The following are quotes concerning the subject of abuse in Marriage. We pray you will find them helpful.
• All marriages are sacred, but not all are safe. (Rob Jackson)
• Most people think “abuse” is just physical attacks such as hitting, punching, kicking, pulling hair, twisting limbs, pinching, slapping, biting, etc. There are many other type of abusive behavior which hurt just as much or more than physical abuse. Just because an abuser stops hitting his spouse doesn’t mean he has stopped being abusive. (Brenda Branson, from article titled, “All Abuse Hurts”)
• Bottom line:
Outbursts of anger —including screaming, throwing things, banging inanimate objects, slamming doors, squealing tires, stomping around, making threats, shoving, restraining, cornering, or yelling down, all carry the threat of physical harm —even if that threat is not intended. All these things are abusive, and completely unacceptable. Nothing a woman [or man] does (including any of the above) justifies doing any of these. If you are doing any of these, you have a problem —PLEASE deal with it before it escalates. (Paul, from The-generous-husband.com)
• You have heard that it was said to those of ancient times, “You shall not murder,” and “Whoever murders shall be liable to judgment.” But I say to you that if you are angry with a brother or sister, you will be liable of judgment; and if you insult a brother or sister, you will be liable to the council; and if you say, “You fool” you will be liable to the hell of fire. (Matthew 5:21-23)
• Keep in Mind:
Just because you aren’t being physically punched, slapped, or kicked doesn’t mean you aren’t in an abusive marriage.
Here are some questions to ask yourself to help you determine whether or not you are in an abusive relationship: • Does my spouse ever try to physically stop me from leaving the room? • Does my spouse ever push me, grab me or my clothing, or hold me against my will? – Has my spouse ever told me to kill myself? • Does my spouse ever threaten to hurt me for any reason? • Does my spouse ever point a weapon of any kind toward me, our children, or him or herself? – Has my spouse ever used language that suggests he or she will “solve” our marriage problems forever through death? • Am I afraid of my spouse?
These questions are not gender exclusive. If you answered yes to any of them, your marriage is fear based and you are in danger of being a victim of domestic violence. Put a plan together now to get the help you need. (Joe and Michelle Williams, from the book “Yes, Your Marriage Can Be Saved”)
• Regarding Anger:
Anger that’s used to control, manipulate, and hold another emotionally hostage is out of control and abusive. It typically starts with name-calling, emotional jabs at a person’s self-worth, painful teasing, public insults. It progresses from there. Eventually the abuser is yelling, grabbing, pushing, slapping, and becoming increasingly aggressive and violent. Remorse follows. So too does more abuse. Even just one of these tactics is abuse, and it won’t stop without serious intervention. If you or your children are being treated in this fashion, please seek help. (Meg Wilson, “Hope After Betrayal”)
• Simply being an eyewitness to family violence has a great effect upon a youngster.
“A child witnessing his mother being battered is equivalent to the child being battered,” notes therapist John Bradshaw. One youth named Ed hated seeing his father beat his mother. Nevertheless, although he may not have realized it, he was being conditioned to believe that men must control women and that in order to do so, men must scare, hurt, and demean them. When he became an adult, Ed used these abusive, violent tactics on his wife.
Some parents cautiously forbid their children to watch violence on television, and that is a good thing. But parents should be even more cautious when it comes to monitoring their own behavior. They are role models for their impressionable children. (Frankie Goh, from article, “What Causes Domestic Violence”)
• Studies show:
One third of children who witness the battering of their mothers demonstrate significant behavioral and/or emotional problems. Children may experience such problems as depression, anger and hostility, isolation, school problems (low achievement), drug and/or alcohol use, and more. They may attempt to get attention through violent behavior. This includes lashing out or treating pets cruelly, or by threatening siblings or mother with violence.
Boys who witness their father’s abuse of their mothers are more likely to inflict severe violence when they become adults. Data suggest that girls who witness maternal abuse are more likely to tolerate abuse as adults. Children from abused homes often have relationship and marital problems as adults. (From the booklet the booklet “A Way of Hope”)
• Husbands, love your wives, and never treat them harshly. (Colossians 3:19)
• Verbal Abuse:
Though prevalent in our culture, verbal abuse often goes unrecognized because it leaves invisible scars. The abusers often come across as nice, even charming, people when they interact with the general public. But behind closed doors, they use cutting words to exert control over those closest to them. And they do it by sending a two-sided message: “I love you… but I don’t.”
The twisted expression of their “love” creates confusion and a sense of helplessness in their victims. This form of abuse includes humiliating, threatening, insulting, or intimidating one’s partner. It also is characterized by withdrawal of approval or affection. The abuser may try to control what his partner wears or who she spends time with. He may even isolate her from family and friends. This constant belittling can cut to the core of a person’s being. (Holly Hudson, from the article, “Recognizing Abuse; Both Seen and Unseen”)
• Scripture:
It is not enemies who taunt me —I could bear that; it is not adversaries who deal insolently with me —I could hide from them. But it is you, my equal, my companion, my familiar friend, with who I kept pleasant company; we walked in the house of God with the throng… My companion laid hands on a friend and violated a covenant with me. With speech smoother than butter, but with a heart set on war; with words that were softer than oil, but in fact were drawn swords. (Psalm 55:12-14; Psalm 55:20-21)
• A person can be so verbally abused that they don’t know what’s true anymore.
This abuse is designed to put a person in a numb state so they are unable to make clear, concise decisions. The path of verbal abuse leads a person from what they know as truth into a confused state. This confused state arises because the abuser consistently interjects lies as truth until the abused no longer knows what to believe. For example, we can see this happen when the abuser uses truths from the Bible to justify a lie, or the abuser twists the Bible’s true intent to satisfy his own selfish motive.
