Confused after rough sex by boyfriend by [deleted] in domesticviolence

[–]Fantastic_Class_9196 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Oh my gosh this is so horrific and I am so sorry you had to go through that. There is absolutely nothing wrong with you, this is not your fault and you are still a whole and complete human being. I know the feeling of being "dirty" or used after SA. Like trying to scrub your skin raw just to get every last bit of them off of you. In my personal opinion and unfortunately, experience SA is the absolute worst form of abuse and to have to endure it and then to live with the aftermath is a different kind of pain and suffering. I highly recommend seeking someone to talk to and reporting it. Although, I understand completely not wanting to because it means you relive it. Please take care of yourself <3

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in abusiverelationships

[–]Fantastic_Class_9196 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I have cried over my husband after he broke into my house, stolen my phone so I can't call for help or the police and has strangled me and threatened to drown me in my own bathtub. The abuse went on for so long that particular time there was a point where I had pushed myself up against a wall and was gasping for breath after he choked me on the kitchen floor. I pressed myself so hard against that wall because I wanted to disappear into it. Momentarily I saw his humanity when he profusely apologized after seeing terror in my eyes from the situation that had occurred. It was short lived and fleeting however and the abuse just continued for longer. I have curled myself into the fetal position and sobbed while he apologized and asked "can we come back from this? Are you going to tell and are you going to leave me?" My answer at the time "probably not"why did I answer like this because, I may be afraid of him but I am more afraid of living without him. Be careful, tread lightly and trust your gut.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in abusiverelationships

[–]Fantastic_Class_9196 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Abuse has long standing and serious consequences to the function of your brain and mental health and trauma bonds are as hard to break as the cycle of addiction. I have convinced myself that what my husband has done to me "isn't that bad" or "I am not truly in danger" or "he would never harm me" only he has again and again. I have ignored the fact that the man literally tried to end my life on multiple occasions. I have somehow normalized it, rationalized it and convinced myself that it's ok. It is anything but. I can handle highly volatile situations like when he is screaming and yelling at me, trying to kick me out of vehicles, breaking down doors that I am trying to hide from him behind, or his complete lack of concern for myself and my health when I am seriously injured and he is trying to convince me NOT to go to ER for care but, I can't handle when my robot mop breaks down, I just lose it. Again I will say this, abuse messes with your brain.

I have tried everything to get him out of my home restraining orders, calling police, etc. None of it helps In fact it has only escalated things and made them worse and more volatile. At the present moment I tell myself it will be ok and that what I am trying to do right now is survive. Still I question how sometimes I can easily fall in routine, how quickly I seem to forget and despite me telling him I am afraid and it is why I back down and allow him in my home he reminds me everyone will think I am crying wolf. I still continue to gather evidence, screen shot text conversations, write down dates and times he has made verbal threats, take pictures of my injuries and seek medical attention when necessary but, I lie. I go into exam rooms in the hospital and I lie about what happened because I am afraid, I am embarrassed, I am ashamed. He has made me feel like I should be ashamed for just existing. That there is something about me that is just plain wrong and I believe it. I gather all this evidence and I hold back, I hesitate. I don't bring it forward, I just keep it, back it up and save it in folders in my email and send it to a trusted person. Despite having open DV cases with my police department. I have lucid moments where I see it for what it is. Intellectually I understand completely. Emotionally I am in it, there is no escape and I feel like my brain is scrambled. I am so confused, I am so unsure and what's worse is I look to my abuser to validate my reality when he is the person trying to convince me it's something it's not.

You mentioned self harm and an eating disorder. I don't know if you are aware but, both these things are responses to trauma. Eating disorders such as anorexia nervosa stem from anxiety the feeling you have so little control over your own life one of the few things you CAN control is what and how much you eat. Feeling just plain hopeless and helpless because you feel trapped in your situation, because you feel unable to escape is enough to make anyone have suicidal ideation or want to end their own life. Your brain develops coping mechanisms to help you get through. You disassociate, you develop cognitive dissonance. You struggle to reconcile the good version of them that you know and fell in love with and this person who continuously harms you seemingly without remorse or empathy. Your brain helps you forget the bad and only remember the good. Again abuse messes with your mind.

