, clothes or whatever. My ex threatened to kill me and smoked a blunt in my car and I was terrified. I moved away and he had a spare key so I think he stalked me for a bit but I am okay! He'd lose his temper and shout in a rage and neighbors called police fairly often. He told me I couldn't leave him. I couldn't imagine how you feel, but I know God will give you strength and you can do anything with him! Also thank God for your kids! They saved you. They're heroes and you're a survivor. You're my hero too because after everything you still know you're blessed. I admire your strength. I want to help you if you need anything! I am so sorry that happened. I had mental suffering healing from mine. But in time God will heal everything! Keep seeking him and he sees you and what you're going through and he will help to put everything together! After a storm comes sunshine. Your sunny day is coming, and you'll have peace. God has good things for you. Are you away from him? Did you tell your parents? Are they helping you? Who are you staying with?... I also found yoga really helpful for helping with anxiety and depression....Okay I hope email me if you need anything or want to talk or anything or if there is anything I can do. Okay sending hugs and prayers!! Your friend, Lauren
Also, if you are planning to leave an abusive partner, keep your plans silent....leave when they are gone from the home....only tell those you can trust!!!
Was psychologically abused by my mother for most my life. She used to degrade me, use my weaknesses as starting points, and get her partner to always side with her (out of fear). Used to be embarrassed of me, making me not walk with her in public. Told everyone my darkest secrets. Even when I tried to commit suicide at 8 years old, she would tell me "you were just playing around". I'm on better terms with her now at 24 but I've dealt with alot of damage from the way she would treat me.
I could have written this, except for the gun. I was never 'hit' but was shoved, raped, and lots of verbal abuse. I also didn't know I was abused. I thought it was my fault for everything - until he was taking off his belt to whip my daughter because she was listening to us fight. I ran to the kitchen, picked up a butcher knife and turned to kill him. He had followed me downstairs and I think my fighting back shocked him. I packed up and moved back to the town where my family lived. (He had moved me from Kansas to Ohio, away from family and friends.) I, too, am married to a very gentle man - after being divorced for 10 years. Domestic violence stories are not very different. I've shared my story many times and hope it has helped others going through it today. Thank you for sharing your story.
People always talk as if abusers PLAN each step. I think very few abusers actually plan it. It’s a learned behavior, and it happens slowly over time. A lot of abusers see that behavior as normal and acceptable. They justify it to themselves, and truly believe they aren’t in the wrong. A lot of abusers don’t think they’re abusive.
Up until now I have been feeling soooo stupid and so, so ashamed of myself for having let a guy like that treat me like this. I graduated with honors from NYU, I battled countless challenges in my life, I have always prided myself with being a strong, independent woman. And it's just like you said! He just looked so sweet. He had a forever-16 face. He used to idolize me in the early stages of our relationship. And then this happened to me and, even worse, I LET it happen. I am so relieved to see how it really works. As with everything else that happened in the relationship, I felt guilty for everything. On the road to recovery now.
She didn t answer the question why was she deceived despite the signs ? I still don t get it. I do only if she had no financial resources,or she s physically dependent but not in her case When she can afford it to live by herself. So what is it?
@@greatstuff5865 There is no deception. It is obvious they are a deeply troubled person. The caring one can plainly see they were not loved as a child and thinks they can be healed into betterment by being loved. A factor is having too high a tolerance for harmful behavior, maybe because the caring one was exposed to a harmful relative growing up, so it is familiar and they have coping skills to live with it. Problemmatic people are complicated and high maintenance. Women, especially are socialized to be nurturers. If you want better understanding of the dynamics, volunteer at a domestic violence shelter. The patterns will be plain to see.
Oh my gosh, this is my story. I met my ex at 18 and just like you he wad an absolute gentleman in the beginning. It started with him being in control, to verbal abuse then physical abuse. My last straw was when he bought a gun. I started planning my way out and was lucky enough to leave. Thank you for breaking the silence.
How do I get out as a stay at home mom of two little ones and no job. And he’s a powerful influential man in the community. I’m scared. No one would believe me.
@@Portia1416 Save as much money you can. Plan every detail of your escape plan. Plan where you will live, how you will get there, how you will earn money when you get there. One day when he's out, leave without him knowing and without telling anyone in your community or who would tell him.
29 years. It took me 29 years to get the courage to leave. I left with nothing....except my life. I live with the guilt and regret that it took me so long to leave and my children grew up watching me get beaten,choked,threatened, controlled,isolated, shot at, and constantly miserable. ( Choking was the worst. If you've never been choked until you lose consciousness then you cannot understand the terror. )I have asked my children to forgive me and I can only hope that they have. If you're in an abusive relationship, don't let it take you 29 years to leave.
People asked me why I stayed with my boyfriend . All of what she said was right on. He terrified me so much when I left stalking - threats- etc. that I decided I felt safer when I was with him so I returned so I could see him right in front of me. The watching over my shoulder constantly was extremely stressful. The isolation is so very true. Once I was “allowed” to go to my mothers on Christmas. When I returned he flipped his switch and said I disrespected him for going. He beat me on Christmas. Thank Goodness I left for good 3 years ago and he moved away.
''It's incredibly dangerous to leave an abuser'' i broke down in tears when she said that, i always tell my friends i can not leave but never knew how to exactly explain why! i am right now typing with one hand because my partner broke my right hand fingers....
Its been 2 months since you wrote this. If you are still with him, please leave him. If you have nowhere else to go, go to a shelter.. If you are scared he will not leave you alone, collect evidence and contact the authorities....or just disappear Take action, you are the only one who can save you.
Love your life. The most important thing, even more important than your so called husband. Ask yourself Does your life deserve it. One life to live, One chance to escape. Escape at any cost, any cost. What the fucking society is there if it couldn't help a lady to escape violence, escape life threat. Sorry for my Creative English.
Gabriel Knight Sexist? I didn't get that from this talk. She was abused, and she shared her story. If a male victim of domestic violence did a talk, I would call him brave, as well. I wouldn't call him disgusting. Her willingness to share has undoubtedly helped many, already. She shouldn't be berated for it.
ShellHawksNest If somebody who was raped or abused shares his story that´s one thing. But coming up with invented "facts" is simply disgusting. Right from the start, this sexist woman stated that men are the perpetrators of DV in 85% of the cases. This woman is either uninformed, which is pretty bad, when you give a public speech. She should at least done her homework. Or she wants to portray men as the perpetrators and women in general as the victims. Now what reasons could she have to do such a thing? Maybe because the victim-industry can be very lucrative and because many women make a living by playing the victim-card, thus getting funded to do "important studies on violence against women". She can now write books about it and travel from talkshow to talkshow. Bottom line: She is either unprofessional and very stupid. Or she is a disgusting and sexist professional victim who uses lies to further her agenda. This article might help you. (Found after a few seconds of searching) There is much more info availlable if only you are willing to invest 30 minutes of research. www.saveservices.org/2012/02/cdc-study-more-men-than-women-victims-of-partner-abuse/
Scary, eye-opening and well delivered. Lockdown has resulted in a huge spike in abuse so this message of 'abuse only survives in silence' is all the more important.
I grew up with domestic violence. My earliest memory of my father verbally and physically abusing my mother was when I was 8. My siblings and I would frequently defend our mother and block the blows. And our dad would more often than not stop when the children intervene. I know my father deserves all my resentment and the victim is not to blame, but I can't help resenting my mother. For staying in an abusive relationship and letting her children grow up in such an environment. And for making us feel guilty because we're the main reason she stayed. And then I hate myself for feeling this resentment. And so this video made me understand my mother more. So thank you.
Blame isn't the right word. However she holds responsibility in upholding your violent childhood. Still, you are on the right path searching yourself for forgiveness on her part.
Same story. My brother is very unsound and abuses his wife. I feel sorry that my sister-in-law did not leave and subjected her 4 children to growing up in a very toxic household.
you made me cry cuz i am the mother who is helpless and i have to stay cuz i do not have an option that is safe for kids i wish my kids would not hate me
You have to stay? Nah. Stop using your children as an excuse to not do what you know is right. Because guess what? Your children are NOT safe in your current situation. The emotional damage and trauma you are inflicting on them by submitting to an abusive partner and having them witness the abuse and your fucked up relationship is grievous to their mental and emotional health. You could be doing long-term, possibly irreparable damage by staying. GET REAL HELP.
He was 35 and I was 18. Now he’s 37 and I am 20. Am young and have to live my life. I can get back those 15kilos I lost but if I stay I will lose my future. Am leaving this week. Am so happy. I don’t even love him anymore. I think I was just looking for comfort. I was young and dumb. Still young but don’t wanna say it anymore. Am leaving this week !!! This was and will be the worse part of my life. I promise myself I’ll never be in this case anymore. Édit : I leeeeeeft !! 😩😍😂 why didn’t I do it earlier ? Freedom is so good. Now am better. 💞thank u
No these people are abusive from the start you are just unaware. They are constantly doing abusive things that you are unaware of. You are the one they can do it to and get away with it.
No - you are aware - you pick them. Think about it - battering is kind of rare - like the ability to play the violin. If you knew a person who had serial relationships with violin players, you'd think they had a thing for violin players. Same with domestic abuse - the victims pick them.
actually they pick each other. Put 100 people in a room, and by the end of the evening, the abuser and his future victim will have spotted on another and started talking. It's creepy to think about it but when there's a pattern of abuse (family history, ex-partners, etc.) in the partner's lives, the unconscious attraction/recognition is strong and immediate ... Sad but true.
I remember being ashamed. I hid it from everyone. It lasted 15 years. I am now happily re-married to the kindest most respectful man and I hope this gives hope to anyone who might be going through this right now. Get the help you need NOW. Do not tell your abuser what you plan to do. Get advice from those who are trained in dealing with this, from the local refuge centres who deal with domestic violence and from the police. Tell only trusted friends and family. You deserve a happy fear free life
This is why it is so important to see the signs early on of their character and not to brush them off but leave before it starts. Also knowing what a healthy adult relationship is.
Did you even listen to her??? She said there were no early signs. And in my case, there weren’t either. Everything was beautiful for quite a while. My situation was not nearly as egregious as hers but I’d be lying if I said it wasn’t abuse.
@@kassandrakid9440 Unless your I.Q. is =47 then there are ALWAYS signs... Unless he HIT HIS HEAD, developed Dementia, or a DRUG PROBLEM he is a human being not a Marvel comic Super Villain...Are you DAFT
@@2Bad4YOUuu Wow. So insulting my intelligence based on there not being red flags??? And I don’t know if the “he” you’re referring to is her abuser or mine. In the case of mine, he actually DID have a head injury that resulted from a car accident and eventually developed serious substance abuse problems. I do believe those two things did contribute to his abusive behavior but they aren’t the only things. He developed a temper over time that ABSOLUTELY was not present for the several years of our relationship. When I say that there were no warning signs, I mean there were no warning signs. But feel free to continue to insult me. Very mature.
Morgan Steiner has published two books and made good money on this issue so she wants to perpetuate the false propaganda. Her story concerns a man who was mentally ill. There are mentally ill women in equal numbers but we don't hear about that. If you look at the data at domesticviolenceresearch (just google) you will find that half of perpetrators are female. If you watch an academic expert make a presentation (just google Dr Donald Dutton) you will find that half of perpetrators are female. DV mainly occurs in areas of poverty and/or drug use. DV has become a money making industry which seeks to paint males as perpetrators and females as victims. This false narrative is a big part of a larger money making scam. Almost all of government money goes to aid women only. If you listen to this video again you will find numerous references to women and girls as victims or mothers and daughters; as victims. Count the number of times you hear her talk of fathers, boys or sons as victims. Male victims are mentioned as if they don't matter and rarely occur. She also gives outrageously false percentages.
@@stevegcq i agree with you some part. DV like any violence is very complex. Blame or point out abuser and label men is dangerous. I dont thibk is about gender but human condition.
This is a powerful TED Talk. What particularly stood out to me were two things: first, the demographics the presenter shared about how domestic violence victims transcend race, class, and sometimes gender. Second, how she explained the transition her first abusive husband demonstrated, from appearing to be someone who is sweet, smart, sensitive, and who'd overcome a history of abuse at the hands of his stepfather, to gradually acting abusive and violent toward her. Many people from the outside who've never been victims of domestic violence often judge victims by assuming they are weak or were stupid to choose a partner who would treat them so poorly. Little do they realize, the signs of an abuser are not always apparent for quite a while. And, abusive relationships are complicated because the abuser can behave nicely, lovingly, or generously part of the time, too. Plus, when you could lose financial control, child custody, or your life, it's harder to leave, change your name, hide your kids, and relocate.
EXACTLY…Men have the MONEY & the power. Most women who are murdered in the US, it’s by the husband or boyfriend….the danger is real! When getting into a relationship, Abusers will put on a good show until you’re trapped, as in married.
Exactly. Some have no money or anywhere to go. Where are they gonna take the kids? And if he hunts them down? Some women are ready to leave on an emotional level; they physically & financially cannot.
I am at almost 2 months free from a 4 year abusive relationship. It was so hard to leave. I thought I could love us and behave to the point of making it stop. I was scared to leave , the danger, my son, my work equipment was tethered to our apartment. And i couldn't leave and lose my job. I couldn't take care of our kid without it. I couldn't handle the stress of breaking the normalcy and routine of everyday life. I just wanted to take the abuse and move on like nothing happened. I left on a Tuesday when he took a pole and beat me to the point of broken bones. I haven't went back. I don't struggle with wanting to go back. But I really just cannot take the PTSD. everything is triggering. My home is filled with items used to abuse me. Even my son's toys. I constantly disassociate and lose memory. I constantly feel sick to my stomach. I figured out how to escape physically. But am so lost on how to actually repair myself... Just needed the vent.
I'm currently at the tail end of my 14yr marriage to a (covert narcissist) I also have dissociated due to C-ptsd and its scary! I just wanted to share that EFT-aka (emotional freedom technique) free online resource and you can do it at home.. it helps reset your Vegas nerve.. we are always in fight or flight mode..my resting heart rate will be 130 when I'm ruminating on the pain and having children with these abusers isn't easy..as it's always a game also look into RET therapy I'm going the first of the year.. stay strong!
PTSD is extremely stressful and challenging. Neither the abuse nor the PTSD are your fault. Pray to God for help and direction, and carefully try the suggestions you receive. Pray to God for comfort and strength. I will pray for you, too.
You can also contact your county mental health services. They can provide free or low fee based counseling or therapy. Your county may also have a domestic violence center for counseling or therapies. I wish you the best and God bless you!