The sad part comes when the abused embraces the lies from the abuser as truth, thereby disregarding the real truth. At this point the abused feels like they are in chains of bondage with no way out. A trusted godly person is like a life preserver to the abused at this point. For “the mouth of the righteous is a well of life“ (Proverbs 10:11). (From the article titled, “Verbal Abuse in Marriage”)
• Verbal Abuse:
What makes verbal abuse particularly threatening is the fact that verbal abuse always precedes physical abuse. The progression to this level of attack may take years —or months. (Holly Hudson, from the article, “Recognizing Abuse; Both Seen and Unseen”)
• All forms of abuse follow a pattern that, left unchecked, will only increase over time. Injuries from verbal and emotional abuse can run deep and leave lasting scars. Many emotionally and verbally abused people reason that, because there are no bruises or broken bones, their abuse must not be serious. But it is. …If pain motivates you to act against emotional and verbal abuse, then listen and act. You may be saving more than your life. (Beth J. Lueders, from article titled, “Emotional and Verbal Abuse”)
• While the optimum situation is for both parties in an abusive situation to seek help, Dr. Tim Clinton, President of the American Association of Christian Counselors, insists one person can change the relationship. “Change a person; change a relationship,” he says. On the other hand, if the abuse is severe and occurring within the marriage relationship, it’s time to take bold steps and assert biblical, healthy boundaries. (Mary J. Yerkes, from the article “Healing the Wounds of Emotional Abuse”)
• “The anatomy of an abusive relationship is really very simple.
There’s a cycle of violence that takes place. “The cycle has three stages: • Tension Building Stage • Acute Battering Stage • Honeymoon Stage. Dr. Phil McGraw says of the honeymoon stage, “This is where, ‘Oh, I’m sorry. I’m so sorry. I will never do this again. I hate that this happened. I’ll make it up to you. I’m so sorry. I’m so sorry,’ but then the cycle starts over again.”
Dr Phil notes that nearly half of abusers re-offend, most within the first six months. “And then you’ve got what’s called traumatic bonding. This is because there’s an imbalance of power, and there’s an intermittent reinforcement schedule. You never know whether you’re going to get hugged or hit. And so psychologically that’s a very strong tendency to stay involved in that relationship.” (Dr Phil McGraw, from: “The Cycle of Violence”)
• Regarding Separation:
Sometimes separation can be a powerful attention-getting boundary if you’re fully ready to use it. The purpose of the separation can be to physically or emotionally protect you and your children or to convince your husband (or wife) that you’ll not continue to live the same way. Separation can also be by mutual agreement for each to work on your own problems separately with the goal of reconciling your marriage. (Karla Downing, from book “10 Principles for Women in Difficult Marriages”)
• Keep in mind:
If you decide to leave your home to protect yourself from physical harm, your husband may view your leaving as betrayal or rejection. He may become even more violent as a result. That is why you need to develop your safety plan with outside counsel and guidance. You may even need the help and protection of the police. Do not make your plans alone!
If you are staying in your home out of fear, or if your husband’s words or behavior becomes more and more threatening, you need to work out an immediate safety plan. With the help of friends and counselors, you will need to plan where to keep keys, clothes, medications, and important documents; what to do with your children’ where you will go if you have to leave suddenly, and much more. You may need to choose a safe, protected environment where you can be kept hidden from your husband. (From the booklet “A Way of Hope”)
• These are the “hallmarks of an abuser —both verbal and physical”:
They include jealousy, a need to control, efforts to isolate their partner or relative, attempts to rush a romantic relationship and disrespect for privacy and personal boundaries. Drug and alcohol abuse are often present in the situation. (Holly Hudson, from article titled, “Recognizing Abuse; Both Seen and Unseen”)
• Minna Schulman, director of a domestic violence and law enforcement agency, stated that violence is a tool that men use to maintain control and to demonstrate power and authority over a woman. She added: “We see domestic violence as a misuse of power and control.” Some wife beaters suffer from low self-esteem, the same trait they induce in their victims. If they can do that, then their ego will have been fed, and they will feel a measure of superiority and control over another human. They feel that they prove their masculinity in this way.
Yet, do they?
Since they perpetrate their violence on physically weaker women, does it prove that they are truly men of strength, or does it prove, instead, that they are unreasonable? Is it really manly for a stronger male to beat up a weaker, more defenseless female? A man of strong moral character would show consideration and compassion for weaker and more defenseless ones, not take advantage of them.
Another demonstration of the unreasonable thinking of the abuser is the fact that he often blames his wife for provoking the beatings. He may imply, or even say to her, such things as: ‘You didn’t do this right. That’s why I’m beating you.’ Or: ‘Dinner was late, so you’re just getting what you deserve.’ In the abuser’s mind, it is her fault. However, no shortcoming of the other mate justifies battering. (Frankie Goh, from article, “What Causes Domestic Violence”)
• Don’t blame yourself.
Realize that the abuse is not your fault, no matter what your abuser says. Understand that abuse can happen to anyone, of any faith, age, economic status, race, or neighborhood. Know that you are not alone. Know that you are not stupid or worthless; to the contrary, God loves you deeply and values you highly.
Realize that God does not condone abuse of any kind. Believe that His will for you is to break free of the abuse you’re suffering. Recognize your need for help, and decide to pursue it. (From the article “Heal from Abuse”)
• The Lord examines both the righteous and the wicked. He hates everyone who loves violence. (Psalms 11:5)
• “…and I hate a man’s covering himself with violence as well as with his garment” says the Lord Almighty. (Malachi 2:16)
• He who brings trouble on his family will inherit only wind. And the fool will be a servant to the wise. The fruit of the righteous is a tree of life, and he who wins souls is wise. (Proverbs 11:29-30)
• Jesus is our Model.
Instead of following Christ’s model of servant leadership in the home, an abusive man views it as his God-given right to have power and control over his wife, and rewrites the scripture to give himself the right to punish her whenever she falls short of his expectations. Jesus would remind us that He, as head of the church, is the role model for the husband. Has he ever been controlling and abusive toward the church? Or does He, as a servant leader, lovingly guide and nurture His church?
… Although churches should offer unconditional love, far too often families are only accepted by the congregation if they seem to fit in with the status quo. …Jesus offers unconditional love and acceptance, and does not value a person for how he looks or what he owns. He said, “You are like whitewashed tombs—beautiful on the outside, but filled on the inside with dead people’s bones and all sorts of impurity. You try to look like upright people outwardly, but inside your hearts are filled with hypocrisy and lawlessness.” (Matthew 23:27-28 NLT)
… Although some churches are guilty of perpetuating family violence, many other church communities and pastors are actively involved in stopping the cycle of abuse, providing safety for the victim and help for the abuser. Does your church offer hope or perpetuate the pain? (From the article, “Abuse and The Church’s Role”)
• Church leaders need to realize batterers can be manipulative.
