Why Men Don't Do Anything About It

sanctus

The Padre
Oct 27, 2006
4,558
48
48
Ontario
www.poetrypoem.com

Heres some information from Phil Cooks pamphlet for battered men.

[FONT=Verdana,Arial,Sans]HOW MEN COPE

Taking on a macho I can handle it attitude.

Even if you have been hurt much worse on an athletic playing field, that is not the same thing as being physically attacked by your intimate partner, which hurts emotionally as well as physically. Allowing this pattern to continue can result in depression, substance abuse, loss of confidence, even suicide. (At its worst, It has resulted in death at the hands or a partner or someone induced to kill you by the partner.)


Men Dont Tell.

This is the actual title of a fact-based CBS TV movie about male victims of domestic abuse. Keeping silent, (not confiding to a friend, relative or professional) is a common reaction of both male and female victims of domestic abuse; its embarrassing.


Men typically face a greater degree of disbelief and ridicule than do most women in this situation, which helps enforce the silence. Domestic violence victims make excuses for injuries that show (It was an accident or it happened while playing sports) when friends or medical personnel ask about them.

Hiding From it.


Men often escape a bad home life that they are afraid of by spending extra time at work, staying in their space (garage, den) at home, or even sleeping in the car or at a friends place.[/FONT]
 

tamarin

House Member
Jun 12, 2006
3,197
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Oshawa ON
Most men I know want extra space in their lives. They want time on their own. Some are religious about their yards and drive-ways. Many putter for hours in their garage. I never thought it might be abuse that pushed them there. Or maybe it's all psycho-babble. Psychology and its crusty older brother psychiatry are churlish twits most days.
 

sanctus

The Padre
Oct 27, 2006
4,558
48
48
Ontario
www.poetrypoem.com
Most men I know want extra space in their lives. They want time on their own. Some are religious about their yards and drive-ways. Many putter for hours in their garage. I never thought it might be abuse that pushed them there. Or maybe it's all psycho-babble. Psychology and its crusty older brother psychiatry are churlish twits most days.

You'd be surprised at the numbers of physically or emotionally abused men. I recently began working with a men's group of members who are dealing with, for the most part, emotional abuse. There are some incredible stories coming out of the sharing. Most men do not have an avenue open to them if they are in an abusive relationship. Certainly other men will certainly ridicule them for being "sissies".
 

tamarin

House Member
Jun 12, 2006
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Oshawa ON
And a lot will have to do with the stress of aging. It is a different world. By living longer we invite all the tigers of boredom to our homes and beds. And so many of us have married on the flip of a dime. Maybe the answer is to make marriage renewable and allow outs every five years. Other generations mercifully avoided the gnawing staleness that enters most lives that are lived beyond what they deserve.
 

Curiosity

Senate Member
Jul 30, 2005
7,326
138
63
California
I have a battered men and women group which meets every Thursday evening after work
We meet every week, perhaps with one exception during the Christmas season if a Thursday night is inconvenient but we meet 51 times a year.
There are almost as many men as women in the group.
The stories shared could not be dreamed by Steven Spielberg.
Amazing group - have taught me much - and very few fit any stereotype we can think of.
 

TenPenny

Hall of Fame Member
Jun 9, 2004
17,467
139
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Location, Location
And a lot will have to do with the stress of aging. It is a different world. By living longer we invite all the tigers of boredom to our homes and beds. And so many of us have married on the flip of a dime. Maybe the answer is to make marriage renewable and allow outs every five years. Other generations mercifully avoided the gnawing staleness that enters most lives that are lived beyond what they deserve.
I'm trying to understand this comment in context of this thread. Are you suggesting that boredom and stress lead to abuse of men? And that the solution is to make marriage renewable?
Seriously, I can't decipher your point here in this context.
 

sanctus

The Padre
Oct 27, 2006
4,558
48
48
Ontario
www.poetrypoem.com
And a lot will have to do with the stress of aging. It is a different world. By living longer we invite all the tigers of boredom to our homes and beds. And so many of us have married on the flip of a dime. Maybe the answer is to make marriage renewable and allow outs every five years. Other generations mercifully avoided the gnawing staleness that enters most lives that are lived beyond what they deserve.


No, not with aging. that is not at all a factor in the abuse these people suffer.