If I were you I would throw everything away and rebuy everything little by little from scratch. It sounds extreme but I’m doing this as well even though I’m not in your situation. I just want a fresh start is all! Please consider getting rid of the triggering items. It will be a physical manifestation of your new life. Good luck!
My best friend was brutally murdered by her abusive ex. She tried to get away from him but he would stalk and harass her. He beat her and shot her in the head. Me and her mother want to make stricter stalking laws can you help us?
I am so deeply sorry for your loss. Everyone needs to be careful of men who put tracking devices on the cars or phones of the partner they abuse, a common tactic to stalk.
I am so sorry for your loss.. I agree with you Bobbi Jo. My first ex-husband would sit in his car and watch the house where my children and I were living. I had a friend move in there with me. She even saw him sitting out there.. It is a scary thought let alone to be happening . I still feel at times that there is someone watching me, even though I am far away from them.. Every now and then I get that feeling that someone is out there watching me and every move I make... They can track your every movement with a tracking device on your car, on your phone. If you really need to have a cellphone then get a burner phone from any store... they can not track them... Again I am so sorry for your loss.
You don’t have to be silent no more ladies and gentlemen. Hurt people hurt people and you don’t have to go through abuse with anyone that treats you bad. May God be with you all
No kidding, Darren. The problem is that everyone likes to tell people what they should do...instead of helping! She needs a plan and safe people to help her execute that plan. See my other bomment.
@@nitalightell336 exactly.. everyone keeps telling me “just leave” LOL it doesn’t work like that… stupid fucks don’t get it.. me leaving means death sentence.. I’m fucked
Why do you need that? There really is no point in hoping for that day, just do things for yourself and be happy by yourself. Dont wait or hope for any man.
I remember making peace with the idea that I was going to get killed regardless if I had stayed or if leave. Everything that I was afraid of happened to me he showed up to my job and beat me in front of everyone and no one did anything to stop him he showed up to my house drunk and no one called the police and finally his whole family knew and no one stopped him. I am happy to be alive and after years of therapy I have been able to forgive myself
About no one helping you on the job, from my experience, as a MAN, if you try to break up the fight WITHOUT the victim asking you do so, as soon as you intervene, they gonna double tag you. She will slap you, he will punch you and both of them will walk home happily ever after while you are on the ground being laughed at by bystanders. It is better to say away honestly.
40 plus years on and I still bear the emotional scars, (as well as the physical ones)..you are soooo right... we do need to talk about it, especially to our children.
I'm surprised she didn't speak very much about the cycle of "please forgive me, I'll never do it again", and then another beating. Any folks out there in an abusive relationship....my thoughts and best hopes to you. Be strong. Be of good courage.
@@likemycommentifyouwantareply OK! Thank you. I sympathize with abuse victims patently, but the lack of self-accountability and their not understanding their culpability in being manipulated is stupefying.
I didn’t realize how hard it would be. I was being given money which I didn’t realize was a form of abuse to financially be independent on him. It’s so hard but I treat is like AA and I’m gonna get through this.
Covert narcissistic abuse is one of the worst things you’ll ever have to go through. My ex never hit me once. He never called me a name either. He used force but never hit me or beat me. The neglect, the comparing, the invalidation, mind games, gaslighting and mental torment in between super positive reinforcement, is enough to mess you up and be internally broken for a while. You will never get it until you’re actually in it.
This was a powerful talk. Thank you, Leslie, for the courage to speak out about this. I was on the cusp of this type of violence before I simply moved away without telling him where I went. It was one of the scariest and best decisions I've ever made.
The most dangerous time in an abusive relationship is when the abused person tries to leave. Oh and abuse affects every single demographic in America and it has to stop. 😊
Dear.....abuse STOPS when we stop tolerating bad behavior like abuse. The reason why women never get into an abusive relationship is because they don't tolerate it. Period.
@@py528 That was cruel. He was the sweetest talker you ever heard, I never thought he would be abusive until I was pregnant. BTW, that is when abuse starts a lot of the time. Absolutely nobody knows exactly how a person will act until they live with them. I left as soon as I could and that was one year after we married. I didn't put up with it but I had to leave carefully, I kicked him out of my Grandma's house while my 3 large Uncles were there for a visit and I told him, "hit me now you cowardly so and so." I can't repeat it here. He left with a pillow case and his clothes. I got everything I wanted in the divorce. He was forced to pay for all the bills incurred during the marriage. I didn't "tolerate" anything. I left and I made him pay when I did. It's not so easy for every woman, I was raised by two very strong women who taught me that I don't have to put up with abuse. My Grandma and my Mom.
Wow. She hit the nail on the head. I was in an abusive relationship for 8 years. He charmed and seduced me and my family, isolated me from my friends so I had no one to turn to, started abusing me, and constantly blamed me for his outbursts. When he got mad and hit me with household things, it was MY FAULT because I pissed him off. It's been 4 years I've been free to heal, and it's been so much inner work and therapy to get to a place of strength and softness. I'm happy I'm here with my soul and my heart.
I'm a man and I'm experiencing this kind of treatment. I'm stuck and trying to ride the storm. It's incredibly complex with very good and very bad. It would already seem to be an impossible situation but I'm in a foreign country and got a baby too. Without being too naive, I still hope some divine or civil intervention will come to help all of us and transform the situation.
@@mec1 Please take care ! God bless you and your child 🙏💞 Abuse is abuse regardless of one's gender. It's been a year since your comment, I pray you and your child are safe!
@@mec1 We can't wait on miracles, boo. Because, even if they do come, they are so rare, it's likely we won't be the lucky chosen one. We need to MAKE the decision for ourselves and SEEK out help if necessary.
We stay because we get so trampled down , our self esteem becomes non existent. We are convinced beyond a shadow of a doubt that if we walk out the door we will never survive and no one will ever want us. The truth is, we will never survive if we stay. Quite a catch 22.
My husband/abuser was carrying a gun daily, and he was the one you called for help...yes he was a police officer. My only defense was to leave quietly and quickly. He remarried immediately, I feel sorry for her.
@@rasher331 When running from abuse...certain Police were abusive to me also.I didnt do anything about it because I was not even able to deal with husband yet. Also my tolerance was very high for abuse,I became agressive,not scared of any man! Adrenaline ect you get screwed up.....I had children I had to get away! Actually if I had no children I wonder if I would have left for good. I yhink he was trying to get rid of me.I was loyal old fashionedect...I think he already had n other......more to this ...too long too lengthy....... one cop was choking me ,one rubbed my stomache circular strokes after slamming me to ground...yes I was being fiesty but at that time in my life I fought.......anger issues from prolonged abuse.....
They follow you. My father did it to my mother he didn't love any of us but wouldn't leave or let us go. When we finally escaped but he followed.. The instant my ex started abusing me i left. He stalked me for 12 months and would even demand to see me when i was at work. I had to move to the other side of the country to get away. If you have to go DO NOT TELL ANYONE other than your most trusted family and friends that are ACTIVELY trying to help you. Abusers are the most cunning of con men and master manipulators their trap is laid and "nice guy" image set long before the Abuse starts. NO ONE KNOWS and most will not believe the reality of what living with that person truly is. But after you are gone i can assure you that people soon wake-up to who they really are when they start tearing through everyones lives looking for you.
Story of my life. Left after 19 years and the stalking was horrifying - at work, at church, the kids' schools, grocery shopping, on all my social media accounts (he even cloned my accounts) Even restraint order did not deter him. Police had to patrol our neighbourhood at night after he'd tried to break into our house several times. Nobody believed me because he was such a great, kind, thoughtful, funny guy. I was a strong, financially stable, educated fine woman - but it took me years to say "Wait a minute. This is not right". He's no longer in the picture now but I'm still struggling with the PTSD from the whole nightmare
Kirsty Lyons my abuser is still stalking me. It feels like my past is coming back to haunt me, he abandoned me for a year but came back, I’ve deleted whole apps just to try to avoid communication with him
I grew up in an physically and emotionally abusive Home. People who have never lived through it don't understand how much power the abuser has through manipulation and intimidation. You are Brave and wise.
But being a child at home, having no autonomy and agency of having to be there and being an adult who makes sequential decisions, putting oneself in an abusive space, is vastly different.
It's never easy grow up in a hectic household, where everyone seems to make you feel as though you are small and inadequate, that nothing you do matters and how nobody ever cares about what you think or feel; it's always about the abusers, no matter how much they screwed over the family or whether they deserve special treatment. Abuse is only as powerful as the people involved in it, and unfortunately, most people in a hard situation like that prefer to be an enabler than just trying to fix their problems. That's why we need to absorb as much information as we can, deconstructing all the harsh lessons we were taught and try to make a better place for the new generation, so they won't have to go through the same things we did. I give this message to those struggling in abusive households and communities.
I went through that abuse for 38 Years ... was not grant nor allow any independence or to live my own individuality I was never allow to have a job BUT to be a wife, a mother, a gardener and maid Currently after I divorced my ex, I found myself in exactly the same relationship ... but even worse this time I'm leaving in two days time and then I'm done
i fear that one of my siblings may turn into an abuser. They're verbally abusive already and unshameful about it. Our biological father is a domestic abuser and cycles repeat. But if this becomes the future, I'll be there to pull the leash and act.
I was called an abuser by a friend online for calling my wife stupid in a gaming event. It wasn't a problem when she said something similar in return. Heck, some people might appear abusive but use words with affectation. Then there are those who really are just angry all the time and say and do things they ought not to. In my case "Cmon, don't be a silly sausage. You're just being stupid" was affectation. A bit of fun. In your sibling's case perhaps it might be more like "You're fucking stupid. You can't do anything right". Does it seem more like that?
“Abuse thrives in silence”. Excellent. That statement sums it up.
- HE’S DEAD NOW.
Morgan Steiner has published two books and made good money on this issue so she wants to perpetuate the false propaganda. Her story concerns a man who was mentally ill. There are mentally ill women in equal numbers but we don't hear about that.
If you look at the data at domesticviolenceresearch (just google) you will find that half of perpetrators are female.
If you watch an academic expert make a presentation (just google Dr Donald Dutton) you will find that half of perpetrators are female.
DV mainly occurs in areas of poverty and/or drug use. DV has become a money making industry which seeks to paint males as perpetrators and females as victims. This false narrative is a big part of a larger money making scam. Almost all of government money goes to aid women only.
If you listen to this video again you will find numerous references to women and girls as victims or mothers and daughters; as victims. Count the number of times you hear her talk of fathers, boys or sons as victims. Male victims are mentioned as if they don't matter and rarely occur. She also gives outrageously false percentages.
@@stevegcq it is a fact that half of perpartrators are women, and the other half are men. Then there are other kind, women and men who are equaly as good, communicating and collaborating with each other for greater success without the drama and wars. I am for that other kind of beings who come to resolution without arguments and fighting. Thank you
@@somyan8540 Well done. It is difficult for many people because the education system is indoctrinating females to believe in an imaginary evil patriarchy that is trying to oppress women. This is false of course, most men are subservient to women. I researched to find out why feminism is so extreme and why they have so much power. The answer is explained in the video showing Breitbart talking about the Kalergi plan, the title is, *Andrew Breitbart on the Frankfurt School of Cultural Marxism (Jun 14 ,2011)* (mWgkYv-JOGA)..
@@hamsandwichindahouse so right
The part where she said she didn't think of herself as a victim; she was a strong, independent woman who was helping a troubled man...I think I just woke up to my current situation.
Tiger Lily She was an enabler.
Rae Amelia
yeah and your icon speaks for its self XD
+Rae Amelia huh...sounds exactly like 50 shades of grey. interesting.
+d sar Not all abuser are the typical thug type though.... My abuser was a total nerd and, at first, a nice guy. No one deserves to be beaten by someone they love, by someone that claims that they love you. For me it was so hard to leave because i thought like you, that only bad boys abuse, and this guy was a nice guy, but now i have scars that constantly reminds me of how wrong i was... Also, the majority of abusers are people you trust, and like she said in the video, the violence comes after a while, when you no longer have the strength or bravery to leave...
+d sar you clearly did not watch the video.
One thing she left out. Abusers always make you feel like its your fault and you are the crazy one.
Very true
Absolutely
True, they didn't accept explanation, and didn't accept their fault. I am struggling with it now for almost 3 years
Read my comment and tell me if I’m right
Exactly!
My best friend finally got enough courage to pack her bags and leave her abusive husband. He shot her to death before she reached the door. If you are in an abusive relationship please make a safe plan to leave and never speak a word of it to him. Leave when he is not home and never go back. The most dangerous thing you can do is let him know you want to leave
I totally agree. Have a plan, be smart....
Make sure there is no trace of you on social media. If staying with parents make sure doors windows and such are barred up with camera systems. And consistently change your number. And have hope that person will stop. Knowing they can’t have what they had before. They move on to another which in my case she married and karma is still biting her in the butt. I thank god that it finished after 14 years of being together. Tho she may have won the battle and the war she didn’t get my wil l to move forward and experience my new life in a whole light.
I'm sorry for your loss.
So sorry. That’s horrible
She needs a support system, very few can do it alone!
I thought I wasn't with an abuser because I was doing everything to prevent them from getting mad. I didn't realize that that was abuse.
PoodleParti I needed to c this
PoodleParti - True. Start planning a way out.
PoodleParti wow i needed this..
So true, my ex was the shouting, I would keep him happy for him not to shout, walking on egg shells all the time, the threats if u left x
@Amanda Bee Same and makes me feel sick and ashamed about my life and my lack of courage to leave.
My husband said he turned violent because I made him mad. And this was my fault for making him mad. I was confused once but now I understand that every act of violence is a choice, and I’m not responsible for his choice of actions.
Do you have an escape plan?
You would have provoked him.
@@jahangirsamtio8690 shut up, dummy
@@faniceangatia915 need to run?
@@faniceangatia915 Know of a local shelter?
Ummm. I hate that people ask "Why does she stay?".. The much better question is "Why does he hit her?"
Morgan Steiner has published two books and made good money on this issue so she wants to perpetuate the false propaganda. Her story concerns a man who was mentally ill. There are mentally ill women in equal numbers but we don't hear about that.
If you look at the data at domesticviolenceresearch (just google) you will find that half of perpetrators are female.
If you watch an academic expert make a presentation (just google Dr Donald Dutton) you will find that half of perpetrators are female.
DV mainly occurs in areas of poverty and/or drug use. DV has become a money making industry which seeks to paint males as perpetrators and females as victims. This false narrative is a big part of a larger money making scam. Almost all of government money goes to aid women only.
