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)
(USA) The affair happened long, long after the abuse started – so it is not fair to compare the hurt he caused me to the hurt he brought on himself through his repeated rejection and abuse of me.
(USA) Elizabeth, would you accept a similar justification from your husband? I.E. if he said his abuse started long after something he said you did wrong. Would you tell him it’s not fair for him to make such a comparison?
I doubt you would. You would say what he did was hurtful and it doesn’t matter what you did before, it doesn’t justify him hurting you.
You sound like an abuser. You are saying the hurt you perpetrated on him was in your words, “he brought on himself.”
Look up abuse and almost every definition of an abuser includes the abusing believing the victim brought the abuse upon themselves.
Again, I’m not defending what he did. What I’m trying to do is to show you that at the very least, you’ve chosen to become what you detest in him. It will be hard for you to make a consistent case that he should stop his abuse while you continue to cling to your abusive ways. Your defense and justification of your abuse only serves to continue the cycle.
Your behavior is not predicated on his. Your abuse is never justified by his abuse. I wouldn’t accept him telling me that you had abuse coming to you because of your behavior. I will not sit by and let you follow the abusers script word for word, trying to claim victim status, when you are by your own words and attitudes displayed, a co-combatant.
If you want to stop the abuse, then start with your abusive behaviors and attitudes about your behaviors. End your justification and blame shifting today and own your contributions to the cycle of abuse you perpetrate on one another.
Perhaps then you can speak to him in word and deed from a position of credibility.
The justifications or your actions and the suggestion he had your abuse of him coming destroy any credibility you think you have.
(USA) While I understand you may be trying to help, surely you have not experienced your spouse telling you how worthless you are or you would not have this perspective. It is true, my behavior with the affair was not right. But it was not abuse. I have never been an abusive person. And yes, you are correct in me contributing. I contributed by allowing him to treat me the way he did and not setting boundaries for myself. I loved him so much, I lost myself and dignity in the process. I hope at some point he can find his own healing, from his abusiveness and the remnants of the affair left in his heart.
I will spend the rest of my life trying to get him out of mind. What we had when it was good was amazing, and I will always remember him for those times. Hard as it is amidst the pain from his words that cut me like a sword and left deep scars.
(USA) Sure I have experienced that. When my ex-wife had an affair and left, she said with her very words AND actions that I was useless.
Read what Dr Willard Harley says of affairs. They are abuse. They are emotional abuse that does the same damage if not greater than being raped.
Please, don’t tell me I wasn’t abused when experts and my own experience say otherwise. Betraying your spouse is abusing your spouse, period.
(USA) Don’t just take my word for it. Read what Dr Harley says at this link: http://www.marriagebuilders.com/graphic/mbi5525_qa.html
“Those I’ve counseled who have had the tragic misfortune of having experienced rape, physical abuse, sexual abuse of their children, and infidelity have consistently reported to me that their spouse’s unfaithfulness was their very worst experience. To be convinced of the devastating impact of infidelity, you only need to go through it once.”
So here you have a trained professional, probably one of the best in the field of dealing with marriage and infidelity who is telling you the damage done by a spouses affair is consistently rated by those who have experienced the acts described above as the most horrid thing they’ve gone through.
So please, don’t discount the abusive nature of your affair. It is equal to the hurt done by rape or any other form of abuse.
If your husband doesn’t yet know about the affair, then I would say the abuse is on-going, as it’s the secrecy and the manipulation of the circumstance because he does not know the truth about his spouse and his marriage. An un-confessed affair is a continuation of the abuse. He may have a sensation that something is wrong, but doesn’t know what it is.
When my ex-wife told me she wanted to move out I was devastated. I could not eat or sleep for a month. I lost close to 30 pounds in 30 days. I wanted to die and even thought about making that happen.
It actually got better for me when I found out about the affair, which she denied the whole time. At least I knew it wasn’t all me. It wasn’t fixed, and the process of me trying to restore the marriage and her sprinting headlong in to the affair was an emotional roller coaster of galactic proportions.
Finally, after close to a year of getting no help, but lots of blame from my pastor and church (“What did you do to force her to have an affair?”) no movement from her, and the petition for divorce she filed, I packed it in. I had no chance of gaining primary custody of my child because she lied when she left the home. Had I known the truth, I would not have allowed her to take my child out of the marital home and thus establishing precedence. Instead, we fought over assets and custody. I ended up with the home, two cars 70% of the debt, and 1/3 – 2/3rds parenting time.
That doesn’t even count when she physically hit me when I pointed out that she had lied and betrayed me. I didn’t yell, didn’t curse, I simply pointed out the truth. Her response was to slap me and unleash a torrent of obscenities. Did the police care? Nope, nothing came of the police report.
Affairs perpetrate the worst type of abuse on the betrayed spouse. That’s not just my opinion. Dr Harley, who has seen thousands of these cases will tell you the very same thing. Do not minimize the abusive nature of affairs.
(USA) Your experience does sound devastating. Please don’t misunderstand that I am minimizing the affects of my brief affair on my husband (which occurred while we were separated by the way, not living together, and the marriage looked like it was ending).
I would agree that dealing with an affair is painful. I believe there is also pain for the spouse who had the affair. I know this of myself. Your emotions are in such an unstable state, that the very joy you seek to have (because you have been verbally bashed and physically ignored) is not true joy at all. It’s a temporary fix to a long-term problem.
Coming from a person who allowed themselves to act in such a way after the long-term betrayal with verbal/emotional abuse, it’s difficult. It further separates you from your spouse. Even though you know at the time you shouldn’t engage in those conversations/acts with another man, somehow it feels comforting to know someone cares about you, because your husband doesn’t. You gain a sense of value (whether superficial or genuine from the other man) from another source.
Certainly, again, this is not justification. I am only pointing out what happens on the other side and why. When a spouse feels abandoned like I did (my husband physically left our home at one time, disappeared for a week with no explanation), rejected (he refused to talk to me, touch me, have sex with me for long periods of time), unwanted (he told me so with his own words), unloved (he demonstrated by stopping to provide food for myself and my children when I had no income, withdrawing from me, cursing about me to his mother and talking behind my back, sending me horrid emails which I have until this day as proof, verbally bashing me in public on many occasions, being so trivial as to remove all the toilet paper from the house so we wouldn’t have any, disconnecting electric and gas service when my children and I were still in the home and he had left, the list goes on and on) and mistreated -your human nature causes you to seek someone who WILL love you. You get tired of living in torment, which I was. The small bit of hope of keeping my spirit alive from his abuse was to seek some form of comfort from the immense pain I was feeling. I was so deeply in love with my husband, and I could not humanly bear that he was treating me this way. He was ALREADY treating me as if I HAD an affair -which I had not. I could understand the anger in that capacity. But to treat your wife so horribly without such a grave action as an affair is unthinkable in my book.
So while yes, ultimately the affair that DID end up happening (he was confessing it for so long before it actually happened, he brought his desires into physical manifestation) was painful for him I am sure -my pain started with him a long time prior to this taking place. I had already felt like I had lost the man I married. His temperament with me increasingly changed once we got married. He began to try to exercise more control over me with time, and when I would not submit to his controlling ways, he because aggressive towards me verbally. So the cycle kept going. He could not stop, I could not take it anymore. So a separation was necessary.