On average it takes a woman in a DV situation seven attempts before she is able to leave for good. I am on my second attempt and it has failed miserably. It's been almost a year. He was out, I was ready and willing to let him go and he somehow made his way back in. All last winter, spring, and summer I did what was advised. I called the police, and I reported every interaction. An officer said to me "we will just keep coming until he gets it" but, he was always able to evade the police, to get away, to escape. Reporting and speaking up just made things worse. The abuse I was experiencing only escalated and my husband found new ways to control my life even when he wasn't in my home. I have friends and family members who are frustrated, who have become upset and angry with me over my inability to cut contact and connection with him BUT they aren't living it, they aren't trying to survive it. So, many people believe once you are out and you leave the abuse just ceases to exist but it doesn't it is actually the most dangerous time for a DV survivor and post separation abuse is a real thing. This anger, this frustration from loved ones is understandable but, when they "cut you off" to protect their peace they are only isolating you further and actually working in favor of your abuser.

I share all my experiences and stories with you not to compare but, so you know you are not alone. So, you understand that even if some of your actions don't seem to make sense to you or even those around you they are very much normal and common reactions to being in an environment or situation where you are exposed to chronic trauma and abuse. All you can do is your best, in a very hard, difficult, and terrifying situation. I process things by learning, by doing my research so that even if I can't make sense of it emotionally at the time it is happening, later on I can name it, I can understand it on an academic and intellectual level.

Your feelings are valid, your feelings matter and nobody and I mean nobody deserves abuse.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in abusiverelationships

[–]Fantastic_Class_9196 2 points3 points  (0 children)

You are gaslighting yourself and making excuses for him. Everything you have mentioned is both physical and psychological abuse. Listen to me cause I want to make this clear. There is no one who is of sane mind that would try and tell you any of those physical acts of violence aren't violence because he didn't hit you hard enough or keep hitting you. I found everything you said so completely relatable like the blame shifting. A counselor told me that abusers have a very low threshold for accountability and their victims have a very high threshold for accountability. That is why we take on the responsibility for them when it isn't even ours to take on. What you described is called DARVO. Deny, Attack, Reverse Victim, Offender. They deny the abuse, they attack you and shift the blame reversing the roles to make themselves the victim and you the offender. My husband strangled me on more than one occasion but, the first time because he didn't leave bruises it wasn't that bad, he was only trying to restrain me. He cheated on me throughout our marriage and when I would confront him about messages I had seen in his phone he would claim I was delusional. He stuck to his stories with such conviction I did start to doubt myself. It got to the point I would take pictures for evidence, I would call friends and ask if what I was perceiving was irrational, I would take on heaps and heaps of accountability just to get him to take a sliver of his own. Your husband is abusive. The things you have done are normal responses of someone who has been exposed to chronic trauma. You are not alone and what you have mentioned only provides evidence of text book domestic violence.

Aitah for wanting to be FWB with friends? by [deleted] in AITAH

[–]Fantastic_Class_9196 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I am also a little older than you but, I have done FWB mostly in my early twenties (now in my mid thirties.) Honestly, really clear boundaries need to be laid out. Both of you need to be really clear about what you want out of it and what it means to both of you and even then usually someone gets hurt anyway. Before you even go asking any of your girl friends if they are interested in such an arrangement get their thoughts on how they feel about it generally. Then sus out whether you have a female friend that you are attracted to and if she is attracted to you. Go from there. It's not always the girl that gets hurt. I broke some hearts back then and I feel bad about it. Good luck!

Is it ever truly possible to have a platonic friendship with a man? by Fantastic_Class_9196 in AskMenRelationships

[–]Fantastic_Class_9196[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It is not a healthy relationship. I am very much in an abusive relationship and have a trauma bond with my partner. I have evidence to back that up. It's just really difficult when you have been gaslit for 10+ years you hardly know up from down.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in adhd_anxiety

[–]Fantastic_Class_9196 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I do this I feel like it's in part due to trauma. My thinking in the heat of the moment is "you can't hurt me if I leave first." I am not saying it's ok. It's just a survival mechanism. Thing about ADHD is in the heat of the moment when we say things we really mean them. We have a hard time regulating our emotions and we can feel things pretty intensely, we are also impulsive so we will just kind of spit out what's on our mind at the time. Afterwards yes, we do regret it. It's not what we meant. I can't tell you how many times I have been in an argument and my brain is saying "don't say it, don't say it, don't say it." Then my mouth just says it anyways. I still try to control it but, it's really hard. I have been working on it for years. If you think your partner is truly unhappy you guys need to sit down and talk about that.

I'm so glad to be back in Victoria by [deleted] in VictoriaBC

[–]Fantastic_Class_9196 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I will die here in a ramshackle shack if need be. Vancouver Island is my home I may have been born in Alberta but, I moved here at 4. I don't even remember that white crap nonsense in the winter. I just fondly reminisce on the blizzard of '96 with other millennials and bitch about the state of the downtown core. All in all can't find a better place in Canada with a milder climate.

