Guest guest Posted October 28, 2003 Report Share Posted October 28, 2003 Sometimes, it takes people a really long time to leave an abusive spouse or significant other. Of the people I know that managed to leave such people, one took 29 years, another took 7 years, one took 3 years, and another took several years but I'm not sure as she had already been out of the situation for over a year when I met her. In all of these cases, I saw the abused person do their best to " make things work, " believing, " S/he will change " and become a good person. Each of these individuals believe that their abuser could be a good person, but each of them has also decided they are not going to wait around for that to happen (or more likely, never happen) but have gotten out of the situation to protect themselves. And yet they have all continued to have kind feelings towards their former abusers. It takes a long time to leave and, for many, an even longer time to stop remembering the " good times " when they were not being abused, even if those " good times " were far in the distant past. People often tend to forget how bad things were once they are out of a given situation, and perhaps this is part of the problem. At least she has left him...that is the first step. Recovery from abuse can be a long and difficult process. All you can really do is be a friend to her, and do your best to talk her out of it if she ever decides to go back. I think I once read that the average abused woman goes back 20 times before she stays away for good. This is average. Some never go back, and some go back hundreds of times. I hope your friend is very below-average in this matter but at this point, who knows? gareth wrote: This girl at work, who i like very much, is in love with somebody who beat her when she was pregnant with his baby, he booted her in her stomach and she lost the baby. She is a very intelligent, very well liked woman. She is fat and attractive. Lots of men ask her out. She is a friend of mine, i hope a good friend. She still loves this disgusting piece of shit that beat her up, 5 months after they have split up after four years. Why? Why? i dont understand it. She has EVERYTHING going for her, yet a disgusting man who killed her baby has her love....... she's as NT as can be, but i so believe really good. We just hit it off straight away. Why can she still love him?? why is she so stupid?? i just dont get it............ I cant impress enough her genuine goodness. She does not need him. Only she is in love with him...... I just dont understand!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 28, 2003 Report Share Posted October 28, 2003 > Sometimes, it takes people a really long time to leave an abusive spouse or significant other. > > Of the people I know that managed to leave such people, one took 29 years, another took 7 years, one took 3 years, and another took several years but I'm not sure as she had already been out of the situation for over a year when I met her. In all of these cases, I saw the abused person do their best to " make things work, " believing, " S/he will change " and become a good person. Each of these individuals believe that their abuser could be a good person, but each of them has also decided they are not going to wait around for that to happen (or more likely, never happen) but have gotten out of the situation to protect themselves. And yet they have all continued to have kind feelings towards their former abusers. > > It takes a long time to leave and, for many, an even longer time to stop remembering the " good times " when they were not being abused, even if those " good times " were far in the distant past. > > People often tend to forget how bad things were once they are out of a given situation, and perhaps this is part of the problem. At least she has left him...that is the first step. Recovery from abuse can be a long and difficult process. All you can really do is be a friend to her, and do your best to talk her out of it if she ever decides to go back. > > I think I once read that the average abused woman goes back 20 times before she stays away for good. This is average. Some never go back, and some go back hundreds of times. I hope your friend is very below-average in this matter but at this point, who knows? ********** Thanks for your reply, susanna....... I see the sad fact that women go back to be beaten again and again and again.... and id like to ask the list WHY!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Thats the mind blowing thing!!!!!!! I mean, he didnt just punch her, this woman, the wonderfull intelligent social, friendly woman who everybody loves, lost her baby to his beatings, and yet she still loves him..... I mean he beat her till she lost the baby, and he did it many times....... i avoid violence, despite physically being able to kill most people, but i swear, this " man " for want of a better noun, inspires me to kill him. I believe i could, were i to see him hurt her badly and her to cry out in pain, crush his skull. How can she love him....... I just dont understand......... It makes me feel mental, like im wrong somehow, like i just dont get something...... Im not mental am i? it is so sick, yes? but she isnt dumb, or ugly, i mean people just LIKE her, without her trying, she knows so many people, NT, criminal people and so many normall people, and the crimainal ones have said, any time she wants, they will go round and break the little bastard, when she was with him, but she protects him, and i just dont understand....... is it a defect in her, as i hope it is, or am i missing something.......... i mean, i understand losing my temper, but he wasnt even apologetic afterwards, he wouldnt even pick her up from the hospital, hes a ********************************************************************** ********************************************************************** *************************** I dont UNDERSTANDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDD D Its just so 180 degress from who she normally is,........ and i try so hard to understand, but this is the one female behaviour i just donttttttttttttt understand!