She was used and abused by her ex-husband, but Eden Strong has stopped hiding the bruises and is showing her face to the world.
Note: this post deals with intimate partner violence and rape and may be triggering for some readers.
By: Eden Strong for YourTango.com.
I looked in the mirror and pondered where to even start with this mess of a face. I’m what you call a professional “bruise cover-upper.” I can mix foundations and concealers with the best in the business and no one would even suspect my husband had smacked the shit out of me the day before. But in my year of healing, I threw all my make-up away, promising myself I would never allow there to be a reason I’d need it again. I stand by that decision but it wasn’t helping me this morning while I was recovering from surgery to fix my broken face and I needed to go to the grocery store.
I covered my bruises the best I could but eventually realised I didn’t look any better and decided to just hold my head high and not let it bother me. As I drove to the store, I looked in the rear view mirror and chuckled, thinking of the phrase “it’s like putting lipstick on a pig.” Nobody was going to look at me today and think, “Wow, that’s a cute girl; great eye shadow.” Their thoughts would probably fall more along the lines of, “OMG, that chick’s face is BROKEN.” Sigh.
Read more: “The hardest part wasn’t my brother’s abuse… it’s that it was covered up.”
Top Comments
It is great Eden had the strength to stop covering up the abuse. When I was married I found the shame crippled my attempts to explain to people the violence and mental and emotional abuse I was being subjected to. It did not help that the few people I made comments to did not believe me. www.scarycatholics.tumblr.com
Sadly mothers who stay teach their children that the behaviour is normal. Hidden by many. Expected. This is why my mother stayed. And before why her mother stayed. Beaten. Abused. Left feeling unworthy.
If you are in this situation, think very hard whether you want your son or daughter to think this is normal. To think when they choose a partner that they should expect this behaviour. That this will be their children's norm.
Stand up. Break the cycle. Leave. You and your children and their children deserve it. It just takes one to say no. No more. You are worth more than you know. Your children will thank you. I promise.
And be killed? Most women are killed after they leave their abuser. Domestic abuse is not about violence, it's about control and abusers are very good at it. Experts in fact. Suggesting a woman just needs to 'stand up' shows a complete misunderstanding of abuse and the danger victims are in.
Why doesn't she just leave? To that I say, why doesn't he just stop?
Because he won't. He won't stop until you're dead anyway. We should be encouraging people to leave abusive partners and pressuring the government to have social services in place that will help the people fleeing.
I've been in an abusive relationship and the only thing that broke the cycle was me stepping foot outside the door. I'd rather fear for my life when I'm free than fear for my life when I'm a prisoner.
Blaming the victim. How typical. Asking 'why doesn't she leave' is offensive in the extreme and chooses to completely miss the point. If you've been a victim it would be nice to see more compassion towards those still trapped. I work at a shelter, of course I would rather victims are safe with us, but I am not naive enough to blame those who are trapped in the cycle of domestic abuse.
I'm not blaming them. But just because statistics tell us one thing, doesn't mean we should base the entire narrative on telling them stay put. I will always encourage my friends and family to leave abusive relationships because they're the only ones that can actually do it.
I'm not blaming the victim for their abuse and I'm not judging those who stay but I will never, ever tell a woman to stay in an abusive relationship because of statistics.