If you listen to this video again you will find numerous references to 'women and girls' as victims or 'mothers and daughters' as victims. Count the number of times you hear her talk of fathers, boys or sons as victims. Male victims are mentioned as if they don't matter and rarely occur. She also gives outrageously false percentages.
Blague mauritien
That not asking the right questions hurts plenty, abusers continue to elude accountability and the victim shaming is perpetuated when the wrong questions continue to be asked.
The most common reason is a mental disorder called BPD. Please look it up.
Rush Rush hun noo it dosnt matter why she hit her because there's no reason too hit her
I left an abusive relationship. I now have zero tolerance of abuse, that's how much I changed.
Good for you!
It's all about having a zero tolerance to abuse that breaks the cycle and helps start the healing process. 👏👏
Work! We all should give one another the space and safety to speak honestly about abuse. Especially those of us who experienced it in childhood and deserve therapy to help us navigate the trauma we might continue to hold onto. Because while we might not get into abusive relationships, untreated trauma can manifest itself in damaging ways and perspectives as adults.
How did you get to that place?
Nice work just don't turn into an amber heard and lie on men now
Domestic Abuse isn't always physical.
SUZANNE Arena
👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
Mhm
SUZANNE Arena -all too true....emotional violence and all the other titles under the banner of family violence these days are equally and sometimes even more dangerous and are so destructive to the very depth of one’s being and through also being largely hidden and designed in such a specific was that it creates a self actualising self perpetual destruction of a person on every single part of what makes them who they are- pure evil - I cringe to think of what kind of trauma a person has themselves suffered that they have reacted by delivering this kind of malicious intention towards anyone.....
exactly. domestic abuse is often emotional and psychological, which is invisible but equally devastating.
Yes
Women are not taught to just walk-away. We are taught to stay, work it out because the unknown is scary. We are taught that the things we have are so much more important than the way we feel.
Well said Ashley, this is true.
Ashley Powers - for generations... why are we not taught to trust our feelings, our gut and our intuition? Why is it “reasoned” out of us... to discount what your body and spidey sense and intuition are telling us ?
I think it is a way to make us lower our defenses, so we are wide open for exploitation and abuse for those who cash in on that.
How do you know that you raised your daughter (or son) right ? They will not give people more than one or two chances maximum - no more benefit of doubt BS after that. Protecting yourself is praised and held up.
And follow your gut when you don’t trust someone.
@Josh M i agree however, if u cant work it out.....WALK AWAY.....yes its hard to let go bc of feelings but A HAPPY LIFE deserve so much better bc it begins with a HEALTHY LIFE'S JOURNEY
True, but as Leslie said, leaving also puts you in mortal danger and you have to keep the practicalities in mind. In abuse situations, the woman often has no money at all, and she may not have a car. How is she going to get away, where is she going to go to and how is she going to survive without instantly putting herself at risk of abuse by someone else, when she needs a place to stay and income. Also, Leslie told everyone about the abuse one day, and apparently everyone believed her, but what happens very often is that nobody believes the woman because "he is such a wonderful guy" in public. "And even if he ever did raise a hand, well, then she must have provoked him."
So true
This video is a video that has been permanently ingrained in my mind for the past two years. Two years ago when I first watch this video I was in an abusive relationship. This video played a major role in giving me the courage to leave, and for that I will be forever grateful, watching this video was a major turning point in my life.
dana holtzman I’ve been happy for a month but I had a slip up last night. I came back to this video because it was this video that made me realize why I stayed before
Good for you Dana. Hope your still out
Very proud of you. If it helped only you then it was worth everything
Dana I wish you all the best!
I wish I was that brave to leave
In my experience, domestic violence is a cycle. A husband attacks, is sorry, and in that sorrow you get a glimpse of the man you love. Then the tension starts and the violence is repeated. By the time you are battered, you have no friends, no job and are trapped in the destructive circle of trying to please the impossible. Nothing you ever do will be right, so round and round you go until something breaks. Die or find the strength from somewhere to get out.
Very well described
My husband was never nice to me or felt remorse for hitting me. And despite this even I still stayed.
Emotional abuse isn't cyclical. It's daily. And you don't even get a honeymoon phase, because the abusive behavior is never acknowledged to have taken place. Or it happened, but it wasn't that bad.
@@laurenbatson5918 agree
Yes. That's my situation. Add to that my age, being disabled, very little money, and no place that has room. It terrifies me that the only place I have to go right now is the streets. So I just stay back in my room, which serves as my domestic violence shelter 💔😞😭
When I was splitting with my ex husband, I was seeking advice from a police officer friend of mine and he said “I don’t care what he says or what he tries to make you think, NEVER be alone with him. Not even in a parked car at a shopping center. Nothing is private enough. Remember, he is a wounded dog and even wounded dogs bite their owners”. It saved my life. My ex tried everything to get me alone, even pointing out how public certain places were when technically they really weren’t.
That's great. When I went to the police to get a restraining order from my violent ex, he said I should be nice to him and not make him angry. He said that there are too many people leaving marriages too quickly! So I went to another police station, but couldn't even get past the front desk to speak to the DV unit, because the person said they don't give out restraining orders "willy nilly". So I went to another, who said I should just call the police if he comes to the front door and refuses to leave. No help.
@@Tamarahope77 that's sad. I'm so sorry!
It's awesome that you had that friend! I'm glad you stayed safe!
@@Tamarahope77 my first 2 attempts at restraining orders were denied with a similar attitude. Some officers are good with DV, but many aren't. They need better training for starters. Are you doing ok now?
@@Tamarahope77 hopefully its better now. I know a lot of cops are jaded with dv because a lot of women return to an abusive relationship and there's nothing they can do about it.
I walked away from my husband when he began physically abusing me and I never went back. I credit my father. From a very young age, my father taught me that a man who hits a woman is not a man. Those words have stuck with me throughout my life. I think all fathers should teach their daughters this lesson.
What happens when the abuser is your father? He has been physically abusive to me and my mother for years but his best act is that he's great at abusing me verbally, manipulating me financially/mentally and I am constantly living with the fear that he will throw me out of the apartment if I don't behave the way he wants me to. I have to stay quiet, always locked in my room. It feels like I am always walking on egg shells, always on the edge of being yelled at or just slapped. After every fight he buys a lot of food, acts overly nice and leaves me alone for a while, this lasts for around two weeks, then he's back at his usual self, which is violent, crazy eyes, and passive-aggressive behavior. And the worst part is that in public he displays an extremely charming, overly polite and funny personality. You wouldn't even think he's actually capable of this.
@@TheKorcik You don't say how old you are.
I have two daughters. I started telling them from a very young age that there is no such thing as "three strike rule". The rule is, even if you just think he might hit you, leave now, not tomorrow, not next week, don't stop to "talk it out", and never believe protestations of "it won't happen again". Get out now.
Thank you. A women who isn’t gonna stand for that bullshit
Fathers should also teach their sons
This woman deserved a standing ovation for she spoke only truth.
1k gave it thumbs down. Why?
Morgan Steiner has published two books and made good money on this issue so she wants to perpetuate the false propaganda. Her story concerns a man who was mentally ill. There are mentally ill women in equal numbers but we don't hear about that.
If you look at the data at domesticviolenceresearch (just google) you will find that half of perpetrators are female.
If you watch an academic expert make a presentation (just search for *Dr Donald Dutton)* you will find that half of perpetrators are female.
DV mainly occurs in areas of poverty and/or drug use. DV has become a money making industry which seeks to paint males as perpetrators and females as victims. This false narrative is a big part of a larger money making scam. Almost all of government money goes to aid women only.
If you listen to this video again you will find numerous references to 'women and girls' as victims or 'mothers and daughters' as victims. Count the number of times you hear her talk of fathers, boys or sons as victims. Male victims are mentioned as if they don't matter and rarely occur. She also gives outrageously false percentages.
Because she gendered a nongendered issue. The founder of the first domestic violence shelter for women Erin Pizzey said 2/3rds of the women in her shelter were AT LEAST as violent as the men they left.
@Charlie Hunt do you feminists just spin a wheel of villains to randomly select which group you hate to blame? I understand why you'd assume sock accounts, basic projection... but of all groups why would you blame incels? They are the branch of the manosphere who'd most approve of this woman's message.
Incels, BY DEFINITION, aren't committing domestic violence and as such have no reason to take this talk personally. Further more while they take psychological injury from the fact that they are rejected en mass, the real insult is that stacy would rather be with an abusive Chad than them. Incels would appreciate efforts to get women to stop dating abusers.
If you want to presume a group of men for the ratio, it'd make much more sense to blame the PUAs. But here is a crazy thought, rather than just blindly brush off everyone who doesn't agree with you, maybe try GENUINELY LEARNING what other than (insert evil assumption here) could possibly motivate their disagreement.
This is 100% accurate.. I have experienced the same horrible relationship. Thank God we both left safely.
That part where she said she didn't think of herself as a victim; she was a strong, independent woman who was helping a troubled man...RELATEABLE. I cried, listening to that, because that, that was me. I thought my love would help him, would conquer all; I was wrong.
So much of her story, sadly, sounded familiar.
Bless you!! I hope you are on a path to healing and a renewed life. Anything is possible, for you!! 🌞🕊
Same here. When I escaped my abuser - literally running to the train with my baby to flee to another city while he had left the house, praying that he wouldn´t come home earlier - I felt totally guilty for not having been able to help him breaking free of his violent habits ..... it´s incredible how abusers mess with your head and prey on your love, your good heart and willingness to help.
When you say you were helping him, was that with a therapist or social services?
You’re too real for the majority of these people in the comments @Marcos Martinez. I always say it takes a certain kind of woman to end up in these situations. A common trait I notice is that they are DELUSIONAL. How can they claim to want to help someone and they aren’t a trained person to do so? They actually stay for their ego and many are low key masochistic. Most actually think they are special or can control others’ bad behavior. How can they not see they are being lied to?? If someone takes money out of your purse in front of your face and then tells you they aren’t a thief and would never want to see you without money, would you believe them or would it be obvious that they are scamming you??? They are slaves to the rhythm of ‘love’ 🙄 (MJ song). These men use these women’s delusions of ‘love’ to abuse them and these women are too blind to see it. It’s a very expensive mistake to make since it usually costs these women their health (mental, emotional, financial, physical) and even their lives! I would rather live in a cardboard box than live with an abusive man. These women come up with all kinds of excuses, as you can clearly see in these comments, and attack you for thinking critically about their situation because they clearly lack any critical thinking ability themselves and see THAT as abusive lmao! It’s not victim blaming, it’s called EMPOWERMENT. When you can see where you have the power to change your situation then you can get out of it, but many here try to silence any talk of having control over their own actions. They need to ask themselves if this is the life they dreamed for themselves as a little girl. They need to leave for her and make her proud, if not for anyone else. I say all of this out of my love of finding solutions to hard problems, not out of insensitivity. Caring too much about another’s feelings and putting ‘sensitivity’ above common sense is usually what get these women into these kinds of situations with these horrible men who end up abusing them in the first place, so please keep this in mind!
@@likemycommentifyouwantareply While we should always remember to be sensitive, it's more important to be SENSIBLE. So many of the narratives posted in reply to these types of videos are, as you said, deluded and intellectually dishonest. It's alarming because it shows a lack of understanding as to how these predicaments begin and proceed. Even more troubling, after so many of them escape, the lessons learned, if any, are emotionally shallow and not introspective or self-reflective. Empowerment, as you said, should be our goal, not the regurgitation of excuses and platitudes.
Sadly victims don't always get help when they try to get it. I was in a relationship much like hers, and when I started telling my coworkers because I was finally done with it, one of my co-workers came over to me and told me to keep my business to myself and people didn't need to hear what I was going through. So I say, if someone comes to you, don't shush them, help them.
Okietokie omg that’s horrible I’m sorry you had to go through that, shame on them.
That is awful! Nobody should ever say that to a victim! I’m so glad and lucky that nobody said that to me when I was going through it. I’m so sorry hun!
Society has a problem with turning it's back on people in need and trying to sweep things under the rug that they don't have answers for. Please don't let that keep you silent. If people choose to treat you that way do your best to tell them that you wouldn't treat them the same way if they were in need and you apprecaite them not telling you, or anyone else for that matter, to be quiet simply because they don't have an answer readily available and therefore it makes them uncomfortable. We, as a society, need to learn how to help people, not shut them out in the cold and simply turn our backs so that we don't have to see them starving, suffering, dying, and feel badly about it.
The same thing goes for all victims and all people suffering, whether it's from illness, poverty, inequality, addiction, etc. Compassion is a dying trait that needs to be resuscitated. There ARE people who do care though. I hope you have been able to free yourself completely from your past relationship and are moving on mentally.
I once shushed a fellow female worker going through domestic violence abuse to protect her from the nastiness and malice of other envious bitches working there, as this abuse victim was very pretty and I knew the male workers would have loved to pounce on her if they knew her relationship was disintegrating. She was younger and I felt the need to care for her. I took her to the Ladies when it was deserted, powder our noses and chat about "female hassles" and she told me everything and I was able to help her get out of this hopeless abusive relationship with absolutely no future. She kept arguing she loved him and his family wanted her in it and that he was always sorry after each bout of violence, proclaiming everlasting true love, blah, blah, romantic bullshit and that he was very handsome and a great lover, with heaps of girls who wanted him and that she did not want to waste five years of courtship now that he had just bought her an expensive engagement ting he had worked endless overtime in some slum factory slave job to buy her. I asked her whether she thought that pretty ring was better then her, worth more. She looked confused then replied that it was. So I left her to enjoy what she seemed to prefer. It was pointless trying yo persuade her to quit such a toxic relationship because some women seem to enjoy such relationships and who are we to intrude on their idea of "domestic bliss" and "true love". I have seen so many such women....You throw them a life line but they reject it. Some will even turn on you and abuse and accuse you when the relationship is going all rosy, on again. I steer clear of domestic abuse cases and refuse to be drawn into taking sides. Not my problem but theirs.
i took us to relationship counselling. the focus was on saving the marriage, even tho i now realise it was obviously not going to work
i ve just left..i had two beautiful children...god help me to survive from this...
Amalia Gkouma may god be with you
Amalia Gkouma u better dip fam
i need strengh its very very difficult it was ten tears beating.it was natural for me sometime a..