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ********* Ok, i was going to send it there, but if anybody can tell me, what can i do, i mean, where you a battered woman........ how can i stop it? ( i could crush HIM, my concern is to remove him from her head, with little social graces at my disposal.......... Can anybody help???? Many thanks in advance, Gareth. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 28, 2003 Report Share Posted October 28, 2003 gareth danced around singing: >I see the sad fact that women >go back to be beaten again and again and again.... and id like to ask >the list WHY!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! It is a psychological phenomenon known as Stockholm Syndrome, also known as Captor Syndrome. In the syndrome, the person is so routinely and severely mistreated that he/she comes to believe that they deserve to be abused, plus that they can *never* escape (this aspect is known as Learned Helplessness). Doing things that the abuser likes is rewarded by the absence of pain (including being allowed to have food or to talk to somebody else); the person becomes so used to always being hurt/deprived that this removal of pain makes the abuser seem benevolent and deeply loving -- seemingly sparing the victim out of " kindness " from the torment he/she " deserves. " The victim eventually becomes psychologically dependent and basically falls in love with the abuser. It only takes *four days* of being " captive " like this for an average human being to develop the syndrome. It actually is almost identical to the application of methods used for training dogs: http://www.flyingdogpress.com/hostage.html There's also an interesting page on how Stockholm Syndrome works here: http://www.sniggle.net/stock.php Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 28, 2003 Report Share Posted October 28, 2003 > gareth danced around singing: > >I see the sad fact that women > >go back to be beaten again and again and again.... and id like to ask > >the list WHY!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! > > It is a psychological phenomenon known as Stockholm Syndrome, also known as > Captor Syndrome. > > In the syndrome, the person is so routinely and severely mistreated that > he/she comes to believe that they deserve to be abused, plus that they can > *never* escape (this aspect is known as Learned Helplessness). Doing > things that the abuser likes is rewarded by the absence of pain (including > being allowed to have food or to talk to somebody else); the person becomes > so used to always being hurt/deprived that this removal of pain makes the > abuser seem benevolent and deeply loving -- seemingly sparing the victim > out of " kindness " from the torment he/she " deserves. " The victim > eventually becomes psychologically dependent and basically falls in love > with the abuser. It only takes *four days* of being " captive " like this > for an average human being to develop the syndrome. > > It actually is almost identical to the application of methods used for > training dogs: > http://www.flyingdogpress.com/hostage.html > > There's also an interesting page on how Stockholm Syndrome works here: > http://www.sniggle.net/stock.php *********** I hate all this. Its abhorent. Thanks for cluing me in to this reason .......... Ughhh though. I mean, my solution; hope she stays happy, if she goes back, get me and the boys (her boys, so to speak) to beat him bad, so bad he leaves town. General abused woman solution; stay with him, " because he's a good person most of the tim " I repeat, and these are not just internet words, there are so many MEN that know her (an inordinate amount) that wish to make that little prick bleed so bad he would move away. It just makes us feel bad.............. But she..... well, she is cut up about him, if he asked for her back, im not to sure....... but at least now, he's away, and likely to stay that way. Also, as an aside, what makes men like that? they must be so small, or im wrong, because thats the opposite of who i am, and though i go through pain, i feel big sometimes when i have time to collect myself, so either those men are small, or im mistaken in my bigness............ and it not possible for me to realistically judge myself. But thats all irrelevant, thanks .......... Gareth. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 28, 2003 Report Share Posted October 28, 2003 Hi Gareth, I agree with the concept of Stockholm syndrome, that's what happened to Patty Hearst (Hurst?). The other thing is that the guys who do this know that they need to be nice at some point to keep her so they can lay it on thick, with roses and sweet talk so that the woman will remember that and think that it will go back to the dream romance eventually and stay there, but it won't The thing you have to remember is that you can get addicted to the idea of who she is. Sometimes you have to let go. Your feelings for her are powerful, and I have felt similar feelings myself, I know that they can be very hard to ignore. I have obsessed on similar situations. Make sure that you aren't building up a dream situation yourself wherein you see yourself as a knight in shining armor who will rescue this lovely woman and then you will live happily ever after. It just doesn't work that way. It's also important to remember that you can't really help her to change her attitude toward the abuser. Therapy might help, but you can get into a weird savior syndrome if you are not careful. Been there myself. I'm sure she's great, and surely did not deserve the abuse. I don't want to see you get your heart tromped-on or get into a situation where you try to even the score by hurting him. It will all turn out bad if you try that. Try to get your mind onto something (real, like paying bills) that is not so dramatic and romantic. That's advice that I could have used at different points in my life. I hope you don't think I am just criticizing you. Camille Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 29, 2003 Report Share Posted October 29, 2003 > Hi Gareth, > > I agree with the concept of Stockholm syndrome, that's what happened > to Patty Hearst (Hurst?). > > The other thing is that the guys who do this know that they need to > be nice at some point to keep her so they can lay