This series, in which I am referring to Lundy Bancrofts
amazing book Why Does He Do That? is a memorium for the hundreds
of women and dozens of children who have been emotionally
and physically battered, assaulted and killed by men in their
own homesmen who they trusted, loved and depended on.
Bancroft starts his book with voices of abused women.
I feel like hes never happy with anything I do.
He messes up my mind.
Hes scared me a few times but hes a great
father.
The thing is, he really understands me."
He says he loves me so much. So why does he treat me
like this?
Hes two different people. I feel like Im
living with Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde.
Annually, in the US some four million women are assaulted
by their partners, of them, 2,000 are murdered, making domestic
violence the number one cause of physical and emotional injury
to women between the ages of 15 and 44.
Perhaps through this space, Bancrofts words can help
those women among us who are victims of domestic violence.
Bancroft addresses the garden variety of abuse and controlthe
invisible deadly manipulation and control that
everyone including the victim misses because it is subtle
taking the form of financial control, intimidation, put downs,
emotional abuse and undermining.
Abuse is a sly corrosive control thing that gradually builds
itself into the fabric of the relationship. Gradually it slips
into a black eye here, a broken arm there, destruction of
her property, the threat of worse. Just when the woman thinks
she cant take it anymore he turns into Hyde, the kindest
sweetest man in the world who brings flowers and tenderly
dresses the wound he has inflicted saying, If only you
would listen, I wouldnt do this to you.
Mens Myths
Bancroft shows its a trick. There is no such thing as
doing right for an abuser. His main purpose is
to keep you down to control. He will give you just enough
kindness to keep going and slap you down again, if not physically,
emotionally to keep you where he wants youa remote control
toy controlled by him.
Bancroft says women who live with abusive men often feel sorry
for them because of the myths these men build around themselves.
These myths says Bancroft, include.
1. He was abused as a child.
2. His previous partner hurt him.
3. He abuses those he loves the most.
4. He holds in his feelings too much and they build up until
he bursts.
5. He has an aggressive personality
6. He loses control.
7. He is too angry.
8. He is mentally ill.
9. He is afraid of intimacy and abandonment.
10. He hates women.
11. He has low self-esteem.
12. His boss mistreats him
13. He has poor skills in communication and conflict resolution.
14. There are as many abusive women as there are abusive men.
15. His abusiveness is as bad for him as for his partner.
16. He is a victim of racism.
17 He abuses alcohol or drugs.
According to Bancroft these myths are excuses. There is no
way to overcome abusive behaviour by focusing on self-esteem,
anger management, etc. Abusiveness Bancroft says
is resolved by dealing with abusiveness.
The truth is abusive men dont lose control. They pretend
to. If they did they would damage their own property, or stronger
people but dont. They only do what they have to keep
their women cowering, what they can get away with, and then
stop.
Next week: Types of abusive men.
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