God bless you. I was a victim. You will survive. Getting away was a huge step forward. 💖
It gets better, believe me. Best of luck to you and your family
If you’re out there watching this video and going through similar situations, you deserve better. I pray you get out safely🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻
Thank you
Thank you but it’s so hard. 🙏🏾
Your local women's shelters are ready and willing to carry you down this terrifying road.....their knowledge and Love will light the way...They will Give you their Strength until you Find your Own.....I usedto tell mine I was seeing a dr....actually seeing counselors and advocates setting up an escape.....But ground zero was my personal physician...she promised it would be over....and it was....God Bless You...You are strong enough...And created to Be Outstanding💖💖💖💖💖☔☔☔☔☔
I might need your prayers. Thank you.
Thank you
I was in the hospital after almost being killed by a man and my friend came to see me. The first thing she said was “what did you do to make him do this to you.” I told her to get out and not to bother coming back or calling me again.
Friend?
@@MarcosIsABaritone was. Until that moment.
Was she trying to assign blame? I’ve heard this question asked just to get to know the full story.
What a terrible thing for her to do and say. From experience, and growing up in a toxic home myself, I missed the signs of abusive traits in others. Was hurt by atleast a handful of people who were supposed to love and protect me, care for me the way I had always cared for them. After 30 years God finally led me to the truth and ugliness of abuse and down the road to knowledge, power in understanding and knowing, and eventually healing. That last part takes a lot of time but it does come when we are ready. I’m so sorry you went through this, I pray you got out and life has been so much better to you. You deserve nothing but the best and to experience love and happiness. Xoxo
That happened to me as well. I’m glad you told her to get out
unfortunately nobody will understand until it happens to them. 😒
Why would you doubt that?
That's because being called "creepy" doesn't have quite the impact that being beaten within an inch of your life by someone who claims to love you, every single day does. "Men fear that women will laugh at them. Women fear that men will kill them."
ESPSAlita What is the context of this last phrase you said? "Men fear that women will laugh at them. Women feat that men will kill them." Are you saying a man that is a victim of domestic abuse is only concerned wih the humiliation he's in?
there are medical signs abusive relationships. looking faces of boxers the effects of constant beating. brow ridge gets thicker cheeks along the side get buffer along the cheek bones less nerves in in the face less facial muscle. and others signs along the body of pest constant brosing
right all these people that are bashing her are the reason why some women and men are afraid to tell their story
People stay in abusive relationships because abuse shreds any self respect you have. You cannot take action when you feel like a deflated balloon.
teacup3133 and because abusers are very good at manipulating and brain washing their victim. They gaslight their victims into thinking that everything is okay and that they did nothing wrong. I watched it happened to someone I cared about for years and was forced to live in that situation for six years.
I was mentally abused for 30 years. He was my only man I dated and married at 19. I had no idea what I was getting myself into.
He would deny me affection freedom family visits took away from me what I cared about, threw out my dog, cat, budges flushes down the toilet our son’s fish . Told him he would not amount to anything instead of helping him with homework.
He didn’t love himself and never told our child that he loved him. I though I was strong enough to overcome his bad moods , and support him as a wife .
I though I will make him happy . I never heard I love you after we got married. I didn’t hear you are beautiful my dear wife . Actually, he once said that he had married me because he though I was unattractive, so no other men would look and lust me . That was his way to keep me at his site . He would not talk to me for months at a time . He would not eat my dinner and if I didn’t make anything he would be moody . If he had to do things alone as I was working more and more, he complained that e feels like a widower, no support from me . The abuse was escalating and I didn’t know what to do . I stood up to him few times , worked more hours to avoid his behaviour, started traveling alone to visit my family .
The last time he didn’t talk to me was for 7 months . I had tried at first to ask what’s wrong, why aren’t you talking to me .? - i should know why !!!
When he took our son to a Christmas vacation without me knowing anything about where and how long they will be there I ended my marriage right at the security gate of the airport wishing a Marry Christmas!
2 years later I’m trying to rebuild my self respect self worth.
Struggling but I know I did the right thing .
teacup3133 @ I feel that way!
@@MainStreetElectricalParade and it's people like you that is indirectly causing this
@@MainStreetElectricalParade get a life. You are evil
I was abused for 27 years of my life. I escaped; changed my name, safe so far.
Carolyn Bouley I hope you’re ok x
I was stupidly so depressed because stuff didnt go how I wanted with my baby daddy. I hoped and prayed and then when we finally tried he threatened to hurt me, even kill me, I think I had to see for myself so I could let him go. I'm sorry you went through that. It's your time of peace now, like the rainbow after the storm. God wants you to feel happy. You didn't lose him just your idea of what you thought he'd be! Well for me that's how I think of it. Hope your day is going well.
Proud of you. That kind of change is hard
@@toeachitsown2050 Thanks. He started to be a lot nicer and we had a good two weeks and then he broke up with me because he didn't like what I wore. I am just thinking if it's meant to be it'll come to me in a way that's good for me and my kid. But I am just enjoying my kid and my time and my freedom.
@@Laurendoesflips I think the "if its meant to be he'll come around" thing is toxic. You have to let that go.
I am glad you are enjoying your child :)
Yes, it’s real! Just left a 48 year marriage…far too late. Took my purse only and two years from then finally stand alone and happier. Subsidized housing for a senior helped a lot. When I left, he put out a smear campaign to my only child, family and past friends saying I’m unstable and caused many problems. What could I prove being silent so long?, Still in grief, but I’m safe, breathing and hopeful ;it’s very okay to be alone. Peaceful,no fear. It takes practice but it’s worth that kind of work, day by day affirming what’s real, who you really are, and letting it all go. You’ll find the path you are to be on, just believe it. You are valuable, a unique human being with a purpose. Please hang in there! Bless you greatly for strength and love. Sincerely, Robin
I left a 27yr marriage and yes they do smear your good name as we are the crazy ones.
Hang in there. I would suggest to make a bullet point of the abuses (physical & mental) for yourself, police, and the children. Little at a time, you can start to write/type more details about each point of abuse. I think, personally, that our children need to know about the levels of abuse bcuz the men can be master manipulators and turn the children against...mine has!
you’re not alone. good for you that even after all that time, you got out. you did the right thing and i’m so happy to hear you speak about peace. i can relate 💯 percent. i still hear my ex’s voice in my head criticizing me or something i was doing, but now i just tell that voice to f off. wounds don’t heal completely but strength increases exponentially. i have tried to help others and encourage them to find the courage to leave but mostly i say thank you to my God for bringing me through it. enjoy every day as if it’s your birthday because you’ve won the lottery by walking away. peace.
Thank you Connie, Valerie and Margaret. So very good to read your comments. Stay well and thrive, May God Bless you all.
Robin
If you managed to leave & survive then you’re not too late.
I appreciate the length of time it took to realise may be frustrating, & the path forward daunting & unknown but you gave yourself the option for something different.
Nothing is wasted, all manure for the rose 🌹 garden…these things can serve to make us more compassionate people even if it’s learning compassion for yourself, that alone is a significant life lesson many people only grasp at, some people never have the realisation & never leave.
On difficult days I find just recalling where I am & how it lead to me recognising my own vulnerability, power & freedom.
I hope that doesn’t seem too patronising, I can relate & appreciate what you say & hope you might feel some reassurance, that you’re not alone.
Wishing you the best 🙏💖✨
If he hits you even one time
he WILL HIT YOU AGAIN
Leave him !!!
Don't rationalize his abuse away
I survived, maybe you won't
So what about you hitting him....men are allowed to defend themselves
truest words on this....once they hit, they will hit again...threaten, verbally and mentally abuse and HIT. The abuser is rotten and ruined to the core. Get away!!
gotta two of emmm around maaa hoooood
Or she *
Ladies, you will never ever change a troubled man. Don't hope someday. Run away now!
Same goes for men, fucked up women will never change.
Amen
Lmao lina you don't get it at all
True, this ain't no Wattpad fanfiction, it's real life
true....I tried...nothing happened
Those who haven't been in an abusive relationship won't get it. The person u are with slowly breaks u and makes u feel crazy. It is complicated but THE ONLY way to be happy is to LEAVE. Anyone going through this U CAN BE HAPPY and you will. U have to get away from this person for good as hard as it is emotionally.
I couldn't agree more, I'm a victim of domestic violence, he breaks me and makes me feel like I'm the crazy one. I having a hard time moving on, I'm trying so hard. But everytime he come back and sweet talk, it makes me feel weak and loved but I know in my heart , it's just his crazy self saying it to make me weak.
Thank you. Your comment is giving me the strength i need to keep going
Read my comment and tell me if I’m right
@@amaadav6529 Okay Amaada I’m gonna tell you exactly how I got out… after he did things that were so bad I was embarrassed to tell anyone I knew.. I kept up hope for a REALLY long time that he would change, we would have really good times in between. But it comes to the point that you realize: this man DOESNT ACTUALLY even like me, much less, love me (this was the hardest thing to accept)…… it defies everything I thought in the beginning, but the way he was treating me, it was 10000% true. Once I accepted that, and grieved the relationship silently (I was sad A LOT and cried a lot) I moved in temporarily with relatives, just to put some space between us. Slowly I got comfortable with being away from him. I finally broke up. He tried everything to get me back, he said he started going to therapy (A LIE - even if he did it was TOO LATE, my mind was made up 100%) when I came to get the rest of my stuff he had written down a LIST of things he said I had done wrong and he almost started crying saying he was “so hurt” by me. I said nothing got my stuff and left. I drove to a parking lot and proceeded to block him on all social media, delete pics of us and block his number. When he created other accounts to talk to me I didn’t read and blocked immediately. That was 5 years ago. He created another one last year I immediately blocked. My only regret is staying as long as I did. Ever since, I have felt the most unshakeable pride in myself that I gathered the strength to leave. I used to cry EVERYDAY and I finally was able to trust myself and be happy. GOOD LUCK
@@amaadav6529 Gross. Edit: This response, though sincere when written, was meant to convey a dismay at the capacity for self-reflection and awareness shown by the OP, only to read about their subsequent counter-logical choice to remain and sentimentalize their victimhood.
I came here because my friend told me I’m in a dangerous situation. And they got concerned because I was "defending my abuser", that was a big eye opener for me.
Why did you agree to date him im the first place?
@@specialagentorange4329did you listen to this? They manipulate you!
@@specialagentorange4329 shut up fr
@@staceystrukel1917 sort of like how mcdonalds forces you to eat there? It's called, "accountability"
@@specialagentorange4329 your comparison doesn’t equate. Not sure what your intention is either unless youre an abuser defending your behavior.
I am a proud survivor. Like her I will never ever let a man dictate my life or scare me into submission ever again.
Karen Sefcovic what would you say to a boy abused by women? in fact from discrimination 1in every 3 women is an abuser
It's clear from Karen's comment that she survived a specific, personal experience of abuse at the hands of a man. Countering that affirmative determined comment with "but why aren't we talking about FEMALE ABUSERS and MALE VICTIMS tho" is just ridiculous, maddening!
Yes. Men suffer abuse in silence as well. The statistics demonstrate an imbalance and that women deal with this more often, but we should be working to help everyone. But how, exactly, does commenting on someone's personal testimony that happens to fit the most frequent pattern, and complaining that they're not personally including all other varieties of violence which they didn't experience, help anyone?
Well done you. I won't ever let a man hurt me again. It was he'll on earth. Bless you and may your future be happy now. 💖💖
Karen Sefcovic most women just love Asian guy
Karen Sefcovic My mother is to. I'm a child of an abusive man and I have several horrible memories. This video hit really hard and I'm glad to see another survivor. It's me, my sister and my mom and we all experienced it. I feel empowered whenever I see stories like these and hearing about other survivors. I'm glad your out✊
In year 27, the day I escaped, I ran upstairs to look up "battered housewife" on the computer. I was astounded and right then decided this was the day I would give up everything I ever had in my life, even to go homeless. 12 years later I am still being taken to court by this psychopath, but even though destitute, no longer homeless, I am free. Thank you for speaking out to all of us. Big hugs, lady. God Bless you. ❤
God Bless you Violet ... Your resolve is super Human.
It's been 10 years for me and I'm still getting miserably abused. I'm hopeless and feel like I'm stuck
@@toniawerchan9360 that's his goal. YOU can leave, just be ready to lose your "things." Your life and happiness is more important than possessions; those can be replaced. 🙂❤
Good for you. It's a cliche for a reason, the first step is the hardest. Stay safe. ❤
I;m glad you are better now and so sorry for what happened to you. I wonder, did you notice people around you refusing help or looking the other way? this lady (selling her book) said: " I got out because you all helped me" I wonder if thats true or whether society, friends even family are indifferent or see you differently after what happened.
"I never once thought of myself as a battered wife. Instead, I was a very strong woman in love with a deeply troubled man, and I was the only person on Earth who could help Connor face his demons."
That literally described my first marriage. Thankfully I was able to come to my senses and had people supporting me who helped me get out.
lolzkittenz Glad you got out!
This describes my recent relationship and to a T. Most of her speech sounds too familiar. Only hitting was a rare thing. All other forms of abuse were almost daily. It’s been a week yesterday since he actually left me. He didn’t like that I was seeking therapy. Even though I never told my therapist anything about how he was to me. I told her he was supportive and safe... he didn’t know that. Still today when he comes home I welcome him as his wife. I grieve daily for him and miss him and love him deeply. The comment you posted is exactly what I still feel. I am struggling but I now know that what I am living is still dangerous. I am doing well to control taking him back each time he comes home and tells me how perfect I am. All I can do is say a prayer and wait for the healing to happen in my heart as I get stronger.
That's me but with 0 support and 5 kids. I was trying to homeschool them and raise them all sweet but I am now going to be forced to put them in the horrible public schools we have here and work like a mule. To leave and survive with my kids.
I just left a man who had abused me for 16 years.I went to my local social services and all they could do is give me two bus passes and a bed over 30 miles away.I have no car and can't walk much from my disability,s.Ive tried my local DV center.All the beds are full bc they rolled out the red carpet for the afghan refugees seeking asylum.I am now homeless carless hungry and hopeless in Albany ny
@@audrealambert23 you need to Google a Catholic Charity near you. They will help you. Forget the government!
"Used my anger as an excuse to abuse." That tells an all too familiar story.
There is another sad answer to the question "why doesn't she just leave?". By the time the abuser starts intensifying their abuse, the victim has so much invested in the relationship; physically, spiritually, financially and emotionally. Breaking up a relationship is very hard because you've shared so much with somebody, even if the relationship is a toxic one.
