Verbal Abuse
Some forms of verbal abuse, such as name calling or sneering, are
obvious, but many more forms are covert, such as withholding or
discounting, and therefore much less easily recognizable. Some of
the following questions may help you to work out whether you are
being verbally abused in less obvious ways:
- Does your partner speak to you differently in
private and in public?
- Do you often leave a discussion with your partner
feeling completely confused?
- Does your partner deny being angry or upset
when he/she very obviously is?
- Does your partner act as though you were attacking
them when you try to explain your feelings?
- Does your partner discount your opinions or
experiences?
- You feel as though no matter how hard you try,
you just don't seem to be able to communicate your thoughts and
feelings to your partner as he/she always seems to misunderstand
you, and/or it always seems to cause an argument no matter how
you try to approach the subject?
- Do you feel nervous or avoid discussing issues
which disturb you with your partner because you 'know' that trying
to discuss them will just leave you feeling even more upset?
- Do you feel as though your self-esteem and your
self-confidence have decreased?
- Do you find yourself spending a lot of time
working out either how not to upset your partner or wondering
what you did or said which did upset your partner?
The above are just some indicators that verbal abuse may be an
issue in your relationship. Some facts which generally apply to
verbal abuse:
- Verbal abuse tends to be secretive, ie happens
in private.
- Verbal abuse tends to increase over time, as
both abuser and victim adapt to it.
- Verbal abuse discounts your perception of reality
and denies itself.
- Verbal abuse is usually part of a pattern which
is difficult to recognise and leaves us with a feeling of confusion
and upset without really understanding why.
- Verbal abuse uses words (or silence) to gain
and maintain control.
From time to time we are all likely to say something which is nasty
and abusive to our partner or our children. Usually when we realise
that what we have said is hurtful, we feel sorry for the hurt we
have caused and apologise. Verbal abusers are not likely to apologise,
not because they don't realise that they have been hurtful, but
because that is their aim.
I lived in fear constantly. He rarely hit anyone; he didn't
have to. The threats, coupled with the verbal and emotional abuse,
were more than enough to keep us all under his control. (from
Carla's
Story)
Patricia Evans, in her book "The Verbally Abusive Relationship
- How to Recognise it and How to Respond" lists 15 different
categories of verbal abuse commonly employed by verbal abusers,
which we will have a closer look at below. The categories Patricia
Evans lists are: withholding, countering, discounting, verbal abuse
disguised as a joke, blocking and diverting, accusing and blaming,
judging and criticising, trivialising, undermining, threatening,
name calling, forgetting, ordering, denial and abusive anger.
"I want us to be happy." Those are Lauren’s
own words. For there to be an ‘us’, we both need a
voice. I needed to matter too. "What’s that supposed
to mean?" or "You’re telling me...." I felt
like I was being analyzed, interpreted, manipulated, lead to a
witness stand confession and forced into another apology for something
I didn’t really say or do. I heaped anger on me for feeling
beaten down and damned to silence by the very person I wanted
to spend a life with. (from When
I Want Your Opinion ...)
Withholding basically involves withholding
oneself from the normal intimacy needed for a close relationship.
We may experience it as a prolonged silence, or an unwillingness
to interact with us, or simply get the impression that our partner
never shares themselves with us. Where one partner is withholding,
there can be no intimate relationship, no exchange of feelings,
opinions or thoughts, the whole fabric which is meant to mesh a
relationship together is lacking. We end up feeling alone in our
relationship and often wondering what we have done wrong to alienate
our partner.
When I wasn’t being beaten I was ignored for days on
end, I was sent to Coventry that much that I even thought of moving
there. (Joanne's
Story)
Countering is as it sounds, countering
or opposing any thought, opinion or feeling. If we state that we
feel as though there is a growing distance between us as
a couple, a counterer would respond with an adamant "you're
wrong", as though we had just stated a verifiable fact and
the counterer knew better. Our reality is being undermined, our
perceptions and opinions are opposed. Countering renders any discussion
impossible, as the counterer doesn't listen to our opinion or feelings,
but simply opposes anything we may say. A tell-tale sign of dealing
with a counterer is that phrases such as 'I feel', 'I think' or
'I get the impression' are neither used by the counterer nor accepted
as personal (and therefore valid) opinions when we voice them.
