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Stop The Violence
Abuse does not discriminate. The messages
presented here are for everyone who needs them, men and women, adult and
child. Having only personal knowledge of abuse against women and its
corresponding research material available to me, this is the sole reason
the bulk of this site mentions abuse against women more. For links to
battered men sites, click
here. As more links and information become available to me, they
will be listed here also.
Stop The Violence
There is a secret war in America and around the
world, and in it millions of our citizens are held hostage, beaten,
threatened and killed.
Stop The Violence
Statistics show that a woman is battered every
15 seconds in the United States alone by an intimate- someone who
promised to love and cherish her. That's two million women, each year,
who are battered or abused by their partners. Even more frightening is
that every day, four women lose their lives to violence perpetrated by a
husband or boyfriend, an estimated 1/3 of the women who are abused.
Women who are murdered are not the only ones who die. One in four women
who commit suicide are the victims of Domestic Violence.
Are you as outraged as I am about these documented,
undisputed facts as I am yet?
How about this? Are you aware that there exists 3
times more animal shelters (approximately 4300) than battered women
shelters (approximately 1500)? Still wondering why women and children
are turned away at shelters due to overcrowding? That's why. There
aren't enough shelters for them to seek help from.
Consider this fact by the American Medical
Association: One in four women will fall victim to Domestic Violence in
their lifetime. That's staggering. Think about it in real-life terms.
Imagine that one of four of your women friends, relatives, and neighbors
is a potential victim.
That's pretty upsetting, isn't it?
What is battering? Battering is the
establishment of control and fear in a relationship through violence and
other forms of abuse, and a series of behaviors including intimidation,
threats, psychological abuse, isolation, and to coerce and control
another person. Battering is the single most common cause of injury to
women, more than muggings, auto accidents, and sexual assaults combined.
Battering is also a criminal act of physical assault, battery, sexual
assault, or other act that injures or kills another person in a
relationship with the offender.
Beyond immediate injury, Domestic Violence often
leads to long term health problems: chronic pain, difficult pregnancies,
PTSD (Post Traumatic Stress Disorder), physical disability, drug and
alcohol abuse and depression.
Abuse is about power and control. More often than
not, the abuse escalates in a relationship. There are many facets of
this abuse, ranging from psychological abuse, to emotional abuse, to
economic abuse, to sexual abuse, to physical abuse, to legal abuse, to
death.
The big question is always: Then why do they stay?
Let's break this down for a minute. First of all, this is a question
based on a myth that women do stay. Not all do. Up to 75% of those who
report abuse have left.. permanently.
But that isn't the end of their problems: Many are
stalked, harassed and assaulted by their batterer.
There are other women who have left only to return.
The average victim returns to the relationship 5-7 times before finally
leaving for good.
The ones who do stay often do so because of a number
of factors happening at once. They have been "conditioned" to feel
helpless and hopeless- they have come to believe through various avenues
such as battering or intimidation, to name a few, that they somehow
deserved being abused and that they have to keep silent about what is
happening to them. Some stay because they still love their partner on
some level. And they stay also because they fear retaliation and
death....and with good reason. More injuries and deaths occur while
leaving and the following two months after leaving. One study says that
one half of the homicides of female spouses and partners were committed
by men after separation from their batterers.
Domestic Violence does not only occur in marriages.
An average 28% of high school and college students have experienced
dating violence.
What about children? Children are traumatized
by witnessing family violence and, as a result, are very likely to
repeat the pattern either by becoming a victim or an abuser. 75% of
violent children have witnessed violence between partners. Do you want
this happening to your child or children? I know I certainly don't. And
think about this: 63% of the young men between the ages of 11 and 20 who
are serving jail sentences are there for homicide--for killing their
mother's abuser. That's disturbing at the very least. Children are also
1500 times more likely to be abused. Reports show that 40- 60% of men
who abuse women, also abuse children. Further, 70% of children are
physically abused, 20% are sexually abused; 90% of children killed
during domestic disputes are under the age of 10, half of those are
under age 2.
Let's go beyond the effects of Domestic Violence on
the family for a few seconds. Domestic Violence costs are astronomical
in the United States alone. By astronomical I mean $5- 10 billion
a year in medical expenses, police costs, court costs, shelters, and
foster care. It costs the American workplace, on average, $3.5
billion in medical expenses, absenteeism, down time caused by
absenteeism, and sick leave.
Do you see the ripple effect here and how widespread this is if we
let it?
With the absence of hope, the victim has nothing and
this is where, in understanding abuse, common sense breaks down. Most
people who have never been abused can't understand why the victim
doesn't see what is happening to her and doesn't leave. Lack of
knowledge on this point is massive and this has to change. Our society
needs to throw all gut reactions, common sense, and misconceptions out
the window and leave it there. Society needs to think the matter through
or nothing will get done and someone you know and love will get hurt or
die. Most people's concept of "normal" is vastly different from the
Domestic Violence victim's concept of "normal". Never, ever, force your
concept of "normal" upon a victim or you will push her farther into her
ordeal and you become part of the problem and not part of the solution.
