General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsHas this ever happened to you? No? Then I am glad.
Violence against Women most often Starts at Home.
As a young child, did you ever sit down to dinner, while your mom and dad were in the middle of a very loud argument. Did you ever sit there and watch your dad backhand your mom so hard that blood spattered across the table. Did you ever stand around the bathroom, with your mom sitting on the toilet seat, and hand her tissues to stop the blood flow. Did you stand there and cry. No? Then I am glad. My sister and brother and I, it happened to us.
That is the only time that I saw my dad hit my mom. However the fights and verbal abuse were the same as a physical blow. It can crush you. They stayed together for 25 years...for the children. I wish they had not.
The ironic part in all this, I had a similar marriage. Most of it was verbal abuse. He made me feel worthless, that I was nothing. I knew that I was not. It was short lived. I left, with scars on my soul from my marriage and my upbringing.
I have never talked about this, not to anyone, ever. I hinted about it. That was it. So you might ask yourself, why now. I started to post something a few times.I wanted to make a point. It was hard.
However after posting thread after thread on VAWA, and watching other similar posts sink and die with so little notice. I felt like someone, that had the air sucked out their body. I wept each time they died unnoticed.
I have said before, that there is not one single person here on DU that does not have at least one Woman in their life. Someone that they care about, someone they want to protect. We can only protect them if we stand for all Women.
Please sign the Violence Against Women Petition:
http://www.beaubiden.com/landing/w1302vw/
Originally posted by gateley here:
http://www.democraticunderground.com/?com=view_post&forum=1002&pid=2366783
MotherPetrie
(3,145 posts)I'm very grateful I never experienced anything like that.
Laura PourMeADrink
(42,770 posts)to have never had to suffer as you and countless others have.
Signed petition !!
People do care...we all do.
sheshe2
(83,791 posts)Thank you so much!
Euphoria
(448 posts)We are lucky to have you here at DU to give voice to this cause. Thank you.
sheshe2
(83,791 posts)[url=http://postimage.org/][img][/img][/url]
Deep13
(39,154 posts)Just saying.
Laura PourMeADrink
(42,770 posts)sheshe2
(83,791 posts)That felt like a sucker punch...I was staying away from the thread after I read that!
I wasn't in the least trying to belittle men, as you know. It was why everytime I posted someting in VAWA...I always stated that everyone here has at least one woman in their lives.
Again thanks.
Deep13
(39,154 posts)Laura PourMeADrink
(42,770 posts)by your comment....just came across wrong. Everyone does that once in awhile.
Deep13
(39,154 posts)...and a bit ashamed to be a man.
Thats all I meant.
I don't know how else it could be taken.
Obviously, I agree with the Violence Against Women Act.
GentryDixon
(2,953 posts)It seems all is well now. Nobody with a soul would condone violence against another.
sheshe2
(83,791 posts)Sorry...I was really not sure what you meant.
You see, I still love my dad. He was a damaged man, I do not think a bad man. I have some beautiful memories of my childhood. However the agony of the fights and oh so many other ugly scenarios that went on over the years were heartbreaking.
I used to feel that way about the abusive people in my life. Now I make no excuses for them. Perhaps you deal with it better than I do, but I've stopped trying to polish the turd of my own childhood. I spent the few good times in constant anxiety over the next eruption. I know full well my mother, my one time step-father, and most of her relatives are cruel, selfish people.
sheshe2
(83,791 posts)Please accept a from me.
Deep13
(39,154 posts)tblue37
(65,408 posts)your comment that way, the unfortunate reality is that every time a woman posts a comment or thread about rape or about violence against women, the usual suspects show up to accuse the poster of "male bashing," of painting all men as rapists or abusers.
As a result, a post like yours can easily be misconstrued as more of the same, as you saw in the responses to your comment.
Sad experience has caused a lot of us to have sensitive--perhaps overly sensitive, even hair-trigger--radar for such contemptuous dismissals of real abuses against women.
smirkymonkey
(63,221 posts)That is true. Only cowards go after women and children. How can anyone call himself a man after beating up a woman.
I am so sorry for the OP's experience.
annabanana
(52,791 posts)and a heart for you.
No one should suffer this.
sheshe2
(83,791 posts)For signing and caring...and for the heart!
DollarBillHines
(1,922 posts)I live with a wonderful woman who went thru very much the same...
She is 59 years old and has climbed many a mountain, figuratively speaking. She has lived her professional life in a a Man's World and has bested many of them. I wish I could go into detail, but the vultures and piranhas who inhabit this site would have a field day with that info.
But, today, her asshole overbearing father (long dead, thankfully) still inhibits her every move.
I would like to thank you for your post.
DBH
sheshe2
(83,791 posts)My best to you and yours!
rurallib
(62,423 posts)My 2 older brothers were pretty much out of the house when it started. I was @10.
My father was working in another city and so was only home on the weekends. The fighting would start @ an hour after he returned home for the weekend and go until he left Monday morning.
All mixed in with alcohol. We were catholic, so they stayed together. I so wanted the fighting to stop or at least be able to go someplace else like my brothers did.
I vaguely remember one slapping incident where dad hit mom. I also had my mother try to kill us (she and I) 3 times with gas once, with a knife once and one time she just beat the crap out me.
peace finally came about 6 years later.
Funny thing is my brothers saw little of it. When I accidentally brought it up at a family party, they really got pissed at me for saying such stuff.
With two daughters I am a great believer and worker for women's rights.
sheshe2
(83,791 posts)sheshe
rurallib
(62,423 posts)the whole priest abuse thing came out. Yeah, i was one of those too.
When the memories started coming back, it wasn't painful or anything - just made me very mad.
And strangely up til then most of my memories of my youth were of playing basketball.
But what is really strange is how neither of my brothers experienced what I did either at home or at school. It is like I was cursed.
So yes, I hang on to my daughters very tightly, even though each are hundreds of miles away. We Skype weekly for hours.
When they grew up my wife had a brain hemorrhage when #2 was born and my wife spent about 20 years quite paranoid until her doctor finally gave her prozac. It was really tough keeping it all together.
come to think of it I must be cursed.
freshwest
(53,661 posts)That one is just for you, this time.
sheshe2
(83,791 posts)I had to say it. I had to make it personal. It was hard.
If it will help the cause, I will be happy.
gateley
(62,683 posts)Your good deeds are known.
Bonobo
(29,257 posts)And and even more shocking 5,365,000 MEN were victims of domestic violence.
littlemissmartypants
(22,692 posts)could you provide a link to those?
Thanks.
Love, Peace and Shelter. lmsp
Bonobo
(29,257 posts)Page 38, tables 4.1 and 4.2.
http://www.cdc.gov/violencepreventio...port2010-a.pdf
BlancheSplanchnik
(20,219 posts)"May be unavailable or may have been removed"
Bonobo
(29,257 posts)BlancheSplanchnik
(20,219 posts)The first time though, I just got the error thing.
Anyway, I am going to need to look at it later...it's a long document and it's late here. I've got some things to do that I've already put off for being online for too long.