it on thick, with > roses and sweet talk so that the woman will remember that and think > that it will go back to the dream romance eventually and stay there, > but it won't > > The thing you have to remember is that you can get addicted to the > idea of who she is. Sometimes you have to let go. Your feelings for > her are powerful, and I have felt similar feelings myself, I know > that they can be very hard to ignore. I have obsessed on similar > situations. Make sure that you aren't building up a dream situation > yourself wherein you see yourself as a knight in shining armor who > will rescue this lovely woman and then you will live happily ever > after. It just doesn't work that way. > > It's also important to remember that you can't really help her to > change her attitude toward the abuser. Therapy might help, but you > can get into a weird savior syndrome if you are not careful. Been > there myself. > > I'm sure she's great, and surely did not deserve the abuse. I don't > want to see you get your heart tromped-on or get into a situation > where you try to even the score by hurting him. It will all turn out > bad if you try that. > > Try to get your mind onto something (real, like paying bills) that is > not so dramatic and romantic. That's advice that I could have used > at different points in my life. > > I hope you don't think I am just criticizing you. > > Camille ******** No, i dont think that your just criticizing me Camile. Big sigh.................. It was all very intuitive of you,,,,,,,, we DO get on great...... but she doesnt want me im sure........ not like that...... which is bad for me yes......... there is a part of me that sees that and that i cant do anything...... but there is another that wants to do something anyway!! (although she's not actually with him now, thank G-d) yes, i do feel strong for her, but also not just as a potential GF, as a person too, first and foremost. (and they should remain seperate parts for the good of our relationship) but.... She is so very special, and good, and people just LIKE her, she's one of the good ones in life, and i just cant get my head around her loving him, i mean i could never get my head around it with any woman... It can give me a complex, really, seeing women with men that treat them bad, seeing me with nobody, and thinking like " oh, ok, so im s'posd to treat em bad " Its oh so wierd and screwed up. Its at times like this that i really wish i was normall, and not aspergic, so i could do what they wanted, but i just cant. Thanks for all your advice, ive let the steam off my system now guys and galls, so that helps. Gareth. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 29, 2003 Report Share Posted October 29, 2003 Camille wrote: > Hi Gareth, > > I agree with the concept of Stockholm syndrome, that's what happened > to Patty Hearst (Hurst?). > > The other thing is that the guys who do this know that they need to > be nice at some point to keep her so they can lay it on thick, with > roses and sweet talk so that the woman will remember that and think > that it will go back to the dream romance eventually and stay there, > but it won't Wow... that sounds so much like the situation with , the woman with whom I had a few dates about a year ago. I've probably already bored everyone to death with the details of that, but here it is again in case anyone missed it. She had a singles ad that sounded interesting, and I responded to it. We began to communicate in email, and when I went to visit my mother in California, we began to talk on the phone, and then graduated to a meeting IRL. By then, I had gotten to hear all kinds of details about her ex, Greg-- a guy she described as disgusting (as in dirty), purely emotional without a trace of thinking, abusive, criminal-- and terribly romantic. This guy had supposedly turned into a stalker, and he was scaring the heck out of her. When I went to her city of residence about an hour from my mom's house to begin our date, I had to wait in the parking lot of a Chinese restaurant, while she took a taxi there. She was afraid of what would happen if her stalker, or his network of friends that lived in her apartment complex, would see her being picked up by some other guy, and that he might do something to her. He had forbidden her to have any friends except those that he personally approved, which were the people that were his friends and would have loyalty to him.. Once her taxi arrived and she got into my car, we had to leave the city to avoid being seen. I would have liked to stay at the Chinese place; Chinese is one of my favorite foods, but she was clearly agitated being in her hometown with this guy around. We went about 15 miles away and ended up at a Carrow's. We went out again the next day, and the day after that. It was fun, but there was no " chemistry " at all. I am not sure what the cause of that was; I liked her as a person, and we had a lot in common, and although she was significantly overweight, she was physically very appealing. Maybe it was that she thought that I was not interested, since I made no moves at all on her... I wrote about this before on the list. I had no idea that she was interested, and so I would never make any advances... not that I even know what that would involve. We had discussed that I was on the spectrum before we ever met; it was in my singles ad, which she read before she even wrote back to my initial email to her. She had a lot of spectrum traits, and after I got to know her, I began strongly to suspect that she may be on the spectrum herself. There were, though, some niggling little things that I chose to ignore because I wanted this to work so much.... things like her saying that when she and Greg said certain things, pennies would materialize and fall from the air... how she and Greg set up altars all over the complex, for reasons unknown... how she suspected that Greg may be from another planet... and she was dead serious about all of it. After those three dates, it was coming close to the time where I had to get back to Arizona. As she was still afraid of Greg (every time we met or talked, I got to hear about how he had hit her, terrorized her, thrown her on the hard tile floor, et cetera), I told