I know a woman in my community who went to her pastor for help because she was afraid of her husband. The pastor called her husband and asked that he and the wife come in for counseling. The poor woman was absolutely terrified to sit in a joint counseling session with her husband and said nothing while the husband smoothed things over.
Shortly after this, the woman made a decision to leave her husband. One night when she thought he was away, she returned home to get some of her things. The husband was there hiding and beat the woman so severely that parts of her brain were exposed.
Leaders also need to work to dismiss misinterpretations of Scripture such as 1 Peter 3:1-6, which abusers often use to defend their actions. It’s unbelievable how many Christian men think they’re entitled by God to discipline and control their wives. As 1 Peter 3:7 reminds us, no man has a God-given right to punish or retaliate against his wife under any condition. And a woman shouldn’t be led to think that through her submission and suffering she’ll become a better person. To allow someone to abuse you does not bring glory to God. (Corrie Cutrer, from article titled, “The Silent Epidemic”)
• Marriage is for committed lovers, not hostages.
Marriage is a sacred relationship created for two people who complete each other spiritually. While it requires sacrificial service, it is not a call to martyrdom. In many cases of domestic violence, a therapeutic separation is necessary to gain safety and direct attention to the gravity of the need for change. (Rob Jackson, from chapter “What If My Spouse Abuses Me?” from the book, “The First Five Years of Marriage”)
• Break your silence.
Reflect on how much pain you’ve suffered, and remember your abuser’s broken promises. Consider the fear you feel and how your children are being affected. Gather your courage to take action. Realize that God offers you real hope for a life free of abuse. Take stock of trustworthy people with whom you may safely share your story. Start by telling one person as soon as you can. Then reach out to others so you’re not relying just one person to meet all your needs.
Don’t let the person abusing you know who you have told so he or she won’t try to harm the people who are trying to help you. Understand that it’s critical for you to break your silence, however. Know that many people are willing and able to help you if you let them know what’s going on. (From Crosswalk.com article “Heal from Abuse”)
• Abuse is always wrong.
Some try to excuse it. Most perpetrators have a sense of entitlement, thinking their actions are justified. Ironically, their victims may also believe they deserve to be mistreated. Some will even defend their abuser, citing his or her earnest apologies afterward. But abuse in any form, for any reason, wounds both spouses. It’s always sinful, and few things destroy trust in a marriage as quickly. Regardless of childhood pain or marital conflict, mature spouses learn to set limits. They do this so anger doesn’t become abuse by frequency, degree, or duration. (Rob Jackson, from the book, “The First Five Years of Marriage”)
• Most people assume that men are almost always more violent.
They assume men are sometimes seen as the only ones who need help with anger and the sources of anger. In reality, both genders need help. Spousal abuse from the wife to husband is currently an underreported problem in homes of passive men. Domestic-violence research overwhelmingly shows that women are as likely as men to initiate and engage in domestic violence, and that much of female domestic violence is not committed in self-defense. Studies show that women often compensate for smaller size by greater use of weapons and the element of surprise. (Paul and Sandy Coughlin, from the book Married But Not Engaged)
• No one, under any circumstance, deserves to be abused.
They don’t deserve to feel disregarded, insulted, controlled, coerced, intimidated, hurt, hit, pushed, grabbed, or touched in any undesired way. Nothing that anyone in a family says or does justifies abuse. One act of abuse never justifies another. Everyone has the right and the responsibility to heal suffering. Whenever we hurt a loved one we bleed a little inside. That internal injury, unhealed, becomes the source of still more anger, aggression, diminished sense of self, and enduring misery. (Dr Steven Stosny, Compassionpower.com)
• Angry and controlling husbands are very anxious by temperament.
From the time they were young children, they’ve had a more or less constant sense of dread that things will go badly and they will fail to cope. So they try to control their environment to avoid that terrible feeling of failure and inadequacy. But the cause of their anxiety is with them, not in their environment. The sole purpose of your husband’s anger and abusive behavior is to defend himself from feeling like a failure, especially as a: • Protector • Provider • Lover • Parent. In truth, most men feel inadequate about relationships. We learn to feel adequate by providing what all relationships require: support and compassion. (Steven Stosny, from Compassionpower.com article, “You Are Not the Cause of His Anger or Abuse”)
• What All Forms of Abuse Have in Common:
Whether overt or silent, all forms of abuse are failures of compassion; he stops caring about how you feel. Compassion is the lifeblood of marriage and failure of compassion is the heart disease. It actually would be less hurtful if your husband never cared about how you felt. But when you were falling in love, he cared a great deal. So now it feels like betrayal when he doesn’t care or try to understand. It feels like he’s not the person you married.
Unlike love, which masks the differences between people, compassion makes us sensitive to the individual strengths and vulnerabilities of other people. It lets us appreciate our differences. Love without the sensitivity of compassion is: • Rejecting (who you really are as a person) • Possessive • Controlling • Dangerous. (Steven Stosny, from Compassionpower.com article, “Emotional Abuse, Verbal Abuse”)
• In abusive relationships, violence usually occurs in cycles.
The cycle of violence begins with increased tension, anger, blaming and arguing. Then the cycle progresses to a violent stage where the abuser begins to afflict physical violence such as hitting, kicking, slapping, etc. After the storm of violence blows over, he may experience remorse and swear he will never resort to such behavior again. This is called the calm stage or honeymoon stage.
There are several tactics a man might use to sweet talk his way back into his victim’s life. He may try to convince her to return to the home if she has left. These include showering her with love and gifts; telling her he will be a great dad; starting to attend church services; halting his drinking; and starting to receive outside counseling. Often the cycle begins again, however, and continues under his control until the battered woman learns to break free. (From the booklet “A Way of Hope”)
• How to Know If Your Husband Has Truly Changed:
If you are in an emotionally abusive relationship, you have no doubt experienced “honeymoon” periods in the past when, driven by remorse, he seemed to change and everything was fine. The following will help you know that your partner is in the process of permanent change. You will feel that he consistently (every day): • Values and appreciates you —you are important to him; • Listens to you; • Shows compassion —cares how you feel, even when you disagree with him; – Respects you as an equal and doesn’t try to control you or dismiss your opinions; • Shows affection without always expecting sex; – Regulates his guilt, shame, anxiety, resentment or anger, without blaming them on you. (Dr Steven Stosny, Compassionpower.com)
• Seek wisdom when deciding whether or not to reconcile with the one who abused you.