Thanks
SunSeeker
(51,574 posts)Your citation to that 5 million figure for men is very misleading. It comes from a CDC chart that lumps everything from "slaps" to shooting to define violence. When it comes to serious physical abuse by an intimate partner, women are far more often the victim than a man. The chart breaks down the type of physical violence (slaps, burning, knife/guns) and the more serious the harm, the more likely it is that a woman is the victim. Yes, when it comes to slaps, millions of men are victims each year. But the numbers for men drop off dramatically as the violence gets more serious...and increases proportionally for women. For example, the stat on being "beaten" lists 822, 000 women as victims each year and 379, 000 men as victims each year.
raccoon
(31,111 posts)DURHAM D
(32,610 posts)SunSeeker
(51,574 posts)Helen Reddy
(998 posts)that he has turned this posters own tragedy into a misleading claim about the abuses of the menz.
Thank you for parsing the numbers through.
sheshe2
(83,791 posts)SunSeeker
(51,574 posts)The least we could do is respond to bs posts trying to stomp on your post.
Gormy Cuss
(30,884 posts)For all types of violence examined in this report, the majority of both
female and male victims had one perpetrator. Across all forms of violence, the majority of female
victims reported that the perpetrators were male. Male rape victims and male victims of non-contact
unwanted sexual experiences reported predominantly male perpetrators. Nearly half of male stalking victims also reported
perpetration by a male. Male victims of other forms of violence reported predominantly female perpetrators
To try to deflect the discussion by cherry picking one stat to suggest that men and women experience equal victimization without looking at the severity of that victimization and without looking at the gender of the offender is just absurd.
I doubt that anyone here dismisses that IPV of men is also a serious issue in this society. It's just not anywhere near as serious as IPV of women.
riderinthestorm
(23,272 posts)in your post.
I hope you are in a better place. Thank you so, so very much for this beautiful OP. You so eloquently demonstrate exactly why this legislation is desperately needed.
K&R.
sheshe2
(83,791 posts)The whole issue of the war on Women and the the Bulls**t about not passing VAWA!
It just kind of made everything hit home. It reopened wounds long buried. I cried every time a thread went almost unnoticed.
I feel strongly about this issue, as many others do here at DU!
Thank you, rider ( may I call you rider for short?)
patrice
(47,992 posts)emotional violence, though, and that is so excruciating that actual hitting must surely make the pain incomprehensibly deeper.
Thank you for telling us about your experience, sheshe2. I will not forget.
sheshe2
(83,791 posts)Emotional or Physical, they sure as hell cut the same deep wounds. Most physical abuse can be seen, or lied away. Oops bumped into a door.
Emotional violence in my opinion is worse, it can cut so very deeply, to your soul. People can not see it. They may never know. I don't have the words to explain it...I don't think I have to, you know!
Thank you for your post and support, patrice, it is appreciated.
tpsbmam
(3,927 posts)emotional neglect i lived with growing up up and it's never a completed process as I find a myself at nearing 60 still having to check my decisions & behaviors for the lingering influence. I've known many women personally and professionally who suffered horrific physical abuse on top of all of that, a hell you have to be an incredibly cold-hearted "person" to not empathize with....or, given the power to do so, want to protect.
Absolutely signed & shared the petition.
And thank you, sheshe2, for your courageous post. There's power in the sharing of your story. The only shame is owned 100% by the abusers.
sheshe2
(83,791 posts)You believe in our WOMEN and I thank you for that!
BlancheSplanchnik
(20,219 posts)It always feels like a sucker punch.
Sometimes I don't wade in just because I get tired and overwhelmed.....
Growing up, my mother was the violent one...my Dad was comparatively sane but was gone all the time on business. Trying to tell him what she was doing did not go well, however. He never physically hit me, though.
Anyway, I was very aware of inequality of women (girls) even when I was a kid. Oddly, though, I also have a long history of falling desperately in love with very damaged people who end up treating me badly. Even with years of recovery I am recovering yet again from another one.
Abuse is the gift that keeps giving. Depression, isolating, self-sabotage, tendency to feel despairing, feeling like you (I) don't know how to do life. Thinking normal people must be very different than you (me). For whatever reason, we have all this on our plate. We have to do our best to make ourselves whole and learn to take care of ourselves better than what we learned.
(I've already signed the petition)
Bonobo
(29,257 posts)and it killed him. She broke his shoulder and left him all night in a puddle of his own urine.
Domestic violence is as much against men as women and I am tired of seeing one side of it ignored.
BlancheSplanchnik
(20,219 posts)Do you respond in this way, jumping in to the thread to minimize it? To argue that the OP is wrong because in spite of the overwhelming imbalance, you lived the less common experience?
Actually, what you are talking about is Elder Abuse, and elderly women are at risk as much as elderly men are. Sick people beat up on those weaker than themselves.
What happened to your Dad is WRONG and i am so sorry. He did not deserve it.
Llet me share that my Dad also experienced something awful in his old age, so my heart DOES go out to you empathetically.........but what we both experienced with our Dads is not a gender issue.
I think it's inappropriate to hijack this thread and imply that it is wrong for focusing on a phenomenon that is proportionately FAR more common to women.
A new thread raising consciousness about Elder issues would be a better thing to do.
Bonobo
(29,257 posts)Older people are people too.
BlancheSplanchnik
(20,219 posts)and the whole point of the OP.
Bonobo
(29,257 posts)Some people have experienced domestic abuse from women as children, as husbands and as fathers, as grandfathers, as grandchildren.
For men and boys, it can be hard to come out with these experiences precisely because while one side of the gender equation is addressed and its victims supported, the other side is silenced and shamed (as I am starting to get) in this thread for even raising it.
Imagine if I STARTED a thread about male victims of domestic violence! I would be laughed out of here.
So where does it get voiced? It doesn't. And now you are trying to shame me into shutting up here too.
BlancheSplanchnik
(20,219 posts)Honestly. I think you should start a consciousness raising thread.
The key is how you phrase it.
The reason you are seeing "backlash" responses to your issue is due to the WORDING and ATTITUDE of the post.
Posts which voice an attitude that says, or SEEMS to say that women talking about VAWA and the phenomenon of male violence against women (as well as the cultural normalization of misogyny/sexualization of women) should shut up are not going to be greeted well.
I tried to point out how you sounded in your first reply to me. There are some other posters here sounding like they are implying that women "should shut up because it hapens to men too".
Perhaps that's not what you meant to imply.....so please note that there ARE men on here telling of experiences of being abused by a women (like their mothers, who were bigger and stronger at the time.)
They are NOT getting negative responses.
The difference is in how they're expressing themselves.
CitizenPatriot
(3,783 posts)but the facts are that women are killed more often by a partner than men are. 3 women are killed a day in the US by an intimate partner.
Domestic violence is the leading cause of injury to womenmore than car accidents, muggings, and rapes combined.
http://domesticviolencestatistics.org/domestic-violence-statistics/
I am sorry for what you've gone through. However, the facts are that domestic violence more often kills women than it does men, and that is why we make that claim. It is true. In no way is that fact meant to disparage what your family went through.