her she could come with me and see if she would like it here enough to possibly move here to get away from him. She agreed, and I stopped by her apartment (in the middle of the night) and picked her and her stuff up, and we headed for Arizona. She did very little other than sleep while she was here. By the time she got out of bed each evening, everything was closed. We never got to go to any of the section 8 apartments and see if any of them would take her voucher, because they were all closed. (I did, though, learn that she had had been abducted by aliens, and had an implant. She took me to a web site where there was a test to see if you had been abducted by aliens, and it was not intended as parody or humor.) After a week, in which time we had only gone (at night) to look at the places that might be prospective residences, I took her home. I drove right from her house to my mother's house, where I would stay for a few more days before going back to Arizona. By the time I got to my mom's house, which was about an hour after I dropped off, she had already emailed me. She found a letter in her mailbox, from Greg... he wrote her some kind of poem, and filled the envelope with plant matter (crushed rose petals, she said). She was in tears... she was practically gushing about how great and romantic Greg was. What had I just wasted a week for, trying to get her away from this guy? He had been stalking her, threatening her, hitting her... she kept telling me how she had called the police, but Greg was friends with many of the cops in that town, and he told them that she was nuts, and the police did not believe her... all of this, and all he has to do is write some cheesy-ass poem and put a dismembered flower in there and he's got her back? I went back to Arizona shortly after that, and I got another email, where she went outside her apartment and found him standing there (like a stalker would be), and they " basically ravaged one another. " She told me that she told him that this was just a one-time thing, and he should not believe it meant that they were back together. I wrote back and I told her that I thought it meant that they were back together. I was not pleased... I made an extra trip to California to bring her back home, 450 miles each way, and spent all this time trying to help her get away from this guy, and now she went back. I wrote a rather pointed letter to her to this effect. She wrote back, and in the midst of her complaining about how mean I was, she indicated that she was (duh) in a relationship with him again. Of course. Not long after that (a few weeks), she wrote again, to the effect of " I know we're not friends anymore, but I need help. " You guessed it-- Greg was beating her again, and after she broke up with him again, he threatened to kill her, and she believed him. I told her that if she was afraid, she should gather her important stuff, call a taxi, and get the hell out. Doesn't matter where... find a Motel 6 some distance away, then figure out where she would go. She refused... she had a million reasons why she couldn't do that. I told her to call a women's shelter... a million more reasons why she can't. She wanted me to come out there and live in her front room for a month, being her personal security guard, in case he tried something. I told her no. I had already tried to help her, and she made her choice-- she went back to him. I was willing to help her, but I would not do it by myself; she was going to have to help herself too, not continue to thwart my efforts to help her. I told her that if she wanted to move, I would assemble a sizable group of adult males (my mom's significant other had already offered to get a bunch of his friends together to do this) to help her move out, so there would be too many of us for Greg and friends to intimidate. She made a bunch of excuses why that would not work. We didn't communicate for a while after that. She contacted me again after that, and that was when she let me know that she had seen Jesus Christ, and it was the most wonderful, spiritual thing ever in her life. No, not in a vision, but in real life. She was not being metaphorical; she meant it. I told her that I did not believe that she had seen Jesus, and that I saw this as a psychosis. She began to rail on me for being so blind. I told her that until she was ready to apologize for insulting my religious beliefs (none), I would not talk to her again. I have not heard from her since. I have discussed with an autistic female I know that has been in mental hospitals for a number of years, and who has perseverated on psychiatry and schizophrenia for years, and she told me that probably was not on the spectrum, but was more likely instead (mildly) schizophrenic. I was pretty surprised, because I had her pegged as mildly AS (I even went over the diagnostic criteria with , since I have them memorized (not verbatim though)), but all of those delusions... there were many more than what I have mentioned here. It's not so easy to tell the conditions apart when you are looking only at the current presentation of an adult. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 29, 2003 Report Share Posted October 29, 2003 > Why? i dont understand it. She has EVERYTHING going for her, yet a > disgusting man who killed her baby has her love....... she's as NT > as can be, but i so believe really good. We just hit it off > straight away. Why can she still love him?? why is she so stupid?? > i just dont get it............ > I cant impress enough her genuine goodness. She does not need him. > Only she is in love with him...... I just dont > understand I don't know the details of this exact situation, but it can be a lot of things. My ex convinced me we had a supernatural connection and that if it was broken we could die or have something really bad happen to us. I took him quite literally and was *terrified* of the idea of breaking up with him, although in the end I was the one who did it. I also immediately sectioned off most of the things he did to me into an area of my memory labeled " Don't Look Here " , so I naturally didn't think of him as abusive. I found it bizarre to go through old files on my computer at the time and find that I had written about the things he had done, but know that I completely forgot writing about it, probably even the next day. There's also a possibility (not an absolute) that if someone is dominated by someone long enough, and if the right (or wrong, rather) things happen, to become either emotionally bonded or identified with that person. An example of that from my own life has two sides to it -- the time period when I thought I wanted to be a psychologist, and the time period later when I became convinced that everything I was doing was staffish. Some people also mistake high levels of hormones for being " in love with " someone. Also, people who spend a lot of time around someone see both their bad side and their good side. While others may see an abuser as a monster, people closer to them are more likely to see several facets of their personality. For instance, my brother is not a single- faceted person -- he is the person who molested me, the person who taught me his opinions about the NT world when nobody else would, the person who taught me self-directed misogyny, the person who got me out of the house when the house was not a good place to be, the person who went on long walks and bicycle rides with me, the person who had a sense of humor I could understand, the person who played strange mind-games on me, the person who listened to music with me and took me to concerts, the person who understood why I liked to collect small objects of various sorts and helped me expand my collections, the person who liked to go with me to try new kinds of food, the person who stuck up for me in some bad situations, the person I argue with nearly every time I see him, the person who turned himself in to the authorities and changed his behavior completely, and so forth. My relationship to him is complex -- not all of the good things are " things he did good for me just so he could do something bad to me " , some of them are things he did for good reasons. When you're *in the middle* of a situation like that, it can be possible to focus on the good things to the exclusion of the bad things, while those around you (if they're aware of the bad things) are most likely focusing on the bad things to the exclusion of the good things (and are possibly unaware the good things even exist). It is prudent to learn when the bad things outweigh the good things and act on that knowledge, but I suspect some of the " why doesn't a person just leave " stuff is based in *knowing* and *valuing* the good things (whether they really are good things or just tricks, or a combination of both). A person can also be taught in various ways to doubt their own judgement, and to doubt all the warning signals that say " This person is bad for me at the moment, get me out of here. " I was quite carefully and systematically taught that by a psychologist (and I *still* immediately react with " I must be paranoid, let me check my thoughts with someone " whenever I mention what this guy did to me -- and that's a perfect example of the thoughts he taught me to have, and that I have heard even non-psychologist abusers teach people). I'm sure there are other potential reasons as well. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 29, 2003 Report Share Posted October 29, 2003 > Thanks for your reply, susanna....... I see the sad fact that women > go back to be beaten again and again and again.... and id like to > ask the list WHY!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! It's not just women -- it can happen to anyone who's being abused. Children by their parents. Wives by their husbands. Husbands by their wives. Patients by their shrinks. Anyone. I've seen the same exact phenomenon in men who were abused, it's just that the most public instances of abuse of males I've seen were not spouse- beatings, so they went back (in various ways) to people *other* than spouses. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 29, 2003 Report Share Posted October 29, 2003 > > > Why? i dont understand it. She has EVERYTHING going for her, yet a > > disgusting man who killed her baby has her love....... she's as NT > > as can be, but i so believe really good. We just hit it off > > straight away. Why can she still love him?? why is she so stupid?? > > i just dont get it............ > > > I cant impress enough her genuine goodness. She does not need him. > > Only she is in love with him...... I just dont > > understand > > I don't know the details of this exact situation, but it can be a lot > of things. > > My ex convinced me we had a supernatural connection and that if it > was broken we could die or have something really bad happen to us. I > took him quite literally and was *terrified* of the idea of breaking > up with him, although in the end I was the one who did it. I also > immediately sectioned off most of the things he did to me into an > area of my memory labeled " Don't Look Here " , so I naturally didn't > think of him as abusive. I found it bizarre to go through old files > on my computer at the time and find that I had written about the > things he had done, but know that I completely forgot writing about > it, probably even the next day. > > There's also a possibility (not an absolute) that if someone is > dominated by someone long enough, and if the right (or wrong, rather) > things happen, to become either emotionally bonded or identified with > that person. An example of that from my own life has two sides to > it -- the time period when I thought I wanted to be a psychologist, > and the time period later when I became convinced that everything I > was doing was staffish. > > Some people also mistake high levels of hormones for being " in love > with " someone. > > Also, people who spend a lot of time around someone see both their > bad side and their good side. While others may see an abuser as a > monster, people closer to them are more likely to see several facets > of their personality. For instance, my brother is not a single- > faceted person -- he is the person who molested me, the person who > taught me his opinions about the NT world when nobody else would, the > person who taught me self-directed misogyny, the person who got me > out of the house when the house was not a good