I was hoping the separation would help him reflect on how he had treated me, but it did not. He kept verbally bashing me, demeaning me at every conflict. I felt as though I was married to a man who would never change, and thus, the door to the affair actually happening had now been opened. I didn’t shut it. I wanted to feel loved again.
Even though the other man could not be the same as my husband, he did not mistreat me. I needed to see what it felt like to be valued again. And I have to say, it felt very good. To not have every conversation turn into an argument. To not have to walk on eggshells with every word, fearing he will say something bad to me. I was able to be relaxed, be myself and not be afraid. I put aside the residual affects of the affair for those moments of freedom in my spirit.
Now I do regret that this choice has ultimately hurt my husband, but I also understand that in the process of all we went through – the affair was a way of saving myself when I felt like I was the one who was dying.
Maybe this can help you to understand why your ex-wife might have been at a place where she did what she did and had an affair. I am not saying all affairs result out of a spouse being abused, but I think it is something to consider. Perhaps she felt unloved and unwanted? I do not know your situation. I believe that couples who are content, happy with each other, and sexually satisfied (a HUGE deal in a marriage of you expect to keep the marriage bed pure) have no reason to seek an affair. An affair is an indication that there is a flaw in the relationship that has not been addressed.
When we are in pain, we do things that we might not otherwise do. But we also have to look deep inside ourselves at our own patterns of behavior and see how we contributed to our own problem. I know there were things in my marriage that I was at fault with -which I have admitted and take responsibility for. But never to the point of “inviting” such verbal attack on the very essence of who I am and what I was to my husband -which he repeatedly pointed out as useless and worthless to him. Those are words I may never get over. While I have forgiven him, I do not have to subject myself to repeated abuse. That is unwise and unhealthy.
Until he gets to the place of being able to talk to me and communicate without swearing at me or demeaning me in any way, and allowing me to control my own life, make my own choices, not have to ask him for things like he’s my father -our marriage is unable to be restored. I will not go back to that place of torment with him. I pledged him my heart, my love and I gave it to him unconditionally – only to be battered for my acts of service to him.
Unless he is able to come forward and tell me this abusive behavior towards me will end, I cannot remain committed to him. I have to save myself, and I will not die in this marriage. I have to do what is necessary to restore my joy, because I have daughters who are looking to me for an example of how men should treat their wives. He has been a less than perfect example of how a husband loves his wife as Christ loved the church, and has scarred my daughters for life on how he has verbally bashed me in front of them. They are now unsure of what marriage holds for them, because they have seen the torment that verbal/emotional abuse brings on -along with a mother who has been fighting for her very survival because of it.
I so much wished things had been different. I gave this man every ounce of who I was and he hurt me in countless ways, well before the affair. If I could turn back the clock, I can honestly say I do not know what I could have done differently to have stopped his abusiveness towards me. His view of biblical submission was not accurate, but oppressive. 18th century oppressive. Do what I tell you to do because I am the husband is something that would never work for me. I wanted a loving partner, but apparently, he did not. So that very fact in itself would perpetuate his abuse. He never saw me as equal to him, always inferior. Which is why he gave license to treating me like a doormat. I said no more and got out. I want to be a man’s princess, not his doormat. So unless he can treat me like a princess, unconditionally as God requires -he will lose my heart.
I am so sorry for your divorce. I am wondering how that past experience has affected your current relationship? I know this experience I have just had with my husband makes me less trusting of men and less willing to open my heart in the future. Hopefully, you were able to put your past behind you and not bring that bitterness forward. I hope I can do the same. Thanks for sharing your story. I wish you great happiness. Perhaps we can both discover and experience the very essence of the relationship between two people -love.
(USA) To top it off, this week is my wedding anniversary. A difficult time, which is why I am here on this website searching for ways to help comfort my heart. Seeing the stories of others helps. Another special day will come and go, as has been in the past, and he will give no thought to me. Something I have grown used to – feeling unloved by him.
(USA) Tony, I am curious to know if you have served in any branch of the U.S Armed Forces?
(USA) I got out 20 years ago. I was an Army officer in the Signal Corps. The military was no place to raise a family. I came back from Germany after we pulled out the Pershing II missles in the early 1990’s. To get there, I earned an ROTC scholarship, went to a top twenty university in the US, earned two engineering degrees and I’ve worked in the IT business for the past 20 years now.
I teach Sunday School, go on mission trips, chaperone youth events, and study as well as work out with a group of men in the church, for what it’s worth.
(USA) Impressive.
(USA) Thanks for the marriage builders link. There was a good article on “What to Do with an Unfaithful Wife”. That made some very good points I would agree with, as noted below:
• If you could do for her what this other man is doing, the conflict would be ended and your family would be secure.
• Have a non-threatening discussion
• You will be tempted to lose your temper, to say disrespectful things, try to straighten her out, and give her ultimatums. If you do any of these things, she will find you repulsive, and withdraw from you more than she already has. It will get you nowhere.
• Right now, she is not convinced that you have put her first in your life. Convince her otherwise.
• After you have established what her lover does for her that you don’t do, ask her to give you a chance to prove to her that you can do it, too. Give yourself about six months where you go all out to try your best to meet her needs. And be sure you do not wreck it all by being thoughtless or disrespectful.
But it of course does not address the issue of abuse (which this site talks about in great detail and covers very well). If my husband were to do these things (in the article) -he would most definitely win me over again! But he would have to stop being verbally abusive and withdrawn, or it gets us back to square one.
(USA) Again with the he should… Look for things to do if you are the one who cheated. Those are the articles that you should be reading. They will describe what you should do.
I’m not saying he shouldn’t read those. But my focus is solely on your actions and responsibilities.
What good does it to do to agree with you on what your husband should do if you are not willing to do what you should do with respect to rebuilding your marriage and coming to grips with the damage you’ve caused?
So while he should be doing those things, what things can you find should the unfaithful spouse be doing? Those are more salient topics for you to study and act upon.
(USA) One more thing. This only works if both spouses do their part. I did these things. My ex-wife didn’t do her part. So you’ll understand my reluctance to let go of the idea that you need to focus on your part. You have to do that.
You have to do your part, regardless if he does his or not. Just as I had to do all those things regardless if my unfaithful ex-wife was willing to end her affair and do her part to rebuild the marriage.
As long as you focus on what you think he should do, and I suspect he’ll only focus on what YOU should do, nothing will change for the better.
What if you focus on what you need to do, and do that for the next three to six months and see if things get better or not? If they don’t, or if you are truly in danger, then leave.
But as long as you are focused only on what he should be doing, and that’s what you appear hung up on here, I predict things will not get better.
(USA) Well Tony, my focus now has shifted from wanting to restore my marriage (as you said clearly, I cannot change him or choose how he will treat me) – to focusing on restoring ME. That means, doing what keeps me sane, keeps me in joy, keeps me healthy, keeps me pressing into my relationship with Christ. I have removed him from my focus and ceased all communication.