It happened to my mom. She's smart, funny, sweet and kind and she was trapped in an emotionally and verbally abusive marriage for 32 years. By the time her husband's abuse really got underway, she had two small children and was living in a foreign country as part of his job. When times were good, they were very good. He would surprise us with presents, took us on trips, told us how much he loved us and always sided with Mom whenever she and I argued. But he was also the man who criticized us, belittled us and made us feel worthless. He cheated on Mom twice with two of the women who worked for him. During one instance, he told my mom that he was going to leave her (this is when we were still living out of the states) and take her children away from her. Mom was horrified at that prospect and fought hard to keep her marriage and her children (who she loved more than anyone else). After they got their issues worked out, he and Mom were discussing renewing their vows.
The first time Mom realized that the marriage was bad was after he had left her for a younger woman. Mom was heartbroken and, once again, tried everything to make the marriage work. It was during couple's therapy that the therapist pulled her aside and told her that she was in an abusive marriage. Like Ms. Steiner, Mom never believed that she was being abused and was shocked at the allegation that her husband and father of her two now-grown children had harmed her. But with time and counseling, she's accepted this and has moved on. She's now working her dream job and is now free. I'm very proud of her.
The sad fact of the matter is that unless you've been through it yourself, you're never going to fully understand just what abuse does and why victims feel trapped and unable to escape.
+janeyrevanescence12 You seem to be telling your mother's side of the story. Your father might have a different story.
Children grow up listening to their mother in their formative years and as a result they favour the mother. Mothers are quite willing to demonise the father when in fact the father is a good man. Women can be very manipulative and deceptive in this way.
This happens because the father is out working and providing for his family. Males and females are both good and bad. Badness is not the domain of the male. Fifty percent of the time the father is a better and more caring person than the mother, yet the mother is favoured about 90% of the time because she is at home while the father works.
Even abusive mothers can be favoured by children over a good father who is out working during the day.
The following is probably what happened, hope you can handle the truth.
When your mother met your father, she considered him as a capable man who would be a good provider.
She used her feminine charms to attract him and they married. Much biology and human evolution needs to be explained but there is no time.
When your mother became pregnant, your father followed normal male responsibility procedure and worked hard to provide for woman and child.
The pregnancy process repeated and one more child resulted. Your father worked even harder to provide.
He progressed with his skills and he obtained promotion.
In this typical situation where the woman looks after the home and children, she controls the finances because she purchases the food and has a major say in the purchase of the car, the home and other major purchases. Women have more time for this and fathers allow control to go to the mother. That is why the market cater to women. That is why women are the main consumers in society and why advertising focuses on women.
As children grow older, they become able to get themselves to school, feed themselves and clean their own rooms. The mother supervises more.
The father continues to work hard so that the mother can supply the childrens needs, the children have a room to themselves, a desk, a bed, a computer. The mother controls the home and controls the home content and the home management. The children see this. They ask for things and the mother provides. She gets all the credit for buying them things, and all the credit for helping with their problems and their needs.
The father is out working, he does many more things and helps many more people with far more complex situations, he gets home tired and doesn't have always have the patience for advice and care to the children.
At home, he gets credit for nothing. For this reason, children think the mother is number one, especially male children.
(You are lucky in that you didn't have an abusive mother, such mothers are very bad for children because the father is not home to protect them from her.)
Your mother had had a much easier life than your father. Looking after the home with two children means that she had much more free time and much less stress.
Your father paid all the childrens comforts and fun - but he got no credit. At his workplace however he attained respect from his work ethic and his income increased.
Younger women recognised him for his talent and work ethic, in later years these younger women could see that he had an older, overweight, nagging wife and that his children were becoming independant.
Steve M While my father never dared raise a hand to my mother....he had no qualms about hurting my younger brother and me. He choked me once when I talked back to him and he flipped my brother onto his back during an argument, nearly smacking his head onto the table as he did so.
Xian Zi So you're saying it was perfectly okay for my father to treat his wife and two children the way he did to us?
+janeyrevanescence12
You have never reacted in anger? Or your brother or mother? Sounds like when you use the word "once" and "nearly" your father was a very nonviolent man overall. It must have taken an amazing amount of provocation to make him react like that. Think of all his work for your family over two decades. It sounds like you thanked him by treating him very disrespectfully.
It could be that it was a result of years of indoctrination from your mother - not deliberate perhaps, but it had a great effect on your subconscious.
Obviously I can't completely judge an individual case like yours but when you write:
"Mom never believed that she was being abused and was shocked at the allegation that her husband and father of her two now-grown children had harmed her. But with time and counseling, she's accepted this and has moved on."
... it sounds like the counselor was a rabid feminist. Your mother wasn't harmed at all. From your own description it sounds like the exact opposite. You have to realise that feminism tries to spread the myth that males are perpetrators and females are victims. Very false and very negative.
I advise you, very sincerely, to listen to Professor Janice Fiamengo who has made 20 short, easy to listen to, videos on feminism and as you have been indoctrinated by this negative ideology it would do you much good.
UA-cam search for: ♣ Fiamengo File ♣.
Met my ex at 19 yrs old. I’m now 24. Finally had the courage to leave today. Just keep in mind if he/she hits you once, they’ll do it again. Wish I realized this sooner, but I’m free and that’s what matters 🙏 Sending so much love to ALL domestic violence victims and those who are planning/ wanting to leave. We all deserve to be loved THE RIGHT WAY. ❤️
And sending soo much love to you in you new path, healthy choices and renewed healthier life!!! It just gets better, bless you! 🙂🕊
Please don't ever go back!! I did and now I'm trapped here with him. My bedroom serves as my domestic violence shelter. I'm completely hopeless and I pray to die every night before I go to sleep
Be careful. Abusers often escalate when they lose control.
You broke that trauma bond. Amazing
Stay far away from your d. They are cunning. Run Free!
My cousin was killed by her husband. She ran away and he followed her. Killed her, the friends that were hiding her, and then himself.
Don't doubt yourself, get out while you can and never look back. If you even have to wonder if it's abuse, it is.
Be careful and stay safe.
I’m so sorry about it cousin and her friends 😔
💙💙
The threat of murder is very real, 🥶🥶🥶 and I’m glad you shared your incredibly tragic story. 😭😱😭 My dad threatened to kill everyone when my more tried to leave. He had his gun out. I didn’t get child support for 16 years because I believed my ex could kill me or our kid. He was violent & wacked in many ways. I say get out, but only when your escape is fool proof, as in safe, and the violent abuser can’t find you, ever. 🌷🌸💕🌸🌷
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
@@123lxxx6 what's funny?
"I told everyone (about the abuse).. Abuse thrives only in silence. You have the power to end domestic violence simply by shining a spotlight on them. Show abuse the light of day. Recast survivors as wonderful, loveable people with full futures." Thank you, Leslie Morgan Steiner... ❤❤
I’m crying out and no one listens because it’s verbally abuse
“...because the final step in the domestic violence pattern is kill her.” I really wish everyone around me understood that.
Hamsandwichindahouse Because Leaving is the step that usually causes that reaction. It’s the mentality of ‘if I can’t have you, then nobody will’.
@@hamsandwichindahouse Man. Did you watch the video? Getting away isn't easy in the slightest . With Many of these men, it's love me or DIE .
@@hamsandwichindahouse She didn't have three kids with her abuser. She had three kids with her second husband. Have you watched the video? Also, before signs of killing showed up, she always thought she's in love and she's helping a troubled man. It's okay to not understand, but did you TRY to understand?
Hamsandwichindahouse Valuable or not, just scroll down the comment section and see how people say they’re inspired or “waking up to their situation” because of her words. Unless you think helping one person isn’t helping, then that’s “valuable” to me. The psychological problem of some victims IS worth exploring, but this speaker chooses to talk about the abuser side of the problem, the signs and patterns. What’s wrong in that? If you’re genuinely interested in the mental health of victims, I’m sure there’re plenty other talks and articles. Why not research and read? I’ll be very happy to hear your findings. Sincerely.
Hamsandwichindahouse Moral Obligation? Seriously? I was intentionally avoiding to press the “victim-blaming” charges on you earlier but man you are seriously asking the victims to PREVENT and BE RESPONSIBLE for the damage instead of the abusers? You’re wrong about your clever suggestion. To learn more about the psychological problems that trouble the victims is exactly for the purpose of empathizing with them more, so that we, outsiders, can know how to effectively help them get out. The REAL SOLUTION to stop kids being beaten is to send the beater into fucking jail. I don’t even bother to mention how many mental problems of the victims are CAUSED by the abusers in the first place. Just google gaslighting if you don’t already know. “No sane people would stay” is just an arrogant assertion. Show me your reference then? One last time, ask what’s wrong with the abuser’s head and what can we do to prevent THEM from beating people, not the other way around.
Domestic violence not only affect women but kids too. In worst way
Vijeta Bhati exactly. It's a lot worse for the kids.
Yes it does . I hated my mother a long time for staying . Hearing/ seeing your parents fight can be traumatized. That’s one of the main reasons why I say leave . And I hope I don’t sound harsh . If Marting Luther King said he wasn’t going to fight for equal opportunities for everyone because someone might kill him . We will probably still be segregated. Stop worrying about the future take control of the now . And go . Thanks for pointing that view out . Lots of typeos
@Josh M What you are saying is correct. Look up the CDC, studies from 2014. If you want names and details, listen to Paul Elam's video Domestic Violence - Women are half the problem.
@@DaSurfr very true .Problem never take sides it always sits in the middle
@@DaSurfr My exact though!
I didn’t think I was a victim I thought I was a brave woman saving a troubled man YES
Same
Best part
I called that period in the beginning the "Cinderella syndrome", back when I thought all he needed was a loving woman to care for him, what he was doing was grooming me to be abused. Won't ever fall for the " .... and they lived happily ever after " again.
Women like men they can fix if your a nice guy with a job you will be an incel
wolf4811
Agreed. Me too.
Such a clear message, especially about staying because who else will help him? Leaving was the hardest thing I have ever done. Raising four great kids as a single parent wasn't a cake walk either. I never remarried. Had opportunities, but It took me years to figure out how "my one great love" had become "the crazy love." By then I had become independent enough to be happy living a safe and single life. I'm nearly 80 now, but one marriage was enough.
How were you able to pull yourself and a clan of humans with you?
I really would like to know.
I feel like I've always been worthy of nothing but scraps.
How did you re-find your self-worth?
@@SouchiMousy Well, as you just stated, you've never really had much self-worth. Probably not since you were very young and lost it to trauma. Still, you do express wanting more for yourself and that's a good sign that all hope is not lost. What you have to understand and then decide, is are you going to give yourself the chance for more and better, knowing you will have to go it alone, or are you going to stay and live your current life until you die? Whatever last bit of self-worth you have, girl, SUMMON it up and JUST DO IT!
@okayjackson587 thank you for sharing your story. It’s comforting to know that I’m not alone in being okay with and desiring to be alone moving forward.
That's why you should be careful who you feel pity for..... That is how toxic relationships begin.
Exactly
Wow...
nobody deserves pity
amen
Yes, we especially shouldn't pity grown women who choose violent relationships. They are grown adults and at least half the problem in any bad relationship
Her story was mine almost exactly. I've been free 5 years next month and it still affects me to this day.
Get over it. I recommend the video titled, *Police Training for Domestic Violence with Donald Dutton *
Jessica Letchworth are you being serious? Do you need help? If so have you called the DV hotline, they can help including getting you out 800-799-7233
Vladimir Makarov she said she's been free for 5yrs which means she left him 5yrs ago.
Wurmo no you certainly won't get laughed at if you phoned a domestic abuse helpline these people on the phones would be only to happy to help male or females who are being abused? Why say this.
Sandy DiVa I've been free for 5 years and 3 months. Leaving was the scariest thing I had ever done. It will always be a part of our lives. But it doesn't define us. You are so strong❤️
I cried. 22 and it's so familiar. I'm out, but I don't think I'll ever be the same.
You're right you'll be more aware of the warning signs and be smarter the next time around. He took some of your innocence but now you're a survivor and can move forward. With the help of a therapist someone you could talk to and walk you through what happened giving you clarity. You're right you won't be the same but you gained so much more, you're wiser and stronger. And what he did to you will only destroy him, tell your story its yours to share now.
erica castillo Really appreciate this reply!
@@Emmah1243 I'm happy to have helped. Sometimes the things we don't understand now end up being the things that build us up and gives us character makes us stronger. That only comes from experience and glad you survived through it to inform and help others.
Morgan Steiner has published two books and made good money on this issue so she wants to perpetuate the false propaganda. Her story concerns a man who was mentally ill. There are mentally ill women in equal numbers but we don't hear about that.
If you look at the data at domesticviolenceresearch (just google) you will find that half of perpetrators are female.
If you watch an academic expert make a presentation (just google Dr Donald Dutton) you will find that half of perpetrators are female.
DV mainly occurs in areas of poverty and/or drug use. DV has become a money making industry which seeks to paint males as perpetrators and females as victims. This false narrative is a big part of a larger money making scam. Almost all of government money goes to aid women only.
If you listen to this video again you will find numerous references to women and girls as victims or mothers and daughters; as victims. Count the number of times you hear her talk of fathers, boys or sons as victims. Male victims are mentioned as if they don't matter and rarely occur. She also gives outrageously false percentages.
You wont be the same sweety but you'll be stronger and know yourself better 🌹
She did such a great job. I like how she outlines how dangerous it is to leave your abuser. That’s something we never think about, but she went about it the right way to tell everyone so she had a support group looking out for her.
My advice to new dates. Put a big boundary and if he react negative he is an abuser. At the beginning we always said yes to everything, tried to say No and see what happens.Narcissist don’t like boundaries. They think they are entitled to everything.
Do you really need a partner?
Or try to argue with them on something and see if they're open to discussion or treat you with contempt
Good suggestion on saying no got to remember this! Pathetically though ,I do want a MAN!
The only things we need are food water and shelter
this is a very good advice. I have thought about it but would help an example. Anybody has done it?
Love is a want not a need. You don't need to fall in love to live your best life.
Im leaving him in September....shshshsh im going quietly while he's at work...as peacful as I can...he will never find me again and talk me back to him...