Again, no one is justifying violence against anyone. Violence is always wrong. You would make your point better if you were not ignoring the facts. You don't have to claim men suffer more than women from domestic violence in order to make your point.
Your point could be that violence against anyone is wrong, and that it does get aimed at men, and that men have died from it as well. I've never laughed at any man who brought that up. It's not either/or and it's not a contest to see who should get the attention. Passing the VAWA doesn't make your point any less valid.
I have seen friends of mine hunted down with guns by their partner, and have helped women escape from deranged violent men in their lives. Many of us have seen the pain close up.
That said, it is true that people ignore the Violence Against Women Act. It simply isn't a cool cause for some reason, and that deeply saddens me re the liberal movement. It needs to be reauthorized before we go back to the even higher stats from before Biden passed it originally.
raccoon
(31,111 posts)sheshe2
(83,791 posts)We are stonger now.
I know that I am. Do I have my bad times , sure. However I feel much stonger on my own now. I have great friends and a pretty great family! All in all I am blessed.
Disconnect
(33 posts)And where are the equal protections for fathers and their children from these abusive females?? Try finding a generously funded men's shelter, better yet try finding a abused men's shelter. Men have no where to go when the female is having a tantrum excaept to jail when the neighbors call the police and only the Man is injured!!
BlancheSplanchnik
(20,219 posts)Who can easily kill you with his bare hands. Who can do extensive damage with one punch. Who is more likely to externalize rage (women tend to internalize)
As for your claim that there are as many or more abusive females....statistics worldwide disagree with you. Men are far far FAR more likely to harm their female partner than the other way around. And no, I'm not going to do the search for you.
If you're interested enough to argue, you can be interested enough to search on your own.
sheshe2
(83,791 posts)I don't have the energy, and am far to emotional to respond tonight. It took everything out of me just to have the courage to post this thread.
OldHippieChick
(2,434 posts)Puleez - you are truly disconnected Disconnect. Show me where you get this statistic - I assume you have no back-up. I do not belittle men who are abused. It happens, yes, but far, far, less than man on woman abuse. And a "tantrum" hardly equals a punch to the mouth. In my jurisdiction many females go to jail, especially if both parties are injured. You are making things up.
sufrommich
(22,871 posts)OldDem2012
(3,526 posts)Zoeisright
(8,339 posts)My husband was the director of an abused women's shelter and he knows the stats. There are NOT NEARLY as many abusive women as men. That's a complete lie.
And you're showing your misogyny there, sparky. Women having a "tantrum"?? Grow up. Then leave.
Disconnect
(33 posts)Women are just as likely as men to engage in partner aggression.
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report, "In nonreciprocally violent relationships, women were the perpetrators in more than 70% of the cases. Reciprocity was associated with more frequent violence among women, but not men." [Source: Whitaker, Haileyesus, Swahn and Saltzman, Differences in Frequency of Violence and Reported Injury Between Relationships With Reciprocal and Nonreciprocal Intimate Partner Violence, American Journal of Public Health, May 2007, Vol 97, No. 5, pp. 941-947, http://www.ajph.org/cgi/content/abstract/97/5/941]
Psychologist John Archer reviewed hundreds of studies and concluded, Women were slightly more likely than men to use one or more act of physical aggression and to use such acts more frequently. [Source: John Archer: Sex differences in aggression between heterosexual partners: A meta-analytic review. Psychological Bulletin, Vol. 126, No. 5, pages 651-680]
Law professor Linda Kelly noted, "leading sociologists have repeatedly found that men and women commit violence at similar rates." [Source: Linda Kelly: Disabusing the definition of domestic abuse. Florida State University Law Review, Vol. 30, pages 791-855, 2003. Accessible at: http://www.law.fsu.edu/journals/lawreview/downloads/304/kelly.pdf ]
An international survey of violence between dating partners in 16 countries concluded: Perhaps the most important similarity is the high rate of assault perpetrated by both male and female students in all the countries. [Source: Murray Straus: Prevalence of violence against dating partners by male and female university students worldwide. Violence Against Women, Vol. 10, No. 7, 2001]
Cal State Psychology Professor Martin Fiebert has assembled a bibliography of 175 scholarly investigations: 139 empirical studies and 36 reviews and/or analyses, which demonstrate that women are as physically aggressive, or more aggressive, than men in their relationships with their spouses or male partners. http://www.csulb.edu/~mfiebert/assault.htm
An analysis of the data collected by the National Violence Against Women (NVAW) Survey found that more women than men engage in controlling behavior in their current marriages, but there was no statistically significant difference between men's and women's use of controlling behaviors in former marriages. Controlling husbands were not particularly likely to engage in frequent, injurious, or unprovoked violence. Husband and wives did not differ in their motivation to control. [Source: Sociology Professors Richard B. Felson (Penn State) and Maureen C. Outlaw (Providence College) "The Control Motive and Marital Violence," Violence and Victims, 2007, Vol. 22, Issue 4 http://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/ebm/record/17691548/full_citation/The_control_motive_and_marital_violence_
Men experience over one-third of DV-related injuries.
Of all persons who suffer an injury from partner aggression, 38% are male. [Source: John Archer: Sex differences in aggression between heterosexual partners: A meta-analytic review. Psychological Bulletin, Vol. 126, No. 5, pages 651-680]
Of all persons who require medical treatment as the result of partner aggression, 35% are male. [Source: John Archer: Sex differences in aggression between heterosexual partners: A meta-analytic review. Psychological Bulletin, Vol. 126, No. 5, Table 5]
Men who are victims of severe domestic violence suffer other problems, as well [Source: Richard J. Gelles: Intimate Violence in Families, 1997]:
30% experienced depression
14% required bed rest to recuperate from the injuries
10% needed to take time off from work
Men are far less likely to report DV incidents than women.
According to the National Family Violence Survey, female victims of DV are nine times more likely to call the police than male DV victims. These are the percentages of victims who called the police in response to the assault:
Women: 8.5%
Men: 0.9%
[Source: JE Stets and MA Straus: Gender differences in reporting marital violence and its medical and psychological consequences. In Straus and Gelles (editors): Physical violence in American families, 1990, Table 15.]
The myths about domestic violence are numerous.
These are some of the common myths about domestic violence:
According to the FBI, a woman is beaten every 15 seconds
4,000 women each year are killed by their husbands, ex-husbands, or boyfriends
There are nearly three times as many animal shelters in the United states as there are shelters for women
Battering during pregnancy is the leading cause of birth defects and infant mortality
Women who kill their batterers receive longer prison sentences than men who kill their partners
Richard Gelles, an internationally-recognized expert on domestic violence, refers to many of these claims as factoids from nowhere. [http://www.mincava.umn.edu/documents/factoid/factoid.html]
Many of these myths are based on DV studies that use biased survey methods.
Some studies survey women but not men. Predictably, these studies yield one-sided findings.