He has been telling me for over a year he is going to divorce me. That he is tired of me. And is so quick to give up. I am tired of being the one always fighting for HIM, and to keep our marriage alive. It would take me far less effort to find someone new. The only reason I kept trying was to honor our marriage commitment, despite his abuse. And because I loved him so deeply. He destroyed what we had, long before the affair. At some point, the commitment importance left and I lost hope he would ever be different.
I was never, ever abusive to him. The affair should have been a wake up call he was about to lose his wife. That to another man, I am desirable, I am valuable.
I am sick and tired of blame being placed on me for his bully behavior. He is the bully, not me. And there is not one counselor (secular or non) that does not agree about his behavior being unacceptable. I am certain he has a mild case of bipolar disorder, which is almost impossible to live with when he won’t seek medical evaluation. He fits all the signs.
Because I had an affair two years after a ton of abuse is nothing I am going to concern myself with. The affair means nothing to me, and will never erase how he demeaned me and treated me like I was nothing to him. A thousand affairs couldn’t do that. But the right man will.
If he doesn’t wake up and be a loving husband, he won’t have this wife. I was married the first time around for 18 years, and never once did I so much as look at another man inappropriately. Because I was NOT abused!
His abuse triggered a side of me that will happen again if he continues it. Now he does have a choice to stop it, but he hasn’t. I will not be any man’s doormat. I am faithful, devoted and very much a serving wife – but not to someone who thinks abuse is acceptable – on any level. Or control hiding behind scripture that is twisted to his own purposes and male superiority attitude.
If you think an affair is abuse – well, he received a taste of it back then (not that that was my intention). He ripped my heart to pieces and I feel no obligation to give him warm fuzzies when he continues in the same behaviors.
I may be moved to have some remorse or compassion if I had seen a man who was sorry for how he treated me – but he’s not. So I don’t feel sorry for him. Only in that he will never have a lasting relationship with a woman if this is how he treats them. He’s banned from seeing his own daughter. Now I know why. His ex-wife knows just a bit more about his abusiveness than I do. At least that’s how it looks to me.
What was love is turning to bitterness. Which I do not want to harbor. But it is hard to fight, when he doesn’t care to fight for me. I met all of his needs as a wife – more than most men would ask for. And still, abuse.
So the affair is the absolute least of my concern. I know this may sound harsh, but I have reached a place where he has pushed me so far away from his actions and words I do not know how we can save our marriage.
I know anything is possible with God, but this is unbelievable to deal with. And he is now passing his emotional abusiveness to my oldest daughter. Not acceptable. She is now starting to feel pain he is causing her and is being traumatized by it.
So he is NOT the victim here. He brought this all on himself. While I appreciate your input, this situation has been evaluated by many, many reputable professionals and I am not making this up.
(USA) Oh, thanks for sharing about your military experience. My husband has an IT background as well. You two think alike! Weird!!
(USA) Tony, one more thing… Gee, can I get this all in one? Yikes! One day, my husband loves me deeply, misses me, wants me. The next, he flares up about something trivial and either lashes out at me verbally or stops talking all together for WEEKS. It has been this up and down, up and down battle for close to a year now. I have tried everything possible to work with him and get through this. While he has minimized how often he is verbally abusive, it is still happening. Last week he told me he didnt care if I killed myself, he was sick of me. Yet, the day BEFORE he said that to me, he was sweet and nice, and told me he was worried about me.
So when you say I should focus on my part, I have done that for well over a year and half with no success in stopping his abuse.
(USA) I should also add that he has had multiple surgeries on his head, which I have been told by medical professionals that this could cause mood disorders. So this is another area of concern. But he refuses to seek any sort of evaluation. I have asked him to. He won’t. He thinks there is nothing wrong with him, when everyone around him can see otherwise – not just me. This is another reason I held on for so long with him. I was hoping he would get medication to balance out the horrible mood swings. Things would be so much better if he did.
I venture to say he has had this same problem with others, but won’t admit it to himself. He has become very much overweight (before I met him, but it has escalated after marriage – now a size 5X), so this tells me there is something deeper going on inside him. He apparently needs to devalue others to build himself up and feel in control – when he has no control over his own body. Evident by the weight problem.
As I continue to get more fit, his weight is a big deal for me. I have never wanted to hurt his feelings, because I love him. He thinks I should look great and if not, it would be a turn off to him. I do this not just for him, but for myself. But he has made it clear if I was obese he couldn’t have sex with me. Yet I do not say that to him. He operates on double standards. He thinks I’m “hot”, he says. But I want him to look hot for me too. He won’t exercise, lose the weight. Sits at a computer day and night, won’t do anything active with me (walks, etc).
So there is more to this whole picture. These are just tiny parts.
(US) I’m married for 6 six years. We were on a long distance relationship for about 2 years since I was working in a different country, while raising our 2 yr old daughter. The verbal abuse started when my daughter and I started to migrate and live with my husband. That means, starting my career from the scratch. I need to take board exams since I am a foreign medical graduate. I failed 2x.
From then on, my husband has treated me differently. He’s in the military, he will always say, stick to the time. I would even control me, as to when I should take the exam, even if I’m not yet ready. He doesn’t understand the pressure I’m dealing with, if I continuously fail. Coming from him, I’m just good in taking care of the kids and nothing else. He told me, that the only good thing he learned from me is I taught him to hear Sunday masses and increased his faith.
Things got worse when I rescheduled an exam for just 3 days behind. He told me, “I am not stable with you!” That day, I just want to leave and study in the library so we can’t clash further but he threathens to divorce me thru text if I leave the house. So I came back. He wants me to go back to the other country and leave our 2 daughters with him. He wants just temporary separation and just for me to focus studying for my board exams. I did not agree to that, of course I will not leave my kids with him.
He said sorry about it after talking to his dad, because his dad understands me and told my husband, I have proven myself in the other country, that I am a good wife and a responsible mom. His dad told him to encourage me further to achieve our goal and not discourage me with his harsh worlds. I thought, everything is settled.
But just after a month, we had another fight. I just reminded him to update the emergency data record of our second child, because from what I saw in our common file, her name isn’t listed in there. He blurted out harse words again, like what do you think of me, irresponsible? I already told you, it’s all done, I can’t provide with you with a hard copy. Think of yourself. You haven’t proven anything yet in this family.
He started calling me, stupid! What happened to your 10 years of education? As far as I know, this marriage is over, that I’m just staying with you because of the kids. Just to let you know now, I have my own account, you don’t have any access in there. If we separate, I will use it for me and my new wife.
I composed myself, but I reached my boiling point for the first time and started yelling at the top of my lungs. When are you gonna stop belittling me? I am not stupid! When I decided to marry you, I was already a licensed doctor. My parents didn’t ask a cent from you! You don’t have the right to belittle me. Then my husband replied in a low tone voice, But it doesn’t mean you’re good. This continued on, He started twisting the story, like accusing me of thinking that he has other dependents that’s why I’m digging up the emergency data record.
At that point, I told him, God forbid me for saying this, If at this very point, It’s already my time, I can face anybody, that I’m telling the truth, that I’m just reminding you about that for the security of my child and nothing else..