Discounting means giving our feelings,
emotions, thoughts and opinions lesser value, and in so doing, devaluing
or discounting us. Discounting tells us that our thoughts and experiences
are worth nothing. If we are upset, we may be told that we are making
a mountain out of a molehill, imagining things, too sensitive, can't
take a joke, too serious, etc etc etc. Basically any statement which
tries to discount or deny our reality as we perceive it. We end
up wondering whether our partner is right and we are imagining things,
too sensitive, etc. We lose our willingness to trust in our own
judgment and perception.
When verbal abuse is disguised as a joke
it simply isn't funny. It may be a disparaging comment said with
a laugh or a smile, but which actually feels more like an attack
on our competencies, abilities or values, or it may be a sexist
joke which we find offensive. If we verbalise that we don't think
it was funny, we may then be discounted ("You don't know how
to take a joke.") or our partner may get angry with us. Some
abusers also purposely frighten or scare us and then laugh, as though
it were funny when it was actually designed to give us a fright.
In social situations I was often the butt of his jokes, and
some of them hurt. If I got upset he would make it look like I
was the crazy one by loudly proclaiming that he was only kidding
and that I was being too sensitive, so I taught myself to keep
my mouth shut and brush it off whenever he said or did something
that hurt. (from There
is Life After Abuse)
Blocking and Diverting are both ways
of preventing or controlling a discussion or changing the topic.
An example of blocking is simply refusing to discuss an issue, while
diverting changes the discussion from the original topic to one
of the abusers choice, often by criticising us in some way so that
we end up trying to defend ourselves or explain ourselves and lose
sight of the original aim of the conversation.
I tried talking to Pat about the way he was treating me but
it was like talking to a brick wall. He didn’t want to hear
it. (from There
is Life After Abuse)
"When I want your opinions, I’ll ask for them."
That hurt me. (from When
I Want Your Opinion ...)
Blaming and accusing are self-evident
and consist of statements or retorts which are designed to shift
the blame and the emphasis from abuser onto victim. While it is
easy to pick up blaming and accusing when we are, for instance,
accused of sleeping with someone else, it is not so easy to recognise
phrases such as "You always have to have the last word"
as an accusation.
When things went his way he was wonderful. When they didn’t,
well, he snapped at me and blamed me whether it was my fault or
not. If I got upset or challenged him, he’d get even angrier
and then bellow and threaten until I backed down. (from There
is Life After Abuse)
Judging and criticising are ways in which
our partner shows his/her lack of acceptance of us as an individual.
Phrases such as "you always think you are right" are an
example of judging - our abuser believes he/she can know and judge
us better than we can ourselves. Comments disguised as being 'constructive
criticism' are often actually judgmental, critical and abusive,
eg statements starting with "The problem with you is ...".
Making critical statements or telling critical 'stories' about you
to third parties are also in the same abusive category.
He would nit-pick on the tiniest, stupidest things, and make
me feel like an idiot. It seemed like he enjoyed pointing out
my shortcomings and mistakes and was constantly referring to me
as stupid, idiot, or moron. Pretty soon I believed it. I had always
been extremely self-critical, but after a while I began to hate
myself for being such an incompetent fool who couldn’t do
anything right. And even when I did manage to do something right
it was still never quite good enough for him, so I was still wrong.