Most stories of abuse begins shortly after the couple are together, and sometimes carries on for years. One man in the group has been through 20 odd years of the most damaging emotional abuse I've seen. It has left him insecure and self-hating, and his wife seems to enjoy every minute of his pain.
 

sanctus

The Padre
Oct 27, 2006
4,558
48
48
Ontario
www.poetrypoem.com
I have a battered men and women group which meets every Thursday evening after work
We meet every week, perhaps with one exception during the Christmas season if a Thursday night is inconvenient but we meet 51 times a year.
There are almost as many men as women in the group.
The stories shared could not be dreamed by Steven Spielberg.
Amazing group - have taught me much - and very few fit any stereotype we can think of.

That is becoming my experience too. mind you, it is just a men's group. I don't have a mixed group yet. But to see grown men break down in tears..well..I'm sure you know what I'm talking about:)
 

tamarin

House Member
Jun 12, 2006
3,197
22
38
Oshawa ON
What I see in my own age group is relationships, far past saving, linger on for financial reasons. Or for reasons of duty, the honourable thing done to aid a declining spouse. When a person feels bereft of choice it's damaging. A lot of it, of course, will be self-inflicted. Yet, abuse is a clever little bastard. Some women achieve it simply by limiting the free time many men crave. A guy that finds solace in his yard will find each outing shaped by an extra duty the wife imposes. A guy that lives in his garage will be harassed by errands the wife chooses from hour to hour via the phone. It is uninterruption they crave. And this will and can save them. Yet, how many would term it abuse when time deprivation is the issue in question?
 

Curiosity

Senate Member
Jul 30, 2005
7,326
138
63
California
Dear Sanctus

What I have learned is how ignorant we are about couple relationships when nature is calling to join up and produce with or without love.

I am still learning - the women I 'get' ...the men are a whole new world for me and we work on them having the power to teach me so they can relate their stories without hesitation or embarrassment. Silence does terrible things to men - in their guilt and self-hatred.

I always thought batterers felt powerful (men and women too) - and they do not in reality - they feel trapped and pushed into a corner and react the only way they know how - by exerting force.
 

Curiosity

Senate Member
Jul 30, 2005
7,326
138
63
California
What I see in my own age group is relationships, far past saving, linger on for financial reasons. Or for reasons of duty, the honourable thing done to aid a declining spouse. When a person feels bereft of choice it's damaging. A lot of it, of course, will be self-inflicted. Yet, abuse is a clever little bastard. Some women achieve it simply by limiting the free time many men crave. A guy that finds solace in his yard will find each outing shaped by an extra duty the wife imposes. A guy that lives in his garage will be harassed by errands the wife chooses from hour to hour via the phone. It is uninterruption they crave. And this will and can save them. Yet, how many would term it abuse when time deprivation is the issue in question?
Tamarin Women by their very nature often use their tongue and wits rather than fists and fighting.
 

MikeyDB

House Member
Jun 9, 2006
4,612
63
48
Curiosity
How does the sexual stereotyping of social -role definitions strike you? How does the engine of greed that conditions men to insensitivity and "machismo" at the cost of self-respect and respect for others strike you?
How is the blame ladled on men for their despicable appetites satisfied by a multi-billion dollar porn industry? How is the human propensity for sacrificing our children and future generations as pawns in global conflicts...that sees the ancient practices of male children as the first sacrifice to the "cause"..repeated in the name of senseless nonsense?
I've got a news bulletin for you Curio...human evolution stopped thirty-thousand years ago.
 

Niflmir

A modern nomad
Dec 18, 2006
3,460
58
48
Leiden, the Netherlands
Me and my wife joke about this from time to time. It is one of those things that really shouldn't be joked about, but one time I did something annoying to tease her and she fake punched me in the side. I said, "Abuse!" and she asked what I was going to do about it, I told her I would just tell everyone I fell down the stairs, since no one would believe me anyways. So its really just some satire in bad taste, really, really bad taste.

I was reading some bizarre domestic abuse case one time where the neighbours were always complaining about screams next door and things breaking so the police arrested the husband for domestic abuse. As the course progressed they realized that they had arrested the victim and charged the wife.

The fact that people don't come forward is frightening.
 

Sparrow

Council Member
Nov 12, 2006
1,202
23
38
Quebec
The battered man's worst enemy is men. If is was not for the fear of judgment from other men they would talk more about their problem.
Have you noticed that many men will accept a man if he is a wife abuser but never a battered man? I have never understood this!
Society has studied the ins and outs of the battered women for years, now it is time to do the same for the men.
 