Well, 3 days passed. I haven’t heard him say sorry for the hurting words he said. So what do you think? What will I do next? I’m having a hard time now studying for my exam. I’d like to schedule marriage counseling. I mentioned that before to my husband but he doesn’t want it because he thinks it will affect his job. I scheduled my own counselling with a priest. He doesn’t know that. Please enlighten me, I still want to save our marriage. We usually pray as a family every night. Btw, he didn’t get his promotion just recently, but I stand by his side thinking he will do the same thing for me and realize that we can’t achieve everything we want, that God has a perfect plan for us, in His own time.
(USA) Hi Bailey. I can empathize with you. My husband used to call me stupid, ignorant, and so many others. I am a very professionally accomplished woman, and he had no right to say the things he did to me. I think some men just have a power trip, and feel the need to try to be superior by belittling women. Do not, under any circumstances move out and leave your children with him! No matter how he tries to convince you. These men are smooth talkers, and they can manipulate their way into thinking their way is the “right” way. Before you know it, you are making choices opposite of what you feel is right in your spirit.
My husband and I are separated for 8 months now. Living apart. While I believe it is much more difficult to restore a marriage when you do not live together, it was a good decision. I can actually come home now in peace, not worrying about how he will treat me, what bad thing he will say next, what people important in my life he will try to seclude me from.
Chances are, he has you so distraught, that is why you cannot focus to pass the exam! My husband negatively impaired my work also. Stopped my creative flow completely. Until I left the house and got out on my own again. Then it returned and I was passionate about my work again.
While I miss him immensely, I cannot change how he chooses to value or treat me. Sounds like your husband is the same. Get yourself a strong support network or Christian friends, pastors, counselors and so forth to help you keep your mind clear and focused on what is healthy in a relationship and what is not.
Abusers have a way of messing up your thought life, and you start thinking wrongly. I want my marriage saved too. But not at the expense of my life. The very essence of who God created me to be. You are beautiful and wonderful in the eyes of God and He loves you! If your husband does not see that, it is his loss. God will give you a man who will value you. But you have to first love and respect yourself enough to not put up with his abusiveness. Just make sure you approach it safely.
If the verbal abuse does not stop, make plans to move with your children and get out of that house! He is already telling you that you’re second class to him, and the likelihood is that will not change without a major intervention from God. This is possible, but you do not have to live in that situation while he’s working out his behavioral issues.
(US) Thanks Elizabeth! I appreciate your advices. I already told my story to some of my trusted friends, 3 of them are military wives and one them is involved in the church, just to make sure I’m protected too and trying to understand my husbands behavior. You know what is common among our husbands? They all treat us as one of their subordinates in the military. But my husband is different because he is starting to call me ugly names. He wasn’t like that before.
From my story, thank God my prayer worked. He started to say sorry for the things he said and he loves me. I didn’t say sorry, for the reason that he may understand that what he’s accusing me is not true (that I’m digging the emergency data record because I was thinking he has other dependents aside from my children). Just yesterday we talked about it. My friends in the Catholic community knows about it and I asked for their prayers. I asked him first, if he’s still willing to work out our marriage and his answer is a big YES! I told him I was hurt when he calls me with those ugly names. He’s stepping on my self esteem and most importantly, he’s pushing me away from him. I know myself, and I know that none of those is true.
During the courtship stage, I told him I don’t believe in divorce and we have opposite views about it. But we both respected each others views. From the looks of it, I think he is the one who is threatened now. He started to promise me that he’s not gonna say those ugly names from now on. I demanded respect from him if he truly loves me, as any wife or husband would want. He explained to me that he’s not degrading me, it’s just his way of encouraging me to further move forward on a fast pace. Just like in the military, he said, I wish you are in the military, don’t be too emotional. I answered back, I wish you are in the medical field so you would understand the pressure I’m going through, while trying to balance family life and focusing to review for the boards.
We are pressed for time, military families are always on the move. We’ll be staying in this state for 3 years only and we got 1 1/2 year left. I told him he’s not helping at all, he’s just pulling me down by his harsh words. Then as he always say, I believe in your potential, you are just spoiled and just don’t know how to manage your time effectively. In the other country, which I’ve studied and worked as a doctor, we have baby sitter there and my parents can take turns taking care of the kids, though me and my husband are in a long distance relationship. That I would say and will accept, that I’m adjusting slowly and my husband knows that.
He also asked me if still want to become a doctor here in the US and if not, he will make ways to move forward for his career if he needs to stay in the military for several years. I told him that will not make me happy as a wife if he will just let me stay home. I told him to let me handle my own schedule because it is only me who knows when I’m prepared to take the test.
Partly as he said, I have some contribution as to why he didn’t get his promotion. For me, it’s not true, because it’s his job, not mine. I am not dictating to him about what he will do with his job. I fully support him. The main decision will always come from him. We both agreed to go this state because we want to spend more family time here, and we could not do it if he’s assigned to a different station.
We’re meeting half way now. He promised he will stop saying those ugly names to me and I assure him I will do my very best to get my license here. I told him, I’m taking my pre-med boards also, just for a fall back. He doesn’t agree with it, but still, I’m going take it and he knows that. I’m going to take those tests, based on the scheduled time that is left before we leave for my husbands’ next duty station.
He also admitted to me that he has anger management issues, and he told me, I need to help him too. I am there to understand him, but it’s still his choice how he will react to different situations. I told him it’s ok to get angry but you need to control yourself from yelling, throwing things, calling ugly names, and he agreed to that.
“I am wonderfully and fearfully made.” A friend from the Catholic community told me that. I also told that to my husband. That’s how I think about myself. He was just quiet and did not disagree. We went home peacefully, and made up for the bad times as husband and wife. I know, we still have a long way to go. I’m taking note of all the advice given to me. I just keep in mind, that God is always there, present and very much willing to help me. I entrust to His hands all the decisions I have to make for myself and for my family.
(USA) Bailey, It is good that he is open to working on the relationship and recognizes that what he is doing hurts you. That is the first step to creating change. I hope for you that he puts action to his words and makes the effort.
And yes, regardless of what happen in your marriage, know God loves you and is watching out for you! You always have a choice what you are willing to accept for your own life (and your children). Be wise on that, and don’t settle. All the best to you!
(USA) Hi Elizabeth! So far, things are going well between me and my husband. I agree, only divine intervention can start to change his anger management issues.., we go back to praying every night with the kids..He prayed, to keep our family stronger and felt sorry for all the sins he/we committed. This time, I felt that for a marriage to really work, wives need to be submissive but not the extent that their husbands would abuse them. In our case, I am very submissive to him, but now I realized I should set boundaries.
Last weekend, while I was doing my make up, He was staring at me and told me, “I’m very lucky to have a lovely wife” and then followed by, “I was just joking.” Immediately, I told him, If you don’t see the goodness in me the way others see it, it’s not my loss (I was serious, but not with an angry face ;-) ). Then he said, “You know, I love you, Of course you’re beautiful. I don’t know what I’d do, without having you by my side, I am very lucky to have you and our children.”