Abuse is not, I repeat, not their fault and to think
otherwise or tell a victim otherwise is a collossal injustice in trying
to help or become part of the solution.
Every battered woman stands alone, isolated and
without a support system in place. We must become a world of people who
understand this kind of violence or nothing will get done. It's not
somebody else's problem or someone else's responsibility. It's mine,
it's yours, it's your lawmaker's, it's your community's.
Everyone wants to know: Why do men do it?. The
answer is, I don't know, but what I do know is that when you start
trying to figure out what makes these men tick, you enter a realm so
foreign to normal experience that you are taken aback. You find handsome
men, intelligent men, successful men and everything in between. But you
discover that these batterers have another personality, so to speak.
Abusive men are masters at projecting a public face so far from what
they exhibit to their loved ones. Their public face is characterized by
charm, tenderness and warmth but behind this public mask hides an
extreme danger to his loved ones. We have a difficult time understanding
men who beat and sometimes kill their wives or girlfriends--or their
children--because they violate our sense of normal decency.
This is the exact reason why what happens behind
closed doors is not none of our business, for behind those closed doors
could be your mother, your sister, your daughter, your friend...even
you.
Okay, so let's talk about solutions now. The
solution is that we learn about Domestic Violence, recognize it when it
happens, and help the victim find a safe way out with a
Safety Plan. Reading sites such as this and getting angry is a
start but it isn't enough. This site is simply a guideline to saving
lives. Read this site and share it. Check out the links on here, read
them and share them also. Research this topic more and understand and
share your knowledge with others; you will begin to help those in need
simply by knowing how to help them. Education is key. Education leads to
knowledge and knowledge is power and it saves lives.
If you want to do more, here are some suggestions:
1. Contact a shelter. They are in dire need of help.
Volunteer your time, as much or as little as you can manage. Donate to
food drives and clothing drives. Donate money if you can spare it to
enhance programs at shelters designed to help battered women get back on
their feet. There is also the Nicole Brown Simpson Charitable Foundation
who distributes monies donated to shelters nationwide.
2. Get your community involved. This is a community
problem and a global problem. This isn't a problem that exists in a
fishbowl, folks. To learn how to stop Domestic Violence in your
community, call 1-800-END-ABUSE and ask for information on what you can
do locally.
3. Contact your Senator, President and other elected
officials, via phone, fax or e-mail. When some politicians get letters
they think money and votes; many genuinely care about causes such as
this. And keep in mind that this November is election time. Ask your
Senator, State Representatives, and your President--officials whose job
it is to serve the public-- what can be done to save lives and what they
will do to change the way the laws are written. Did you know that in
most states that the police have to be called and make a report four
times before Domestic Violence is considered a felony? That's just
ludicrous and that has to be changed right now and these are the very
people who can accomplish that. Some states and police departments have
a zero tolerance policy and Domestic Violence is considered a felony
charge the first time. If your state is not among them, isn't it about
time it follows the example of the states and police departments who do?
Complete E-Mail List Of All United States Senators
Contact your State's Member of
Congress
E-Mail The President of the United States
4. Go to your local police department, your family
courts, law schools, and hospitals and ask for their brochures on
Domestic Violence. If they don't have any, ask why not and what they
plan to do to get the information out there. In these settings, it is
their job and their duty to their community to educate and do their part
to help. Remember education is key and it saves lives.
5. If you get a dead end, contact your local paper or
news affiliate. The media is a powerful tool.
I would really hate to believe that we as a society
are not more angry that men, women, and children are being beaten,
humiliated, intimidated, maimed, abused, living in fear, and killed
every day, of every week, of every year; that one more person has to get
hurt or die because we can't take a few minutes or a few hours of our
time to save a life from being destroyed as a result of abuse, or to
save a family from anguish and a lifetime of pain because they were
informed their loved one was beaten to death.
How ever way you found this page, I'm glad you are
here, to educate and to be educated. You and I are a powerful agent for
change to keep more men and women from being beaten senseless, and
living in fear, and to keep more children safe and free from witnessing
this horror. Educate, be educated, and make a difference. This is the
very least we can do. And this much is alot because it is the foundation
of changing how we think about Domestic Violence. The "Domestic" part of
the term "Domestic Violence" makes it seem almost harmless but ask any
survivor, any victim, or any family member who has lost a loved one to
this how harmless this is. You won't get that answer from them. I make
few guarantees as a general rule. But this I will guarantee. From now
on, instead of keying a term that makes this issue seem harmless by
calling it "Domestic" Violence, let's just call it what it is: spousal
and relationship beating.
This page is my way of opening the door to what is
happening in America and abroad and telling my story of survival. What
is written here could quite possibly save a life if we do our part
individually and collectively.
In the time it took you to read just the text on this
page, 38 women were battered. How many more people have to be before we
light the way for those who may never know what freedom and happiness
is? We must do our part now.
This page is dedicated to those who won the
battle--the survivors and Angels on Earth-- who light the way for
others; to those who cannot yet make their voices heard--the victims; to
those who can never again make their voices heard--the Angels in Heaven
above.
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