Monday, October 1, 2012

Signs of Domestic Abuse


It's October 1st, the beginning of Domestic Violence Awareness Month...I'm sitting with my husband as I type this, thinking back to a time when I could have never mentioned domestic abuse, and even a time when I didn't realize that's what I was living in. It's been one year and 8 months to the day of me leaving the abusive situation I was in. I call February 1, 2010, the day we left, Freedom Day. Not because it was happy, or because I wanted it to happen (just the opposite, it was terrifying and I hate divorce and families falling apart!). I call it Freedom Day because it was the first step in me being able to feel alive and like I was breathing again.

Domestic Abuse causes you to feel dead, but you don't even realize you feel that way until something changes and you all of the sudden realize you're breathing again. In fact, very often, you don't even realize you're in an abusive situation. It's easy if you're punched, stabbed, or thrown out of a moving car. It's not so easy if your keys are taken away, you aren't allowed to have friends, you have to be careful about what you say, or if you're "just" called names. In fact, it makes it even harder to realize what's going on when you consider the fact that most people being abused are really, really good at loving...which means we can forgive easily, be happy easily, and we are "fixers", so we are always thinking about the other person and how we can help them rather than focusing on ourselves.

I looked back today and read through my Facebook timeline of statuses in the months surrounding the day we left my now ex-husband...and I realized how important it is for people to recognize abuse so that their families can be healed, and also so that people can be prevented from getting into abusive relationships to begin with. A relationship with abuse can't last forever. It will end, either the abuse, or the relationship. Abusive relationships aren't sustainable, and the first step to preventing or healing a family affected by this is to realize it's going on. If you don't know it's going on, you can't stop it.

Here are some signs that you may be in an abusive relationship...
  • You secretly pack needed belongings in case you need to escape. I don't know why it never occurred to me that there might be a problem with my life when I was sneaking underwear and socks into the bottom of the diaper bag before we left the house!  
  • You have to tell coworkers to not call or text you while you are home. Especially those of another gender!  
  • You overcompensate in taking care of the kids, house, making money, etc. so that your spouse doesn't get angry. 
  • You are called names, derogatory comments are made to you, your worth is devalued. 
  • You place breakable or valuable objects in "safer" locations so they won't be as easily broken. 
  • You don't watch movies, etc. with your spouse that have a theme of domestic abuse or of a spouse leaving or divorce, etc..

...there is always hope. <3 p="p">

2 comments:

  1. Thank you for sharing your thoughts and experience. I shared this via facebook in case someone needs to see it today....

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  2. Thanks, Stealthy Mom! Unfortunately, there are a lot more people that we all know who need it than we realize. :(

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incredibly interesting comments!