For purposes of simplicity I will be using “he” throughout this post to designate the abuser and “she” to designate the abuse victim. We can all agree that males are also abused in relationships by females.
One of the insidious (and enabling) aspects of abuse is that the abuse victim often lacks a credible witness to the abuse that is occurring (or has occurred).
“Witnessing” is the act of validating, of believing, the victim’s presentation of her trauma. It is the willingness to face, not turn away from, the victim’s experience of her experience.
The abuse victim often lacks a mature, credible witness to validate the abuse as existing as a real problem—a real problem that is called “abuse,” and not a watered-down euphemism.
Lacking this validation, she is less empowered to confront the abuse, while the abuser’s leverage is simultaneously strengthened.
One can’t confront, after all, something that isn’t identified, recognized as real.
When we speak of abuse, we are referring to the intentional use of one’s power to control, frighten, cow, shame, restrict, degrade, dismiss, humiliate, suppress, inhibit, isolate, invalidate and/or damage and destroy another person.
I routinely work cases in which abuse is occurring but has yet to be labeled “abuse.” Sometimes the euphemisms, the minimization, or the mis-identification of the abuse begin at the bureaucratic level.
For instance, I recently got a referral through an insurer who described “anger” as the presenting issue. With a little further information, I asked the referrer if “abuse” wasn’t the more relevant concern? A half-minute later, with a little more information, I suggested,“So this is about domestic violence?”
The referring agent, who probably had some mental health training, surprised me with how relieved, almost enthusiastic, she was that I’d apparently called the situation for what it was—abuse.
And so the insurance company, in seeking a provider for the client, could not “witness” for her, at this early stage of her help-seeking, the true predicament (and trauma) she was dealing with.
The culture of secrecy, shame, euphemistic language, and sometimes ignorance surrounding relationship abuse enable and sustain its subterrean status and persistence.
Abuse always is a form of exploitation. But it’s also a tactic; the tactical aim of abuse is to control, restrict, or otherwise subjugate someone. The pattern of abusive behavior defines the abuser, which shouldn’t surprise us, as the aims of abuse speak directly, and indictingly, to character.
The abusive individual chronically uses a variety of defenses—like rationalization, contempt, devaluation, denial, minimization—to support his abusive attitudes and behaviors.
The more, for instance, we devalue someone—the more contempt we feel towards someone—the more we are de-humanizing that person. And the more we de-humanize someone, the more dangerously we expand our latitude to treat (and mistreat) that person as an “object.”
A major aspect of the abuser’s mentality is an inflated sense of entitlement. The abuser feels entitled to what he wants. He doesn’t just want what he wants; he doesn’t even just want what he wants badly.
The abuser demands what he wants.
For the abusive individual, to want something is to deserve it. Anything less than the responsive delivery of what he wants (and feels entitled to) is perceived as an injustice—a personal affront.
He will then use this perceived affront as justification (rationalizing) for his punitive, destructive response.
The abusive individual sees it somewhat like this: I deserved what I wanted; I didn’t get it; now she (as the uncooperative party) deserves to be punished.
When the abuser is too cowardly to punish his real frustrator (say, a boss), he’ll bully, instead, a more vulnerable target, like his partner (or kids).
Often intense anger and abuse are assumed to be synonymous. But it’s important to remember that expressions of anger—even intense anger—aren’t always indicative of abuse, just as expressions of abuse aren’t always delivered as overt anger and rage.
Anger can nicely deliver an abusive intent; but sometimes it’s just anger, not anger as the delivery vehicle of the abuse.
Many intelligent, abusive individuals can convincingly give lip service to the wrongness of their behaviors. Some abusive individuals, who aren’t sociopaths and/or too narcissistically disturbed, can and do confront the driving factors of their abuse and make genuine amends and changes.
But many others can’t, and won’t; their narcissism or sociopathy—in any case their fundamental immaturity and pathological self-centeredness—prove insurmountable.
When I work with cases of abuse “witnessing” for the abused client is vital. Although it’s true therapists shouldn’t make a practice of diagnosing people they’ve never met, it’s also true that when clients have a story to tell of their abuse or exploitation, it would be destructive not to believe them. And if you believe their experience (and why wouldn’t you?), then failing to recognize and label it as one of abuse is to fail them.
Why would it be destructive not to believe the client? Isn’t it theoretically possible that a client could be lying, contriving, or grossly exaggerating? What about false memories? It is exceedingly rare for clients to manufacture experiences of abuse. If anything, the opposite is true: the culture (as noted) of shame, secrecy, and minimization surrounding abuse inclines clients to underreport, not exaggerate, the extent of their victimization.
Invariably, it is the abuser who is guilty of the inverse of exaggerating, which is minimizing. And from the abuser’s minimized perspective, the truth looks like an exaggeration.
In the case of the aforementioned referral, it took little time to see that abuse was prevalent. I saw this couple for a consultation. It’s always an informative, first red flag when a partner tries to take you aside before his partner has shown up to preemptively set the record straight—that is, to assure and prepare you to expect all sorts of exaggerations and misreprentations from the yet-to-arrive partner.
You know that invalidation (and gaslighting), for instance, are issues when you hear (as I did), “Trust me, Doc, what she’s gonna say, it never happened”¦at least not the way she’s gonna say it did.”
These are cases where it’s best not to trust the client.
(This article is copyrighted (c) 2009 by Steve Becker, LCSW.)