Regarding your husband Elizabeth, you mentioned about his multiple brain surgeries and that affected his behavior/ mood disorders..If you cannot convince him to follow up with a doctor, perhaps his friends or immediate family members would be able to help him. His obesity problem, would definitely add up to lower his self-esteem and it sounds like you’re the appropriate victim to be controlled by him to cover up for his insecurities..
I’m glad you’re doing fine with your job now and involved with support group. I wish you all the best. God bless.
(AUSTRALIA) Anger is not the issue. Anger doesn’t cause abuse, it’s the other way around. I would highly recommend a blog post by a Pastor who gets it about abuse:
http://www.cryingoutforjustice.wordpress.com/2012/05/03/anger-management-is-not-the-answer-by-jeff-crippen/
You will find more support, validation, insight and Biblical wisdom on abuse in marriage than many other places, I assure you. There are so so many Christians struggling with this injustice and unfortunately, the paradigms out there only serve to encourage them in ways that expose them to more danger. The comments on these pages alone show the desperation and errors in thinking, such as somehow if they try harder, things will change, or that God has a plan for their suffering, or that the perpetrator is a victim. You can just see the tactics of evil and the abuse cycle described over and over again.
(INDIA) We’ve been married for 1 year but our relationship is very bad because of he is a very dominating person. He is good human being but he lost his job 7 months ago, and he is feeling very pressured. Now he has got a job, but still all time he says, don’t do this; do this thing. I am just going mad. His love is becoming very commanding. He is a very confused person. What I will do???
(US) I wrote back in September about my husband who has become progressively more abusive in our marriage as time goes by. Things really have not changed, but I am to a point that I don’t have any feelings left for him. I just exist and try to avoid confrontations.
I cry a lot and I feel so hopeless because he guilts me about him not having anywhere for him and his kids to go. He told me in October after a 4-5 day avoidance from both of us that the only thing he worried about was having a place for him and his 3 kids. When he said that, a peace just came over me. I think the Lord was telling me to stop. You see why he is here… not for you.
Since that time I have just had no feelings. I just want to live in peace and not be mistreated. He made the comment again about 2 weeks ago, and I had been asking God to help me because I have such a tender heart that I will try anything and I know that the guilt works on me. I feel absolutely hopeless.
(AUSTRALIA) I have been in a relationship for 25 years and my confidence is so low I cannot hold a job down for very long and just leave -sometimes without giving notice and making a huge mess.
I have 2 children and both girls are emotionally scrambled. They are in their 20’s -one bipolar and the other just lost for drive and direction.
My partner is very good at letting his great side shine for others -very bubbly and fun and has many female young friends at work which he flirts and emails to and fro. The side we see is miserable and complaining and controlling. He tells me that I am a fool and just like my daughters and do not want to work. I pick up the emotional nuturing of our girls and he comes home from work and does not talk to them. I relied heavily on alcohol for years so that I could tolerate him and have intimate relationship with him. I do not drink now and haven’t for months and cannot stand the sadness and failure of my life as a person and mother. He thinks we are all losers and makes me and them feel like nothing.
Is it me? Am I the loser? I have been in professional employment and very good at it but when I come home and see that my daughters are not living life and my husband is always having a go at me about money I just want to hide from the world and stay at home. If I go to work and hear about other people’s successful lives I just want to run and hide. I think I have just answered my question. I am a terrible role model and my husband is looking outside the home. I do deserve the abuse as I am a fool!
(USA) I am in an abusive marriage and have been trying to seek help/ leave for almost a year now. Every time I try to leave he manipulates and blackmails me, says I will never see our daughter again and kidnaps her!
The last time I tried to leave he got physical with me and almost broke my wrist! Then he called his police officer FRIEND and blatantly lied saying I punched him in the face several times and that I am a regular abuser to him!! I could not believe it! My husband is so sadistic he now uses food against me to manipulate me and make me do what he wants and to say the least I am STARVING (96 pounds).
My family is aware of everything and turns a blind eye and a deaf ear. I have no friends now. He won’t let me get a drivers license. He is unpredictable and I spend every other NIGHT up all night crying because he has inflicted some sort of pain upon me! Staying out all night drinking then coming home telling me I’M the DEVIL when everything was just fine 5 minutes ago. I need help. I feel so hopeless IN or OUT of this relationship. He steals my phone so I can’t call my family to get me or dial 911! Please give me advice. I am a 19 year old mother. I’m mother to a 1 year old baby girl. We live in Florida.
Brianna, Please look through the links we provide in the “Abuse in Marriage” topic. I encourage you to find a few of those web sites where you could contact them in some way with the information you gave us. Make sure you tell them about your daughter and that is a main concern in keeping her. Also, surely, there are abuse centers in Florida, where you could talk to a counselor there.
One of the first things that an abuser does is to try to isolate their victim, so it’s not surprising that you don’t have friends. I’m not sure what’s up with your family –perhaps they don’t think they can help you because they don’t know how to or perhaps they’re dysfunctional themselves. But whatever is happening, use them or someone else, who can keep a confidence, to make the necessary counseling phone calls, or perhaps provide rides to a counseling center. But be careful (we have articles in this topic to tell you how to do this). You need to figure out a way of escape –whether it is to separate physically from your husband, or find protection in other ways. A good domestic abuse counselor should be able to help you with that. There ARE people who can help you. You just have to be wise and discerning and resourceful. If at first you don’t succeed, try, try again. I hope you will, for your sake and for the sake of your daughter so she isn’t raised in a home, which is so toxic. I pray wisdom for you and a for a way of escape to open to you so that you and your daughter are safe and live a life of peace and love.
(USA) I was a faithful, loving, Godly wife …who prayed for my abusive husband diligently. I prayed with young son who witnessed abuse, told him God is faithful. I sought counseling in church -long story short… GOD never condones abuse ever! For Christian leaders or lay ministers to counsel those seeking advise to pray for spouse -you need to live it. See what the emotional & verbal does to your soul. Please -if you care, never encourage anyone to stay ESP with children in a home that instills fear. God have us brains & common sense to use with the Bible.
(USA) 37 years of marriage that has been full of turmoil since the second week. I have endured the bullying, threats, slaps, punches, kicks, spit on, and, many other insane things. I have taken the blame because I was told it was “my fault” or “If only you would change, I would be different”. Then, when I turned 55, I realized I didn’t need to explain myself or have to take the crap being dished out to me. Many, many counselling sessions with pastors, counsellors, friends, etc. Never to be truly dealt with. Living the lie in public, not wanting to embarrass “him” or the kids… taking the abuse.
Not anymore, I am done. However, I am “stuck” as though my feet were in cement. I’m terrified. Please someone help me to take the step I NEED to take to get out of here. A long time to stay in a terrible marriage. Please guide me. Thank you very much. I do have several close friends that are encouraging me to leave and have offered their homes… etc. I want to go, I just can’t get my feet to move… as silly as that sounds… help me… please.