The DOJ National Crime Victimization Survey is flawed because persons do not consider most forms of domestic violence, such as slapping, shoving, or throwing an object at a partner, to be a crime.
The DOJ National Violence Against Women survey prefaces the questions by repeatedly using the phrase personal safety. Those words bias the responses because women are more concerned about personal safety than men.
Some studies of domestic violence assess both physical and verbal abuse. That inflates and distorts the picture of physical violence.
[Source: MA Straus: The controversy over domestic violence by women: A methodological, theoretical, and sociology of science analysis. In XB Arriaga and S Oskamp: Violence in intimate relationships. Sage Publishers, 1999. http://pubpages.unh.edu/~mas2/CTS21.pdf]
DURHAM D
(32,610 posts)Disconnect
(33 posts)The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report, "In nonreciprocally violent relationships, women were the perpetrators in more than 70% of the cases. Reciprocity was associated with more frequent violence among women, but not men." [Source: Whitaker, Haileyesus, Swahn and Saltzman, Differences in Frequency of Violence and Reported Injury Between Relationships With Reciprocal and Nonreciprocal Intimate Partner Violence, American Journal of Public Health, May 2007, Vol 97, No. 5, pp. 941-947, http://www.ajph.org/cgi/content/abstract/97/5/941]
Psychologist John Archer reviewed hundreds of studies and concluded, Women were slightly more likely than men to use one or more act of physical aggression and to use such acts more frequently. [Source: John Archer: Sex differences in aggression between heterosexual partners: A meta-analytic review. Psychological Bulletin, Vol. 126, No. 5, pages 651-680]
Law professor Linda Kelly noted, "leading sociologists have repeatedly found that men and women commit violence at similar rates." [Source: Linda Kelly: Disabusing the definition of domestic abuse. Florida State University Law Review, Vol. 30, pages 791-855, 2003. Accessible at: http://www.law.fsu.edu/journals/lawreview/downloads/304/kelly.pdf ]
An international survey of violence between dating partners in 16 countries concluded: Perhaps the most important similarity is the high rate of assault perpetrated by both male and female students in all the countries. [Source: Murray Straus: Prevalence of violence against dating partners by male and female university students worldwide. Violence Against Women, Vol. 10, No. 7, 2001]
Cal State Psychology Professor Martin Fiebert has assembled a bibliography of 175 scholarly investigations: 139 empirical studies and 36 reviews and/or analyses, which demonstrate that women are as physically aggressive, or more aggressive, than men in their relationships with their spouses or male partners. http://www.csulb.edu/~mfiebert/assault.htm
An analysis of the data collected by the National Violence Against Women (NVAW) Survey found that more women than men engage in controlling behavior in their current marriages, but there was no statistically significant difference between men's and women's use of controlling behaviors in former marriages. Controlling husbands were not particularly likely to engage in frequent, injurious, or unprovoked violence. Husband and wives did not differ in their motivation to control. [Source: Sociology Professors Richard B. Felson (Penn State) and Maureen C. Outlaw (Providence College) "The Control Motive and Marital Violence," Violence and Victims, 2007, Vol. 22, Issue 4 http://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/ebm/record/17691548/full_citation/The_control_motive_and_marital_violence_
CitizenPatriot
(3,783 posts)Very strange. Sounds like he needs some help. Arrested with no evidence and blames the woman's tantrums? Gosh golly it's a classic abuser defense.
Just saying, if we're throwing out accusations and generalizations.
Contrary to your wild claims, domestic violence is the leading cause of injury for women in the US:
http://domesticviolencestatistics.org/domestic-violence-statistics/
Disconnect
(33 posts)Where are the Equal Protections and facilities, programs for Battered, Abused, Men as compared to human females??
CitizenPatriot
(3,783 posts)wickerwoman
(5,662 posts)and have to escape an abusive marriage with four or five little ones in tow but have no employable skills, no savings account in their name, no credit cards (because their abusive ex wouldn't let them have one), etc. etc.? Are there enough of them in any given metropolitan area to make keeping a shelter open economically feasible? Because there are enough women in that situation.
Most men have jobs and are less likely to feel the urgent need to take their kids with them when they flee. Men are less likely to be raped in homeless shelters or sleeping out on the streets. The assault, rape and murder rates for homeless women are fucking appalling. That's why battered womens' shelters exist.
Abused men are more likely to have the financial resources to flee to a motel. If they do have to hit the streets, they are not in the same kind of mortal danger that homeless women are in.
And female abusers are less likely to stalk their partner after they try to leave.
There are not equal programs because men and women fleeing abusers are frequently not in the same situation.
Disconnect
(33 posts)Where are your facts to back any of this up??
Marrah_G
(28,581 posts)alarimer
(16,245 posts)Back up your claim with some statistics, then we'll talk.
Otherwise this is just some men's rights bullshit.
I noticed what you posted doesn't link to any report, just a list of references. Still, from what you posted, men suffered 38% of the injuries. That's less than 62%, which were presumably women. And says nothing about the perpetrator, which could be male or female.
I don't believe the 70% figure, not for a minute.
Demo_Chris
(6,234 posts)It was my fault though.
I was the subject of discussion every day, every single day. Specifically, the topic was "What has Chris done wrong today?" If the answer was nothing, which was rare, they would default to the previous day's list of failures and flaws. My earliest memory is dad throwing me into a lit BBQ. That is literally my earliest memory.
Not complaining mind you, I've heard some horror stories and mine falls far short.
Tumbulu
(6,291 posts)This whole thread is so hard to read. Lots of sorrow going around.
Demo_Chris
(6,234 posts)BlancheSplanchnik
(20,219 posts)I'm having PTSD reactions from reading...heart pounding and sweat drenches
We are connected through relating to each other
Demo_Chris
(6,234 posts)I suffer from panic attacks (at least I hope that's all it is) and have for some time. Often they are really horrible, but I am sure you know all about that. Anyway, I had wondered if some of that might be related to the things I experienced when younger but I wasn't sure that was possible.
Is this correct that traumatic shit from when you are younger can mess you up years or even decades later? And if so, would you KNOW that it is related to this stuff or do you just have to guess?
I mean this question respectfully so if I accidentally said something disrespectful or insensitive I apologize in advance.
raccoon
(31,111 posts)"Is this correct that traumatic shit from when you are younger can mess you up years or even decades later? "
I experienced similar abuse. Like you, I was the family scapegoat.
Tumbulu
(6,291 posts)put me into a panic attack. I have been getting a lot of help by taking a supplement called L-theanine, but last night I was just so tense and frightened and angry etc that I just had to go through it. I vowd NOT to go on DU tonight....but here I am.
redqueen
(115,103 posts)My other siblings weren't targeted with violence for some reason.
It's interesting how many of us tend to downplay our own experiences, aware as we are of others, and how many of them had it worse.
Gormy Cuss
(30,884 posts)Weirdly, if we can point to others' experiences as being worse than our own it's easier to cope with our own abuse because we're convincing ourselves that we were lucky that it was only THAT bad.
calimary
(81,322 posts)experienced that kind of horror you did, sheshe2. Thank you for sharing this. I can only imagine the anguish, day after day after day.