(from There
is Life After Abuse)
Robert started to say that people were commenting on what
I was wearing and that I looked a bit of a slapper which was one
of his favourite words, and that I should try and tone it down
a bit, he was so convincing that I believed him. (from Joanne's
Story)
Trivialising is telling your partner
in some way that what they do is not significant, not valuable or
not worth doing. Abusers tend to trivialise our interests and hobbies,
our achievements and often our work or jobs (lack of appreciation
for the work of a stay-at-home mum being an obvious one). We may
feel confused or that we have not explained ourselves very well
so that our partner simply doesn't understand.
Threats are an overt form of verbal abuse,
like yelling and shouting. Threats are designed to frighten us and
verbally beat us into submission. Usually we will be threatened
either with pain or with loss, and the abuser will often choose
threats based on his/her knowledge of what we value most or what
we are most afraid of. In the context of physical abuse, threats
can be as debilitating as the violence itself. Threats are also
often made to prevent us from leaving an abusive relationship or
to persuade us back after leaving.
He told me if I didn’t take any pride in the way I
looked he would cheat on me. (from Belinda's
Story)
Name calling again is an overt, obvious
form of verbal abuse, designed to hurt or degrade us. Terms of endearment
can also be used in an abusive way, when spoken with obvious sarcasm
for example.
He gave me a nick name which referred to me looking like
a duck.[Muggy quacks.] He called me this in a ‘loving’
manner and manipulated me into thinking it was true. (from
Belinda's
Story)
His campaign of degradation intensified. He stopped being
‘nice’ about it and started calling me a whore, slut
and ‘skettel’ [patois for cheap prostitute]. These
words went through me like a hot knife through butter. (from
Belinda's
Story)
Forgetting includes denial and manipulation.
Verbal abusers will conveniently 'forget' incidents or promises
which are of importance to us - especially previous incidents of
verbal abuse. Denying by 'forgetting' (rather than blatant denial)
what has happened consistently is way beyond the normal forgetfulness
which we all sometimes have, and is in itself abusive.
Ordering is another overt form of verbal
abuse. If our partner orders us about, he/she is not treating us
as an equal individual but as a servant or someone who is exists
to fulfil the abusers wishes and needs. Ordering someone around
is an obvious indication that the abuser believes he/she has the
right to dominate and have power over us.
He took to ordering me around instead of asking, and if I
balked or didn’t jump when he wanted something I’d
get a withering verbal tirade, so I learned to jump really fast.
I’d still get the tirade, but the faster I jumped the faster
it would end. He felt that since I was his wife he didn’t
need to be polite, and I soon discovered that trying to convince
him otherwise was a useless proposition. (from There
is Life After Abuse)
Denial underpines most abuse. A verbal
abuser will deny outright that he/she has in any way been verbally
abusive or that his/her behaviour unacceptable. Denial is dangerous
for us because it denies our experiences, and often turns reality
on its head. When our partner denies outright that a conversation
or disagreement has taken place, that any hurt or upset has been
caused, or that he/she was shouting and angry, we may begin to doubt
our own perceptions.
Abusive Anger is something only
too many of us are familiar with. It is that unexplicable explosion
of rage which we try to pacify, and that brooding uneasiness we
can sense just in the presence of our partner. When we ask our partner
what they are angry about, the anger is likely to be denied outright,
or we are likely to be verbally abused in some of the ways described
above.
He said the problems in our marriage were because of me,
that he didn't have a problem. That he got angry because of what
I did or how I was; if I would just be better, than he wouldn't
have to get angry. So I fixed his favorite gourmet meals, cleaned
the house, said the right things and tried to change myself, thinking
he would stop being angry. But he always found something else
to be angry about. (from Kiara's
Story)
For more information on how to recognise and for suggestions on
how to tackle verbal abuse in your relationship we strongly recommend
Patricia Evan's book "The Verbally Abusive Relationship
- How to Recognise it and How to Respond".
Useful Links on Verbal Abuse:
Verbal
Abuse In Relationships - by Patricia Evans
Verbal
Abuse and its Devastating Impact - by Patricia Evans
Verbal
Abuse Precedes Domestic Violence - by Patricia Evans
Back to Types
of Abuse. |