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The
Cycle of Violence & Abuse
Uzma Mazhar
Abuse
or physical violence is a recurring cycle.
Wooing
Phase:
Most relationships are rarely violent from the beginning as there is no
cumulative stress between partners. Both are on their
best behavior and trying to impress each other.
As the relationship continues, the demands,
expectations and stress increases. At this phase violence is
directed toward objects rather than the partner. ie: punching doors,
kicking furniture, throwing objects, breaking stuff, etc. The abusive
behavior is reinforced by a release of tension following this aggressive
action. Aggressive behavior is a maladaptive coping mechanism to
release tension and stress.
The violence then moves from objects to spouse and there is an increase
in verbal abuse, ie: yelling, screaming, increased arguments, insults,
name-calling, etc. and in general tends to become more critical of the
victim.
The attacked partner (or victim) begins to alter his/her behavior to
stop the verbal abuse and/or the physical violence. The partner
works harder at keeping the house cleaner, the children quieter, helping
more with chores, staying home more often, etc... anything to not get
the abuser angry or to trigger another outburst.
The victim has bought into the belief that he/she is the cause of the
abuser's anger. The verbal, emotional and/or physical abuse continues to
escalate. The victim tends to pull away from the abusive spouse
and feels responsible for the abuse, often blaming themselves, feeling
inadequate and a failure.
The abuser's control starts becoming more pervasive, and spills over
into all aspects of the victim's life. He/she may become
obsessively jealous and tries to control most of the partner's behavior
or time, i.e. where the partner will go, with whom, how they should
dress and will even forbid the partner from seeing certain people.
The abuser isolates the partner from family and friends. Emotional
manipulation and black-mailing the partner into believing that if they
loved them, they would not need others, or that since they are married
their place is with each other... even to the exclusion of sharing any
'private' stuff with family or close friends. Insisting that they
should keep their personal life private and to maintain secrecy.
Having effectively cut off any reality-checking that he/she could do if
she shared his/her problem with family or friends.
The victim tends to feel that nothing they do is good enough for the abuser, that they are
walking on eggshells and feels powerless to stop the next beating and/or
explosion. They start doubting their ability to discern right from
wrong.
The abuser believes that the victim should be able to make them
feel better if they changed, they blame the victim for making them feel
miserable and deny that they are hurt, frustrated, disappointed and
insecure. The abuser feels powerless and stuck, yet unwilling to
look at themselves, it does not occur to them that the problem may be
with them.
Active Phase:
Typically, the abuser makes a choice about his/her violence before the
incident... choosing the place and time, deciding what fight to pick,
how and which part of the body to hit. The pattern of abuse is so
well established that they know what button to push and what reaction
they will get. They know what will escalate the situation. It has
become a well choreographed dance.
The
victim being unprepared for the incident, is shocked at where it came
from and is terrified, ashamed, humiliated, degraded and
angry. The victim tends to wrongly blame themselves for the
violence.
The
abuser feels out of control, tries to prove to himself that he/she is in
control and does so by abusing the victim. The abuser blames the
victim for their loss of control, their violent outburst and believes
that the victim instigated it. They usually believe that the abuse
solved the problem.
The Morning After Phase:
This phase is also called the 'Honeymoon Phase'. I prefer calling
it the Morning After Phase as it has characteristics similar to the
disoriented hangover of a drunk, and the guilt after a one night
stand.
This phase is characterized by shame and guilt-provoked resolve to
change, with promises of never abusing again and begging for
forgiveness.
At
this stage the abuser feels temporarily in control, takes
some responsibility for his/her behavior, giving the partner hope for
change. Even though the abuser is afraid of the intensity of their
own anger and that the victim will leave them, they minimize the abuse
and want to avoid dealing with it.
The victim, on the other hand, feels scared, wants to leave the abuser,
feels guilty about wanting to leave the abuser when he is promising to
change, wants to believe all the promises and feels helpless, depressed,
trapped and very confused.
Unfortunately
however, usually there is no
intervention, neither seek to follow up on the promises and
resolves. The relationship continues and with every such cycle the
possibility that the violence will escalate and the severity increase
will get greater.
Unless the abuser receives help in learning how to deal with stress and
anger, this phase will only last a period of time. The stress and
tension will again begin to increase and the cycle repeat itself.
And
the cycle continues... back to the very short-lived wooing phase, then
the building up of the tension, to active abuse phase and on to the
morning after phase. As the pattern gets more established, the
phases get shorter and shorter, and the abuse gets more severe and
violent.
Both the abuser and victim need to get long-term professional
help. Both need to learn their own dynamics of what keeps them
stuck in their unhealthy and damaging patterns of behavior. Both
need to work VERY hard at breaking the cycle.
©
Uzma Mazhar 1999
Contact
Info: UzmaMazhar@hotmail.com
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