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Escaping Abusive Relationships: Therapists Keep This Quiet

April 9, 2015 Kellie Jo Holly

The aftermath of escaping abusive relationships is an emotional minefield many aren't prepared for. I can help you avoid some of those mines. Read this.

Escaping abusive relationships involves more than the escape plan, and you won't know the depth of your problems until you break free. But, as you plan your escape, it often feels as if getting out of the abuse will make everything better. And once you get out, you will have well-deserved stages of bliss - you will often feel much better! But at first, as often as you feel better, you will feel worse or confused or doubtful of your ability to create a life of your own. The aftermath of escaping abusive relationships is an emotional minefield that therapists won't warn you about. I can help you avoid some of those mines.

 

First of all, your therapist does not want to deter you from planning to escape or escaping abusive relationships. They know that after you leave, you will gain your mental footing and you will become emotionally and mentally healthy. Secondly, therapists aren't psychics. There's no guarantee that you will experience even one scary emotion after leaving abuse. You could be the exception, blossom immediately and maintain that bloom for the rest of your life!

But reality says you'll experience emotions similar to many other survivors of domestic abuse, so I want to give you a heads up on some confusing emotions you may encounter after escaping. If you know your strange emotions are normal, then you're more likely to sail through them without returning to your abuser.

Escaping Abusive Relationships: The Other 3 Things Your Therapist Won't Tell You

For numbers 1 and 2, see Part I, Escaping Abuse: 5 Things Your Therapist Won't Tell You

3.) You could feel an overwhelming desire to speak well of your partner to your friends, no matter what he or she did to you.

Escaping abuse is the first and most important thing you can do for your mental health. Find out what you could experience after you leave.How did you make up for the things your abuser said you did wrong during the relationship? You somehow soothed your ex-partner's ego, got them to calm down, apologized, or perhaps purposefully let them overhear you speak well of them to others. Old habits die hard. You know your partner feels angry with you for leaving them. You know they want to react in their typical way. Calming his or her ego was priority number one during the cycle of violence, so don't be surprised to hear yourself say things that remind you of your ex's better qualities (real or imagined).

Additionally, you could feel compelled to say good things about your ex out of guilt.

4.) You could feel incredibly guilty for leaving your abuser for any number of reasons.

Your logical mind knows that you have no reason to feel guilty. The abuse wasn't your fault, you didn't cause it and you couldn't stop it. But holy cow! Your heart bleeds for the person you left! He never had a good example of how a man should act. She fell victim to a sexual predator during her formative years. You feel sorry for them.

I challenge you to re-channel any guilty feelings about leaving to how you feel about your partner's behavior toward you. One of the side-effects of abuse is forgetting to pay attention to your feelings. You feel guilty because you're imagining what your ex might feel, not because you did something wrong. When you start feeling guilty or hear yourself giving your ex a glowing review, get in tune with your emotions and leave what your ex could be feeling alone.

5.) You could find yourself mourning the death of the abusive relationship.

I know you don't want to feel like a victim anymore. You're a survivor and you escaped abuse. But you must allow yourself to mourn the death of the relationship, and more than likely, you will feel intense loss and sadness. For me, I discovered that I didn't so much need to mourn the marriage I had as the marriage I wished I had. The dream of growing old with the man who finally learned to love completely was very difficult to let go.

When the sadness overwhelmed me, I let myself cry and be angry; but I reminded myself that I mourned for something I would never have and that escaping my abusive relationship was the best thing I could have done. And it was.

As you prepare for escaping your abusive relationship (or imagine what leaving would feel like), I hope you look at your possible future emotions as a rite of passage. No matter how horrible you may feel during recovery, escaping abusive relationships is the only way to guarantee your mental and emotional health will improve. Expect the unexpected, including the urge to return to the abuser, and talk your way through it with your friends and a therapist.

Although your therapist didn't give you a heads up about how hard it would be to stay gone after escaping your abusive relationship, he or she will definitely be by your side as your story unfolds. A therapist's job is not to guess what you might feel, but to help you deal with what you do feel. And you won't know what you will feel for sure until you leave.

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APA Reference
Jo, K. (2015, April 9). Escaping Abusive Relationships: Therapists Keep This Quiet, HealthyPlace. Retrieved on 2024, November 22 from https://www.healthyplace.com/blogs/verbalabuseinrelationships/2015/04/escaping-abusive-relationships-therapists-part2



Author: Kellie Jo Holly

Nadine
April, 21 2018 at 8:06 am

I am lying in bed crying and feeling sorry for my ex partner of 8 years (with whom) I have a 7 yr old daughter.
I mainly experienced emotional abuse but occassionally physical (slap on the lips head and face). Additionally he is suffering from psychosis/possibly schizophrenia but he was nwver diagnosed as refuses help. I feel guilty that I had to pack my bags and leave together with my daughter to live with my parents thousands of miles away. He won't reply to anyone's call or texts. He sometimes just calls and hangs up. His own family said I will have to go back to my parents but J still feel so bad knowing what terrible state he must be in.
Any advice is appreciated.

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

Natasha Tracy
April, 22 2018 at 8:13 am

Hi Nadine,
I'll let the authors of this blog address your abuse concerns but I did want to pass along a resource for you. This book is about getting a person with a mental illness to accept help: https://www.amazon.com/Someone-Mental-Illness-Treatment-Anniversary/dp/0967718937/ref=sr_…
(I'm not affiliated with it and neither is HealthyPlace.)
It has helped many, I highly suggest you look it up.
- Natasha Tracy
- Blog Manager

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

Nadine
April, 24 2018 at 2:28 am

Thanks for your reply Natasha..much appreciated.

