I come from a loving and supportive family, I have lots of friends and I am not someone you would consider unintelligent.
But know this: one does not have to be dumb to fall for the wrong person.
When I was 18 I had just started university and I was full of energy and life and I was very impressionable. Six months into my degree, I met a man five years older than me.
We dated for awhile before he moved in, I saw less and less of my friends because he called them immature and not ‘his sort of people’. His family was negative and not supportive, his stepfather was horrible and his real father wanted very little to do with him.
Over the course of five years, I went from being bubbly to downright depressed. This man managed to crush all of my personality and make me believe that I deserved it, when I was only ever supportive.
I tried to help him get into university, I sat down with him and helped with all of his assignments, he couldn’t be bothered. He next decided he would get an apprenticeship and I spent weeks looking for jobs and writing his CV; he lost interest.
This man told me I was overweight when I was 178cm and 65kg. He would not let me go out in public without make-up in case we saw someone he knew. He would tell me I looked tired, or that I looked fat or simply that I just looked plain awful.
This man had a gambling addiction. At first it was just a few hundred dollars every so often (which I thought was terrible as it was), it then turned into hundreds, then to thousands and one day it was over ten thousand. He quit his job and told me he was making enough money gambling. I tried to change his mind. I was embarrassed by his choice. I cried every day. I lied to my family, saying he was still working because I was so ashamed. My parents would visit and I would make up an excuse so they would not come inside and see him there.
Top Comments
I find men that abuse women do so because they find them disposable... Replaceable therefore no value is put on the women making way for the seed of abuse to germate.
"Why didn't you leave?".... yes it's uncomfortable question but still a valid one. It was also a question I tormented myself with pre and post my marriage.
In hindsight, I truly believe that in answering that question for myself, it created / reset/ redefined the boundaries for how I would conduct myself in any further relationship and moreso what I would and wouldn't accept. It made me think long and hard about not only the red flags but also the things that were most important for me in a secure, loving, empowering relationship.
A few years ago at a function, a key note speaker said something along the lines of "you keep doing what you're doing til you don't" - that was a powerful statement for me.
It happens less often now, but if I'm ever asked the question "why didn't you leave?", my usual answer is simply "staying seemed like the right thing to do at the time".