place to be, the > person who went on long walks and bicycle rides with me, the person > who had a sense of humor I could understand, the person who played > strange mind-games on me, the person who listened to music with me > and took me to concerts, the person who understood why I liked to > collect small objects of various sorts and helped me expand my > collections, the person who liked to go with me to try new kinds of > food, the person who stuck up for me in some bad situations, the > person I argue with nearly every time I see him, the person who > turned himself in to the authorities and changed his behavior > completely, and so forth. My relationship to him is complex -- not > all of the good things are " things he did good for me just so he > could do something bad to me " , some of them are things he did for > good reasons. > > When you're *in the middle* of a situation like that, it can be > possible to focus on the good things to the exclusion of the bad > things, while those around you (if they're aware of the bad things) > are most likely focusing on the bad things to the exclusion of the > good things (and are possibly unaware the good things even exist). > It is prudent to learn when the bad things outweigh the good things > and act on that knowledge, but I suspect some of the " why doesn't a > person just leave " stuff is based in *knowing* and *valuing* the good > things (whether they really are good things or just tricks, or a > combination of both). > > A person can also be taught in various ways to doubt their own > judgement, and to doubt all the warning signals that say " This person > is bad for me at the moment, get me out of here. " I was quite > carefully and systematically taught that by a psychologist (and I > *still* immediately react with " I must be paranoid, let me check my > thoughts with someone " whenever I mention what this guy did to me -- > and that's a perfect example of the thoughts he taught me to have, > and that I have heard even non-psychologist abusers teach people). > > I'm sure there are other potential reasons as well. > > ******** Very interesting ; All of it, but certainly the last paragraph i must take note of. I do check up on my thoughts to a painfull degree, and wonder where this behaviour was learned, or wether its inbuilt into me. Its not fun to think about the things people can do to one another. Gareth. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 29, 2003 Report Share Posted October 29, 2003 This topic suddenly triggered a memory I had from the summer after seventh grade. Seventh grade was a really horrible time for me. From November until the end of the school year, a classmate named Sam kept threatening to rape me, several times every day. Sam had been abusive (physically and verbally) since second grade. He caused the majority of bruises that I would have all school year, and I actually heard him instructing new students about what would really bother me so he could abuse me, too. I always saw him as the leader of my abusers. I think he picked out the shoes he picked just because they were extra-painful when he kicked me with them. He was horrible and I *hated* him. I was 12 when he started the sexual harassment...I remember I was at my locker getting out my English book when he came over to me and I thought he was going to kick me, but instead he said, " Will you have sex with me? " This shocked me so much I couldn't even react. He repeated this every day for weeks, until, realizing I was not going to respond, he started threatening, " If you don't have sex with me, I'm going to rape you, " and after a few months, he changed it to, " I'm going to come to your house tonight and rape you. " And, with my literal mind, I can remember smuggling a steak knife up to my room, and I remember hiding it under my pillow so that in the event that he broke into our house (which would not be hard because we did not have locks on the doors) I would be able to defend myself. I also remember playing through possible senerios hunderds of times to figure out how to handle such a situation. I planned for just him showing up, for him coming with several people. While I did not think it would be very likely for him to ride his bike to my house in the middle of the night when I lived at least several miles away from him, I did realize he may have a friend who was old enough to drive or he may already know how to drive a car. I told some female adults that I trusted (my mother and Sunday School teacher) and they made recommendations for how to handle the situation. It was during this time that my mother bought a tape recorder for me to take to school, concealed, to record everything that was going on. I had been sexually harassed for many years at school (since third grade) but I didn't know what any of the words they used meant except for " bitch " so this seemed to come out of nowhere, when in fact, it had been escalating for four years. I remember how relieved I was when summer came and I didn't have to go to school anymore. But I also remember a strange, bizarre thing that happened that summer: I developed a sort of crush...on SAM! I didn't understand this at all...here was this guy who abused me, threatened to rape me, threatened to kill my entire family...and I suddenly *liked* him?! I must be insane! I remember thinking about how he could change and become a better person and maybe if I was nice to him he would start being nice to me. This all started when I found my second grade class composite picture, and I saw so much fear in his face, and I realized that he knew what it was like to be terrorized, or to at least to anticipate it, and I realized that the only reason he abused me was because he figured people wouldn't abuse him if he lead abuse against someone else. He had moved in at the end of my first grade year, but he had been in second grade. He failed second grade. Here he was, the new kid that just failed. He started abusing me to protect himself. I could empathicize with him, knowing how I'd love to not be abused but I would not abuse others to prevent it...I thought I could make him " see the light, " I saw potential in him. But as soon as the next school year started, I stopped