Guest guest Posted January 1, 2002 Report Share Posted January 1, 2002 << " Sticks and Stones " from Dateline on 09/18/2000 Emotional abuse may include any of the following: name-calling blaming/shaming unfairly putting down ridiculing insulting constantly criticizing screaming shouting yelling raging throwing things ignoring rejection abandoning threatening to or hurting people or pets threatening to, or damaging, property withholding affection or approval as punishment repeatedly frightening repeatedly threatening to leave manipulating with lies making you feel guilty making you feel like you are crazy telling/treating you like you are worthless distorting your reality (mind games) making you fear for your safety or the safety of others Emotional abuse, the least understood form of domestic violence and child abuse, is difficult to both define and recognize. When one is from a dysfunctional family and estranged from the rest of the world, that person has no basis for comparing what is happening in their world to what is happening elsewhere. Police officers, courts, doctors, lawyers and other professionals are far more likely to respond to a victim who has a black eye, broken bone or other physical evidence of abuse but the pain of words can not only hurt, when hurled like sticks and stones, but that pain rarely ends when the abuse ends. Most victims of emotional abuse internalize the abusive messages, and continue the emotional abuse in his or her own self-talk. Emotional abuse victims can become withdrawn, anxious, depressed or even suicidal. They may experience sleep disorders, compulsions, panic attacks or engage in self-harm or obsessions, phobias, and risky behavior. For child victims, emotional abuse has been known to cause speech disorders, hysterical outbursts, and delays in physical, mental and/or emotional development. It can lead to addiction. It can severely impair the child's ability to truly bond with others. In cases where a caretaker emotionally abuses a child by withholding love, emotional abuse can cause a " failure to thrive " . The lives of adults who were emotionally abused as children are often marked by a deep, pervasive sadness, a severely damaged self-concept and an inability to truly engage and bond with others. Thus, many emotionally abused children engage in a lifelong drive for the approval (which they translate as " love " ) of others. So eager are they for love - and so convinced that they don't deserve it - that they become prime candidates for abuse in intimate relationships. Emotional abuse is often trivialized. Police officers, courts, lawyers, etc may be unwilling or legally unable to respond to abuse where there is no actual physical evidence of harm or threat of harm. Victims of physical abuse need both time and specialized treatment to heal. Friends and family, however, may fail to see the pain of the survivor of emotional abuse. And, when emotional abuse occurs in childhood, it is more likely to be believed that the victims will " just get over it " when they become adults. But, unfortunately, such victims are not likely to " just get over it. " Many victims won't even realize that they have been subjected to emotional abuse - they just " numb out " emotionally. Abuse is defined in the dictionary as follows: To use wrongly or improperly; misuse. To hurt or injure by maltreatment; ill-use. To assail with contemptuous, coarse, or insulting words; revile. Obsolete. To deceive or trick. Using the dictionary definition of abuse, emotional abuse is " to assail with contemptuous, coarse, or insulting words " or " to deceive or trick " or to hurt someone emotionally. In that definition, there is no mention of intent. Emotional abuse, however, can be intentional such as someone yelling " You're stupid! " or unintentional as, for example, when parents are involved in a bitter divorce, and place too much pressure on their children to choose between the parents or to meet their emotional needs. According to the National Committee for the Prevention of Child Abuse, emotional abuse of a child is a pattern of behavior that attacks a child's emotional development and sense of self-worth. For children, emotional abuse by a caretaker may include a failure to provide the necessary love, support and guidance a child needs to thrive. It can also include placing excessive or unreasonable demands on the child, such as a parent who uses their child in the place of a confidante. And, according to Pamela Brewer in her book Emotional Abuse, emotional abuse of an adult is the " ongoing emotional environment created by the abuser for the purposes of control " . For adults, emotional abuse may include isolating them from friends or family. The abuser may make one's life miserable whenever they associate with anyone else or they may be rude to their friends or family. Emotional abuse can also include using money or children to control another person. Like guns, knives, fists or feet, words are simply another weapon that an abuser can use. For the victim, there is little difference in the end result - pain that can last a lifetime. >> Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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