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What Is Domestic Abuse?
Domestic abuse can take the form of either: physical, sexual, psychological
or financial abuse within an intimate or family-type relationship which
forms a pattern of coercive and controlling behaviour.
This can include forced marriage and so-called 'honour based violence'.
Domestic abuse may include a range of abusive behaviours, not all of
which include physical violence.
Many people assume that they are not experiencing Domestic Abuse,
if they have never been physically assaulted. However, this is not true.
You don’t need bruises to be abused! Usually the most
damaging effect of domestic abuse is the emotional impact that abuse
has on a person.
Emotional abuse can be the most damaging of the four forms which domestic
abuse can take.
Does Domestic Abuse Only Happen In Certain Cultures or Classes?
No.
Domestic abuse can occur in anyone’s family/partner relationship,
regardless of culture, ethnicity, age, gender, sexual orientation, disability,
religion or social class.
Abusers can be partners (male or female), boyfriends, ex-partners, brothers,
sons, fathers, in-laws, siblings, carers or dependants, or any other
family member.
Why Does Domestic Abuse Happen?
All forms of domestic abuse come from the abuser's desire for power
and control over other family members or intimate partners.
Although every situation is unique, there are common factors
involved.
The most important factor to remember is that the survivor is NOT
to blame for the abuse.
What Are the Signs of Domestic Abuse?
- Destructive criticism and verbal abuse: shouting,
mocking, accusing, name calling, verbally threatening you, making
you feel bad about yourself
- Pressure tactics: sulking, threatening to withhold
money, disconnect the telephone, take the car away, commit suicide,
take the children away, report you to welfare agencies unless you
comply with his demands regarding bringing up the children, lying
to your friends and family about you, telling you that you have no
choice in any decisions.
- Disrespect: persistently putting you down in front
of other people, not listening or responding when you talk, interrupting
your telephone calls, taking money from your purse without asking,
refusing to help with childcare or housework.
- Breaking trust: lying to you, withholding information
from you, being jealous, having other relationships, breaking promises
and shared agreements.
- Isolation: monitoring or blocking your telephone
calls, telling you where you can and cannot go, preventing you from
seeing friends and relatives.
- Harassment: following you, checking up on you,
opening your mail, repeatedly checking to see who has telephoned you,
embarrassing you in public.
- Threats: making angry gestures, using physical
size to intimidate, shouting you down, destroying your possessions,
breaking things, punching walls, wielding a knife or a gun, threatening
to kill or harm you and the children.
- Sexual violence: using force, threats or intimidation
to make you perform sexual acts, having sex with you when you don't
want to have sex, any degrading treatment based on your sexual orientation.
- Physical violence: punching, slapping, hitting,
biting, pinching, kicking, pulling hair out, pushing, shoving, burning,
strangling.
- Denial: saying the abuse doesn't happen, saying
you caused the abusive behaviour, being publicly gentle and patient,
crying and begging for forgiveness, saying it will never happen again
Statistics
Here are just a few statistics to demonstrate how serious domestic
abuse is:
- 1 in 4 women will experience domestic abuse in their lifetime,
with 57% subjected to repeat victimisation
- 2 women a week are killed by a current or former partner
- 1 in 6 men will experience domestic abuse in their lifetime
- One incident of domestic violence is reported to the police every
minute
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