Anonymous wrote:Wow. I was in an abusive relationship in college, and I am glad the people I love don't hold it against me. It was a long, slow side into abuse (it wasn't physical until the very end) and I didn't realize how crazy it was until I got out of it. Shame on you.
OP here, this is actually exactly what I need to understand. I logically get that being in a relationship like that clouds your judgment, but then I see stuff he did in front of me, like screaming the N word, and I think, how can she be so blind to his actions? I don't feel blaming of her? But genuinely sad and not sure how to proceed and understand all of this.
She has a new boyfriend who is fine. OP, I need for you to repeatedly explain to me why you can't get over this. How long has it been she she broke up with the jerk? What is within you that you just cannot let go. Do you have daughters? Would you think your daughter is garbage if she became involved with an abusive jerk? Is your dad garbage? Do you have garbage daddy issues?
OP, please reply. I will be back to ask you the same questions again later today.
Anonymous wrote:I'm not going to theorize about why she stayed in the relationship other than to say that abusive relationships can be complicated, and there can be a lot of self-blame on the part of the abused person that makes them feel responsible for their abuser's bad behavior (including things like yelling the n-word) and thus like they can't break up with the abuser over it. She has ended that relationship, though, which can be very difficult for an abuse victim, so instead of viewing her as garbage for getting into the relationship, you could try looking at her as a person who has found her strength and did something admirable by moving on from that awful relationship. That she's now with someone who doesn't appear to have those same traits as her last boyfriend supports this view much more than it does your view that she's just an awful person.
Wow. I was in an abusive relationship in college, and I am glad the people I love don't hold it against me. It was a long, slow side into abuse (it wasn't physical until the very end) and I didn't realize how crazy it was until I got out of it. Shame on you.
OP here, this is actually exactly what I need to understand. I logically get that being in a relationship like that clouds your judgment, but then I see stuff he did in front of me, like screaming the N word, and I think, how can she be so blind to his actions? I don't feel blaming of her? But genuinely sad and not sure how to proceed and understand all of this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I grew up with a cousin who I feel v close to. She doesn't date a lot, but three years ago she brought a boyfriend on an annual trip who was a completely an inexcusable garbage person. Racist, homophobic, black out morning drunk, and her arms were covered in bruises that weekend. There was a ton of attempts to intervene in the months following as the extent of the horribleness of the relationship and him had all the hallmarks of abuse and control. The next year she tried to bring him again, and I was nominated to stand up for the family and tell her no because we had babies in the house that year and he was so horrendous we were scared to have him around the kids.
They have since broken up, and she's moved on to a new bf who seems fine. Smoke has cleared. However, although I am not the type of person to hold onto things, and I strongly believe you don't know what's going on with people often so you should reserve judgment, I can not get over this. My view of her has changed drastically. I used to think she was a smart, thoughtful person, but her choice of this guy, who she was with for many years in the end, is so incredible, I can't stop thinking if she was ok with him, she must be okay with everything he said and did (n words, homophobic slurs, etc). I think it was an abusive relationship so I "take comfort" in perhaps thinking he had a hold over her that I can't understand. But I am hoping to get an outside perspective on how someone who is a social worker and has always had strong values would see something in a person like this. Although this is in the past, I can't get over it, and on a logistical level it's getting complicated bc I avoid her now, and the annual trip is mere weeks away. I want to be empathetic and understanding but is she a secret garbage person too?
Wow. I was in an abusive relationship in college, and I am glad the people I love don't hold it against me. It was a long, slow side into abuse (it wasn't physical until the very end) and I didn't realize how crazy it was until I got out of it. Shame on you.
Anonymous wrote:I grew up with a cousin who I feel v close to. She doesn't date a lot, but three years ago she brought a boyfriend on an annual trip who was a completely an inexcusable garbage person. Racist, homophobic, black out morning drunk, and her arms were covered in bruises that weekend. There was a ton of attempts to intervene in the months following as the extent of the horribleness of the relationship and him had all the hallmarks of abuse and control. The next year she tried to bring him again, and I was nominated to stand up for the family and tell her no because we had babies in the house that year and he was so horrendous we were scared to have him around the kids.
They have since broken up, and she's moved on to a new bf who seems fine. Smoke has cleared. However, although I am not the type of person to hold onto things, and I strongly believe you don't know what's going on with people often so you should reserve judgment, I can not get over this. My view of her has changed drastically. I used to think she was a smart, thoughtful person, but her choice of this guy, who she was with for many years in the end, is so incredible, I can't stop thinking if she was ok with him, she must be okay with everything he said and did (n words, homophobic slurs, etc). I think it was an abusive relationship so I "take comfort" in perhaps thinking he had a hold over her that I can't understand. But I am hoping to get an outside perspective on how someone who is a social worker and has always had strong values would see something in a person like this. Although this is in the past, I can't get over it, and on a logistical level it's getting complicated bc I avoid her now, and the annual trip is mere weeks away. I want to be empathetic and understanding but is she a secret garbage person too?
Anonymous wrote:
You don't have to get over it right now, OP. Only time will dampen your memory of her actions as other events come in between.
So for now try to interact with her as if that episode had not happened. Fake it.