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

TauntedOctopus
April, 29 2019 at 1:53 am

My ex is bi-polar and has psychotic episodes. Mostly due to continued drug use. It would do well to have your number changed and/or document anything he texts if he does. I understand feeling sorry for him, but I've learned that I needed to instead start taking my feelings and self care into priority, as well as my daughters. During the relationship so much of my time was spent worrying about him instead of me and my daughter. Hes grown and has to take care of himself, it's not your responsibility. Attention tactics are something abusers will use to try to rope you back in or impose some form of control over you, your thoughts and your feelings. You did the right thing choosing yourself and your kid. You're doing good reaching out here for help and support. Keep going, keep working on yourself. ♡

John Schreiber
April, 25 2018 at 11:19 am

i was talking with my gilrfriend last night, when i found out that a few days ago, her soon-to-be ex-boyfriend, after she tried to break it off, not only raped her, but also threatened to kill not only her, but her mother as well if she tried to go to the police. she also said that she was having powerful self-harm urges, and that she was so tired of all of this that she just wanted to die...
what i want to know most right now, is what to do or say either to or for her in order to help her cope with all this as best as i can.
Any advice would be GREATLY appreciated.
Thank you,
John L. Schreiber

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

April, 26 2018 at 4:47 am

Hi John,
Thank you for reaching out. I'm Emma-Marie, one of the Verbal Abuse in Relationships bloggers. The situation your girlfriend is in does indeed sound dangerous. It may not be wise for her to try to stand up to him or leave the relationship until she is in a safe place and is well-protected. Abusers are often at their most dangerous when they fear losing control, usually at the point of separation. For this reason, it's important your girlfriend doesn't tell her partner about any actions she is thinking of taking.
This man's threats are not only frightening, they are illegal. If you think she is ever in immediate danger, one of you should call the police immediately -- though I can understand why she would be reluctant to do what without a support system in place.
I'm not sure if you're in a romantic or platonic relationship with this woman, but you seem to care a great deal for her. What she needs right now is someone to listen and help her move in the right direction, but you can only do so much. I would suggest you encourage your girlfriend reach out to a domestic violence helpline, the details of which can be found on our hotlines and resources page. A domestic violence organization can put her in touch with local refuges, support groups and give practical advice about how to stay safe and form an escape plan. You should also consider calling the Suicide Prevention Lifeline if you're worried she may harm herself -- the fact that she's expressed suicidal thoughts to you is concerning, and I think they should be followed up.
It's clear this woman is in danger, and action needs to be taken. It's great that she has someone like you on her side, John, so well done for reaching out on her behalf. Just be sure to tread carefully and seek advice from a domestic violence advisor before stepping in. That phone call is your first step. Good luck!

John Schreiber
April, 28 2018 at 10:14 am

thank you so much for such a quick reply,
i've taken screenshots of both numbers you mentioned above, and have passed them on to a number of friends of mine who are also worried about this situation, just in case. this is a BIG help for all of us, and i am quite eager to see what the results may show.
thank you again.

carla
June, 7 2018 at 8:33 am

I have an emotional and mental abuser that gas lights me all the time. He his disabled and I supported us to help him get his disability. However, he's a mssive gambler that refuses to quit or says he's quitting his way which is by slowing down. He can't have utilities or possessions in his name from previous debt, and 2 little girls from a previous marriage. Having children has been my 1 goal in life and this has been the closest j came. But I want to escape the mental and emotional abuse. It controls me. If I leave his world will get turned upside down and so will the kids I love. He threatens to distort the car he bought but is in my name and I pay for. Its the one possession I feel he owed me from the amount of $ I've worked for and he blew. I feel trapped by empathy and it's suffocating the life out of me. He says everything is my fault and in my mind. I question everything no matter how much I try to stay strong. I'm crumbling.

Why Me
June, 13 2018 at 6:29 pm

I’ve been in a 9 month relationship after being single for almost 10 years. I finally let someone in and truly gave my all to this man. The false accusations started almost immediately. 3 weeks in to knowing eachother we were on a late night phone call while he was at work. On two separate occasions within a few weeks of each other I was accused of having sex with another man while on the phone with him. The man he accused me to be with happened to be my best friends husband. I couldn’t wrap my mind around this. I know for a fact that I would never do anything of the sort and for sure he had to believe that I was not that kind of person to do something so horrible and disgusting. I spent the next 9 months trying to convince this man that I was not that person meanwhile any and every chance he got he verbally attacked me saying that he couldn’t trust me and that every time we are out in public I have wandering eyes. Over and over again I found myself being verbally attacked over things he falsely accused me of. It got as bad as being accused of wanting his brother. I did everything to try and reassure him that I was a good person that had no intention on hurting or playing games. I began feeling emotionally battered. No matter positive I did he would praise me and act grateful but I knew the verbal assault would soon follow. I find myself putting an end to a relationship I thought I would manage to hold together but failed. My feelings are scrambled and confusing but I’m pretty sure my only option is to leave the relationship. In a sense I feel a little sadness for him. I don’t know how else to feel.

gg
October, 26 2018 at 7:09 pm

You are not responsible for his behavior
(to anjel and the other angels here)

Kathleen
November, 20 2018 at 5:32 am

I left an abusive relationship for 5 years now.
The abuse is now taking place on my five year old son when he visit his dad.
I feel helpless that I cannot protect my son.
Only recently my son reported he has being choked by his dad for spilling something on the floor.
The child service do not believe my son disclosure.
What can I Do?

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