Make sure that your abuser has demonstrated strong accountability and thorough change before you consider restoring your relationship with him or her. Understand that, if you are to reconcile, you should feel stronger, safe to voice your own opinions, and able to live without fear or the threat of violence. You need to be valued for who you are and have your skills and talents appreciated and respected. Ask the Holy Spirit to give you wisdom about whether to reconcile, and if so, when. (From the article “Heal from Abuse”)
• If you have been abused and are hurt deeply inside, there is hope, healing, and full restoration.
If you will yield your heart to the Holy Spirit sent from God to be our helper, He will lead you through every traumatic situation that you have been through into wholeness. The process is painful. However, on the other side of each “door of pain” is a place of joy, peace and rest.
The Holy Spirit works through the Word of God (the Bible). Which means, you must diligently give yourself to study of the Bible daily, surround yourself with godly people, turn your ears and eyes away from the secular media including TV, radio, movies, books and the like, and turn all of your heart over to Jesus, He will tenderly minister life to you instead of death. Share the pain of your heart with Him while searching the Scriptures for the answers. As you’re doing that, turn your eyes and ears to godly Christian books, tapes, videos, TV, radio stations and music that God can use to administer healing to your heart. (From an article titled, Abuse in Marriage)
• Use the many resources that can help you.
Spiritually, bring all your painful feelings and hard questions to God in prayer. Invite Him to minister to you through His Spirit and His Word —especially passages such as the Psalms. The biblical characters pour out their own pain and doubts to Him and find deliverance. (From the article “Heal from Abuse”)
• Your life is not futile because God has not forgotten you.
Although it may seem you are on an endless treadmill of despair and tragic circumstances, God is working behind the scenes, in spite of your pain, to bring you out of bondage and “give you a future and a hope.” (Jeremiah 29:11) (From the article, “Because He Loves You”)
• You hear, O Lord, the desire of the afflicted; you encourage them and you listen to their cry, defending the fatherless and the oppressed, in order that man, who is of the earth, may terrify no more. (Psalm 10:17-18)
• To you, O Lord, I lift up my soul; in you I trust, O my God. Do not let me be put to shame, nor let my enemies triumph over me. No one whose hope is in you will ever be put to shame, but they will be put to shame who are treacherous without excuse. Show me your ways, O Lord, teach me your paths; guide me in your truth and teach me, for you are God my Savior, and my hope is in you all day long. (Psalm 25:1-5)
(PHILIPPINES) A husband puts his wife onto a pedestal, almost worshipping her then suddenly, because of jealousy that has not been proven, abuse occurs. Sometimes it ends up killing the partner…OMG!!!
(U.S.) I am in a 5 year relationship that has been verbally, emotionally and physically abusive for most of the time. The first 4 months was wonderful so the first incident put me into shock. I had never experienced domestic abuse and didn’t realize what was happening. I tried to leave him more that 20 times but every time he’d apologize with flowers and gifts and persistence. I never dated anyone so aggressive and besides calling the police, I didn’t know how to handle it.
There were times when it was quiet for 2-3 months and then I would catch him cheating or lying and the cycle would continue. It went off and on that way for 3 years. We conceived a beautiful daughter during one of our “on” times (my first blessing in the storm). The last year and a half has been non-abusive, but he has also been in prison for a year. The last time he physically abused me I called the police (as I have done several times before). But this time there was no turning back (as I did several times before).
He is now serving a 2.5 year sentence for that last incident. We broke up immediately after his arrest to later get back together 2 months later. And we stayed together until he went to prison.
A few months after he was gone, I feel like I had a revelation – “why are you still with him, why are you keeping yourself in bondage?” I asked myself. This is your chance to get out I told myself. And I did. I broke up with him (again). Some how I talked myself into going back last December. “I love him, he’s changed, and he is the father of my child,” I told myself then. I have been writing and visiting him frequently and we are talking about marriage before he comes home. But again I find myself in this place of – “what are you doing, what if he hasn’t changed, what if he comes home and the abuse starts all over again?”
My friends say he changed before he went to prison only because he couldn’t get into any more trouble or his sentence would have been stiffer. And of course he is being good now because he’s in prison. I don’t know, I think he could still be abusive in either case if he was still that person. I am a different person than I once was and I want to believe he is too. If the Lord can save and change a sinner like me then He can do the same for him.
So much has happened since his arrest. He lost his other child’s mother to suicide and a brother to murder. I can’t help but believe he values life a little more than before. Also, I have introduced him to Jesus and he’s reading the Word and praying and trying to understand God’s purpose for his life. He accepts all responsibility for all he put me through, he acknowledges he was a controlling and abusive monster at times. And he says he will never be that person again.
The abuse he put me through was a nightmare, I wouldn’t wish on any one. I am in the healing process and have already declared Victory in Jesus name! But I continue to find myself in doubt and afraid of displeasing God by being in this relationship. I also don’t want to keep leading him on just to keep letting him down. We have children, his daughter and our daughter together, that I am also thinking about. I know that only God can see me through this and guide me in the right direction but I thank you letting me share.
(UNITED STATES) I just have to say that I was in an abusive relationship for a total of 16 years. He was a drinker too. I don’t even want to go through and discuss all the things he had done to me over the years, because I wouldn’t even know where to start.
Things went extremely bitter when he cheated on me. I think the most hurtful thing he did was tell me that I was not attractive to him anymore. He would watch porn, tell other women how pretty they were (right there in front of me too) and all the while, he would criticize everything about me, especially after I had given birth to two beautiful children with him. I could take the hits, punches, hair pulling, kicks, pokes, slapping, etc., but the constant criticism and “jokes” I couldn’t take any longer. He refused to go to counseling until I threatened to divorce him. After I kicked him out of the house, he tried to bully his way in to the house because it was “just as much his house as mine.”
A pastor a few years prior to my divorcie with my ex, told me that divorce was not the worst sin. I was so scared that God wouldn’t allow me to remarry, and I would be left alone. I was so wrong. God loves me enough that he gave me a second chance, and I am getting remarried to a man I have known for several years.