Im soooooo exhausted....he sucked the life out of me...he almost BROKE MY SPIRIT
But GOD IS GOOD...the old me will Die
And the new me will be born...im so excited and happpy n sad all at the same time. . ...but I UNDERSTAND...its time to move on.....💖💔💖
I understand where you are truly coming from. Here is a suggesting, it is up to you if you would like to do this or not. I would wait until he is at work, and slowly pack up your small stuff that he will not notice, rent a storage shed unit, slowly move your things in there a little bit at time. then I would go to the bank and set up a personal checking/savings account with just your name on it. ( if you do have a joint checking savings account. do a cash withdraw at the bank and then deposit into your own checking/savings account, go to the post office and get yourself a post office box for just you and your children only. On your last day that you are there and getting ready to move. If you have children have someone you trust watch them, well you and your family/friends move the big stuff out of there. You can also buy somethings at Walmart, Kmart, JcPenny's Sears for your new place. only things that you can replace. but keep your most valuable treasures, family treasures. when I am talking about buying new things I am saying like a coffeepot, toaster, can opener, microwave oven & etc; put it in your storage bin and do not tell anyone that you have as far as common friends, his family. Trust yourself and your own family... I really do understand what you are going through. Also get a prepaid debit card through GreenDot, NetSpend card. put money on there and keep it in a safe place.. I learned the hard way some people that I thought were my friends turned out to be people who stabbed me in the back... Needless to say I am no longer friends with them. I moved out of state to get away. I did move back to my home state, but only to a whole new part of the state where him/his family & his friends will not be able to find me. I am still in the planning stages of moving completely out of my home state for good. I am in the process of saving for it and getting me and my puppy out of here... Good Luck I really do hope that it works out for you..
kay lynn connor thank you so much💖
You are very welcome.. I forgot to mention that you might want to buy food like your can & dry foods. ( the rest can wait until you are in your new place) also you might also want to stock up on your cleaning, personal, misc, laundry, pets, laundry supplies. you might even want to buy yourself a tool box and your own tools. just make sure you put all of this in your storage shed unit. if you would like to you can email me at kaylynn.connor@gmail.com I am glad that I could help . Good luck and take of yourself and your children/pets
You're strong, and you can do it. My dad is emotionally abusive to my sister, my mom and I. Everyone wants to leave, but we're scared and financially dependent on him.
skytiger859 thnk you...yes...im strong n I left...
Don't stay for children leave for them i stayed 12 years now both my sons have violent temper so sad
Julia Dawnyel my boyfriend’s dad used to hit his mom and now my boyfriend has a bad temper... it’s scary that from seeing stuff like that it sticks with them and they see it as something normal :/
@@annngggxsame thing : my grandpa was abusive then my father too.
My father abused us and mom especially so much.. and mom chose to stay because she saw nowhere to go, because the system then the 90' then the 2000 didn't show they'd do much- eventually some fines few months in jail and back to the same house so he can abuse some more..
He often abused me beating me in the head or head against the wall.. or broke my nose..
Once he strangled me in such fury.. he almost killed me.. I wanted to stop him hitting my mom. I was 18..
She never left and nowadays both me and my sis ( we're having our lives, we left house when we were in our early 20) have intensive anxiety and ptsd...
My mom is a shiprek physically and psychologically ( emotionally) and recently ( last year) she was diagnosed with MS ( multiple sclerosis) with cerebral demielinisation... that's practically cerebral lesions.. i am so angry.. so so angry.. more than 30 years of narcissistic abuse.. I saw her often with head bruised ...
Sigh....
Now she's 63.. and .. not sure how much she'll hold on..
He's still there, drinking like a pig and smoking. Even though he knows this is a nuisance to mom's health...
And obviously "no one can intervene" as you're told by those in charge of protecting you.. because she didn't fill a complaint..
He abused her emotionally that she thinks she's nothing without him, or that she won't be able to manage the simplest thing without him...
I rarely went back home since and I miss mom and we talk on the phone often. But I hurt so much because of all this and it's like she's not realising how much her decision or rather said nonnactuon ever since we were kids.. to leave him.. practically fucked up her life but also the life of her children.
So my message to mothers and wifes and partners out there : don't stay " for the children" with an abusive partner, that's a cheap excuse. You need to address your doctor, police etc immediately when he hit you becaus eyou have proof, bruises and so on. Then and only then - unfortunately- the system can step up and do something. But dont stay until is too late. You deserve to be loved and have a peaceful life..
Take care of yourselves...
This is something , everyone should learn.
I pray that they are going to a therapist for the help that they need.
You should send them to therapy if you haven't already. Don't want them treating a girl how you were treated.
Fortunately, I got out before it escalated too far. But not without massive scaring. Scars you can’t see. The verbal abuse and isolation started long before the physical. I was told everyone thought I was dumb, and to keep my mouth shut even though I have two advanced degrees and he barely graduated high school. He was whittling away at my self esteem. From the moment we were married he stopped pretending he loved me. I was in a state of shock and kept thinking there was something I could do to “fix it”. That’s why I stayed. After all, I’d made a commitment in front of God and everyone. So I was determined to tough it out. I’m certain if I hadn’t left when I did though, I would have ended up in the hospital or worse. Wish I’d had more information and the internet back then. Thanks for your courageous message. 🥰
I had a similar experience. He also told me that I wasn't very pretty or smart and that I had no friends (I did have friends, thank God, and I have a degree in Math while he was still struggling with his first semester in college). He then started telling me "I want a divorce and I want you out of the house" and after hearing that several times a day for months, I wanted that too! I packed up and left - 3 "non friends" had given me copies of their house keys and said I could let myself in any time of day or night. He then fought the divorce. He refused to cooperate and tried to convince me that I couldn't divorce him without his signature. There was no internet in those days so I couldn't check to see if that was true, but I just couldn't believe that any society would force someone to stay in a marriage, so I had him served anyway, and got my divorce.
Suzanne, I am so sorry for what you endured. I can relate. You are enough, you will live a life of love and laughter after abuse. Much love to you. 🙂🥰
@@cindykloman1177 I am sorry for the experiences he put you through. You will be ok. Hugs 🙂🥰
@@linda9497 thank you, Linda. We become stronger from it if we chose. It’s always our choice.
@@linda9497 ❤️
You can not fix him. Never. You can not fix him....Or her..
Or her. Thank you
Very true.
It is NOT our job to fix people!!! Especially our partner.
That’s not true
@@davidgarxia1477 ...I am always here for my son, but I respectfully disagree.
I love the fact she mentions his name. You rock!
Art in Urban Nature YES!! then she told everyone! How hard is this? It takes many years to talk and then not much is said...
+Southern Charm It takes supporting people in person to have one tell the story, obviously after many years of denial of even sharing a word... each story is a very complicated and peculiar one.
it,s not "crazy love" as she puts it, it,s low self esteem...
ua-cam.com/video/BMHJOop4KhQ/v-deo.html
She was fucked up in her head, too. That's why she stayed, she's no victim. She should make a talk that says "I was so fucked up in my head that I was attracted to abusive men, I had daddy issues and fucked up self-esteem. It is my fault for not being able to see the signs and leave him at the first sign. I am responsible for my own safety and I did not act on my instincts". That would sound more like an empowered woman, and not a victim.
I grew up in a house where hitting, yelling, staying quiet, remaining submissive, and belonging to a man meant family, proper lifestyle, and love. And I believed it for the first 23 years. I still do sometimes. For most of my life...its was our little family secret.
@Golden Gainz d-dude...
I can feel you though I realized early how abnormal it was and wasn't normal as my mum always told. Keep knowing yourself more and you'll do good....wishes
Abuse is not always physical and men can be victims too even if they look big and strong
same, u cant tell anybody like its shameful to be a victim
I grew up in the same kind of house. I was so ill prepared to make good choices
Abusers are not always charming at first. They are signs that are overlooked because we are young with no experience of encountering controlling men, sometimes our self esteem is low, and the abusers manipulate us by making us believe that we are doing a lot of things wrong that make them angry. I have been there, I know what I am talking about. And yes, if you leave, make sure he/she is not around and run as far as you can...go to the police, call a friend or a family member for help right away.
It's more than just being young and inexperienced.
There is a biological effect in the brain the prevents tou from seeing red flags in someone you are emotionally bonded with. abusers love bomb in the beginning, catalyzing pair bonding. By the tine tye abuse starts, you're already literally blinded by love.
This was one of the most informative lectures on domestic abuse that i've ever heard. This woman is absolutely brilliant, strong, and articulate.
I just wanted to also add that abuse is by no means restricted to romantic relationships, can and does certainly happen in platonic friendships just as often (but is commonly overlooked). Abuse truly knows no bounds.
Connor had a bad experience. I don’t understand why someone would not leave a violent relationship. I left a relationship that I believe my boyfriend was a person who I didn’t want to marry and I am asexual.
Absolutely. It even happens that an adult child is abusive and manipulative towards their parents, or most often towards their single Mum. 😥
@@laurieberry162 sometimes it's not always easy to leave an abusive relationship.. esp when the "victim" (for lack of a better word) is reliant on this person financially or can't let go of feelings of attachment to this person
yeah, it sucks when you tell people. and they don't believe you 'he wouldn't do that, he's a good guy' even after he was charged. .
His friends complained that I made him look bad and they didn't like me saying anything about it.
Jazz vader omg yes this is exactly my situation.
:(
We Can Never Fix a Troubled Man. He has to fix himself
And troubled women?
@@Stigmatix666 Let's say that they make up 15%. That's still a significant portion. (BTW, I don't believe that there is any way to find a truly accurate statistic.)
@@boboloko 15? Are you high? I'll bet you a 1000 bucks loads of them are hiding behind feminism..
@@Stigmatix666 Women are typically smaller than men, so there is a greater cost (getting beat up) to acting out on violent impulses. I'm sure that there is a disparity for this reason alone
@@boboloko I'm a bigger guy than my ex gf obviously. But that matters nothing when she hit me over the head with a log, stabbed me and proceeded to strangle me. .
This is my sister's story, too. Unfortunately, she and her husband hid his monstrous behaviour from us for over 20 years; we found out the real story after her death and we are devasted.
Here after some devastating event too 😔
I can't let my family know. It's not their job to take care of my mistake in marrying an abuser. I feel they have happy healthy lives I can't bare to share this much pain with them and my beautiful grandkids
@@kareninman2865 You have to leave, they will support you
@@kareninman2865 please don't feel that you are a burden to your loved ones. I can see how breaking your story can make you feel like dead weight to the people you love but I'm sure they will not ignore you for being a victim domestic violence and they are willing to help you out. The cost of staying with your abuser is way greater and the pain and harm will continue way longer than you see. No one close to you wants to see you harmed but you will need to break your silence to get help.
Please realize that your life is valuable and any harm or violence done to you is never justifiable no matter how big or small the actions are. No abuse is ever okay.
If you want to let someone know, I suggest calling in a discreet location where the abuser isn't aware. There are many hotlines out there ready to assist you and emergency services will be there to help you, there should be many out there. There is not shame in hiding suffering from domestic violence. Also, if your in immediate danger, please call 911.
I know this is a long read but I hope you have the strength to pull yourself out of the situation. Sending prayers.
@@kareninman2865 you only feel like you’re unworthy of help or love bc of the abuse. It's not true. You are worthy. The ppl who love you would *not* want you to suffer... if someone was abusing one of your grandchildren you would do everything you could to protect them. YOU are worthy of the same love and protection ❤
I loved this…I left my abusive relationship 6 months ago and thankfully I was able to get out safely. I like that she outlined the steps of abuse because I realize now that I was able to get out at the stage where he was introducing the threat of violence. He had a gun that he liked to flaunt and he had threatened to break my arm at one point. I didn’t know I was being abused because he had never laid a hand on me. This gave me clarity.
Anonymously report him to crime stoppers if needed
Yay! 👏👏💛
You weren't being explicitly abused but you were in a fucked up relationship with a borderline psychotic partner. Glad you left but you could have left a lot sooner, boo.
Traumatic bonding with a narcissist/psychopath. It's very very hard to break away and takes a long time.
Its ignorance that builds fear. Have u ever seen a mother bear or whatever animal defend their cups? They mean business. Watch and learn from nature.
Juanita Richards couldn’t agree more. I’ve been in this situation all my life since it’s my own dad who’s a narcissist and sociopath.... it’s taken me 26 years to seek help.
Morgan Steiner has published two books and made good money on this issue so she wants to perpetuate the false propaganda. Her story concerns a man who was mentally ill. There are mentally ill women in equal numbers but we don't hear about that.
If you look at the data at domesticviolenceresearch (just google) you will find that half of perpetrators are female.
If you watch an academic expert make a presentation (just google Dr Donald Dutton) you will find that half of perpetrators are female.
DV mainly occurs in areas of poverty and/or drug use. DV has become a money making industry which seeks to paint males as perpetrators and females as victims. This false narrative is a big part of a larger money making scam. Almost all of government money goes to aid women only.
If you listen to this video again you will find numerous references to women and girls as victims or mothers and daughters; as victims. Count the number of times you hear her talk of fathers, boys or sons as victims. Male victims are mentioned as if they don't matter and rarely occur. She also gives outrageously false percentages.
Sure thing. And they love bomb the F out of you at first to get their hooks in real deep too, and then when they start devaluing you, it hits you like a ton of bricks.
its easier with a lover
but In my situation where its actually my mother. My only option is staying calm acting nice and polite while keeping boundaries and refusing small things to keep at bay
I just recently went through a traumatic situation with my sons father he held me hostage for 3 days wouldnt let me leave my home he beat and strangled me the whole time my 3 children were in the home he pulled bleach on me and spit on me i thought he loved me and now i am in a position where im mentally overwhelmed depressed and full of anxiety i cant wrap my mind around the fact i could be dead me and my 3 children ran out of my apartment to the leasing office they called the police... I am so thankful to be alive today even tho i suffer from mental pain i am blessed
hope its better. sending you best wishes
Praying for you
becomingdanyell joe You’re extremely strong and I hope you and your children are doing well♥️
Email me if you need anything Lauren.stanley.82@gmail.com! Ill send u my # and u can text me if you need anything! Do you have family who is helping you or close friends? I can just just be a supportive friend to you especially while you are going through this just in case you need someone to talk to! Or just someone to lend an ear, or money, clothes or whatever. My ex threatened to kill me and smoked a blunt in my car and I was terrified. I moved away and he had a spare key so I think he stalked me for a bit but I am okay! He'd lose his temper and shout in a rage and neighbors called police fairly often. He told me I couldn't leave him. I couldn't imagine how you feel, but I know God will give you strength and you can do anything with him! Also thank God for your kids! They saved you. They're heroes and you're a survivor. You're my hero too because after everything you still know you're blessed. I admire your strength.
