This Is Why I Didn’t Tell You He Was Beating Me- 2
Here’s
what you don’t know: Your friend would love nothing more than to fall into your
arms and ask for help. But she won’t. She can’t. She’s too ashamed. As awful as
you think she looks, she believes she looks even worse. In a relatively short
period of time, her boyfriend has gotten into her head and convinced her that
she’s ugly, stupid, and worthless.
Your
friend no longer puts any effort into her looks because he’ll either accuse her
of dressing up for some “other man,” or he’ll just tell her she looks like crap
anyway—so there’s no point in trying anymore.
Sweatpants
are her new best friend.
She
doesn’t call anymore because she’s embarrassed by her life. That wonderful guy
she bragged about in the beginning has turned into a monster. And she knows
that if her friends knew how bad things were, they’d think she was just as
stupid as he says she is—and maybe she is. After all, she still loves him. So
maybe she’s getting exactly what she deserves. At least that’s what she thinks.
You
don’t see her as much because that’s what abusers do: They isolate their
victims from friends and family. They do it subtly, though. He’d never go so far
as to say that she isn’t allowed to see you—that’s too direct and he’s much
smarter than that. Instead he manipulates her into staying away by doing things
like picking a fight with her when she comes home. That way, the next
time you invite her out, she’ll decline in order to avoid another fight. Or
he’ll accuse her of loving her friends more than him. So that she’ll stay home
instead of upsetting him. He uses her love for him like a weapon.
And
those fights she’s so eager to avoid? “Fight” isn’t exactly the right word, not
when she always ends up sprawled on the floor. At first, it was more yelling
than anything. She could hold her own back then. She always did have an acid
tongue. But then he became cruel, saying things that cut her to her core. And
he twisted her words and used them against her. And all the while, he was
playing the wounded one who couldn’t understand how she could treat him so
badly when he loved her so much. There were the accusations and recriminations,
wild scenarios forged in the deep valleys of his twisted mind. Her smart mouth
never stood a chance against his emotional brutality.
By
the time the first punch landed on her jaw, her psyche had been beaten to a
pulp. And don’t be fooled by the shell of a woman you just saw at the grocery
store. She used to fight back. She even got a few good punches in, especially
that first time. But he’s stronger than her. Bigger than her. He’s been
throwing punches all his life and she never even got a spanking as a child, so
she never stood a chance against him physically, either.
You
ask yourself, If it’s so bad for her, why didn’t she say something to me?
I was right there! We’ve been friends since childhood. Surely she knows that I
would help her!
Does
she know that, though? Does she really? Or does she look at you, her
childhood friend, and remember the time you said, “I don’t understand why women
stay with men who hit them”?
Remember
when the Ray Rice abuse story first
broke, and you all were having drinks? Remember what you said? You said, “If a
man beats me once, shame on him; if he beats me twice, shame on me. That woman
was an idiot for marrying him after what he did to her
in that elevator!”
Your
friend remembers those words. And even though she knows you love and support
her, she can’t help but wonder how she’d change in your eyes if you knew what
was really happening. Understand that she wants desperately to leave her
current situation, but doesn’t know how. She may also be convinced her abuser
will hurt whoever does try to help her. Remember, he’s in her head, even when
he’s not beating her.
Written by Janice Fuller-Roberts; Culled From Dame Magazine
To Be Continued!
Written by Janice Fuller-Roberts; Culled From Dame Magazine
To Be Continued!
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