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Making the Invisible Visible

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He possibly was all of the<br />

descriptions…he was possibly weak<br />

when he pushed me over for asking a<br />

question he did not want to answer, or<br />

when he knocked my jaw out of<br />

alignment on another occasion. He<br />

was probably immature when he tried<br />

to tear our child from my arms when I<br />

said I was leaving him, or when he<br />

later came upstairs and forced me to<br />

“to prove that he loves me”. And on<br />

another occasion when I had tried to<br />

end the relationship after a<br />

particularly bad attack, he maybe did<br />

believe that he loved me when he<br />

bombarded me with tears and flowers<br />

and phonecalls until I took him back. I<br />

know I believed him.<br />

Life can change in a heartbeat but the<br />

fear remains for a long time. Leaving<br />

an abusive relationship is usually just<br />

the beginning of the journey for<br />

survivors.<br />

For most recovery is a long road with<br />

many pitfalls, not least facing the<br />

societal reaction to abuse.<br />

I pressed charges, but thousands don’t.<br />

I can understand why they don’t. I<br />

remember deliberating over this for<br />

several days. I couldn’t eat and I<br />

couldn’t sleep, I wanted it to stop, the<br />

abuse, the fear…then I told the<br />

university.<br />

“he maybe did believe that he loved me when he bombarded me<br />

with tears and flowers and phonecalls until I took him back. I know I<br />

believed him. ”<br />

The abuser, rapist, coercive controller<br />

can look charming to other people.<br />

When I left him, he would ask people<br />

to look out for me and report to him if<br />

they saw me, and people would comply<br />

because he was so genuine and they<br />

wanted to help him avoid a ‘scene’;<br />

should I arrive in all my hysteria.<br />

He would then appear at the<br />

coordinates given. Maybe it is easier to<br />

view a woman as a potential hysteric<br />

rather than a man as a potential<br />

abuser?<br />

The reality often looks rather different<br />

to the perceptions. Friends and even<br />

family members distance themselves,<br />

institutions (supposedly unbiased)<br />

choose sides.<br />

Their reaction shocked me at the time<br />

as I always believed that support<br />

would be forthcoming. I, who already<br />

had crippling moments of doubt, was<br />

told to think about how it felt for my<br />

abuser that I had pressed charges.<br />

I was asked on the phone before any<br />

arrangements were made for me, to<br />

think about how I imagined he was<br />

feeling? Not once did she ask how I<br />

was feeling. How it had felt to describe<br />

scenes of violence to the police,<br />

support workers, family, close friends.<br />

But I had to try and put myself in his<br />

shoes.<br />

Rebecca

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