(USA) I understand your terror. But you are a brave, strong woman. Do you have a plan? Written or verbal? If not, tap into the counsellors, friends, etc. or the local abuse shelter, and put your head together with someone else who can think clearly, and knows your situation well enough to help you formulate “step by step” how, and when to go. Most importantly of all, ask your loving Heavenly Father to show you the way, and I believe He will. Prayers for your safety and courage. You are never alone!!
(USA) Hello. I have seen your website months ago but didn’t know if it’s worth contacting anyone here, if people will respond. I have a question. I’m disabled, in my 30s, with a rare and severe illness, I can’t work and my husband (we’ve been married for over 4 years) earns very little so we could never afford medical care for me, only medication to sustain me (keep me alive, but not better) which is expensive.
I am explaining this to make clear that we are both stressed. We met when I was already ill but was feeling better, and then extreme poverty made us move in with my husbands parents recently. The problem is, we are facing a divorce because we cannot co-exist together. For two years, my husband has been losing his temper and whenever we had a verbal argument he would attack me, shake me, throw me against the wall or on the floor, crush me with his body (I am 105 and he is 200 lbs), body-slammed me and often would wring my arms, pull my mouth open, threaten me and scream.
It started with holding me tight when I was sad about my illness, then progressed to shaking, then became violence when and if we argued or had a disagreement. At first I didn’t leave because I love him, later I couldn’t because I had nowhere to go. I have no money, I am not a citizen yet (green card) and not allowed to have SSI, I have no place to go to and can’t live without my medication. After two years of this he came out about it to his parents and went to Anger Management class. It helped temporarily but now he is verbally abusive all the time, he doesn’t help me, he just started working but he didn’t for almost two years and I had to apply for jobs for him, beg him to look for work, even design his resumes, etc.
It’s horrible and sometimes I would rather he hit me than insult. Now, we live with his parents and I have nowhere to go. I still want a divorce badly. We live in Arkansas and it’s a “no-fault” state. I told him I would file a divorce under “abuse” clause, and he became very angry. He demands me to agree to “seal” this information or annul -otherwise he threatens to lie about me in court that I abused him. I have only touched him once after two years of physical attacks and slapped him on the head when he was lunging at me and calling me crazy. I was scared and I was crying at the moment, but he says he will also come up with other things that never happened –I guess he believes everything was in reverse. He also keeps threatening me that if I disagree to “seal” the divorce records he will tell everyone that I have been in a mental institution (I have, well before I met him, for depression-I already had a debilitating physical illness) and that I’m mentally ill/crazy and that I am making up his abuse.
I don’t know what to do. I’m afraid of him. He basically tells me that he will make sure I come out looking unstable and mentally disturbed and a “liar” and he will do it because he doesn’t want a reputation of an abuser on his record. He says he will say anything it takes to make sure of it. he even tells his parents without blinking how I “abused” him. I’m really scared.
(USA) I’m sorry, made a mistake. I meant a “fault” state, it means you are required to have a “fault” to divorce someone, for example, physical or emotional abuse, or infidelity, stuff like that.
(TURKS AND CAICOS ISLANDS) I am entering the 3rd year of marriage to an abusive husband. Before I met him, I had a good high paying job and was confident in every aspect of my life. A few months into the marriage, I became incompetent -or so I thought -in my job. I began to feel dumb and second guess myself with everything. I was reduced to a cowering, fearful shell of myself. My self condience and self worth are non existent as well.
My husband punches, kicks, slaps, pinches, bites and shoves me. He has held knives to me and constantly threatens to kill me. He tells me I’m fat, ugly, uneducated, dumb, stupid. Because I’m from another country, he belittles my birth country and says we’re all hungry that’s why I came to his country. He calls me a harlot along with choice expletives. All this while I’m singing on the praise team and serving as assistant protocol coordinator at church.
He likes to think that I only married him because I wanted to be legal in the country and he uses that as the reason he is abusive to me. He never admits that he is abusive though, instead he says that it’s because of something I did or said. He recently bought me a car but he took away the keys because I didn’t jump up immediately to make him a sandwich when he demanded. He’s now threatening to take the house keys away and put me out of our marriage bed.
I was close to suicide and was on anti-depressants for 1 year. The suicidal tendancies are back. We don’t have any children and although I deeply desire them, I don’t want to bring them into this world to grow up in this environment. I’m now unemployed and totally dependent on my husband and I have no one or no where to move and go to. One time the beating was so bad, the police locked him up and his family threatened to come and burn down the house while I was asleep. I’m scared for my life and very confused, and all alone. He threatens to kill me if I file for divorce, because then it will prove that I only married him to get legal in the counry. What can I do to get out safely?
Dear Amanda, How I cry for you –to feel so trapped within a situation where your husband has you cornered in so many horrible, abusive ways. I can only imagine your confusion and the cries of your heart for help. With all of this, I wish I knew where you could go for help. I don’t know the legal system where you are located. I know that in the U.S. there are domestic violence centers, where you can call and go to for advice and help. Many other countries have this too. But I’m not sure if this is true where you are located. If there are any abuse centers, I would encourage you to reach out for help (without telling your husband). I don’t know your church either. Some can be helpful in these types of situations and others aren’t. If you can find a church, which is helpful, it would be worth the search, if that is possible.
Also, please read through everything we have posted on our web site (with links to other web sites), on the area of Abuse, to see if you can glean some information to better help you. You need to put into place a plan of escape from this abusive behavior –even if it takes a while. You are not your husband’s punching bag –someone to take aggression out on just because you are there. You are not an object; you are a person with feelings. Ask God and keep asking God for “the way of escape” from this horror, and then look for the windows of opportunities He will open up for you –even momentary, light ones… and certainly healthy ones. NO ONE deserves abuse. NO ONE should be subjected to these types of actions at the hands of anyone –let alone a spouse. Please keep looking for those pin points of light, which God can bring to poke holes in the darkness. God can make a way where there seems to be no way. Look for them. I hope and pray you are able to find them and that you will be able to find a way to live a life in peace. I pray God opens your husband’s eyes to the horror of what he is doing and that he responds in a healthy way. I pray love and peace for you in some way, shape and form. I wish I could do more, but I believe you will find a way. My prayers are with you.
Well, today the usual mental and emotional abuse wrought by spoken word of my husband turned physical. Seems that after 3-1/2 years of it I had had enough and hit him. It was not without warning… repeated warning …to just be quiet and drop the whole conversation. Yet he kept harping along about my 16 year old son who is, well, 16. By all standards, he is kind and easy going. His grades are decent and he helps out when asked. He is an only child and somewhat keeps to himself although it is likely that he just wants to stay out of the way in an awkward marriage.
His dad (my ex-husband) did a year in jail and now is in his second year of house arrest, so I am the go-to parent who is remarried to a loose canon. Yikes! So when my husband get can’t under my skin by insulting me, he starts in on my son. He knows better than to say or do anything face to face with him, but he makes insulting comments about my son, his half-brother from their father’s side, and his father (my ex). I guess it’s not good enough that my first marriage ended 10+ years ago and that my ex and I can be amicable in discussing our son despite our difference in core beliefs. It’s not good enough that my stepson is now 30 years old and has a Master’s Degree despite all of the childhood dysfunction that he experienced. It’s not good enough that I let my son grow his hair long and that I don’t demand he take the personal initiative to do things around the house. Why would any 16 year old want to take the role of an adult when there are two adults in the house? In my current husband’s mind, that translates into me still having feelings for the ex-husband who happened to be raised Jewish so that ends up being an easy target for horrible comments too.