The scars are still there, and it will take a long time to recover. I am no longer oppressed by my ex. Yes, I will have to deal with him because he is my children’s father, but I don’t have to listen to him talk to me like I am a speck of dirt; I will never allow another man to speak harshly to me, nor physically assault me ever again.
Sometimes the only way to free yourself from abuse is through divorce. God doesn’t like divorce, but He would much rather you see a successful marriage WITHOUT abusive behavior. You do not have to stay in that, and if the spouse refuses to change, don’t stay in it. You will allow your spirit to be broken, and God doesn’t want you to hurt like that.
(UNITED STATES) Mark, Per Paul Hengstrom’s years of research, 95% of abuse is of women by men. Only a small percentage of women abuse men, from 1% to 5%. Yes, there are women abusers out there, but I am sorry, the article is more directed toward men and for a reason.
(USA) Just because Paul Hengstrom was an abuser doesn’t mean that his research is accurate.
Men may perpetrate a majority of physical abuse. But verbal and emotional abuse, which is just as damaging and can be just as deadly (ask anyone who was driven to commit suicide due to his wife’s verbal and emotional abuse, oh wait, they are dead!).
Scripture clearly says ALL are sinners and ALL fall short of the glory of God. To claim that men are 95% of the abusers is to make God a liar.
Abuse is not a gender based trait, but a character trait. There is no moral superiority for either gender. Abusers are evenly represented by both men and women. Their forms of abuse may differ, but the sinful nature of that abuse is the same, regardless the form of abuse chosen by the abuser.
(USA) I grew up in an abusive home where my mother was the abuser and my father was trying his best to keep calm and save face in front of me. I never saw my father raise his hands at her or scream at her. All I saw was pain and disappointment. She was a critical, spiteful, jealous woman, that would find fault in anything he did. I never saw her look at him in a loving way, never speak to him calmly or say a positive thing to him. He worked so hard and tried so hard to be the best father he could be and to shelter me.
I asked him to kill me because I didn’t want to live with such an evil person and watch her destroy him. He packed me up and gathered every bit of his life savings and drove me across the country to a boarding school. It was the greatest trip ever. On his way back, he stopped at the Grand Canyon and shot himself. He had a picture of me with a note that said I was the best thing that ever happened to him and for me not to worry about him committing suicide –that he knew he would see me in heaven because he had just spent 22 years living on earth with the Spawn of Satan and he knows that God will have mercy on him. If you knew that woman, you would agree.
Women can be just as violent. Hate is Hate and it doesn’t hurt any less because it’s coming from a different gender.
(S. AFRICA) When is enough enough? For the past 6 years my husband of 37 years has engaged in one affair after the other. I have prayed and forgiven over and over. He moved back into the house in December 2010 and we agreed to move on and put the past behind us. My problem is that he is not being open and honest. He has “secrets.” This he says I have no right to and he needs me to TRUST him in these matters. Well considering his past, I just cannot do this.
At home all seems to be normal, he is kind and supportive, until matters of his secrecy surface. As a result I find myself looking for clues and have found some disturbing results. I cannot live like this as I am emotionally drained. I am hurting so badly and am in the process of filing for divorce. This is not what I want, I hate the idea of divorce but feel this is my only option.
May God be with me. I hope I am making the right move. Crazy but when problems like this are swept under the carpet, one lives in continual fear and feel used and abused. Another problem is that my friends and family have seen the emotional strain I am in and are constantly warning me. These dear people have been my support for so many years. I love my husband and just pray constantly for things to change. I trust God is behind me in this decision I have made. Would things ever be the same?
(CANADA) Well I went through domestic abuse and my child was abused in this relationship as well. The abuse was physical and mental. He hurt me and my daughter quite bad. Finally I had the guts to leave and called the cops and he was arrested. For the last year we have been awaiting to testify at trial with it being adjourned a whole bunch of times.
Finally the day came about 2 weeks ago to testify,my daughter being 11 would have to take the stand as well. Low and behold the RCMP officer that arrested him did not show up to testify as she was mat leave. So it was thrown ouot of court. I was in awww. All we went through the past year waiting for this to be over and to be thrown out. We never got to tell the court what he did to us.
The legal system just proved to me breaking the silence is bull; it’s just to employee a bunch people. Mean time me and my daughter are scarred for life and only for him to reoffend again and someone else to have to go through this process and again it will employee a bunch more people that wont do anything. Not only is abuse a cycle so is the legal system. It’s crooked and wrong.
(UNITED STATES OF AMERICA) I guess I’m the weak one. I have been verbally abused for a long time. He verbally abuses our children ages 16 & 6. I haven’t been able to find work, I have no where to go. He tells me I’m retarded, useless, B—–, on & on… He talks to my children this way, it’s so sad.
I have been married 20 years, I wanna get out so bad but don’t have the money and I feel so very alone. He’s very controlling also. My car needs fixing but he never has the money, and blames me for everything all the time. I feel so dead inside. I love my girls. They are everything to me. I just don’t know what to do next, he’s been throwing and breaking things. He told me he’d take our children away from me because I’m so useless.
My children love me, we’re very close. My oldest hates him. When he comes home he just goes into his room, stays away from us mostly. I do it all, everything for my children. When he comes out he’s mean, and ugly all the time. He’s got high blood pressure, takes Zoloft but doesn’t always take his meds like he should.
I talked with an attorney and she told me you can’t get them on verbal abuse and that I would never get full custody of my children. We were in family counseling but he said he’s not crazy, we’re they crazy Mother F! So he stopped going. Please someone, give me advice. I have never felt so alone…
(USA) My husband is a porn addict He also is sexually verbally mentally and emtionally abusive HE manipulates me and asks me to do things I feel as a Christian are wrong.
I wouldn’t want to do them anyway while he is driving he asks me to raise my blouse and show truck drivers my breasts. When I tell him how this makes me feel he becomes enraged. He tells me all women do this. He becomes verbally abusive.
He also asks me to wear my underwear in front of his friends. The list goes on and on. In fact that’s what he does; He makes a list of discusting things for me to do – Some way worse than what I mentioned.
He tells me all this is normal and that I should act like a woman. I have prayed and prayed about this. He is only getting worse. I think it best if I left because if I stay here I feel that my life is over.