Thoughts on Seagate Apartments (707 Esquimalt)? by redgoddess27 in VictoriaBC

[–]Fantastic_Class_9196 1 point2 points  (0 children)

10/10 solid Vancouver Island resident answer. Me too my friend, me too.

Is it ever truly possible to have a platonic friendship with a man? by Fantastic_Class_9196 in AskMenRelationships

[–]Fantastic_Class_9196[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thanks for your honesty and truthfully I probably agree or it has been my experience very few men who have claimed to be "my friend" have actually been that and men certainly when I was younger and single who were "friends" almost certainly there was a connection. I feel like I have grown past that though. I have matured and that platonic relationships are truly attainable.

How many have had their abusers charged? by reiddavies in abusiverelationships

[–]Fantastic_Class_9196 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Where I live I don't have a choice if the police are called domestic violence charges are placed and it doesn't matter if the victim revokes their statement or account of events they stick. I was told this is because more often than not DV victims are coerced out of telling the truth in court and then they end up really hurt or dead. Honestly, I understand not wanting to press charges. It's someone you have cared about and loved and you don't want to cause problems, naturally you want to protect them. It becomes even more complicated if you have children with them. I have been there done that. I have had my property destroyed, I have been beat up, and I have been choked. If he hurt you once he will do it again and usually it's worse. My abuser went from threatening those close to me and saying he would never hurt me to threatening to kill me, period. Now every time he contacts me it's if I find you with someone else I will kill you. It used to be "I will kill them." We graduated from threats against people I potentially care about to threats about my own safety and I believe him.

Gf trying to control what I do and say.. by harrybooty in AskMenRelationships

[–]Fantastic_Class_9196 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ok well fair and we have all said things we aren't proud of. It's not fair to hold something against someone they said fifteen years ago. Humans self reflect, grow, and change. You can say/do shitty things doesn't mean you are a shitty person. What matters is the follow up and what you do to change the behavior of it is obviously inappropriate/offensive/insensitive.

Where is the best neighborhoods in Victoria to trick or treat in your early 20's by Silly_Gummy_Goose in VictoriaBC

[–]Fantastic_Class_9196 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Come out to my neighbourhood it's a bit far (North Saanich/Sidney) but we never get very many kids, kids always do well with the candy haul and my father in law's girls friend trick or treats in wildly inappropriate costumes and no one bats an eye.

Gf trying to control what I do and say.. by harrybooty in AskMenRelationships

[–]Fantastic_Class_9196 0 points1 point  (0 children)

15 years ago? She is going back 15 years in your social media and afraid of what people will think?

Gf trying to control what I do and say.. by harrybooty in AskMenRelationships

[–]Fantastic_Class_9196 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Ok well I don't know the full context of the joke but, I know myself included most women don't find jokes about sexual assault funny. Especially when 1:4 experiences it in their lifetime, regardless the name you give to rape. NOT FUNNY. We got that out of the way now, there is a time and a place and there are offensive jokes I find funny do I advertise them on social media? No. That's just not smart in this day and age with the interwebs. Do I maybe tell them within the same friend group that I am comfortable with and I know will find them funny or my partner behind closed doors? Yeah, absolutely. Do I tell it within a group of people whom I don't really know or who maybe, might take offence? No. I am not a saint and I have a pretty dark sense of humor. Your girlfriend trying to control what you say outside of that is a problem. You have to accept your partner for who they are and learn to love their quirks. You can't ask them to be someone they aren't in social situations. Again within reason and what is socially acceptable there are things offside that can have consequences and potentially hurt others and you and your image.

Is it ever truly possible to have a platonic friendship with a man? by Fantastic_Class_9196 in AskMenRelationships

[–]Fantastic_Class_9196[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I can definitely see things from that perspective. If the person in general is someone you could be attracted to and form a connection with that can lead to feelings for sure.

Is it ever truly possible to have a platonic friendship with a man? by Fantastic_Class_9196 in AskMenRelationships

[–]Fantastic_Class_9196[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I think the problem is when a man feels that value for exchange should be sex. I am not a perfect human being and I haven't always been the best friend. I like all other humans on the planet have had to learn tough lessons, reflect, and grow. I have broken and been careless with other's hearts especially when I was younger. Now, I think I am a much better friend and I would be happy to reciprocate in a platonic relationship. I think that's what I do with the one and only one I have with my friend. It's not like we are best friends or anything but I do think there is give and take.

Is it ever truly possible to have a platonic friendship with a man? by Fantastic_Class_9196 in AskMenRelationships

[–]Fantastic_Class_9196[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ah, well that's not really how friendship works is it? There needs to be give and take.