The VAWA simply MUST be passed. It amazes me to watch the republi-CONS stand so firmly against legislation like this - and then in the next breath they're turning around and scratching their heads, wondering why they're stuck in the ratings basement with women voters. NO DUH!!! And every last one of them has women in THEIR lives too. More infuriating, republi-CON women are against this too. It just doesn't compute for me. I don't get it. I do not get it. What the hell are they THINKING??????????
I am grateful every day that I never went through that or was exposed to it. My mother's father beat her and was abusive to her siblings, too. She'd tell me stories about going to school and feeling her skirt stick to the back of her thighs because he'd beaten her so badly she had weeping sores on the back of her legs. BASTARD. I always found it rather remarkable that, as scarred as she surely was by that, she never hit me. It stopped with her and never got passed on to me. She could be verbally abusive, and I realized early-on that the nursery rhyme "sticks and stones can break my bones but words can never hurt me" - is NOT true. Words CAN hurt. But she NEVER hit me. And for that I'm grateful and actually kind of proud of her. So many batterers learn it from their own parents and then pass it on.
And it just stunning to think - that somewhere in this country, at this moment I'm writing this or you're reading it - some woman is being beaten by someone close to her.
UtahLib
(3,179 posts)Although I have never been in an abusive relationship, I have had to watch my daughter experience a very psychologically abusive marriage. Since finally breaking from the control and manipulation exerted by her so called partner, she has once again become the dynamic, happy and free spirited woman she was meant to be.
Hugs for sharing your pain and eventual triumph in order to help others who may be suffering the same indignities.
kairos12
(12,862 posts)Puzzledtraveller
(5,937 posts)I watched my dad beat up is girlfriend, sat on top of her and punched her in the face several times as she screamed and tried to fight back, I was six years old. My brother was 11 and called the police, they came and she said she didn't want to press charges because she didn't want us to see our dad arrested. This was before policy changes that required an arrest in these cases for our PD. I have PTSD issues from having witnessed this, I will be 40 in March.
BlancheSplanchnik
(20,219 posts)I have PTSD too...different kind of parent situation, though.
How horrible to have to see that...and to live with a man that could do that. Ugh.
nadinbrzezinski
(154,021 posts)Signed, for you and others.
sheshe2
(83,791 posts)Last edited Sun Feb 17, 2013, 12:46 PM - Edit history (1)
ReRe
(10,597 posts)Very very tight. And rocking you like a baby. I'm so sorry those things happened to you. Things like that happened to me too. Got a few black eyes taking up for my Mom. Bless her heart, she finally divorced the SOB when she was 70 yrs old. I was her caretaker in the last two years of her life. I'll never forget when she woke up one night screaming...not long before she passed (@age 86). When I went in and turned on her light and calmed her down telling her she had had a nightmare... she said she thought he was trying to kill her. And he was dead already! I held her and rocked her like a baby and said "No, Mommy, he can't hurt you anymore. He can't hurt you anymore." I didn't let go of her until she calmed down and stopped crying. I made a pallet on the floor by her hospital bed (yes, she had one of those), and I slept there by her until morning. I was afraid she would have another one.
My stepfather was very mean to her, my sister, and me. He left the boys alone. And I'll stop there. To all those who never had to go through anything like this, count yourself very lucky. But I can attest, this really does go on, to this very day, in families all over this country. That is why the VAWA is so important. Women have to have recourse. For God's sake, this is 2013, not 1013.. Let's get in the right millennium!!
sheshe2
(83,791 posts)My mom is 86 and still very active, my dad is in a nursing home now.
I still visit weekly. He is my dad, he never hurt us, at least not physically, he only hurt my mom and himself. He was a damaged man.
So very sorry about your mom... to you too.
We can make the stand together. We can!
Curmudgeoness
(18,219 posts)or that anyone has to go through this. If there is anyone here who does not support VAWA, they should re-evaluate why they are here.
If anyone here thinks that they know no one who is living through this sort of thing, as a child or as an adult, they are deluding themselves. Just like sheshe2, people do not often open up about it.
Sheshe2, I do understand.
sheshe2
(83,791 posts)Control-Z
(15,682 posts)When my father was beating my mother I was too young to understand that it was wrong. You see, whether it was the day before or the day after, it was just as likely that I would be the one in the bathroom bleeding from his blows. But I knew it something to be ashamed of. I guess I thought we were all doing something wrong and so I helped when it came to hiding the truth.
My mother died as an indirect result of his abuse. (The link in my sigline goes to the Wikipedia article about her death.) I've really never talked about how it was after she died - when my sister and I were left to be brought up alone by him. His sudden death while I was still in high school made it all the more difficult to ever really come to terms with.
I'm so sorry for you - and for anyone else who has experienced this kind of violence.
smirkymonkey
(63,221 posts)What a horrifying tale! I am so sorry for you and your mother!
My mother died in childbirth so am very much a strong proponent of safe and legal abortion.
sheshe2
(83,791 posts)I went to the link. I am so sorry. So very sorry. Your poor sweet mom.
You had it worse as a child...no one ever came after me. He hit her that one time, however We had our happy times...we had our sad times too, the multiple suicide attempts....the list goes on................and on.
for you Control-Z.
Peace to you and yours,
sheshe
JNelson6563
(28,151 posts)Followed link.
Julie
Helen Reddy
(998 posts)((((((Control-Z))))))
You have suffered beyond anything comprehensible.
pnwmom
(108,980 posts)iemitsu
(3,888 posts)I likely would have signed the petition anyway (had I seen it) but your testimony struck a chord that will resonate within me for a while.
Too many women (and people in general) are victims of other's abusive behaviors and actions. Educating ourselves about abuse in its various manifestations increases our chances of eliminating it from our lives and our communities.
Thank you for bring this petition to my attention.
sheshe2
(83,791 posts)Thank you...my OP WAS meant to strike a chord.
Shock effect maybe....way more personnal than I ever would have posted. I needed to make a point. Reality S**kS...I know. However OP'S here were going no where. I have been very upset all week. Every thread died. Each and every one. I cried every damn time.
Thank you again...gateley was the one that posted it...however I have tried to push it forward, again and again.
http://www.democraticunderground.com/?com=view_post&forum=1002&pid=2366783
iemitsu
(3,888 posts)are often reluctant to talk about it, even those who think they know the victim well, often don't know this about them.
People don't want to believe that others they know are being abused, so they ignore or don't see the signs. They don't want to acknowledge that the problem exists, they don't want to talk about it. Abuse is an uncomfortable topic.
This is why the issue of abuse toward women must be kept in the forefront of discussions.
I can understand your frustration, seeing threads on this issue sink into oblivion. It makes one feel as if no one else cares.
Thanks again for pushing this topic.
fadedrose
(10,044 posts)I've had some similar experiences . . .