liking him. He was abusing me again, and my new tactic of being nice rather than being hostile failed to produce the results I'd hoped for. And to this day, Sam is the ONLY person who abused me in school that has never either directly apologized or proven to me that they are not like that anymore. He was the leader of the abuse. He has been rather hard to forgive, and I still struggle with that. I saw him at my cousin's high school graduation a few years ago. I was walking with my husband when I saw him. I remember that I simultaneously tried to get into a fetal position and blend into the wall. I was suddenly 12 years old again and very frightened. I was horrified when his little sister bumped into me, making my efforts to hide completely in vain. I wish I were stronger. I wish I could go right up to him and say, " Sam, I have a question for you: WHY did you abuse me all those years? " I asked that of every single person that abused me, when they apologized, and they could only answer, " Because everyone else did. " Since he is the one that started it, surely he is the one that may be able to answer. I'd like to know if my theory is right. Well, that is my experience with having an emotional attachment to an abuser...while he was not abusing me, I liked him, but as soon as I saw he was not going to change no matter what I did, I was able to come back to my senses and detest him as I always had. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 29, 2003 Report Share Posted October 29, 2003 Hi, About women, men and schizophrenic like problems. I have a friend who fits the description of one kind of delusional disorder (can't remember the type now) I don't know if she believes that she has delusions or not. There's a kind of delusion wherein the person thinks that everyone is in love with them. My friend had very strange ideas that a professional man (very very busy) who she had worked with a couple of years before, was stalking her, bugged her car, bugged her house, had keys to her house, had been in her house moved stuff around...this became enlarged so that he became someone who had been a special agent in the military and then there was a big group of conspirators (all men who apparently wanted her romantically) who were all police and firemen and even employees of a grocery store chain. They would " signal " each other in public to pass on information about her (a man within her line of sight touches his glasses and then he becomes a spy who is watching her and signalling someone else something...) She perseverated on police investigations and took classes in criminal justice although that was not the profession she was trained in. She thought license plates were giving her special messages and that police officers were having them made especially to give her messages... Through all of this she was doing a pretty good job of being an employee and wife and mother (her husband was not very nice to her, but not abusive in the classic sense). At any rate, she had a few AS like traits, she used to read encyclopedias when she was a kid, but she basically loves to be around people, and doesn't stim, so I figured she wasn't AS. She didn't hear voices, but did believe that the bug devices allowed her stalkers to hear her just about anywhere. I don't know if the woman you dated was delusional, but she was definately not right in the head. I'm glad you had the good sense not to get pulled into her dramas any further. Camille > > > Hi Gareth, > > > > I agree with the concept of Stockholm syndrome, that's what happened > > to Patty Hearst (Hurst?). > > > > The other thing is that the guys who do this know that they need to > > be nice at some point to keep her so they can lay it on thick, with > > roses and sweet talk so that the woman will remember that and think > > that it will go back to the dream romance eventually and stay there, > > but it won't > > Wow... that sounds so much like the situation with , the woman > with whom I had a few dates about a year ago. I've probably already > bored everyone to death with the details of that, but here it is again > in case anyone missed it. > > She had a singles ad that sounded interesting, and I responded to it. > We began to communicate in email, and when I went to visit my mother in > California, we began to talk on the phone, and then graduated to a > meeting IRL. By then, I had gotten to hear all kinds of details about > her ex, Greg-- a guy she described as disgusting (as in dirty), purely > emotional without a trace of thinking, abusive, criminal-- and terribly > romantic. This guy had supposedly turned into a stalker, and he was > scaring the heck out of her. > > When I went to her city of residence about an hour from my mom's house > to begin our date, I had to wait in the parking lot of a Chinese > restaurant, while she took a taxi there. She was afraid of what would > happen if her stalker, or his network of friends that lived in her > apartment complex, would see her being picked up by some other guy, and > that he might do something to her. He had forbidden her to have any > friends except those that he personally approved, which were the people > that were his friends and would have loyalty to him.. > > Once her taxi arrived and she got into my car, we had to leave the city > to avoid being seen. I would have liked to stay at the Chinese place; > Chinese is one of my favorite foods, but she was clearly agitated being > in her hometown with this guy around. We went about 15 miles away and > ended up at a Carrow's. > > We went out again the next day, and the day after that. It was fun, but > there was no " chemistry " at all. I am not sure what the cause of that > was; I liked her as a person, and we had a lot in common, and although > she was significantly overweight, she was physically very appealing. > Maybe it was that she thought that I was not interested, since I made no > moves at all on her... I wrote about this before on the list. I had no > idea that she was interested, and so I would never make any advances... > not that I even know what that would involve. > > We had discussed that I was on the spectrum before we ever met; it was > in my singles ad, which she read before she even wrote back