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Dedicated to Helping Hurt and Abused Women
JESUS is the Answer.
Grace Ministry
Facts to Consider
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Why She Stays ... Or Returns
- LOW SELF-ESTEEM
- She feels that she is a failure as a wife, a mother, a person because she
cannot avoid abuse. Her batterer reinforces this feeling as a means of
control.
- ECONOMIC DEPENDENCE
- The degree to which she is economically dependent upon her
spouse/boyfriend will be the final factor in whether or not she feels she
can exist independently. A positive attitude can mean very little without
the means to live independently.
- KEEPING THE FAMILY TOGETHER
- She will often feel that having a father is more important than anything
she can offer her children. She is unsure of her ability to keep her
children and support them on her own. In fact, her spouse may often threaten
to take the children away if she attempts to leave.
- GUILT
- She often assumes the blame for the abuse and will expend energy uselessly
trying to determine how to avoid provoking her batterer. Societal factors
tend to hold women responsible for the well-being of the family members.
Thus, she feels responsible for holding the family together in times of
crisis.
- PROMISES OF CHANGE
- She believes her partner when he promises (over and over) that he will
never do "it" again. She often still loves him and wants very
badly for her relationship, marriage, life to be successful. If he will
change, she does not have to face the responsibility to make a change.
- EMOTIONAL DEPENDENCE
- She often has no experience in independent decision-making or in being
responsible for herself. Her spouse has reinforced this dependent
relationship as a means of retaining control of her so that she is available
to abuse.
- FEARS OF INSANITY
- She may be told by her partner that she is crazy. Being dependent upon him
increases her chances of acceptance (at least partially) of this perception.
She is extremely unsure of her ability to cope with the "outside
world" and this increases her fear of insanity.
- ISOLATION
- She is usually quite isolated, having few friends or sources of support.
The more isolated she is, the more dependent upon her spouse she is for any
input about her value as a person or her options in life.
- NO PLACE TO GO
- She is often unaware of community resources and her rights to use them.
- LEARNED BEHAVIOR
- Abused women may come to regard abuse as a normal part of a relationship
or marriage. Societal attitudes often assume a man's right to use physical
violence against "his" wife or "his" woman. She may have
witnessed violence in her own family for years.
- SOCIETAL ATTITUDES
- She often has feelings of loneliness and inadequacy when facing the blank
wall of misunderstanding, unsupportive friends, relatives, community
members. The attitude that family "problems" are private to any
extreme increases her feelings of isolation and fear.
- TRADITIONAL VALUE SYSTEMS
- Traditional societal roles deny the options of separation and divorce for
abused women. Strong religious convictions and the stigma of welfare often
effectively force the woman to remain or return to an abusive situation.
- FEAR OF DEATH
- Quite simply, an abused woman may be told she will be killed, her children
will be killed, or her batterer will kill himself if she leaves or refuses
to return. Past violence has taught her that his threats often translate
into action.
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