Emotionally Abusive Partners

These are just a few that I found myself realizing was my life. Do you see any similarities?

“If someone calls you derogatory names, even if they say they are joking, they mean to hurt you and keep you in line.  Abusers sometimes cover themselves by blaming you, saying that you need to lighten up or that you are too sensitive.  You are not too sensitive; you are feeling in your gut that this is not the way you should be treated.  Abusers have a way of making you think that this is normal behavior and that it is you who has the problem.”

I’ve been called f*&^%#g b#%&h and other names. I have never been able to voice my opinions.

“If your significant other always blames everything on someone else, namely you, this may be a bad sign. If he or she throws a tantrum or attacks you verbally, he or she will say it was because of you. It is not a sign of a healthy relationship if your partner never takes responsibility and never admits to being at fault.”

He is never at fault. When he’s angry, I am the one who caused him to be angry. His first inclination is to leave then tell me I caused him to be gone for as long as he is. It was constant when we were younger. Now I just don’t argue with him. It isn’t worth it.

“Not all abusers use drugs or drink excessive alcohol, but many do. An addiction can lead to erratic and inappropriate behavior. Substance abuse can be a gateway to emotional abuse and an unhealthy relationship.”  

Smoking in my car when he knows I don’t want him to. When he’s drunk, he likes to hug other women. I think it’s his way of showing me that he’s attractive to other women. What’s funny is that it’s always women I know and I know how much in love they are with their husbands.

“If you feel fear around your partner or spouse, there is something very wrong. Abusers may try to intimidate you with violence, dominance or power tactics. For example, intentionally putting you in possibly harmful situations, or showing you their gun collection and stating they are not afraid to use them.”

Many years ago, he got angry with me, pushed me up against the wall and had his other fist ready to swing. Recently, that came up in an argument and he said I deserved it. Funny, it caused me to never push my point too far after that initial incident.

“This goes along with the isolation technique, where abusers want you all to themselves. If you do go somewhere or do something without your partner, or even if he or she goes along but others are also there, an emotional abuser will punish you later. An abuser may shout, insult, threaten or worse, all because you were not exclusively hanging out with him or her.”

We’ve always had “his” friends. We’ve always done what “he” wanted to do. When we are in public he takes over conversations even if he wasn’t involved in whatever we were talking about.

“An emotional abuser goes through life feeling entitled to be treated like royalty, and wants you to be a willing servant. He or she expects you to do everything and will not help at all.”  

Everything is about him. My mom used to get so angry that when we visited her and it came time to leave, she lived about 2 hours away, that he would sit and talk to my brothers while I put everything together and packed in the car. Two of my brothers I only saw a couple of times a year. He was more important than I was.

“A prominent trait of abusers is their jealousy. An abusive partner or spouse is often jealous of you, other people and even your dreams and goals. Their jealousy and rage over intangible things like your aspirations stem from the lack of control they feel over those aspects of your life.”

After I started school in 2008, he didn’t want to talk to me about it and he showed no interest in it. Now he accuses me of talking down to him. That’s funny because he’s the one who has to “explain” everything to me. It’s so important to him that he tried to explain PVC to me. Really?

“An abuser is a grand manipulator and will sulk, threaten to leave, and emotionally punish you for not going along with his or her idea of how things should be.  An abuser will try to make you feel guilty any time you exert your will and assert what is right for you.  At times the abuser may appear to be apologetic and loving but his "remorse" doesn't last long; the abuse begins again when the abuser feels he or she has you back.”

Yeah, this is what always happens. We’ve separated 3 times in 28 years.
Each time we got back together he would be great for a while then revert back to his normal self. Never fails.

“If you are in an emotionally abusive relationship, there is a good chance that eventually things may get physical.  At first, the abuser might pull your hair, push you, or grab you so hard that you bruise; these may only be warning signs that things can escalate further. A partner with an explosive temper who has reacted with violence before (breaking things, punching the wall, getting into altercations with others) may be likely to physically abuse you.

When he had me pushed up against the wall years ago, I realized, albeit subconsciously, that he might go through with it. I have seen him in public take what others say or do personally and do the whole puff up that men sometimes do. It is a theme with him.

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Me and the Other Me

I know I’m not alone when I say there are two sides of me. One is the mom who would do anything for her kids. The other is the one that wants to be free of all her ties. The problem I have right now is that the one who wants to be free is becoming stronger than the other one.