to my > initial email to her. She had a lot of spectrum traits, and after I got > to know her, I began strongly to suspect that she may be on the spectrum > herself. There were, though, some niggling little things that I chose > to ignore because I wanted this to work so much.... things like her > saying that when she and Greg said certain things, pennies would > materialize and fall from the air... how she and Greg set up altars all > over the complex, for reasons unknown... how she suspected that Greg may > be from another planet... and she was dead serious about all of it. > > After those three dates, it was coming close to the time where I had to > get back to Arizona. As she was still afraid of Greg (every time we met > or talked, I got to hear about how he had hit her, terrorized her, > thrown her on the hard tile floor, et cetera), I told her she could come > with me and see if she would like it here enough to possibly move here > to get away from him. She agreed, and I stopped by her apartment (in > the middle of the night) and picked her and her stuff up, and we headed > for Arizona. > > She did very little other than sleep while she was here. By the time > she got out of bed each evening, everything was closed. We never got to > go to any of the section 8 apartments and see if any of them would take > her voucher, because they were all closed. (I did, though, learn that > she had had been abducted by aliens, and had an implant. She took me to > a web site where there was a test to see if you had been abducted by > aliens, and it was not intended as parody or humor.) After a week, in > which time we had only gone (at night) to look at the places that might > be prospective residences, I took her home. I drove right from her > house to my mother's house, where I would stay for a few more days > before going back to Arizona. > > By the time I got to my mom's house, which was about an hour after I > dropped off, she had already emailed me. She found a letter > in her mailbox, from Greg... he wrote her some kind of poem, and filled > the envelope with plant matter (crushed rose petals, she said). She was > in tears... she was practically gushing about how great and romantic > Greg was. What had I just wasted a week for, trying to get her away > from this guy? He had been stalking her, threatening her, hitting > her... she kept telling me how she had called the police, but Greg was > friends with many of the cops in that town, and he told them that she > was nuts, and the police did not believe her... all of this, and all he > has to do is write some cheesy-ass poem and put a dismembered flower in > there and he's got her back? > > I went back to Arizona shortly after that, and I got another email, > where she went outside her apartment and found him standing there (like > a stalker would be), and they " basically ravaged one another. " She told > me that she told him that this was just a one-time thing, and he should > not believe it meant that they were back together. > > I wrote back and I told her that I thought it meant that they were back > together. I was not pleased... I made an extra trip to California to > bring her back home, 450 miles each way, and spent all this time trying > to help her get away from this guy, and now she went back. I wrote a > rather pointed letter to her to this effect. > > She wrote back, and in the midst of her complaining about how mean I > was, she indicated that she was (duh) in a relationship with him again. > Of course. > > Not long after that (a few weeks), she wrote again, to the effect of " I > know we're not friends anymore, but I need help. " You guessed it-- Greg > was beating her again, and after she broke up with him again, he > threatened to kill her, and she believed him. > > I told her that if she was afraid, she should gather her important > stuff, call a taxi, and get the hell out. Doesn't matter where... find > a Motel 6 some distance away, then figure out where she would go. She > refused... she had a million reasons why she couldn't do that. I told > her to call a women's shelter... a million more reasons why she can't. > She wanted me to come out there and live in her front room for a month, > being her personal security guard, in case he tried something. I told > her no. I had already tried to help her, and she made her choice-- she > went back to him. I was willing to help her, but I would not do it by > myself; she was going to have to help herself too, not continue to > thwart my efforts to help her. I told her that if she wanted to move, I > would assemble a sizable group of adult males (my mom's significant > other had already offered to get a bunch of his friends together to do > this) to help her move out, so there would be too many of us for Greg > and friends to intimidate. She made a bunch of excuses why that would > not work. We didn't communicate for a while after that. > > She contacted me again after that, and that was when she let me know > that she had seen Jesus Christ, and it was the most wonderful, spiritual > thing ever in her life. No, not in a vision, but in real life. She was > not being metaphorical; she meant it. I told her that I did not believe > that she had seen Jesus, and that I saw this as a psychosis. She began > to rail on me for being so blind. I told her that until she was ready > to apologize for insulting my religious beliefs (none), I would not talk > to her again. I have not heard from her since. > > I have discussed with an autistic female I know that has been > in mental hospitals for a number of years, and who has perseverated on > psychiatry and schizophrenia for years, and she told me that > probably was not on the spectrum, but was more likely instead (mildly) > schizophrenic. I was pretty surprised, because I had her pegged as > mildly AS (I even went over the diagnostic criteria with , > since I have them memorized (not verbatim though)), but all of those > delusions... there were many more than what I have mentioned here. It's > not so easy to tell the conditions apart when you are looking only at > the current presentation of an adult. > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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