TenPenny

Hall of Fame Member
Jun 9, 2004
17,467
139
63
Location, Location
Me and my wife joke about this from time to time. It is one of those things that really shouldn't be joked about, but one time I did something annoying to tease her and she fake punched me in the side. I said, "Abuse!" and she asked what I was going to do about it, I told her I would just tell everyone I fell down the stairs, since no one would believe me anyways. So its really just some satire in bad taste, really, really bad taste.

I was reading some bizarre domestic abuse case one time where the neighbours were always complaining about screams next door and things breaking so the police arrested the husband for domestic abuse. As the course progressed they realized that they had arrested the victim and charged the wife.

The fact that people don't come forward is frightening.
We had a young guy working here, he was in his early 20s, good sized lad, fit, muscular, worked out, etc etc....one morning he came in with a black eye....when we asked about it, he said he got it from his girlfriend, because he was, in his words, "talking when he should have been listening."
I was stunned, and I pointed out that if his girlfriend has no qualms about hitting a guy twice her size, then what would she be likely to do to her kids, if they ever had any? Abuse is abuse, and I asked him why he put up with it. We were all quite amazed that he would tolerate it, and suggested he should move out.
They did break up a couple of months later, he's better off for it.
 

Niflmir

A modern nomad
Dec 18, 2006
3,460
58
48
Leiden, the Netherlands
It is actually quite incredible actually. On television, that great social normaliser, it is quite common to see a woman slap a man when he says or does something his partner disagrees with and the man is generally portrayed as deserving. On the flip side, men who slap women are always portrayed as villainous. I have always held the firm belief that I should treat every person attacking me the same way, that is to usually run. A little old lady with a knife is just as deadly as that stereotypical scarred ex-con with a knife. Life as a coward beats the hero's grave.
 

s243a

Council Member
Mar 9, 2007
1,352
15
38
Calgary
One thing that empowers husband beaters is that men aren't allowed to fight back. Violent woman will also bite and throw things like dishes and canned goods. They are also more likely to use a knife then a man.
 

hermanntrude

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Jun 23, 2006
7,267
118
63
46
Newfoundland!
It is actually quite incredible actually. On television, that great social normaliser, it is quite common to see a woman slap a man when he says or does something his partner disagrees with and the man is generally portrayed as deserving. On the flip side, men who slap women are always portrayed as villainous. I have always held the firm belief that I should treat every person attacking me the same way, that is to usually run. A little old lady with a knife is just as deadly as that stereotypical scarred ex-con with a knife. Life as a coward beats the hero's grave.

I totally agree. Violence is wrong, in either direction. Just because it's a horrible thing for a man to hit his wife it doesnt mean it's OK for a woman to hit her husband. There are many double standards like this. Sexism goes both ways.
 

GenGap

Electoral Member
Mar 19, 2007
120
3
18
Ottawa, Ontario
It is really sad, that there is not much help out there for men. Stats have poven that men are more of a victim these days because no one believes that a women can inflict harm.


Heres some information from Phil Cooks pamphlet for battered men.

[FONT=Verdana,Arial,Sans]HOW MEN COPE [/FONT]

[FONT=Verdana,Arial,Sans]Taking on a macho I can handle it attitude. [/FONT]

[FONT=Verdana,Arial,Sans]Even if you have been hurt much worse on an athletic playing field, that is not the same thing as being physically attacked by your intimate partner, which hurts emotionally as well as physically. Allowing this pattern to continue can result in depression, substance abuse, loss of confidence, even suicide. (At its worst, It has resulted in death at the hands or a partner or someone induced to kill you by the partner.) [/FONT]


[FONT=Verdana,Arial,Sans]Men Dont Tell. [/FONT]

[FONT=Verdana,Arial,Sans]This is the actual title of a fact-based CBS TV movie about male victims of domestic abuse. Keeping silent, (not confiding to a friend, relative or professional) is a common reaction of both male and female victims of domestic abuse; its embarrassing. [/FONT]


[FONT=Verdana,Arial,Sans]Men typically face a greater degree of disbelief and ridicule than do most women in this situation, which helps enforce the silence. Domestic violence victims make excuses for injuries that show (It was an accident or it happened while playing sports) when friends or medical personnel ask about them. [/FONT]

[FONT=Verdana,Arial,Sans]Hiding From it. [/FONT]


[FONT=Verdana,Arial,Sans]Men often escape a bad home life that they are afraid of by spending extra time at work, staying in their space (garage, den) at home, or even sleeping in the car or at a friends place.[/FONT]