(UNITED STATES) I have been married for 3 years. This is my second marriage and I am at a loss as to what is happening. I was married 35 years to my first husband. My present husband is also younger than me. He started by not letting me touch anything in his home. I had my own home but we lived in his house 2 years. I was not allowed to move any furniture and everything had to be done his way. He is obsessive about his kids eating, cleanliness, obeying his rules you might say.
We moved to my house last September and he really changed for the worse. He constantly found things wrong with the house; he bossed me all the time. He treated me like a child. But I was the one paying for everything and I was the one seeing that everything was getting fixed. When I protest about his controlling and domineering he swears that I am crazy and that I am imagining it. He always tries to blame me for what he does. He only brings up what I say out of defending my own opinions.
He started grabbing me by my arms, then by my clothes and waist. He is always jerking things out of my hands and implying he needs to show me how to do everything. I have a BS and MAED in Education. I am a retired teacher. He throws things and has temper tantrums, but everything is my fault because I won’t be a good little girl and obey him.
I left and stayed gone for several days. He always apologizes and says he will do better, which last about 3-5 days. The episodes are becoming more violent. He insists that I am the problem because I don’t like him grabbing things from my hands, talking down to me, and shouting out rules and regulations in every aspect of our home. He has to control everything. I can’t even cook in the kitchen without him inspecting.
I don’t know what to do. He went to counseling with a minister twice. His excuse to stop was that we were wasting the minister’s time. I am ready to just say leave and not come back.
I am so nerve racked that I can’t do anything. 2 days ago he grabbed my face and jerked it around while he was driving because I didn’t do what he thought I should have with a Nuvi. I was trying to help my grandson bring up a geocache. He assumed I had done it wrong so he needed to show me how to do it correctly. My grandson started crying. I slapped him on the hand because I am tired of being grabbed and jerked. I am a very independent person but I am quiet and reserved until you really push me, and I have just about had it.
I don’t know where to turn or what to do, because he sees nothing wrong with what he does.
(USA) Kathy, I’m concerned for you –especially with the direction these disagreements are escalating into. You can’t just let them build up and continue on the road they’re on –thinking they will either stop or go away somehow. They won’t. They will get worse and worse (especially since you acknowledge that you “have just about had it”). While I agree that I would be in your place of wanting them to stop and would NOT want any of that to continue, you have to know that your husband senses that you are at a breaking point as well. That can escalate things, all the more.
I’m saying this to GREATLY urge you to seek help for this. Your husband is right in thinking that he may be wasting the minister’s time. He probably is. These type of anger issues will take a very skilled person to help shake him up and help him to stop the violence and the level of control he is resorting to and believes he has to have in your lives together. This pastor may have many other skills, but this is a very complex type of dynamic in which most pastors would not have that skill set. You also have to be careful in the help you seek because many counselors can do more harm than good for marriage relationships and this type of issue. We’ve seen that many, many times.
I encourage you to look into some of the Linked web sites we have in the “Abuse in Marriage” topic. See if they have recommendations for you –especially counselors that are marriage-friendly, yet know how to work with the dynamics of abuse. Joint counseling is NOT a good idea for these types of issues (at least not, and ESPECIALLY in the beginning) because the controlling spouse (in this case, your husband) will have more opportunities gain control of what is said and take home some of that, with you. Please read through the articles posted in the Abuse topic of our web site. You need to proceed VERY carefully, with whatever you do. But just to let things continue to spiral down, will only escalate the control and abusive opportunities. That’s the nature of these types of issues.
Pray, read, seek, knock at the right doors, but please, be very pro-active in doing what you can about what is happening in your marriage. If you don’t, I’m concerned what will eventually happen to you. And if you don’t do it wisely and strategically, I’m also concerned. This is not the type of issue where you can just amp up your anger, as well. You need to proceed very carefully and prayerfully, but pro-active, not reactive. I pray wisdom for you and favor –that you will find the help you and your marriage needs. May you be blessed as you reach out for help.
(USA) I am a wife & I am abusive and controlling… HELP.
(USA) We have been married for many years. We have 9 children, and my husband intimidates, yells, screams, throws items close to my body, corners me with his body, and makes me feel guilty for having one friend, who has six children and is married. He is always ridiculing her and scandalizing by spreading gossip about her.
Plus, when I was late by 30 minutes coming back from mass he got very violent with his words and threw my phone almost hitting me. Plus he broke a glass and the shelves fell down and slammed doors to the point of almost breaking them to pieces.
An hour later as I went to bed he turned on the lights and demanded that we speak about what happened blaming it all on me for not having asked his permission to be late 30 minutes. He also told me that everything that I was doing in the community and at church I was never going to be successful at because we are not doing together. Mind you that I invite him and ask him to participate and he declines all the time. I am so confused about this that at one point I began feeling that it was my fault.
(USA) I have read most of the post’s written and I agree with most of the post that men don’t write in because they may not read this sort of thing. I am a man and I wanted to verify by reading other’s posts that there are others out there that are having a problem.
My wife is an verbally abusive person and if I call her out on it she calls me a vagina. I have been called names as a fellow poster put it, would make a sailor blush. She meets every element of what an abusive personality is and leaving is an option. Biblically I thought I could help but it’s more or less hurt me in my opinion of her by staying.
I have a 12 yr old boy in this too (yes, I have custody) and we have been married for 5 years. I have thought of leaving and have for a short time, due to a situation that happened between her and my son. I have changed in how I deal with her. Before I used to listen and take her crap but now I fight back. I have been kicked while laying on the bed, things thrown at me, car door slammed so hard the mirror fell out and various insults directed at me, my parents, friends and past relationships.
She has not left my son out of this. I have been constantly told that my son needs to go live with his mother; it would be better for him. Children belong with their mother. She says I haven’t done a good job in parenting him because of his behavior at times. Has said some things that even therapists have called un-called for and she is the one that needs to be in the chair, and not me.
She is also very smart. She is an English Doctorate student with 2 years left and we will be calling her doctor. I also know nothing but she knows more than has been stated. I have been called stupid, idiot for simple oversights… I have felt like a complete failure as a man. I feel like a complete failure as a parent by listening to her in how she degrades me and I am at the end of my rope, so to speak. There are thousands of things that she has said to me or about my son or about my life in general, that would make anyone reading this ashamed that I have been in this as long as I have. Please advise!!!
