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FINANCIAL
REASONS: Some women fear they won’t be able to support themselves and
their children. They may not have the confidence they need to seek
and obtain employment. They may have to leave with nothing more than
the clothes they are wearing. For many women, there is a stigma associated
with Social Assistance and they fear the difficulty of supporting their
children on Social Assistance Payments. THE CHILDREN:
Women often feel they would be hurting their children by depriving them
of a father’s presence and the things his income may provide for them.
They fear that their children will miss their father and that they will
become upset at the break up of their family even though violence is a
part of their lives.
HOPE: Many women still love their partner and hope that he will change. Their partner may promise to change and the relationship may, in fact, get better for a while; so, they begin to have hope. EMOTIONAL
DEPENDENCE: The woman may feel she can’t exist without her partner.
Because abusive men will attempt to isolate their partners from family
and friends, he may be the only adult person with whom she has any emotional
relationship at all.
SANCTITY OF MARRIAGE: Some women may stay in a marriage as a result of strongly-held religious and/or cultural beliefs. They may also believe it is the woman’s responsibility to stay in the marriage regardless of the abuse. ADVICE
FROM OTHERS: Family and friends may pressure women to stay and make
the marriage work. Together with pleas from her partner to stay,
this may work to keeping a woman in an abusive relationship.
MINIMIZATION
AND DENIAL: Minimization and denial of the abuse are a survival tactic
and they also work towards keeping a woman in an abusive situation.
Women have to put the abuse out of their minds in order to care for the
children, go to work, manage the household, etc. Minimization of
the violence helps a woman continue to function, but it also makes it easier
for her to stay because she tells herself its just not that bad.
GOOD TIMES:
In most cases, there are usually good aspects to the relationship.
Women stay for the positive qualities their partners have, and also for
the quiet periods, mostly after a violent episode, when the abuse is not
as obvious.
LOW SELF-ESTEEM:
Abused women generally have low self-esteem and little self-confidence.
They don’t think they are important enough for their well being to matter.
In many cases, they believe that no other man would love them.
LACK OF
ENERGY: Abused women are drained by constant stress. As a result,
they often feel immobilized, barely able to cope with the day-to-day demands
of children, work, and household management and, therefore, don’t have
the physical or emotional energy it takes to plan ahead or take bold steps.
FEAR OF
THE UNKNOWN: Abused women are often afraid of what is “out there.”
Because of the abuse, they have been isolated and are suffering from low
self-esteem. Often, they don’t have the confidence or energy to face
the unknown.
NO PLACE
TO GO: Because of being isolated by their partners, women often have
no family to turn to or they may fear that by turning to them they could
also put them in danger. There may be no abused women’s shelters
in their area. This is particularly true in remote areas.
FEAR FOR
HERSELF AND OTHERS: Many women fear that the abuse will get worse if
they leave. They fear that their partners may carry out the threats
they have made such as hurting the children or other family members, taking
the children, or committing suicide. In fact, many women continue
to be harassed and terrorized by former partners after they leave the abusive
situation. Women have also been killed.
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