"I
am married to a man that I believe mentally abuses me"
I am confused and depressed. I do not know how to deal
with this. I am tired and have no energy most of the time. Where do
I start to fix this?
Dear Friend, you are not alone. Many women are suffering in
marriages such as yours. You need to learn how to cope and how
to take better care of yourself. through building your self-esteem,
relationship with God, assertiveness skills and getting some support.
I would encourage you to begin to take some of the following steps:
1. Please call the National
Domestic Violence hotline at: 1-800-799-7233 or contact AACC for
a referral
to a mental health professional.
You need to get some counseling and resources. You
need to get some counseling to help you learn how to cope, be more
assertive and build your self-esteem.
2. Get close to God. You need faith. You need spiritual
strength and focus. You need to know that the God of the universe
cares about you and your situation. Pray. Read your Bible,
especially the New Testament book of John, Romans chapters 3-8; the
Psalms in the Old Testament: chapters 42, 46, 51, 121, 139, 145 and
more. Read
more about how to grow in your faith in this article:
How to Know God personally.
3. Go to your family doctor or a psychiatrist
for an evaluation about your depression and whether you need an antidepressant.
Also, you should have a complete physical to check if your hormones
and thyroid are functioning normally because there may be a biological
basis for your depression besides this situation. When people have
been going through an on-going crisis or stress or conflict they can
suffer depression and this depletes the neurochemicals in the brain
which affect a person's mood. Read my article on depression
and take the inventory.
4.
Your husband may benefit from an anger management program. But,
many spouses need a Batterer's intervention program since they tend
to be controllers and blame the other spouse for the abuse. See What's
Good About Anger? for information on the courses and book. Ask
your husband to attend counseling with you or a marriage retreat.
You can check out Prep's
Fighting for Your Marriage web site for a seminar or retreat
in your locality. Read this book together: A
Christian Guide to Fighting for Your Marriage by Scott
Stanley, Howard Markman, Susan Blumberg, Dean Edell found on our resources
page. You can order it right now.
5. Grow in assertiveness skills. Read Assert
Yourself and order books such as: What's
Good About Anger?, and Asserting
Yourself found on our resources
page.
6. You need to take a time-out when your husband becomes verbally
abusive. After the time-out period (30 minutes to one hour) you can
talk with him about the issue and both make some requests. Make sure
you talk about the issue within 24 hours. If he follows
you around the house verbally abusing you then you may need to leave
the house until he can calm down.
The reason that you feel so confused, depressed and
fatigued is that you feel helpless and hopeless about your marriage
and the emotional pain you feel when he is verbally abusing you.
Assertiveness, counseling, faith, friends who are supportive, a church
where you can get pastoral guidance and prayer from others, reading
the Bible, and medication can all help you to improve your communication
skills, coping skills and provide you with spiritual strength.
You can change even if your husband doesn't change. And you
can investigate how you may be contributing to the problems and how
to change your behavior which may be provoking your husband to anger. Proverbs
15:1 reads: "a gentle answer turns away wrath, but a harsh word
stirs up anger." NIV
Your
husband needs to be responsible for his behavior. There is no guarantee
that when you change.....he will.
Men have a tendency to want to fix problems quickly in a marriage,
but one can't fix a relationship, one has to learn skills in
communication and conflict management to build the relationship.
Take care of yourself. Get some exercise.
Think about going back to school or getting a part-time job.
Take some time to get together with friends.
I hope this will give you hope and encouragement.
Many times verbal and mental abuse will escalate. You need to be
prepared with a safety plan. See: Safe Relationships for information
on how to protect yourself. Talk with a pastor and seek domestic
violence resources.
Do
what you can to grow in Christ, get fellowship and support in a
local church. If you don't have a church check out Willow
Creek for a referral to a solid evangelical church near you.
God bless you! Lynette Hoy,
NCC, LCPC
Order
the Stop the Victim Syndrome! an
online/email course for handling abusive relationships
for only $15.00!
Take
the Stop the Victim Syndrome! inventory
to see if you are in an abusive relationship. This
online course will help you determine whether you are in an
abusive relationship and then, help you learn skills to to deal with
the abusive person in your life. There
are several parts to this course which you will be working on:
1. evaluating the situation/abuse,
2. discovering the biblical perspective on your relationship,
3. your response and behavior in your relationships,
4. improving your support,
5. your personal needs: emotionally and physically, and
6. personal steps to change.
You will also be given further resources.
You can access this course online or by email.
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