Women stayed because there was no place to go . . . and no one to help, or because of embarrassment, being blamed, etc.
It actually wasn't until the OJ trial that violence against women became a national shame....
Ilsa
(61,695 posts)Recovered rape victim here.
Kick & Rec and petition signed.
Hang in there. We got each other's backs.
gateley
(62,683 posts)For you and all the others affected by this, let's make sure this gets done.
sheshe2
(83,791 posts)I didn't know any other way to do it...I tried the other way. It didn't work.
Did I want to share this, NO I did not. However, if it helps...then we are better for it.
Linked your petition every step if the way....also your post!
Thanks gateley, together we can!
gateley
(62,683 posts)have experienced this, too. I bet just posting here, in this safe thread you provided, helped some immensely.
sheshe2
(83,791 posts)I had posted several threads about variations of VAWA. Little to no response.
I was getting ready for work and saw your post...however I had just 2 minutes before your post been sent to the naughty mat by the jury for a response I made to someone after the SOTU! So I watched for an hour....saw all the people that viewed. No fricking response! I was the first!
Pissed me off.
Anyway. Here we are...let's fight the fight and keep on fighting!
gateley!
Gemini Cat
(2,820 posts)While I may not have known personally any woman that has been abused, I do know abuse exist. It's also very possible I have known abused women that were silent about the abuse. It has to stop.
PatSeg
(47,501 posts)I couldn't believe the last thread about the petition got so little attention.
sheshe2
(83,791 posts)TexasBushwhacker
(20,202 posts)I worked in the basement of a building, slipped on a piece of ice and kissed the concrete. My glasses were broken, there was blood all down the front of my clothes and I had a big goose egg on my forehead. My boss drove me to the ER because I had lost consciousness and she wanted to make sure I didn't have any fractures.
I got x-rays and the doctor was checking me out. He asked how I had gotten injured and I told him. He asked my boss to leave the room. He said, "Okay....really. Who did this to you?"
I was incredulous. I said, "No, really, I slipped on a piece of melted ice and the next thing I knew, the floor was approaching my face, REALLY FAST. My face hit concrete. Do women come in looking like me because someone hit them?"
He just nodded and said, "All the time."
Flatulo
(5,005 posts)'Straighten her out' a few times.
Dad was a raging alcoholic and WWII vet, who came back damaged but never sought help (did anyone in those days?)
Mom stayed with him for 37 years until he drank himself to death in 1979. She lived another 33 years after his death, but never spoke an ill word about him. It troubled her greatly that my brother and sister and I had such horrible memories of him.
He damaged my mom in every conceivable way, but he also damaged all his children. He tried to murder us all by setting the house in fire with us all inside. Everywhere he went he sowed pain and chaos in the world. If you even looked at him he'd beat you half to death. I saw him bite a man's ear off in a barroom fight. I saw him open an man's skull with a tire iron. He was simply a monster.
It pains me to say it, but the happiest day of my life was when he died.
sheshe2
(83,791 posts)I am so sorry for the monster your father was...
My dad was a far greater threat to himself, though the damage he caused his wife and his children was inexcusable. There were three of us, now we are two. My brother commited suicide six years ago.
Cause and effect.
Flatulo
(5,005 posts)I raised my son with love and compassion, never even had to raise my voice with him. And today he's a wonderful young man of 23 who is also gentle and loving towards all. He's never, ever been in a lick of trouble. I consider my greatest accomplishment in life to be his growing up in a home without fear or anxiety.
My wife was fortunate to grow up in a normal household with a dad who was a great guy. She's been very patient and understanding with me as I bared my soul to her over the years. She can't imagine what we went though, and I glad she can't.
May you find lasting peace, sheshe. I am so sorry for the loss of your brother. The scars can be very deep indeed.
sheshe2
(83,791 posts)"
?ohheckyeah
(9,314 posts)I'm sorry for what you went through.
Suffice it to say that I grew up with an alcoholic father. The details aren't important.
sheshe2
(83,791 posts)You are right...details are not important....action is!!!!
Thank you so much for signing!!! Thank you!
ohheckyeah
(9,314 posts)Details are important in an OP such as yours that is trying to reach people. I'm glad you were courageous enough to share them. My details wouldn't add much to the conversation that you so adeptly started.
bama_blue_dot
(224 posts)I have wanted to post my story, but have been afraid to do so.. I have been stuck in an abusive marriage for 8 long years.. The only reason I have stuck it out this long, is for my children.. I am afraid I can't handle it anymore.. I have nothing left to give.. No one to talk to.. I have been trying to get him to leave, but I am also too much of a coward to call the police.. If anyone is out there that can give me some advice, or help, I really need it! Thanks!
usrbs
(632 posts)I'm so sorry for your situation, and I'm in no way qualified to give practical advise, but at the bottom there are links to people who can do so.
The important thing is NOT to stick it out for your children - read the stories in this thread and see how much damage abusive relationships do to the children.
Please get yourself and your children out. You can do it - you're stronger than you think!
The National Domestic Violence Hotline
Call 800-799-SAFE (7233) or 800-787-3224 (TDD). It's staffed 24/7.
bama_blue_dot
(224 posts)for your response.. It is definitely a decision that tears me apart every day.. I was a child of divorce, and I know how hard it was for me growing up without a mother, so I guess part of me is trying to prevent that..
usrbs
(632 posts)And it was for the children, but they all say they wished we had divorced earlier. And the level of abuse was quite low compared to the stories in this thread.
Just think - do you want your sons thinking abuse is normal and acceptable to mete out? Do you want your daughters internalizing the message that they have to accept abuse, and they somehow deserve it?
Show your children that some things should never be tolerated and that you insist on respect and dignity for yourself, and by extension, to them.
Staying in the relationship is telling your kids that it's OK for people not to treat them with respect and that violence is a form of love.
Would you want your kids to stay in a relationship like the one you're in? If not, get the hell out because staying is modelling it.
Fire Walk With Me
(38,893 posts)snot
(10,530 posts)in feelings, thoughts, expressions, actions AGAINST violence against women.
Silence is not an option. Keep pushing 'til we push it over the top.
pacalo
(24,721 posts)SunSeeker
(51,574 posts)Laura PourMeADrink
(42,770 posts)derby378
(30,252 posts)On behalf of my wife, Ginny.
Her first husband was abusive. Her second husband was me. I feel so lucky that she chose to share her life with me.
WinstonSmith4740
(3,056 posts)Thanks for posting the petition...and you always have us.
Response to sheshe2 (Original post)
OldDem2012 This message was self-deleted by its author.
AnotherMother4Peace
(4,247 posts)to protect you from your mother, or to perhaps intervene to help your family.
I question why you it posted it here on a thread about the Violence Against Women Act.
Statistically, women suffer physical abuse at the hands of men in far greater numbers than men at the hands of women. In my family's case the violence was the result of what many consider "family values": a clean house, wifely obligations, dutiful children, dinner on time, a submissive wife. These were the reasons for the assaults against my mother.
OldDem2012
(3,526 posts)...but don't worry, it won't happen again.