Puzzle: I think you’ve pointed out a very interesting issue. I read Kathleen’s post earlier today, and I’ll put my thoughts together.
I know we each speak from our own experiences. Oxy has had a lot of experience with a variety of S/P/Ns, some of us may have only tangled with one or two, that we know of. Then we read the literature and share our experiences and learn.
The more I’ve learned about sociopaths and psychopaths, the more I’ve been able to understand a number of people in my life. I seem to have tangled with quite a few, now that I know more about the personality disorders.
I also know that I met and interacted with someone who had the charm and heart of Ted Bundy or Jeffrey Dahmer, and he was on a scale so different from the others that two years later I’m still suffering from the shock.
Give me a little time, but I have some thoughts I’m not ready to put down yet.
Puzzle,
This community is set up as a blog and not as a message board even though it has taken on that character in some ways! I often have trouble following a thread and keeping up with everyone’s thoughts. I read a few posts thinking I will come back to them later and reply, then I can’t find them! It’s hard to keep up with everyone when posts are spread over several blogs about different topics. I reached the point of writing down the topic, date, and time so I could find the posts again! Sometimes I forget to note the post though. I’ll have to devise a system for this board.
I don’t think anyone here would deliberately “not speak” to another member. I don’t think people here are like that even if a fuss erupts and there are ruffled feathers; at least I haven’t seen it. As online communities go, this one is exceptional in every respect. People pop in and out at different times and sometimes just can’t read everything. There are several good blogs that I don’t think I ever commented on such as Pearl’s blog about “The Betrayal Bond”.
Eye, I love what you did. That’s really great.
I got kind of crazy last night talking about this on another thread (maybe, who knows anymore?). But I’ve gotten to the point that I don’t even care if I’m right or not. If it doesn’t feel right, I get out of it. I don’t analyze. I don’t wonder if I’m being fair. I don’t consider what I might lose. I just exit.
This made me think of a business opportunity I had a few months ago. A conversation with a prospect that took forever to set up, although he supposedly had some work for me. We got on the phone. He seemed to have nothing particular to say, and before we got off, he e-mailed me a pile of amateurish marketing material, and with a request to tell him what I thought he needed.
I never even bothered to get back to him. If pressed, I could come up with a few good professional reasons. But the reality was I felt like I was being invited into a void, and I wasn’t interested in going there.
I can’t believe you got here in three months. You may be the speed champion of all time in figuring out what you’re taking away from a relationship with a sociopath.
Kathleen Hawk: I’m gad you figured out that you have indeed you’ve been walking among the voided ones… superficial, no substance … just lip service… and your talent and brains is only another amusement for them. I’m sure the “real” folks of the world appreciate what you have to offer.
I think you need to work on Obama’s team to help weed out the non entities of the world.
Peace.
Nice idea, Wini. I’d love to work on Obama’s team.
Kathleen Hawk: You would be perfect. You are at the top of your game for positive thinking for the upper ranks of management. Obama is surrounding himself with ALL the “real” people for his cabinet … and shining the light on all the sociopaths/anti-socials of the world that have been given the American public nothing but lip service.
If I were you, I’d send my CV in for consideration. You might as well put your talents where they can be used and valued.
Peace.
Okay, Wini, I’ll try to figure out how to do that. Thanks for the suggestion.
Gosh, that would be a fabulous career turn. I’d love to support what’s he’s doing.
oh thanks for the clarification everyone, guess I was being a tad paranoid.
KH: The mayor of Boulder, CO, just resigned to take a post in D.C. in the Obama administration. That’s an interesting reach to someone who might look like they’re from an enlightened area, but who hasn’t really done the work.
Wini may be onto something.
Puzzle,
I was reading the posts about your mother. I can imagine how painful and confusing it must be to try and make sense of her abuse and her justifications for it. I was reminded of the many forms of neglect and abuse my mother perpetrated on me. When I finally (as you did) decide to speak the truth, she told me I was bitter and needed to “get over it.” After several communications like this over a long period in my adult life, I decided I really just don’t want to deal with her any more. It was a hard decision to virtually excommunicate her from my life. But once I made the decision, I felt some relief that at least I had taken a stand. I was in effect saying, “it’s not okay to talk to me like this. It’s not okay not to take responsibility for what you did. It’s not okay to minimize and invalidate my feelings. That is how I came to feel invisible in the first place.” I will probably always have that gnawing feeling of compassion for her deep down and wanting to take care of her because she really is wounded and like a little child in many ways. But her aura of narcissism just radiates out like a force field, and I cannot be around it for very long. When she says “I love you” she is really saying “I need you to be my mother” because she never had decent mothering. But it’s not my job. I still have the desire to mother her. I guess that’s part of the betrayal bond. That’s the role I had in my family, to be the caretaker of the adults–clean their house, listen to their problems, cater to their whims, cook their meals…..
I dont’ have a sense of whether I’ve “forgiven” her or not. I think sometimes that if I’d forgiven her, I’d want to go running back into her arms and pretend she’s a real mother again. I can never do that. It’s just all so murky and convoluted when you bond with abusive parents. You still love them, no matter what they did to you. If you cut the love off, it’s like cutting your heart out. So for me, it’s like always having a perpetual hole in my heart. The best I hope for in all of this is to learn to love myself and just be centered. What a lifelong journey.
I hope you are able to come to terms with your very abusive and cruel (sounds like) mother.