blog.notmyidea.org/content/Lectures/2024-04-10-emotional-abuse.md
2024-04-23 23:05:38 +02:00

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Emotional Abuse Marti Tamm Loring draft

Regardless of the terminology [...] this type of violence dismembers the victim's self by systematically attacking her personality, style of communication, accomplishment, values and dreams.

Rather, the abuser perceives the victim in terms of his own needs and wishes, while the victim struggles to connect with him in a mutually validating and empathic manner. When her efforts are repeatedly met with scornful refusals and other forms of emotional abuse, the victim becomes traumatized and clings ever more desperately to the abuser.

the interview with the emotionally abused group provided numerous examples of covert communication abuse — discounts, negation, projection, denial, negative labeling, and abandonment Each woman in this group reported that her husband habitually implied that her feelings and ideas were inadequate and insignificant. This insidious violence clearly had a powerful negative effect on these women's lives. Its subtle destructiveness was harder to bear than overt threats and criticisms.

Attachment

Disruption of connection is the core of emotional abuse, while the dstruggle to attach is the hallmark of the emotionally abused woman. The typical abuser moves in and out of bonding with the victim, periodically sharing warmth and empathy, then cutting them off with overt and covert abuse. Confused by the intermittent connection and struggling to regain it, the victim clings anxiously to the abuser. Her harsh self-blame echoes the abuser's demeaning comments and becomes and internalized shaming mechanism, diminishing self-esteem and eroding the sense of self.


A victim of emotional abuse usually continues to seek attachment with an abuser who has withdrawn his affection. Hoping to regain the lost warmth, she may cling to him tenaciously. Attachment, in this specialized sense, is therefore different from connection, a relationship characterized by each partner's efforts to empathize with a respond to the other.


When couples tend to accommodate to each other's style of attachment, the more verbal partner will make a conscious effort to cut back on problem-solving discussions, while the less verbal person will strive to open up more often.

In emotional abuse, there is no such respect or attempt to compromise. Instead, the abuser ridicules and demeans the victim's style of attachment and other unique forms of relating. His behavioral repertoire is limited and is driven by his fear of loss and need to control. He displays little care and consideration for his partner or her feelings, and he ignores one of the essential components of the caring process — increase knowledge and understanding of the other person in order to find better ways of responding to him or her.