AnotherMother4Peace
(4,247 posts)take place at lakes, with boats, and friends, and noodle salad. Just no one in this car. But alot of people that's their story. Good times, noodle salad." Jack Nicholson in As Good As It Gets. I love that line because I've always thought everyone else had a great story, a pretty story - noodle salads at lakes.
I must apologize to you - I didn't mean to diminish your story. I admire that you can write about it. I haven't even found the courage to go there. I do find that my childhood has sharpened my survival skills, & that I can be one tenacious, tough son-of-a gun at times.
AnotherMother4Peace
(4,247 posts)a child, & it's still difficult to share these experiences, so that is where I'll leave it. I think you are brave to talk about it. In my mother's memory I will sign the Violence Against Women Petition.
http://www.beaubiden.com/landing/w1302vw/
lunatica
(53,410 posts)rhett o rick
(55,981 posts)that abuse, either physical or mental, is not ok. It's not being tough. In fact it's the opposite.
Thanks for sharing and all my best to you and your loved ones.
redwitch
(14,944 posts)Peace and healing to all who have had to endure the torment and strength for those who read this thread that they find the courage to leave.
Cleita
(75,480 posts)Some used to think that it was okay to slap a woman backhanded. Fists were definitely a no, no but backhand okay. What happened to you happened once to me. My parents had returned from a cocktail party and got into a fight. He slapped her backhanded and called her a whore. The argument was about her flirting with some young guy. She was very pretty and men were attracted to her. There was alcohol involved. My mom left him immediately, taking me with her, and they were separated for two years. They went back together then and stayed together until my father died. He never did it again and neither of them ever took an alcoholic drink again. Oh, well not entirely, my dad used to enjoy a beer or two when he went fishing but no more.
I was never privvy to what they did to bridge this other than the alcohol quitting and how they were able to forgive each other. I'm so sorry you went through this. It is awful when it happens and I can't even imagine what it's like to have to live with it every day.
I have experienced your example.
RebelOne
(30,947 posts)If anything, I was the abuser. If any man even raised his hand at me, that was the end. My ex-husband never abused me. Once, I threw a butcher knife at him and he raised his arm to deflect it and it bounced back and stabbed me in the leg.
Then, one time he was out playing pool until 3 am. I was seeing red by that time because he had the car and I was stuck in the house with a tiny baby, out of baby formula, no cigarettes and no food. Well, when I heard the car pull into the drive, I was ready. I got a heavy cast iron pan, stood on a chair next to the door (I had to stand on the chair because he was 6'3" and I am only 5'3". When he walked through the door, I let him have it. I knocked him cold. I have never regretted it.
Cleita
(75,480 posts)You said:
"Then, one time he was out playing pool until 3 am. I was seeing red by that time because he had the car and I was stuck in the house with a tiny baby, out of baby formula, no cigarettes and no food."
Abuse isn't just physical. I hope you both get help.
kdmorris
(5,649 posts)But the petition is very important for anyone who has a woman they love in their life!
So sorry about what you went through. I got my daughters out when they were 5, 2 and 11 months old, but my 5 year old had lasting scars and self-esteem issues.
Sekhmets Daughter
(7,515 posts)I've signed every single petition re: VAWA that I have encountered. I'm so sorry your family had to witness that...and happy you did not stick around to relive th horror of your mother's life.
malokvale77
(4,879 posts)I haven't ignored these threads, I've signed dozens of petitions for the VAWA. I've also passed them along to everyone I know.
Cha
(297,322 posts)I'm so sorry about your personal history with Violence Against Women. Thank you for being so brave and eloquent in your passion for this terrorizing epidemic.
http://blog.populationinstitute.org/2011/11/25/end-the-epidemic-of-violence-against-women/
http://www.dailykos.com/story/2012/11/25/1164077/-Pretty-in-Pink-International-Day-for-the-Elimination-of-Violence-against-Women
sheshe2
(83,791 posts)Thank you for the link to Pretty-in -Pink International! Eve Ensler's speech was inspiring!
1 Billion Rising....We are stong. We get stonger every single day!
Thank you,Cha!
Number23
(24,544 posts)K&R
sheshe2
(83,791 posts)freshwest
(53,661 posts)Let's get this VAWA behind us, this nation and world needs so much healing.
to all who have posted on this thread and also to all the good DUers who have posted here.
Dark n Stormy Knight
(9,760 posts)measures to end violence against women or children could ever be elected. When you look at some of the pathetic excuses for humans that are in the House, it's mortifying.
Disconnect
(33 posts)Women are just as likely as men to engage in partner aggression.
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report, "In nonreciprocally violent relationships, women were the perpetrators in more than 70% of the cases. Reciprocity was associated with more frequent violence among women, but not men." [Source: Whitaker, Haileyesus, Swahn and Saltzman, Differences in Frequency of Violence and Reported Injury Between Relationships With Reciprocal and Nonreciprocal Intimate Partner Violence, American Journal of Public Health, May 2007, Vol 97, No. 5, pp. 941-947, http://www.ajph.org/cgi/content/abstract/97/5/941]
Psychologist John Archer reviewed hundreds of studies and concluded, Women were slightly more likely than men to use one or more act of physical aggression and to use such acts more frequently. [Source: John Archer: Sex differences in aggression between heterosexual partners: A meta-analytic review. Psychological Bulletin, Vol. 126, No. 5, pages 651-680]
Law professor Linda Kelly noted, "leading sociologists have repeatedly found that men and women commit violence at similar rates." [Source: Linda Kelly: Disabusing the definition of domestic abuse. Florida State University Law Review, Vol. 30, pages 791-855, 2003. Accessible at: http://www.law.fsu.edu/journals/lawreview/downloads/304/kelly.pdf ]
An international survey of violence between dating partners in 16 countries concluded: Perhaps the most important similarity is the high rate of assault perpetrated by both male and female students in all the countries. [Source: Murray Straus: Prevalence of violence against dating partners by male and female university students worldwide. Violence Against Women, Vol. 10, No. 7, 2001]
Cal State Psychology Professor Martin Fiebert has assembled a bibliography of 175 scholarly investigations: 139 empirical studies and 36 reviews and/or analyses, which demonstrate that women are as physically aggressive, or more aggressive, than men in their relationships with their spouses or male partners. http://www.csulb.edu/~mfiebert/assault.htm
An analysis of the data collected by the National Violence Against Women (NVAW) Survey found that more women than men engage in controlling behavior in their current marriages, but there was no statistically significant difference between men's and women's use of controlling behaviors in former marriages. Controlling husbands were not particularly likely to engage in frequent, injurious, or unprovoked violence. Husband and wives did not differ in their motivation to control. [Source: Sociology Professors Richard B. Felson (Penn State) and Maureen C. Outlaw (Providence College) "The Control Motive and Marital Violence," Violence and Victims, 2007, Vol. 22, Issue 4 http://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/ebm/record/17691548/full_citation/The_control_motive_and_marital_violence_
Men experience over one-third of DV-related injuries.
