Warning: This post contains references to domestic violence and may be triggering to some readers.
“I bet he likes you” said the well-meaning man at the hospital when he saw the bruises and the cuts.
“I bet he likes you” when he hit you over the head with a metal tea pot.
“I bet he likes you” when he pulled your hair.
“I bet he likes you.”
It’s a statement loaded with mixed messages. One that we’ve all heard at some stage. Boys pinch and punch little girls when they “like them”. Don’t they? But where’s the line? Do men beat women when they like them too? When do these messages start? When should we put a stop to it?
These are the types of generalisations that one mother wants to drive home as unacceptable.
When Merritt Smith’s four-year old daughter was hurt by another child at pre-school, she rushed her to hospital for treatment. Shocked, scared and confused, four-year old Joni was left even further perplexed by the words of the administration clerk.
“I bet he likes you.”
The words, so loaded with meaning, prompted Merritt to address the hospital worker in a public Facebook post where she called for the language surrounding violence to change – especially starting at such a young age.
Merritt, from Columbus, Ohio's words have resonated so strongly with families throughout the world that her post has now been shared over 32,000 times.
She writes: “Dear man at the registration desk at Children's hospital, I'm positive that you didn't think that statement through. As soon as I heard it I knew that is where it begins. That statement is where the idea that hurting is flirting begins to set a tone for what is acceptable behaviour.”