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Hateful
Anger!
© copyright
2005 by Lynette J. Hoy, NCC, LCPC
Question: I
was with my ex-boyfriend for three years. I will refer
to him as HE from here on. HE had a very abusive childhood,
and had many traumas growing up as his father was alcoholic.
HE saw his dad try to kill his mom when HE was very young.
His dad abused his mom and also him and his brother.
Needless to say, the boys grew up alcoholic, too. HE
is 34 years old now and it's been a long time since HE
was physically abused. But his dad calls him every night...drunk...and
is extremely abusive with his words. They end up screaming
at each other sometimes and then HE walks around fuming.
This has gone on throughout our three years together.
HE was always nice to me unless HE got really drunk.
Then about a year and a half ago, HE was more drunk than
I had ever seen him be and HE screamed at me for a long
time, calling me names, pounding his fists on the dash
of the pickup...as I sobbed in fear. The more I cried
the more angry HE got. HE stopped drinking about sixteen
months ago. We had some problems and for the past almost
four months we've been on and off. These past months
have been horrible. HE lives quite far from me, so we
don't see each other much, but we would talk online.
At first the conversations went well, then HE would suddenly
get very angry about something and start calling me names
and being hateful and very mean. It would kill me everytime
HE did it. We would end up telling each other that we
needed to be apart. Then HE would always apologize, etc.
A few weeks ago, we had another huge blowup. Not so different
than the usual, but the words were worse and the anger
was as bad as I've ever seen it. I've told him before
that he needed to get counseling because he was acting
just like his dad. Anyway, before this last blowup, I
always fell back into it...HE would make me feel sorry
for him. I got to the point where I was afraid to even
sign online and I blocked him from my messenger and stuff
so I wouldn't have to talk to him. And it was hard because
I loved him so much. It was weird though...after this
last one, I told him to leave me alone, and I actually
truly meant it. The words were just too much for me this
time. I usually would leave our conversations crying
and feeling extremely hurt. This time, though, I just
felt kind of numb to him. The next day when HE tried
to talk to me, I just ignored HIM. And the next day after
that as well. Then a week or so ago, HE wrote all this
stuff about how HE had gone to counseling and HE saw
things differently now, how HE was taking things out
on me and that it was wrong...blah blah. He tried to
convince me that "it would never happen again" because
HE realized what HE was doing. This...after one counseling
session. And HE expected me to just say, "Oh ok then..." I
can't do it anymore. The love that I felt for HIM has
turned into a feeling of nothing. I don't hate HIM. I
just feel nothing for HIM. I have no desire to talk to
HIM anymore. HE still tries to talk to me online. Now
I just want HIM to leave me alone, but HE won't. Because "HE
is changed now"..with HIS one counseling session. (Hardly
) I have stuck to my guns this time and tell HIM every
day that I have had enough and I'm done. I've tried ignoring
HIM. I have tried to tell HIM that no matter what HE
does, I don't want anything to do with HIM anymore. I
just got tired of being afraid! I got tired of going
to bed every night crying. I got tired of being afraid
to sign online. I just don't want it anymore. How can
I get HIM to go away? I just want some peace in my life
for once. Any advice is much appreciated. Signed: Tired
of Being Afraid
Answer: Dear Tired of Being Afraid,
Protect Yourself: It's time to tell your ex-boyfriend that he
must stop contacting you or you will get a court Order of Protection
which will make it illegal to have any contact with you. This is harrassment
and his actions are threatening and intimidating. He is a typical batterer.
And you have experienced the "cycle of abuse" which begins with:
Phase 1 - Tension Building: Tension increases, breakdown of communication,
victim becomes fearful and feels the need to placate the abuser. and
then,
Phase
2 occurs which is the actual Incident: Verbal, emotional,
physical abuse. Anger, blaming, arguing. Threats. Intimidation.
Phase 3 is Reconciliation: Abuser apologizes, gives excuses, blames the
victim, denies the abuse occurred, or says it wasn't as bad as the victim
claims.
Phase
4 is the Calm: Incident is "forgotten", no abuse is taking
place. The "Honeymoon" phase.
Call the National
Domestic Hotline for
more advice at: 1-800-799-7233. They will help you locate
a domestic violence agency in your area and will provide
you with guidance for getting the court order of protection.
And see Safe
Relationships for more reseouvces on domestic violence.
You need peace in your life. You most likely should change
your phone number and email to help prevent him from contacting
you.
Remember
- there is no excuse for abuse! This kind
of anger is hateful and should not be tolerated.
Hope this helps. God bless!
©
copyright 2005 by Lynette J. Hoy, NCC, LCPC. Lynette is a Marriage
and Family Counselor with CounselCare Connection and National
Certified Counselor. She is the co-author of What's
Good About Anger? and a speaker for community, women's
and church organizations.
See Recommended
Books on Hoyweb.com for
Marriage, Parenting, Faith, Personal Growth, Suffering,
Divorce and Teen issues.
See Hotlines and Support
Groups pages for hotlines and sites for various issues and concerns.
Call CounselCare
Connection for office, online services: 1-708-524-3333 or email: help@counselcareconnection.org
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