(SOUTH AFRICA) I’ve been in a relationship for almost 3 years. At 1st he was kind loving and so on, when I got pregnant he started to leave me 5 to 7 hours alone. He went to night clubs and put his phone off while I was pregnant. After sometime he began to tell me I’m a whore, I’m a low life, I’m worth nothing and so on. I was pushed to the wall, my hair was grabbed out and when I asked him why is he doing this to me, his answer is I don’t greet him. But how can I kiss him hello when all I’m thinking is the words he called me?
Nothing is his fault, it’s mine. He doesn’t want to listen and he’s always talking to his mother –he can’t seems to let go from his mom and he’s 40 years of age. I do love him. Our child is a year old now. But I’m starting to see myself in the way he does and that’s so wrong.
(USA) God wants you to be happy. He wants all of us to be happy even more than we want it for ourselves. Your husband is not helping you realize God’s plan for your happiness…he is not even close to being on a spiritual path with you. Do you think God would condone your husband’s words and actions? No way.
Unfortunately our church leaders misinterpret the sanctity of marriage above God’s desire for our happiness and spiritual growth towards Him and in Him. You are not in a marriage of love – you are in one of bondage. Please get out of this and be happy. I am praying for your strength through God’s love for you. I have been where you are, but not to your extreme, and it has taken me 20 years to reach the point where I know God is moving me in positive direction for my children and me.
I will be a healthier and better person when I am not walking on eggshells, trying to rationalize being verablly and emotionally abused by someone I love(d), making excuses to my children regarding their father’s behaviors, and feeling hurt, resentful and numb. And I will be better for others too. Getting to this point has been a long, painful time coming (and I still have crying spells over it). I am Catholic and come from a very traditional family.
I hold dear the sacredness of marriage and family, but my marriage has not been sacred for a long time and I have been in denial for years wanting so badly to have a forever, loving marriage. One person cannot save a marriage when the other does not want to make it work. I have had it with jealousy, financial neglect, control, isolation, being yelled out and cussed out, while I make 70% of the income, cook, clean, take care of the children and just about all the household and lawn chores.
Your husband wants control over you, not a marriage. Get counseling – emotional and legal, get your ducks lined up (and do not give up what is yours or be manipulated anymore) and get out. Do not be afraid of being alone or weak…if God is for us who can be against it? God is on your side, girl…you will be the winner.
(USA) Thank you so much for this helpful information! I have been saved and a born-again believer for over 25 years. I say this to let you know I am established and versed in the Word of God. I attend church regularly, and have a solid group of supportive Christian friends and counselors. My husband and I married three years ago (2nd marriage for us both).
Shortly after we married, communication became “challenging”. We seemed to have frequent arguments, and me, never being a person that swore -started engaging in this with him. The verbal arguments were ugly, and we both realized it and stopped the swearing. When we met, we fell madly in love with each other, were able to talk for hours on end with each other about anything, had so much fun, went to great places together. So much was good, that I guess I ignored the “bad”.
We moved to a new house after our first year of marriage (me, ignorantly thinking we were entering honeymoon stage bliss), and shortly thereafter, our relationship began to change. For the worse. We started having conflict over what seemed to me to be trivial issues. I remember my husband reprimanding me for wearing my ponytail on the side of my head! Then, he started to comment on how he did not think some of my friends were a good influence on our marriage (good Christian women mind you) -and I should especially avoid having anyone as a friend that was not married.
This seemed to be the beginning of his control. He started to tell me I couldn’t have people over to our home unless he knew about it first. Even my own grown son could not come over unless he “approved” it first. He would label food with his name, and tell us (my children and I) we couldn’t touch it. He did so many good things for myself and my children (that he took on as his own when we married), that I overlooked some of these behaviors -hoping he would “adjust” to family life with kids. It seemed to only get more controlling as time passed. Then the verbal demeaning words started. And it was “my fault”, because if I wouldn’t disrespect his leadership, if I would just do what he would tell me to do like a good Christian wife – t would be OK.
Meanwhile, as this is going on at home, he is plunging full steam ahead into joining ministry teams at our church (which I attended prior to him and our marriage for many years). We decided to seek counseling. Because we argued too much and couldn’t seem to work out our problems without professional help. We went through three counselors and pastors at our church -and he was never satisfied. He finally said they were all wrong and we stopped counseling at our home church. I knew the underlying problem was that they were confronting his views and treatment of his wife, which he did not agree with. So each time he did not get to hear support for his side, he moved on to someone else.
Things were getting real bad at home. He was calling me horrible names, telling me I was worthless, that I meant nothing to him, kept threatening to divorce me. Then he would ignore me in our house for days, weeks. Walk right past me and not speak. Purposefully withhold affection when he knew this was my primary “love language” (Gary Chapman’s book). And after he stonewalled long enough, I couldn’t take it. I left the house every chance I got. Started hanging out with my friends more. Even going out on the weekends again (like when I was single). Then he accuses me of having an affair. Which I was not.
The whole living situation escalated so terribly, that I had no choice but to ask for a separation. I sought much counsel and prayer before doing so. It was hard, very hard because technically, we were still newlyweds, and I was (and am still) deeply in love with my husband. I could not bear the pain of him treating me and viewing me this way. He would talk to me, then suddenly be upset again about some minor issue that he thought was major. And the angry cycle would start again. Up and down, up and down. It was a roller coaster ride with my emotions. Toward the end, he made love to me one night like everything was OK, then left the house before morning and told no one where he went. Disappeared for a week. Ended up finding out he went to see his mother out of state. I thought he had completely abandoned us.
He showed up a week or so later like nothing happened. When he came back, he was upset my son was in our house and called the police (my son is not a trouble maker in any way -he just didn’t want him there). That was a huge issue. He was talking to his mom on the phone during the incident and swearing about me. He even tried locking me out of the house and the police made him let me in. It was awful! I was praying for God to help me! I was getting counseling myself, talking to friends who were grounded in the Word, praying, going to church every time they had a service practically, and seeking wisdom. The Holy Spirit told me I had to leave him until he changed his abusive behavior.
Thanks to a class I had taken, I learned what abuse was or might never have recognized it as such. As they went through the lists, everything they said fit my husband to a tee and I was mortified! I as married to an abuser. Now what? Well, God move miraculously. I was pretty much a stay at home mom with a fledgling business. But God opened doors to a great paying job that gave me the money to not just rent, but buy a new place to live. I moved out with my youngest daughter while my oldest went off to college. God led me to that decision, and it took every ounce of strength I could muster to physically leave him. It still hurts. 8 months later now since we have been separated.