Of all persons who suffer an injury from partner aggression, 38% are male. [Source: John Archer: Sex differences in aggression between heterosexual partners: A meta-analytic review. Psychological Bulletin, Vol. 126, No. 5, pages 651-680]
Of all persons who require medical treatment as the result of partner aggression, 35% are male. [Source: John Archer: Sex differences in aggression between heterosexual partners: A meta-analytic review. Psychological Bulletin, Vol. 126, No. 5, Table 5]
Men who are victims of severe domestic violence suffer other problems, as well [Source: Richard J. Gelles: Intimate Violence in Families, 1997]:
30% experienced depression
14% required bed rest to recuperate from the injuries
10% needed to take time off from work
Men are far less likely to report DV incidents than women.
According to the National Family Violence Survey, female victims of DV are nine times more likely to call the police than male DV victims. These are the percentages of victims who called the police in response to the assault:
Women: 8.5%
Men: 0.9%
[Source: JE Stets and MA Straus: Gender differences in reporting marital violence and its medical and psychological consequences. In Straus and Gelles (editors): Physical violence in American families, 1990, Table 15.]
The myths about domestic violence are numerous.
These are some of the common myths about domestic violence:
According to the FBI, a woman is beaten every 15 seconds
4,000 women each year are killed by their husbands, ex-husbands, or boyfriends
There are nearly three times as many animal shelters in the United states as there are shelters for women
Battering during pregnancy is the leading cause of birth defects and infant mortality
Women who kill their batterers receive longer prison sentences than men who kill their partners
Richard Gelles, an internationally-recognized expert on domestic violence, refers to many of these claims as factoids from nowhere. [http://www.mincava.umn.edu/documents/factoid/factoid.html]
Many of these myths are based on DV studies that use biased survey methods.
Some studies survey women but not men. Predictably, these studies yield one-sided findings.
The DOJ National Crime Victimization Survey is flawed because persons do not consider most forms of domestic violence, such as slapping, shoving, or throwing an object at a partner, to be a crime.
The DOJ National Violence Against Women survey prefaces the questions by repeatedly using the phrase personal safety. Those words bias the responses because women are more concerned about personal safety than men.
Some studies of domestic violence assess both physical and verbal abuse. That inflates and distorts the picture of physical violence.
[Source: MA Straus: The controversy over domestic violence by women: A methodological, theoretical, and sociology of science analysis. In XB Arriaga and S Oskamp: Violence in intimate relationships. Sage Publishers, 1999. http://pubpages.unh.edu/~mas2/CTS21.pdf]
WinkyDink
(51,311 posts)Helen Reddy
(998 posts)Please stop sucking the energy out of this thread. You have an important issue to discuss, may I suggest you start your own thread?
Iggo
(47,558 posts)I was raised under a benevolently sexist "we don't hit girls" regime. Not perfect, but it got the job done.
flying_wahini
(6,606 posts)That took guts - many thanks.
Scootaloo
(25,699 posts)I've been that kid. And I never want another child to have to wonder why mom is bleeding and not moving. I never want another woman to be that mother, or daughter, or... you know what I'm saying.
sheshe2
(83,791 posts)LadyHawkAZ
(6,199 posts)My parents are coming up on their 56th anniversary and my dad has never to my knowledge raised a hand to my mom.
On the other hand, when I got older, I became That Wife.
sheshe2
(83,791 posts)sheshe2
LadyHawkAZ
(6,199 posts)He served less than 24 hours in jail for punching me in the face, none at all for the rape later on.
I survived, and recovered. Thanks.
davidthegnome
(2,983 posts)I remember hearing something a few years back about Joe Biden trying to make the violence against women act gender neutral. Did he ever get anywhere with that? I never did hear anything about the outcome.
rickyhall
(4,889 posts)I did not experience that although I did see the bruises and that one black eye mom got for wearing a little makeup to work.
However, I do remember as a kid sitting on the toilet while mom dressed my wounds after dad disciplined me so many times with punches to the face and ribs.
sheshe2
(83,791 posts)sigmasix
(794 posts)There's gonna be a lot of negative backlash from the "Dude Patrol" towards this- fuck 'em.
This has been a long time coming and our daughters, mothers, wives and granddaughters deserve to be protected from sexist violence with laws that are responsive to the realities of daily abuse.
One again, when the dude patrol comes along and whines "what about the menz"- just ignore them- they represent a small amount of real men.
Quantess
(27,630 posts)Disconnect
(33 posts)In_The_Wind
(72,300 posts)I was. Glasses of buttermilk went flying.
Sometimes I ducked sometimes I was backhanded.
As a child I watched my stepmothers (both of 'em) beat on my father until he retaliated.
One Monday morning my father was wondering where his bruises came from. It was me.
I hit him in an attempt to protect my stepmother.
I moved away from home when I was 17.
No brothers. No sisters. Alone in the world.
Safe as long as I trusted no one.
I became an investigator for Child Protective Services of New York.
Trying to stop the horrors of my childhood from happening to another defenseless child.
I was sexually abused as a child.
Seduced by a 26 year old nephew of my first stepmother.
Oh yeah. I was I was told I was to blame.
When I was 15 my second stepmother sexually abused and humiliated me.
Do I have mommy issues (as one very rude DU male ask when I was posting on a thread about the rape of a fourteen year old by her mother) . . . you bet I do.
Do I trust women in real life ~ no.
The one good thing that came out of my abuse: It never happened again as an adult.
Sekhmets Daughter
(7,515 posts)at some point in her life.
For me it was an uncle...and the ultimate betrayal of a mother who preferred her sister and her b-i-l to her child. None of the beatings, and I've been beaten with just about anything you can imagine, mattered as much as that betrayal. When she died in 2004 I had not a single tear to shed for her.
In_The_Wind
(72,300 posts)There is a very special place in hell for all of those who touch a child in the wrong way.
Sexual abuse changes that child's life forever.
Beatings are never forgotten.
Neglect is horrible. When I was 4, visiting my father and my first stepmother,
I remember a family friend telling me that my tummy ache was because I need something to eat.
I never worried about that while I was staying with my aunts and uncles.
Sekhmets Daughter
(7,515 posts)Hell is too good for them...
In_The_Wind
(72,300 posts)so mote it be ~ to the power of three
Sekhmets Daughter
(7,515 posts)O Guardians of the Eastern Tower,
Airy ones of healing power,
Listen as we call Thee here,
Witness these Rites as Thou draweth near.
sheshe2
(83,791 posts)Sekhmets Daughter
(7,515 posts)It infuriates me that anyone had to go begging for VAWA votes! There are times when I think the world would have been a better place had men been equipped with ON/OFF switches...and brought out of the closet only when needed. Then there are other times, of course.
sheshe2
(83,791 posts)and SD I just posted another Bond video...enjoy it.
Sekhmets Daughter
(7,515 posts)2naSalit
(86,647 posts)lived that with additional issue of father being a pedophile and additional siblings.
Petition signed.
Thanks for sharing and posting.