You know that saying, “If you can’t beat them, join them”? That seems to be what happens when you let your guard down. Slowly but surely, little by little, something negative sneaks into your life and takes control. Neither patience nor forgiveness nor all the wishful thinking in the world change someone who is possessed with negativity and destruction. The more you allow yourself to be around it, the more of a foothold it gets on you.
So today when my spoken requests were ignored and I had had enough mental and emotional abuse, I physically hit my husband. It happened so quick that it was done before I knew what happened. He did shut up for about 3 seconds until the true mark of a coward presented itself, “Oh, you hit me. I’m going to call the cops.” OK by me. They would probably be the same cops who showed up two weeks ago when he couldn’t control his choice of thoughts and words then, as well. I find it amazing how quiet he can be around other people or the cops, but how outspoken he is behind closed doors. I am told to keep our personal problems at home, but in my opinion that privilege ended when he repeatedly refused to change his actions or ignored my requests to reach out for help with counseling or therapy.
He is out of the house again tonight… this is about the 5th time we have separated in 3-1/2 years. We were apart for our second anniversary as it all went bad that fast.
I do feel that if I were stronger spiritually in my faith that I would not allow myself to react by getting drawn into his game playing mode or to feel hurt. Then again, I’m only human and human’s truly were not designed for abuse. God designed us to exist in His presence.
About a month ago I signed up for Divorce Care support group figuring this would all get worse before it got better, and that I had to start with myself. The support group starts next month. I feel like I will just be treading water and barely existing until then.
I thank God for my amazing Christian parents who have been married for 60 years. They are being supportive without being judgmental, holding us both up in prayer. I am also thankful for my amazing Christian backyard neighbor who will pick up the phone or jump the fence to offer support, also without being judgmental. And I am truly humbled by my 16 year old son and ask you to pray that he realizes sooner rather than later that committing your life to God and li ing the commitment is the only way to be fulfilled. He has plenty to learn from my mistakes.
Thank you for your website. It has helped me get back on track, own who I am and who God created me to be, and set boundaries and goals for myself.
My husband and I have been married for just over seven years, and have three children. Though generally my husband is not currently physically abusive, he has been in the past. He has kicked me, hit me, torn my clothes off me, dragged me, spit on me, pulled a knife on me, etc. The last major time he was abusive, I barely was able to grab my phone and call the police. I yelled our address, then he grabbed the phone and broke it. Thankfully, they made it and arrested him. Before the police arrived, he sobered up and began vacuuming and tried to say we were just having an argument. It was then I learned to stand up for myself.
Also during this time, and still occurring, my husband will yell at me and say terrible things in the middle of the night, calling me a whore, saying he hates me, saying I’m garbage, and more. He had a horrible childhood, but at some point he needs to take responsibility, right? I told him I’m sorry his childhood was so horrible, but that was not my fault, and he cannot take all his anger and resentment and bitterness out on me.
Currently, he’s verbally, emotionally, abusive and manipulative. I don’t like to be home much. He calls me a whore quite frequently. He’s accused me of sleeping with all kinds of people, even family. It’s disgusting. He also lies to me often and smokes pot. I hate this because it’s wrong and illegal, but he think it helps his “pain”. He uses his back, neck, gout pain as an excuse to be mean.
He is very controlling. He is always worried about everything, especially the kids. The kids are almost afraid to do anything because he’s so scared they might get hurt. My oldest daughter is becoming almost paralyzed with fear. He also tells me what a horrible mother I am and how I don’t care about anyone.
Writing all this I almost feel numb. Its been happening for so long now… I just don’t care about his feelings anymore. I’m tired of putting out fires and taking care of him. He has me run the household, run our business, do his work (when he’s hurt) and still do the shopping and many household chores. I feel like I’m just here to work for him.
We are not a loving couple. He doesn’t not love me; I’m not sure he even can. He never hugs me, unless I hug him and then he pushes me away quickly. He doesn’t kiss me, unless I kiss him, which he often hates. He always thinks the worst of me.
For a few years, after he’d be abusive we’d have the “honeymoon” phase, where things would be nice again. Now, we don’t even have that. Most of the time it’s just cold and dreary.
We recently had a miscarriage, and I told him I wanted to try again. He told me I’d better go find another man because he wasn’t going to get with me again. He sometimes withholds sex from me. He’s been doing this for years. Then he accuses me of only wanting sex with him to have children, when this is very far from the truth. This is manipulation right? Very numb.
I really need some clarification on this one. How does God look at this type of marriage, clearly this type of physical, mental, verbal and emotional abuse was not part of his marriage design? The logical part of me says this is completely unacceptable and should not continue. Please Cindy, shed some light on this one from your perspective.
Skye, This is something I’m praying about –how to answer Kate and now, how to answer you. Thank you for the added prompt. I’m also praying for words to write to Anita (whose plea is a recent comment posted in “Dealing With the Unlovable Husband”). I’m not sure if God will give me insight today or not, but please be assured that I am praying for wisdom and insight –something to say to Kate (and Anita). This is such a sad, sad situation. I know this moves God’s heart. I’m not all-knowing, as God is, but I’m praying that God will give me at least a little bit of insight that I can pass along, which perhaps can minister in some way. I’m also praying that God will prompt others to pray for these dear gals and if God gives them insight, that they will share it with us.
Dear Kate, How very, very sorry I am to read of the abusive behavior you’ve had to suffer through for so long. How tremendously sad. As the old saying goes, “I feel your pain” and truly I do. I’ve been praying for you and praying for wisdom in how to respond to your questions. From this wife and mother to you, as a wife and mother, my heart goes out to you.
At the end of your comment you ask, “This is manipulation, right?” My answer is, most likely. I can’t say for sure because only God can truly look into the heart of man. But from all outward appearances and from what you told of your side of the issues you are living through… I can’t think of any other reason your husband would do and say such things. He is obviously someone who doesn’t want to be out of control, which probably started with his “out of control” beginning to life. You mention that he “had a horrible childhood.” I can only imagine how “horrible” it was –probably the stuff that can make the most negative imprint on a person that is possible –one that can point a child towards a horrible adult life as he tries to construct a “normal” life that started off very warped. But even so, it’s like what you wrote, “at some point he needs to take responsibility” for how he conducts his life today. And yes, that is true.
No matter what your husband went through in his imprint years, and no matter how obsessive his need is to stay in control (while being a bully along the way), he NEVER has a right to abuse you or anyone –physically or verbally. The names he is calling you, his actions, and his coldness towards you may be ways of his acting out what happened to him when he was younger, but he now has choices to make. He can stay stuck and essentially, keep the abusive cycle going that he learned while he was young –which will cause him to lose his marriage and his family, or he can make the choice to work on his issues, owning up to the fact that his behavior is abusive and totally unacceptable and change the direction in a healthy way, of his downward spiraling life. Whatever his choice is, he needs to make it now. He is running out of time… you all are.