I was hoping this period of separation would open his eyes to him missing his wife. But all he can still see is how if I would learn to “submit” to him in everything as a wife, things would be fine between us. That we are not and never will be “equals” -he is the head and when I come to agreement with that, we can have a “Christian” marriage. He is praying for that to happen. He forgives me he says. And he says he will not compromise the Word of God. He won’t be married any other way.
I know in my heart that he is twisting scripture. That true love means loving your wife as Christ loved the church – not abusing her. Verbally, emotionally, or spiritually. I do not see how he can be saved, go to church, read the same Bible I read and misinterpret “heirs together”. I have spent 8 months trying to get him to see this. He does not. We talk for awhile, trying to restore our marriage -then he flares up suddenly over something trivial again and makes it a huge deal. Then demeans me again and doesn’t speak to me for weeks.
Earlier in the separation we tried another counselor, from a different church. That was no help at all. The pastor said if we would both just concentrate on Christ, taking things vertical, it would all be better. He never confronted my husband’s abuse. Ever! Even though he was aware of it. I really don’t think he had any clue on how to deal with abuse. God instructed me to stop going. I did.
Now my husband has gotten better over time about controlling his tongue, but it still flares up. More so now in silent spells. He doesn’t swear much at all anymore. Once in awhile. No where near like he used to. So I can tell God is working on him. But it is such a slow process, I am nearing losing hope he will change.
He has still never admitted the abuse. At one point when were were separated, he was telling me how he didn’t want me, how worthless I was, and that he was divorcing me. I felt so hurt and wounded I wanted acceptance from another man and had a brief affair. While it made me feel better by realizing all men don’t treat women like this, I felt guilty afterwards. I was in so much emotional pain I wanted to die. It was like my cry for help. My way to reach out and save myself. Every time it looks like things are better, and I reinvest emotionally, he pierces me emotionally/verbally with the sword again.
This last time was over a document I emailed him for our taxes (which I prepared jointly for us). He got so mad he started swearing at me. I hung up immediately, set the boundary (yes, I have read the book too -great!) and told him via email if he swore at me our conversation would come to an immediate end. He called me back, asked me if I hung up, I said yes, then he hung up on me and hasn’t spoken to me again since that a week ago.
I have tried everything to “fix” this relationship. It is ALWAYS me coming to him, apologizing or trying to work things out. He never comes to me to apologize. EVER. I have gotten so frustrated, I ever had him served divorce papers. But then I really didn’t want a divorce, so I stopped the process. It has been the most horrible wedding nightmare I could ever imagine. I am so in love with my husband and it has been hard to be without him. But I have realized that I do not deserve to be treated like this, and despite my love for him -I have to save myself. I have thought about suicide, but my kids keep me mentally from doing that. The pain has been so great I have wanted to die.
I have been prayed over, am seeing a therapist now, and taking meds at night to sleep. It has been the hardest road. I never expected to encounter abuse. I am still at odds with wondering if he will change or if I should courageously let him go and find another man who will love me in a healthy way.
Finding your site and hearing other stories has been an encouragement to me that I am not making this all up. I am not crazy. And yes, my husband is a bully and is abusive to me. I cannot change that. Only he can. We know all things are possible with Christ, and I have been believing for the impossible. Hoping he would recognize what he is doing to me. I have decided I am not communicating with him until he recognizes how he is treating me. That it is wrong and unhealthy. And that it is NOT my fault!
Thanks to great friends, a great church, TBN and The Church Channel feeding my mind constantly with the Word, a therapist, something to relax me at night and not think about him -I am on the way to feeling better about myself again and having hope for my life. I have had to trust God to financially provide for me, when my husband stopped. He has been faithful! While I am still in an immense amount of pain, I know God is helping me every day get through this. He even sent an old boyfriend across my path to encourage me -this man spoke out against men who treated women as property (and he does not even know my situation with the abuse). It ministered to me, unknowing to him.
Day by day I pray for restoration. While it may not be possible for my marriage, it IS possible for me. Someday I will have that love that will last a lifetime, with a man who will value and truly love me. For that I am hopeful. Any other suggestions for getting through this horrible pain would be appreciated. God bless all of you who are going through this too.
(USA) So what you are saying is you abuse one another. You each verbally and emotionally abuse one another. You seem to discount your affair, which is a form of emotional abuse that is typically as emotionally devastating to the betrayed spouse as a rape is to the victim.
As long as you view yourself as the victim and not what you have been, which is a co-combatant, I can see why you have no hope. You are hoping he’ll change, blaming or attributing your bad behaviors to his actions. For example, you say, “I felt so hurt and wounded I wanted acceptance from another man and had a brief affair.” Then you talk about how much you hurt over this. I fail to see where you addressed how this was the emotional equivalent to rape for your husband.
I’m not saying he doesn’t need to change. I’m saying he’s not here, you are. And you are minimizing the impact of your choices.
This old boyfriend you mention is not a Godsend, it’s a temptation. You are in a vulnerable place. You could once again ramp up your abuse of your husband should you become romantically involved with this old boyfriend. Even if it’s “only” emotional, it’s still cheating on your husband.
So while I agree, I hope he realizes what he’s doing to you. I hope you realize you’ve probably done just as much damage to your husband as you claim he’s done to you. You have to address your part. You have to be 100% open and honest about your past affair. You have to own the fact that your affair was equal to any devastation you say your husband has perpetrated on you and your marriage, and you have to be open and honest about this old boyfriend.
You have to stop blaming him for your choices. Otherwise, if you continue to set the example of using his behavior to justify your choices, then you give him license to do the same. He can legitimately use the idea that you make him mad, abusive, etc because what I read from you, you justify your abusive behavior because he was abusive and you just wanted acceptance.
Would you accept that from him? If he came to you and said he acts the way he does because he just want to feel ____ from you? Of course not.
So while I don’t condone his behavior, I reject your justifications and your blame shifting that suggest if he would only do ______, you wouldn’t be tempted to do ______. That is the pattern of justification used by an abuser. Safe spouses own their behavior and do not blame their victim for their abusive behaviors.