I want to help you if you need anything! I am so sorry that happened. I had mental suffering healing from mine. But in time God will heal everything! Keep seeking him and he sees you and what you're going through and he will help to put everything together! After a storm comes sunshine. Your sunny day is coming, and you'll have peace. God has good things for you. Are you away from him? Did you tell your parents? Are they helping you? Who are you staying with?... I also found yoga really helpful for helping with anxiety and depression....Okay I hope email me if you need anything or want to talk or anything or if there is anything I can do. Okay sending hugs and prayers!!
Your friend,
Lauren
remember this you are a survivor. we are all here for you.
Also, if you are planning to leave an abusive partner, keep your plans silent....leave when they are gone from the home....only tell those you can trust!!!
DON'T EVEN TELL THOSE YOU TRUST.
I second that!
Don't tell anyone!
Not nessesarily violence. Abuse can be in other forms. Such as pyscological abuse.
LUClFER MORNINGSTAR how do you know??? Why would someone lie about that.
Was psychologically abused by my mother for most my life. She used to degrade me, use my weaknesses as starting points, and get her partner to always side with her (out of fear). Used to be embarrassed of me, making me not walk with her in public. Told everyone my darkest secrets. Even when I tried to commit suicide at 8 years old, she would tell me "you were just playing around". I'm on better terms with her now at 24 but I've dealt with alot of damage from the way she would treat me.
I could have written this, except for the gun. I was never 'hit' but was shoved, raped, and lots of verbal abuse. I also didn't know I was abused. I thought it was my fault for everything - until he was taking off his belt to whip my daughter because she was listening to us fight. I ran to the kitchen, picked up a butcher knife and turned to kill him. He had followed me downstairs and I think my fighting back shocked him. I packed up and moved back to the town where my family lived. (He had moved me from Kansas to Ohio, away from family and friends.) I, too, am married to a very gentle man - after being divorced for 10 years. Domestic violence stories are not very different. I've shared my story many times and hope it has helped others going through it today. Thank you for sharing your story.
" Domestic violence happens to everyone, all races, all religions , all income and educational levels " 👏👏👏👏👏
Even in Jehovah's Witnesses, who claim to be the only true religion?
@@bmoshareholderappleshareho855 Jehovah's Witnesses is an extremely controlling and abusive religion.
True
Abuser with low libido or no libido! Read my comment
And all genders
People always talk as if abusers PLAN each step. I think very few abusers actually plan it. It’s a learned behavior, and it happens slowly over time. A lot of abusers see that behavior as normal and acceptable. They justify it to themselves, and truly believe they aren’t in the wrong. A lot of abusers don’t think they’re abusive.
Up until now I have been feeling soooo stupid and so, so ashamed of myself for having let a guy like that treat me like this. I graduated with honors from NYU, I battled countless challenges in my life, I have always prided myself with being a strong, independent woman. And it's just like you said! He just looked so sweet. He had a forever-16 face. He used to idolize me in the early stages of our relationship. And then this happened to me and, even worse, I LET it happen. I am so relieved to see how it really works. As with everything else that happened in the relationship, I felt guilty for everything. On the road to recovery now.
Channel Patrick Teahan: reduce tolerance for toxicity.
It's not your fault, it'll never be your fault. Stay as safe as you can. ❤❤❤
She didn t answer the question why was she deceived despite the signs ? I still don t get it. I do only if she had no financial resources,or she s physically dependent but not in her case When she can afford it to live by herself. So what is it?
@@greatstuff5865 There is no deception. It is obvious they are a deeply troubled person. The caring one can plainly see they were not loved as a child and thinks they can be healed into betterment by being loved.
A factor is having too high a tolerance for harmful behavior, maybe because the caring one was exposed to a harmful relative growing up, so it is familiar and they have coping skills to live with it.
Problemmatic people are complicated and high maintenance. Women, especially are socialized to be nurturers.
If you want better understanding of the dynamics, volunteer at a domestic violence shelter. The patterns will be plain to see.
You can do it !!! Break free forever !!!!
Oh my gosh, this is my story. I met my ex at 18 and just like you he wad an absolute gentleman in the beginning. It started with him being in control, to verbal abuse then physical abuse. My last straw was when he bought a gun. I started planning my way out and was lucky enough to leave. Thank you for breaking the silence.
How do I get out as a stay at home mom of two little ones and no job. And he’s a powerful influential man in the community. I’m scared. No one would believe me.
@@Portia1416 start collecting evidences as soon as possible, visit friend/ parents , narrate the whole story Then call Police and find a job
@@Portia1416 ...❤...
@@Portia1416 Save as much money you can. Plan every detail of your escape plan. Plan where you will live, how you will get there, how you will earn money when you get there. One day when he's out, leave without him knowing and without telling anyone in your community or who would tell him.
@@Portia1416 Don't forget your children! It will be hard but you can do it. Your safety and mental health depend on it.
29 years. It took me 29 years to get the courage to leave. I left with nothing....except my life. I live with the guilt and regret that it took me so long to leave and my children grew up watching me get beaten,choked,threatened, controlled,isolated, shot at, and constantly miserable. ( Choking was the worst. If you've never been choked until you lose consciousness then you cannot understand the terror. )I have asked my children to forgive me and I can only hope that they have. If you're in an abusive relationship, don't let it take you 29 years to leave.
Took me 27 years!!
People asked me why I stayed with my boyfriend . All of what she said was right on. He terrified me so much when I left stalking - threats- etc. that I decided I felt safer when I was with him so I returned so I could see him right in front of me. The watching over my shoulder constantly was extremely stressful. The isolation is so very true. Once I was “allowed” to go to my mothers on Christmas. When I returned he flipped his switch and said I disrespected him for going. He beat me on Christmas. Thank Goodness I left for good 3 years ago and he moved away.
Did you ever press charges??
''It's incredibly dangerous to leave an abuser''
i broke down in tears when she said that, i always tell my friends i can not leave but never knew how to exactly explain why!
i am right now typing with one hand because my partner broke my right hand fingers....
Wait until he's gone. Call a friend and have them help you leave. Things will only get worse. Please, save yourself.
Try and get away. Don't make it too obvious and call the police. Nobody deserves abuse.
Its been 2 months since you wrote this.
If you are still with him, please leave him.
If you have nowhere else to go, go to a shelter..
If you are scared he will not leave you alone, collect evidence and contact the authorities....or just disappear
Take action, you are the only one who can save you.
Love your life. The most important thing, even more important than your so called husband. Ask yourself Does your life deserve it. One life to live, One chance to escape. Escape at any cost, any cost. What the fucking society is there if it couldn't help a lady to escape violence, escape life threat. Sorry for my Creative English.
Please leave him. Save yourself. You can do it.
She's very brave for making this public and doing this talk. I admire her courage.
ShellHawksNest She´s not brave. She is just a sexist who thinks that the majority of DV victims are women, which is not the case. She is disgusting!
Gabriel Knight Sexist? I didn't get that from this talk. She was abused, and she shared her story. If a male victim of domestic violence did a talk, I would call him brave, as well. I wouldn't call him disgusting.
Her willingness to share has undoubtedly helped many, already. She shouldn't be berated for it.
ShellHawksNest
If somebody who was raped or abused shares his story that´s one thing. But coming up with invented "facts" is simply disgusting. Right from the start, this sexist woman stated that men are the perpetrators of DV in 85% of the cases. This woman is either uninformed, which is pretty bad, when you give a public speech. She should at least done her homework. Or she wants to portray men as the perpetrators and women in general as the victims.
Now what reasons could she have to do such a thing? Maybe because the victim-industry can be very lucrative and because many women make a living by playing the victim-card, thus getting funded to do "important studies on violence against women". She can now write books about it and travel from talkshow to talkshow.
Bottom line: She is either unprofessional and very stupid. Or she is a disgusting and sexist professional victim who uses lies to further her agenda.
This article might help you. (Found after a few seconds of searching) There is much more info availlable if only you are willing to invest 30 minutes of research.
www.saveservices.org/2012/02/cdc-study-more-men-than-women-victims-of-partner-abuse/
when it happens to men it either doesnt get reported or doesnt get taken seriously.
ShellHawksNest me too
Scary, eye-opening and well delivered. Lockdown has resulted in a huge spike in abuse so this message of 'abuse only survives in silence' is all the more important.
Where is my mother please. Neila is my Name. Thank you.
I grew up with domestic violence. My earliest memory of my father verbally and physically abusing my mother was when I was 8. My siblings and I would frequently defend our mother and block the blows. And our dad would more often than not stop when the children intervene. I know my father deserves all my resentment and the victim is not to blame, but I can't help resenting my mother. For staying in an abusive relationship and letting her children grow up in such an environment. And for making us feel guilty because we're the main reason she stayed. And then I hate myself for feeling this resentment. And so this video made me understand my mother more. So thank you.
Blame isn't the right word. However she holds responsibility in upholding your violent childhood. Still, you are on the right path searching yourself for forgiveness on her part.
Same story. My brother is very unsound and abuses his wife. I feel sorry that my sister-in-law did not leave and subjected her 4 children to growing up in a very toxic household.
you made me cry cuz i am the mother who is helpless and i have to stay cuz i do not have an option that is safe for kids i wish my kids would not hate me
You have to stay? Nah. Stop using your children as an excuse to not do what you know is right. Because guess what? Your children are NOT safe in your current situation. The emotional damage and trauma you are inflicting on them by submitting to an abusive partner and having them witness the abuse and your fucked up relationship is grievous to their mental and emotional health. You could be doing long-term, possibly irreparable damage by staying. GET REAL HELP.
I could have written this myself, every single word. It's so confusing and unfair to us and a very sad situation overall..
He was 35 and I was 18. Now he’s 37 and I am 20. Am young and have to live my life. I can get back those 15kilos I lost but if I stay I will lose my future. Am leaving this week. Am so happy. I don’t even love him anymore. I think I was just looking for comfort. I was young and dumb. Still young but don’t wanna say it anymore. Am leaving this week !!! This was and will be the worse part of my life. I promise myself I’ll never be in this case anymore.
Édit : I leeeeeeft !! 😩😍😂 why didn’t I do it earlier ? Freedom is so good. Now am better. 💞thank u
Fatou Diop still doing okay?
Jasmine Jones hey yes !!! Am so happy for it. I gained 3kikos. Thank u💞💞
Did you leave? Please tell us you are ok... all the best to you Fatou...
How are u now? im still with my bf trying to leave quietly i hope ur ok
Bobbi Jo Hart hey yes I left. Now I finally know where to put my feet. I have learned a lot. This will never happen to me again
In the beginning it's always roses.
No these people are abusive from the start you are just unaware. They are constantly doing abusive things that you are unaware of. You are the one they can do it to and get away with it.
Kathryn1209
No - you are aware - you pick them. Think about it - battering is kind of rare - like the ability to play the violin. If you knew a person who had serial relationships with violin players, you'd think they had a thing for violin players. Same with domestic abuse - the victims pick them.
actually they pick each other. Put 100 people in a room, and by the end of the evening, the abuser and his future victim will have spotted on another and started talking. It's creepy to think about it but when there's a pattern of abuse (family history, ex-partners, etc.) in the partner's lives, the unconscious attraction/recognition is strong and immediate ... Sad but true.
www.gofundme.com/52besn-getting-out-of-domestic-abuse
I remember being ashamed. I hid it from everyone. It lasted 15 years. I am now happily re-married to the kindest most respectful man and I hope this gives hope to anyone who might be going through this right now. Get the help you need NOW. Do not tell your abuser what you plan to do. Get advice from those who are trained in dealing with this, from the local refuge centres who deal with domestic violence and from the police. Tell only trusted friends and family. You deserve a happy fear free life
This is why it is so important to see the signs early on of their character and not to brush them off but leave before it starts. Also knowing what a healthy adult relationship is.
Did you even listen to her??? She said there were no early signs. And in my case, there weren’t either. Everything was beautiful for quite a while. My situation was not nearly as egregious as hers but I’d be lying if I said it wasn’t abuse.
@@kassandrakid9440 Unless your I.Q. is =47 then there are ALWAYS signs... Unless he HIT HIS HEAD, developed Dementia, or a DRUG PROBLEM he is a human being not a Marvel comic Super Villain...Are you DAFT
Good for you Larissa. Don't listen to these helpless fools
Ya like before the first date
@@2Bad4YOUuu Wow. So insulting my intelligence based on there not being red flags??? And I don’t know if the “he” you’re referring to is her abuser or mine. In the case of mine, he actually DID have a head injury that resulted from a car accident and eventually developed serious substance abuse problems. I do believe those two things did contribute to his abusive behavior but they aren’t the only things. He developed a temper over time that ABSOLUTELY was not present for the several years of our relationship. When I say that there were no warning signs, I mean there were no warning signs. But feel free to continue to insult me. Very mature.
As an educated woman with a close knit family, I too was married to an abusive man. It took me 17 years to leave.
Same for my friend. Proud you are out.
Morgan Steiner has published two books and made good money on this issue so she wants to perpetuate the false propaganda. Her story concerns a man who was mentally ill. There are mentally ill women in equal numbers but we don't hear about that.
If you look at the data at domesticviolenceresearch (just google) you will find that half of perpetrators are female.
If you watch an academic expert make a presentation (just google Dr Donald Dutton) you will find that half of perpetrators are female.
DV mainly occurs in areas of poverty and/or drug use. DV has become a money making industry which seeks to paint males as perpetrators and females as victims. This false narrative is a big part of a larger money making scam. Almost all of government money goes to aid women only.
If you listen to this video again you will find numerous references to women and girls as victims or mothers and daughters; as victims. Count the number of times you hear her talk of fathers, boys or sons as victims. Male victims are mentioned as if they don't matter and rarely occur. She also gives outrageously false percentages.
@@stevegcq i agree with you some part. DV like any violence is very complex. Blame or point out abuser and label men is dangerous. I dont thibk is about gender but human condition.
Gosh😣... How did you survive?
Your out. Good. There should be plenty of red flags never to repeat that again 🙏
This is a powerful TED Talk. What particularly stood out to me were two things: first, the demographics the presenter shared about how domestic violence victims transcend race, class, and sometimes gender. Second, how she explained the transition her first abusive husband demonstrated, from appearing to be someone who is sweet, smart, sensitive, and who'd overcome a history of abuse at the hands of his stepfather, to gradually acting abusive and violent toward her. Many people from the outside who've never been victims of domestic violence often judge victims by assuming they are weak or were stupid to choose a partner who would treat them so poorly. Little do they realize, the signs of an abuser are not always apparent for quite a while. And, abusive relationships are complicated because the abuser can behave nicely, lovingly, or generously part of the time, too. Plus, when you could lose financial control, child custody, or your life, it's harder to leave, change your name, hide your kids, and relocate.