Seven years ago, when he married you, he should have made the choice when he first started to see things going in a bad direction by his own hand, to get help. But it’s amazing how differently we can spin things away from reality. His boyhood imprints probably helped him to rationalize his actions, as wrong and warped as they were.
As for the “honeymoon phase” that you referred to after the abuse, it’s not surprising that this “phase” has disappeared. It’s all part of the downward cycle of rationalizing that happens when we get caught up in sinful behavior. We have to somehow color things in a way so that we can live with it. So most abusers eventually get to the point where they no longer listen to the promptings that they could be wrong or that they have to pay any type of price for their hurtful behavior. They somehow color the situation so it’s the other person’s fault (“if she wouldn’t push my button” or, “if she wouldn’t do this or would do that” or, “couldn’t she see that I was in pain… why did she do that? It’s her fault; she should have known better” or, “at least I didn’t hit her” and the rationalizing goes on and on). And then to top it off, old wrongful imprints keep nagging at him. It’s all very complex.
So what do you do? As “Skye” wrote, in response to your comment, “The logical part of me says this is completely unacceptable and should not continue.” And she’s right. No matter what happened to your husband as a child, he needs to be brave enough to come to the point where he sees that his thinking has been warped in some way to think this behavior is even a little bit acceptable. He needs to get help and you need help to know how to put boundaries down that will not keep exposing you to verbal and emotional abuse. There needs to come a time when you both sit down and talk seriously about this. It shouldn’t be a H.A.L.T. time when either of you is hungry, angry, lonely, or tired. And it shouldn’t be when the kids are around or other disruptions can get in the way.
Before you do this, I HIGHLY recommend you read through the “Abuse in Marriage” topic. Prayerfully glean through the information you can use. And then there are three books I’d recommend you get to read so you can come up with a plan, first to better protect yourself and also so that you can know how to best talk to your husband. A line has to be drawn in the sand, so to speak –for your sake, and your kids sakes (who are picking up and are being hit by the emotional shrapnel from all that is exploding around them), and also for your husband. He seriously needs help. Please go into the Abuse in Marriage Resource Page, which you can find at: https://marriagemissions.com/about-us-2/abuse-in-marriage-links-and-resource-descriptions/ and go into the Resource list. The first 2 books listed, I would HIGHLY recommend you get and read (aside from your husband seeing them). Also, the book How We Love written by Milan and Kay Yerkovich is one I highly recommend too because it could also explain a lot. “In How We Love, relationship Milan and Kay Yerkovich draw on the powerful tool of attachment theory to show how your early life experiences created an ‘intimacy imprint’ –an underlying blueprint that shapes your behavior, beliefs, and expectations of all relationships, especially your marriage. They identify four types of injured imprints that combine in marriage to trap couples in a repetitive dance of pain.” I’ve heard them speak on this and it’s outstanding. But you can read more in the link that is provided here, and the links provided in the Abuse in Marriage list.
As you will read in the articles, you need to have a plan, rather than just plow into it. There is a lot at stake here for EVERYONE involved. Kate, I could say a lot more, but I’ll close with this. Your numbness is not surprising. Your wanting all this to stop is right. It HAS to stop –one way or another. But please know that there is “a way that seems right unto a man, but the end leads to death.” I believe there are many different types of deaths that could happen in this case. You want to make sure you proceed as wisely as possible so that there is more life on the other end of the tunnel that can be gained, rather than causing a whole lot of unnecessary and additional hurt and dying. Please prayerfully proceed. And PLEASE don’t intentionally get pregnant at this point. This is not a situation in which to bring another child. Some serious changes need to take place first and above all.
I sense you are so very tired of all of this and just want it to end. I sure get that, and I sure would want the same. But please pray for additional strength and insight, discernment, and wisdom that you can gain if you go the way I recommend. And don’t wait… do what is needed to stop this sick situation. I’m praying the Holy Spirit will be your “Wonderful Counselor” through this –and even though you still have painful and tiring times ahead, I encourage you not to give up in finding the best way out of or through this situation. The best way may not be the one that is most apparent. Pray for guidance and take it. “May the Lord direct your heart into God’s love and Christ’s perseverance.” (2 Thessalonians 3:5) This is my prayer for you: “that your love may abound more and more in knowledge and depth of insight, so that you may be able to discern what is best and may be pure and blameless until the day of Christ, filled with the fruit of righteousness that comes through Jesus Christ –to the glory and praise of God.” (Philippians 1:9-11)
Cindy, Thank you for your response. This is almost a year later, and two months ago I finally decided to separate from my husband. He lives in the same town as I do and still gets time to see the children. We co-own a business and so we still work together. I have not shut the door to future reconciliation, though I would very much like to do so.
However, at this time I know that I do not have permission from the Lord to divorce my husband. At this point, I am not ready to reconcile, and neither is he. He is still very controlling and accusatory. He has said some terrible things to the children, because I know he is hurting. He has made comments about if I ever remarry (we’re not divorced), he’ll kill himself or slit the other guy’s throat. I know he is just saying this because he is in pain, but he shouldn’t say those things to the kids.
I wish I felt a clear word to leave him, but again, it’s only been two months and that is not enough time for someone to change. He is currently in counseling and the counselor believes he should focus on himself and let the relationship go for now. I’ve been memorizing Scripture every night. I’ve read all of the books you suggested, and more. I am very thankful that the Lord has provided me a job I can work at from home with enough income to take care of myself and my children. He is continually showing me to trust Him in all things. I’m doing my best. Thank you again for your prayers and encouraging words. Also, my children are doing very well with the separation. I have noticed a drop in their anxiety levels (in my oldest it actually caused her back pain, so sad), and they seem happier. They actually (at this time) prefer the separation to the way things were. I’ve got some lovely ladies who are supporting me and are there for me when I need a pick-me-up. Anyway, thanks again. :)
Kate, I’m proud of you. From what I sense, you are trying to do this the way that God would have you, rather than the way that others or even you, might want to. Separating seems like the right way to de-escalate the abuse. It’s also good for your children to be removed from the everydayness of his inward hurt and short-fused anger. I believe God is honoring your plea to Him by providing a way for you to financially provide for your family.
I pray the Lord continually gives you little glimpses of His light and love along this very dark path you are traveling on right now. I also pray that as you have stepped back from your husband that it gives his counselor the ability to break through (as the Lord leads the way) so your husband will finally be set free from his past to the point that he can learn how to make his future better for himself and for you and your children. And I pray he learns how to put a filter on his words so they aren’t so harmful to your children and to you.
I support you in prayer and the hope that God will give you better days ahead –ones that will bring smiles to your heart and the heart of your children. “The LORD is near to all who call on Him, to all who call on Him in truth.” (Psalm 145:18)
“To this end we always pray for you, that our God may make you worthy of His calling and may fulfill every resolve for good and every work of faith by His power, so that the name of our Lord Jesus may be glorified in you, and you in Him, according to the grace of our God and the Lord Jesus Christ.” (1 Thessalonians 1:11-12)