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Tension Phase
This is the tension-building phase. The man becomes edgy, critical,
and just plain irritable. He doesn’t need a reason to
feel this way. She knows what's coming, and she may try
to pacify him. That's a waste of time. (In some instances
it actually triggers the second phase.) Being around the abuser
during this phase is like walking on eggshells. Basically,
the woman is in a Catch 22 because he may take it as a challenge,
which will set him off; and if she says nothing, he feels that
she is withdrawing and not giving him the attention he wants.
(Bottom line: he wants to control her.)
As he gets more and more tense, there is the inevitable escalation,
starting with small incidents involving yelling, slapping, and
calling her names "whore" or "slut". She
may try to pacify him, but he's on to her quickly, escalating
with his own techniques for rendering her helpless and releasing
his rage. If she acts nice and sweet, he feels she's giving
him license to let her have it. If she challenges him, she's
gone. This can go on for days; it can even go on for years.
Some women actually get so edgy that they finally do or say just
the thing that will "make him lose it”. This is not
to say that the woman’s in control, but only that many
victims feel that if they get that part over, go through the
violence, they’ll be back to "normal." |
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often begins
with victim's pregnancy, batterer is threatened by new
person and loss of attention |
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victim
knows he’s angry but doesn’t know why. She blames
self, tries to pacify |
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verbal
abuse begins (this is when couple needs to talk about it but
they don’t) |
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very common
for batterer to put fist through wall in this phase, tension
is very high |
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all the
other PATTERNS of non-physical abuse we looked at before on page
2 come into play here. |
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Battering Phase
He "loses it" and gets violent. Some women experience
emotional brutality, but usually the violence is physical; it
can lead to her death. The rage is blind and senseless. The man
is transformed into a madman. A woman will describe her husband
as physically transformed: his eyes bulge; the pupils are dilated;
he is seething with rage. Some men rage until they nearly pass
out, while others become calmer and calmer as they pulverize
everything and everyone in sight. These are some of our solid
and upright citizens ˆ civic leaders and professionals who
seem to be examples of success when they're out in society,
and "regular guys" who seem to be very gentle and kind.
It's important to realize that most women who kill their
batterers do so before he gets to this stage. They know what
is coming, and they kill him because they believe he will kill
them. But most bettered women don't kill their husbands,
and most batterers do not kill their victims. |
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his adrenaline
explodes |
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he beats
her up, throws her against things |
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all the
PATTERNS of physical abuse that we discussed before come into
action during this phase. |
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Repentance/Honeymoon Phase
After the brutality, Mr. Hyde reverts to the smart and charming
Dr. Jekyll: the psychopath disappears and is replaced by an often sweet,
loving and
very contrite man. Unless you see this transformation, it is hard to believe
that the two can be the same man. By this time the battered woman is in
such a physical and mental state that she is putty in his hands. While
he acts sweet, psychologists believe he is actually working his psychological
tactics, digging the claws of control more deeply into her soul. He cons
her into thinking that only a loving woman could put up with his level
of abuse, that she's the key to his emotional well-being. He wants
her to feel that he depends on her for forgiveness; at the same time, she
thinks that this is how she'll get back the "real" man.
She believes that his violent side is not the real person; rather, the "sweet" side
is. She doesn’t understand that the reverse is true; the sweet side
is a con, a lie, a more sophisticated tactic to get deeper into her and
suck the life out of her. This is precisely what these sick men live for.
It is important that batterers be seen for what they are. These men kill
helpless women. They brutalize pregnant women and often cause miscarriages
or even kill the mother. They lead some women to suicide or murder.
The magic window of opportunity for leaving is during phase one or between
phases two and three. Before he gets her back into bed, she must leave.
The part between the "honeymoon," phase three, and the tension-building
stage, phase one, is often the only time in their lives they are happy
together. |
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The kids
are happy, the world seems perfect. It is really hard for her
to leave in that period. |
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doesn't
exhibit violence in any way |
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lots of
loving phone calls, sweeps her off feet, persistent loving attention,
gifts and affection |
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he controls
with love |
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"Don't
go be with your friends, I want you to be with me" |
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he is calculating,
does not lose his temper, stays with her all the time, she can't
go anyplace alone |
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batterer
is so repentant, so loving the victim truly believes it won't
happen again and so does batterer |
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victim accepts
blame when she sees him so repentant |
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both try
to make everything right |
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Then they may go back into the first phase, but it is only a matter
of time until tension builds again, from the areas in his life where he‚s
not in control, and the cycle repeats itself again and again.
When the explosion comes, she may call 911, but often by the time the police
arrive, the man is calm, and back in control. Maybe the house is a mess;
the woman is probably hysterical. Who are the police going to believe?
If they are uninformed about a domestic abuse problem, they see a sobbing
woman, a calm man, and a messy house. If there are children, they may be
crying. This is where education is so important. Rather than arresting
the husband or boyfriend, the police may arrest her if the husband insists
that she was the violent person. They may tell her that if she insists
on his arrest, she will have to go to the police station, while the kids
will be put into foster care. Such episodes actually happen, though education
is changing that.
One thing you can do right now is find out what arrest policy and training
program your police department has. If it does not have a domestic violence
program, insist that one be started. Write letters to the editor of your
local paper and speak with others about the matter. Police are among the
most important people in the battle against violence. They must learn about
it, and the law must provide for the arrest of a batterer when the woman
reaches out for help. |
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