You just said it, let alone waiting for him to show up at your house, the school, your work. I'm still waiting and ready.
Key word: financial.
EXACTLY…Men have the MONEY & the power. Most women who are murdered in the US, it’s by the husband or boyfriend….the danger is real! When getting into a relationship, Abusers will put on a good show until you’re trapped, as in married.
Exactly. Some have no money or anywhere to go. Where are they gonna take the kids? And if he hunts them down? Some women are ready to leave on an emotional level; they physically & financially cannot.
@@dananewhall8230 he doesn’t know where I live yet. But I’m waiting for him to break down my door.
I am at almost 2 months free from a 4 year abusive relationship. It was so hard to leave. I thought I could love us and behave to the point of making it stop. I was scared to leave , the danger, my son, my work equipment was tethered to our apartment. And i couldn't leave and lose my job. I couldn't take care of our kid without it. I couldn't handle the stress of breaking the normalcy and routine of everyday life. I just wanted to take the abuse and move on like nothing happened. I left on a Tuesday when he took a pole and beat me to the point of broken bones. I haven't went back. I don't struggle with wanting to go back. But I really just cannot take the PTSD. everything is triggering. My home is filled with items used to abuse me. Even my son's toys. I constantly disassociate and lose memory. I constantly feel sick to my stomach. I figured out how to escape physically. But am so lost on how to actually repair myself... Just needed the vent.
My daughter too. I'm praying for you.
I'm currently at the tail end of my 14yr marriage to a (covert narcissist) I also have dissociated due to C-ptsd and its scary! I just wanted to share that EFT-aka (emotional freedom technique) free online resource and you can do it at home.. it helps reset your Vegas nerve.. we are always in fight or flight mode..my resting heart rate will be 130 when I'm ruminating on the pain and having children with these abusers isn't easy..as it's always a game also look into RET therapy I'm going the first of the year.. stay strong!
PTSD is extremely stressful and challenging. Neither the abuse nor the PTSD are your fault. Pray to God for help and direction, and carefully try the suggestions you receive. Pray to God for comfort and strength. I will pray for you, too.
You can also contact your county mental health services. They can provide free or low fee based counseling or therapy. Your county may also have a domestic violence center for counseling or therapies. I wish you the best and God bless you!
If I were you I would throw everything away and rebuy everything little by little from scratch. It sounds extreme but I’m doing this as well even though I’m not in your situation. I just want a fresh start is all! Please consider getting rid of the triggering items. It will be a physical manifestation of your new life. Good luck!
My best friend was brutally murdered by her abusive ex. She tried to get away from him but he would stalk and harass her. He beat her and shot her in the head. Me and her mother want to make stricter stalking laws can you help us?
I am so deeply sorry for your loss. Everyone needs to be careful of men who put tracking devices on the cars or phones of the partner they abuse, a common tactic to stalk.
I am so sorry for your loss.. I agree with you Bobbi Jo. My first ex-husband would sit in his car and watch the house where my children and I were living. I had a friend move in there with me. She even saw him sitting out there.. It is a scary thought let alone to be happening . I still feel at times that there is someone watching me, even though I am far away from them.. Every now and then I get that feeling that someone is out there watching me and every move I make... They can track your every movement with a tracking device on your car, on your phone. If you really need to have a cellphone then get a burner phone from any store... they can not track them... Again I am so sorry for your loss.
Oh my god this is what im afraid of getting killed after leaving my disgusting boyfriend ..im so afraid
He's in prison now right?
Stricter laws like what exactly?
You don’t have to be silent no more ladies and gentlemen. Hurt people hurt people and you don’t have to go through abuse with anyone that treats you bad. May God be with you all
Sometimes there's no place to go
No kidding, Darren. The problem is that everyone likes to tell people what they should do...instead of helping! She needs a plan and safe people to help her execute that plan. See my other bomment.
@@nitalightell336 exactly.. everyone keeps telling me “just leave” LOL it doesn’t work like that… stupid fucks don’t get it.. me leaving means death sentence.. I’m fucked
One day I'll know what it's like to be truly loved by a good man.
Maybe.. Youre that good man youve been looking for...
I hope you find a great guy, but if not, you’re enough and you’re worthy of love.
Why do you need that? There really is no point in hoping for that day, just do things for yourself and be happy by yourself. Dont wait or hope for any man.
Look in the friend zone
@@sherbaum1985 is this ironic
This resonates with so many people. Controlling behaviour eventually manifests and not necessarily physically.
I remember making peace with the idea that I was going to get killed regardless if I had stayed or if leave. Everything that I was afraid of happened to me he showed up to my job and beat me in front of everyone and no one did anything to stop him he showed up to my house drunk and no one called the police and finally his whole family knew and no one stopped him.
I am happy to be alive and after years of therapy I have been able to forgive myself
💔 I'm glad you're safe!
Nothing to forgive, all accountability is on the monster who violently hurt you.
And I hope you ditched the people who did nothing to help you. Better to have no one than to have miscreants like that. Never look back.
About no one helping you on the job, from my experience, as a MAN, if you try to break up the fight WITHOUT the victim asking you do so, as soon as you intervene, they gonna double tag you. She will slap you, he will punch you and both of them will walk home happily ever after while you are on the ground being laughed at by bystanders. It is better to say away honestly.
I smell a stunt.
I was 22 when I met my ex , now I’m 24 and broke up with him for good. Stay strong everyone 💪🏼💯
Abuse thrives in silence is so very true. When I finally shared my truth I was called a liar and crazy. I would die for my truth!
Rachel Hope You go gal!!
Yup, I heard “That’s just life” and “I had it worse.” Def writing a book about it for others.
Me too, but I believe you GORGEOUS 💜 you are a survivor, a thriver and you will never experience such pain EVER again, promise 💜🌸
40 plus years on and I still bear the emotional scars, (as well as the physical ones)..you are soooo right... we do need to talk about it, especially to our children.
I'm surprised she didn't speak very much about the cycle of "please forgive me, I'll never do it again", and then another beating. Any folks out there in an abusive relationship....my thoughts and best hopes to you. Be strong. Be of good courage.
It’s called being lied to. If the actions and words don’t line up, take the actions as truth, not the words.
@@likemycommentifyouwantareply OK! Thank you. I sympathize with abuse victims patently, but the lack of self-accountability and their not understanding their culpability in being manipulated is stupefying.
I didn’t realize how hard it would be. I was being given money which I didn’t realize was a form of abuse to financially be independent on him. It’s so hard but I treat is like AA and I’m gonna get through this.
@@MacChicken-up2rl I believe in you!
Maybe he never said sorry
Covert narcissistic abuse is one of the worst things you’ll ever have to go through. My ex never hit me once. He never called me a name either. He used force but never hit me or beat me. The neglect, the comparing, the invalidation, mind games, gaslighting and mental torment in between super positive reinforcement, is enough to mess you up and be internally broken for a while. You will never get it until you’re actually in it.
Yes... it's still abuse
I couldn´t agree more!
Me too
It's just so sad and strange to people who will never go through that because they were raised with love and given self-esteem.
Take responsibility of your own happiness.. Never ever depend your self-worth/confidence base on someone's opinion about you..
This was a powerful talk. Thank you, Leslie, for the courage to speak out about this. I was on the cusp of this type of violence before I simply moved away without telling him where I went. It was one of the scariest and best decisions I've ever made.
Hope life is going good for you
The most dangerous time in an abusive relationship is when the abused person tries to leave. Oh and abuse affects every single demographic in America and it has to stop. 😊
It will only stop when we march in the streets anytime a female is hurt!!
Dear.....abuse STOPS when we stop tolerating bad behavior like abuse. The reason why women never get into an abusive relationship is because they don't tolerate it. Period.
YES DEFINITELY
But men hide their abusive nature at first
@@py528 That was cruel. He was the sweetest talker you ever heard, I never thought he would be abusive until I was pregnant. BTW, that is when abuse starts a lot of the time. Absolutely nobody knows exactly how a person will act until they live with them. I left as soon as I could and that was one year after we married. I didn't put up with it but I had to leave carefully, I kicked him out of my Grandma's house while my 3 large Uncles were there for a visit and I told him, "hit me now you cowardly so and so." I can't repeat it here. He left with a pillow case and his clothes. I got everything I wanted in the divorce. He was forced to pay for all the bills incurred during the marriage. I didn't "tolerate" anything. I left and I made him pay when I did. It's not so easy for every woman, I was raised by two very strong women who taught me that I don't have to put up with abuse. My Grandma and my Mom.
Wow. She hit the nail on the head. I was in an abusive relationship for 8 years. He charmed and seduced me and my family, isolated me from my friends so I had no one to turn to, started abusing me, and constantly blamed me for his outbursts. When he got mad and hit me with household things, it was MY FAULT because I pissed him off. It's been 4 years I've been free to heal, and it's been so much inner work and therapy to get to a place of strength and softness. I'm happy I'm here with my soul and my heart.
I'm a man and I'm experiencing this kind of treatment. I'm stuck and trying to ride the storm. It's incredibly complex with very good and very bad. It would already seem to be an impossible situation but I'm in a foreign country and got a baby too. Without being too naive, I still hope some divine or civil intervention will come to help all of us and transform the situation.
@@mec1 Please take care ! God bless you and your child 🙏💞 Abuse is abuse regardless of one's gender. It's been a year since your comment, I pray you and your child are safe!
@@mec1 We can't wait on miracles, boo. Because, even if they do come, they are so rare, it's likely we won't be the lucky chosen one. We need to MAKE the decision for ourselves and SEEK out help if necessary.
We stay because we get so trampled down , our self esteem becomes non existent. We are convinced beyond a shadow of a doubt that if we walk out the door we will never survive and no one will ever want us. The truth is, we will never survive if we stay. Quite a catch 22.
Love that line Abuse thrives only in silence
Abusers never get better, the violence only ever escalate. If you stay, they know that you will put up with it and it only gets worse from there.
My husband/abuser was carrying a gun daily, and he was the one you called for help...yes he was a police officer. My only defense was to leave quietly and quickly. He remarried immediately, I feel sorry for her.
You hear of an awful lot of men who are in the Police force being abusers, particularly men in the pressurised side of policing.
Where did you come from Joy? You got away FAST! Your common sense is AMAZING? SOooo rare around this forum.
@@rasher331 When running from abuse...certain Police were abusive to me also.I didnt do anything about it because I was not even able to deal with husband yet. Also my tolerance was very high for abuse,I became agressive,not scared of any man! Adrenaline ect you get screwed up.....I had children I had to get away! Actually if I had no children I wonder if I would have left for good. I yhink he was trying to get rid of me.I was loyal old fashionedect...I think he already had n other......more to this ...too long too lengthy....... one cop was choking me ,one rubbed my stomache circular strokes after slamming me to ground...yes I was being fiesty but at that time in my life I fought.......anger issues from prolonged abuse.....
@@manyhats3846 I hope things are better for you now x
@@rasher331 Things are better!....Memories...Wont go! We are left dammaged ect. THANKS Rasher for asking!!!!
They follow you. My father did it to my mother he didn't love any of us but wouldn't leave or let us go. When we finally escaped but he followed..
The instant my ex started abusing me i left. He stalked me for 12 months and would even demand to see me when i was at work. I had to move to the other side of the country to get away.
If you have to go DO NOT TELL ANYONE other than your most trusted family and friends that are ACTIVELY trying to help you. Abusers are the most cunning of con men and master manipulators their trap is laid and "nice guy" image set long before the Abuse starts. NO ONE KNOWS and most will not believe the reality of what living with that person truly is. But after you are gone i can assure you that people soon wake-up to who they really are when they start tearing through everyones lives looking for you.
Story of my life. Left after 19 years and the stalking was horrifying - at work, at church, the kids' schools, grocery shopping, on all my social media accounts (he even cloned my accounts) Even restraint order did not deter him. Police had to patrol our neighbourhood at night after he'd tried to break into our house several times. Nobody believed me because he was such a great, kind, thoughtful, funny guy. I was a strong, financially stable, educated fine woman - but it took me years to say "Wait a minute. This is not right". He's no longer in the picture now but I'm still struggling with the PTSD from the whole nightmare
Kirsty Lyons my abuser is still stalking me. It feels like my past is coming back to haunt me, he abandoned me for a year but came back, I’ve deleted whole apps just to try to avoid communication with him
I grew up in an physically and emotionally abusive Home. People who have never lived through it don't understand how much power the abuser has through manipulation and intimidation. You are Brave and wise.
But being a child at home, having no autonomy and agency of having to be there and being an adult who makes sequential decisions, putting oneself in an abusive space, is vastly different.
Exactly 💯
True.. and it makes us highly susceptible to future toxic relationships. I pray life has gotten better for you. 🙏🏼
Facts ❤
It's never easy grow up in a hectic household, where everyone seems to make you feel as though you are small and inadequate, that nothing you do matters and how nobody ever cares about what you think or feel; it's always about the abusers, no matter how much they screwed over the family or whether they deserve special treatment. Abuse is only as powerful as the people involved in it, and unfortunately, most people in a hard situation like that prefer to be an enabler than just trying to fix their problems.
That's why we need to absorb as much information as we can, deconstructing all the harsh lessons we were taught and try to make a better place for the new generation, so they won't have to go through the same things we did.
I give this message to those struggling in abusive households and communities.
I went through that abuse for 38 Years ... was not grant nor allow any independence or to live my own individuality
I was never allow to have a job BUT to be a wife, a mother, a gardener and maid
Currently after I divorced my ex, I found myself in exactly the same relationship ... but even worse this time
I'm leaving in two days time and then I'm done
Sending all my love and support from the internet across the globe you can overcome this don’t give up❤
I hope you're safe ❤️
Did you leave...am hoping you did!!😢
i fear that one of my siblings may turn into an abuser. They're verbally abusive already and unshameful about it. Our biological father is a domestic abuser and cycles repeat. But if this becomes the future, I'll be there to pull the leash and act.
i stayed because i was scared
I was called an abuser by a friend online for calling my wife stupid in a gaming event. It wasn't a problem when she said something similar in return. Heck, some people might appear abusive but use words with affectation. Then there are those who really are just angry all the time and say and do things they ought not to.
In my case "Cmon, don't be a silly sausage. You're just being stupid" was affectation. A bit of fun. In your sibling's case perhaps it might be more like "You're fucking stupid. You can't do anything right". Does it seem more like that?
Blair Bishop good for you
My siblings are abusers. They don't care. My dad was an abuser. I think my dad had a mental disorder.