Abusive Relationships - Are You in One?

How to Sense Abuse

By Alexa Long, published Sep 22, 2006
Published Content: 12  Total Views: 4,094  Favorited By: 0 CPs
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What is an abusive relationship? How do you know if you are in one? What if you have never been hit or pushed? Is it possible to feel perfectly safe and still be in an abusive relationship? How do you know if you are being abused?

These are questions that you might be asking yourself—even if you won’t ask them out loud. The truth is that there are not always clear-cut answers. Sometimes abuse is easy to point out because the bruises are visible. Sometimes, however, it is not so easy to identify abuse because the abuser didn’t leave a mark, at least not a visible one.

Let’s start with the harder types of abuse to identify. Emotional abuse is one of them. Emotional abuse often occurs when one party is more involved or needy than the other. These needy people make an easy target. It is easy to take advantage of someone who is going to be there tomorrow no matter what.

Emotional abuse can start small and can easily be blown off as nothing. In fact, many times the abused feels responsible for being torn down…and this is exactly what the abuser wants. It can start with tiny insults that slowly torment the abused person. Little jabs that seem like nothing at the time can tear at a person until they start to believe them. For instance, a line like, “How can you be so beautiful and so dumb at the same time?” or “To be such as smart guy, you can’t even get that right.” are emotional jabs. They are disguised as a compliment, and the person on the receiving end doesn’t realize that is was a stab into their dignity. Enough of those, and people can start to feel as worthless as abusers think they are.

The more obvious type of abuse is physical abuse. Physical abuse is usually preceded by emotional abuse. If a person is easily victimized emotionally, it makes it easier for them to be a victim physically. And though physical abuse is much more easy to spot than emotional, it is often overlooked just as much. People are often in denial about it.

Takeaways
  • Victims don't always know they are victims.
  • Emotional abuse is just as painful as physical abuse.
  • Abuse does not stop without treatment.
Did You Know?
Physical abuse is often preceded by emotional abuse.
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