I went from my mother’s house to a house with someone who didn’t think much of me. I had low self-esteem and he exploited that to his own ends. He had to be the number one and that’s what he got. Now after 28 years, I’m just done.

I want to find out what’s possible without having others tell me who I’m supposed to be or where I’m supposed to be. We all have roles we are expected to fit into. Our kids think we are supposed to be one way, our spouses or partners think we are supposed to fit their idea of who we are. Our siblings and friends have yet another idea of who were are and expect us to be that way. There is no getting around those expectations. But are we supposed to just accept that and not push the boundaries of those constraints?

I don’t believe we should. There are parts of us that never see the light of day. The reason is that we don’t think we can. We become sedate in our thinking to the point where there is only a certain way to be. We push aside our feelings and opinions because when we have voiced them, we are met with strong opposition.

The trouble with expectations that others have of us is that we may not be showing them the real us; the real person who lives inside us. Yes, they may know our political leanings or how we feel about certain people or actions others take. But they don’t really know us. They don’t take the time to know our desires or aspirations. They don’t take the time to know what moves us, what makes us still hope for something more.

I’m at that crossroads. My kids are grown now. They may still need me in a different capacity than when they were small but they need to realize I might need to be able to say what’s on my mind. After all, I’m almost 50 and I think I should be able to be me. 

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I Am Ready to Explode

I don’t know where to start.  I have been going over in my mind what I’m going to say to him about the divorce. I know how he thinks and he expects us to do everything the way he wants it done. Well he isn’t going to like it.

If he expects me to walk away with nothing, then he will have to do the same thing as me. We will just sell everything, pay off debts, and if anything’s left over, we will both walk away with nothing but debt.

I can’t stand to hear him speak, look at him, or have him walk through the door. Yeah, I’m not being very nice, but I can’t be considered a quitter either. I’ve done 28  years with someone who thinks I’m less than he is.

SO THERE!!!

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The More I Think About It

Have you ever had a conversation then later thought about what you should have said? I do it regularly because of my constant need to “say the right thing”. It also gives me time to analyze the conversation.

For example, he told me “I had a higher earning potential than he does because of my education. It’s a bad time for me to get a divorce.” Here are the facts.

I have an Associate’s Degree and am working on my Bachelor’s. An Associate’s will offer between $28-32,000 a year. He made over $50,000 last year. I did the taxes so I know exactly what he made. We are looking at minimum an $18,000 difference. And there’s more.

When I go to retire, I will have NO Social Security to fall back on. Why? I took care of kids. He didn’t stay home from work when they couldn’t go to school. And forget being able to go to daycare. Not only could I not pay for it, no one would take a sick child and no one would take on Amanda with all her health issues.  

There is also the “small” problem with my education. I only have an Associate’s. I do not have my Bachelor’s yet and I won’t have it if we don’t get divorced. Why? I have to count his income when getting assistance. So I have student loans not grants. The government limits the amount of student loans they guarantee. They will guarantee mine but not the last $7500. Do you think he’ll pay it? No! That means the student loans will be much larger and I won’t have the degree that would ensure I could pay it with a decent salary.

So, once again, he is trying to control everything. I think he wants me to walk away with nothing but my personal possessions. I suggest that all of you get your earplugs put in cause I think you will hear the explosion no matter where you live.

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No Trust

This morning I told him I needed to get the legal separation put in place so I could continue to get help with school finances. You see, I have to include his income when I do my FAFSA and that puts me out of any help with school. It isn’t that I want free school I just need to ensure I can get the loans when I need them. His income limits even that for me. That’s when he went into this whole idea of what he thinks about the whole thing.

The main points he made are these.

1.    He wants it to be amicable (my word, not his).
2.   Everything is debt so I can’t get anything.
3.   It isn’t good for me at this time because I have a higher earning potential because of my higher education.
4.   This could take a while.

Okay, here’s my take on these.

1.    He wants me to walk away with nothing.
2.   He wants me to think there is nothing.
3.   He may be looking to get me for support.
4.   I have no job. The longer we wait, the more likely it will be that he keeps everything because I’ll just walk away after getting tired of waiting.

The bottom line is this. I don’t trust him. He has made sure he has control of everything so I have no options at this point. In other words, although Wisconsin is a community property state, I’m responsible for half the debts but I have no say over anything. He has engineered everything this way and I’m stuck with it.

Every attorney I contacted required a retainer fee and I can’t do that. Why you ask? Because he has control of everything and I have nothing. So I’m not sure what he wants to do. I just know that I don’t trust him. And he’s earned my full distrust.

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