"Action is a great restorer and builder of confidence. Inaction is not only the result, but the cause, of fear. Perhaps the action you take will be successful; perhaps different action or adjustments will have to follow. But any action is better than no action at all." - Norman Vincent Peale
Sunday, October 7, 2012
Domestic Violence Awareness Month Day 7
Saturday, October 6, 2012
Domestic Violence Awareness Month Day 6
Remember if you or know someone in need of help and resources, call 1-800-799-7233, 1.800.787.3224 (TTY) or visit the website www.safe4all.org.
The following text and other information about domestic violence from The White House can be found here http://www.whitehouse.gov/1is2many
Presidential Proclamation -- National Domestic Violence Awareness Month, 2012
NOW, THEREFORE, I, BARACK OBAMA, President of the United States of America, by virtue of the authority vested in me by the Constitution and the laws of the United States, do hereby proclaim October 2012 as National Domestic Violence Awareness Month. I call on all Americans to speak out against domestic violence and support local efforts to assist victims of these crimes in finding the help and healing they need.
Friday, October 5, 2012
Domestic Violence Awareness Month Day 5
Thursday, October 4, 2012
National Domestic Violence Awareness Month Day 4
If you or someone you know is need of help and resources, please call 800-799-7233 or 800-787-3224 TTY or visit the website www.safe4all.org.
Today's awareness comes in the form of an article I wrote for The Montclarion, my college newspaper which is why some of the information contained here may not be relevant, but still contains helpful info. The link can be found here http://www.themontclarion.org/archives/3746555
You know October is here when all the talk on campus is of
Homecoming and dreaded midterms. However, something else is happening.
It is National Domestic Violence Awareness Month, also known as Intimate
Partner Violence. For me, it has been my mission since leaving my
abusive marriage, to inform, educate and empower folks who are being
abused or know someone in such a relationship. To let you and them know,
you are not alone and help is out there. This year, I created a
Facebook page to serve this purpose: www.facebook.com/DomesticViolenceAffectsEvery1.
You may ask what domestic violence is. People often believe domestic violence is usually an isolated one-time incident that affects only poor and uneducated people, where abusers are only men who are also alcohol abusers and that it is the fault of the women for staying in these relationships.
Getting help means acknowledging there is a problem. Assistance can be found in the United States by calling 1-800-799-SAFE (7233) or 1-800-787-3244 (TTY) for referrals for help in a given area. In New Jersey, one can call 1-800-572-SAFE (SAFE). There is also information on the Internet, but be careful, as web browsing on a computer you and your abuser share can be tracked. If you find yourself in this situation, find another computer to use, such as one belonging to a trusted friend or at the library. This holds true for your cell phone, too. Delete phone numbers or assign false names in the contact list.
During the planning stages of leaving, there is helpful but often overlooked advice. The Coalition also suggests, “You should take important papers and documents with you to enable you to apply for benefits or take legal action. Important papers you should take include social security cards and birth certificates for you and your children, your marriage license, leases or deeds in your name or both yours and your partner’s names, your checkbook, your charge cards, bank statements and charge account statements, insurance policies, proof of income for you and your spouse (pay stubs or W-2’s) and any documentation of past incidents of abuse (photos, police reports, medical records, etc.).”
If you find yourself looking for help here on campus, visit the Women’s Center in Student Center Room 421. Speak with the director, Esmilda Abreu-Hornbostel.
This semester, the Center is conducting a series of conversations on this issue, such as Cycle Breakers. This is a conversation group aimed to combat domestic violence and discuss thoughts and feelings on this issue. It is held on Tuesdays from 2 to 3 p.m. in Student Center Room 421.
In addition, the newly formed Women’s and Gender Studies club will be hosting an event on Oct. 16 from 2:30 to 5:00 in UN 2010. There will be a screening of the film Crime After Crime, followed by a discussion, and presentation by yours truly.
Sometimes we watch our loved ones who we suspect are experiencing domestic violence from afar and we wish and beg them to get out, but it is not always that easy, especially when there are children involved or their immigration status is dependent on the spouse or partner. However, there are steps you can take while encouraging empowering friends and loved ones in this difficult and emotional situation. Be supportive of whether they wish to stay or not, but if they are willing, help them develop a safety plan, sit with them as they call the hotline and offer to do Internet research. Most of all, though, remember it is their decision to make, not yours.
•Change your phone number and screen calls.
•Save and document all contacts, messages, injuries or other incidents involving the batterer.
•Change locks if the batterer has a key.
•Avoid staying alone.
•Plan how to get away if confronted by an abusive partner.
•If you have to meet your partner, do so in a public place.
•Vary your routine.
•Notify school and work contacts.
•Call a shelter for battered women.
•Think of a safe place to go if an argument occurs – avoid rooms with no exits (bathroom) or rooms with weapons (kitchen).
•Think about and make a list of safe people to contact.
•Keep change with you at all times.
•Memorize all important numbers.
•Establish a “code word” or “sign” so that family, friends, teachers or co-workers know when to call for help.
•Think about what you will say to your partner if he or she becomes violent.
Wednesday, October 3, 2012
Domestic Violence Awareness Month Day 3
If you or know someone in need of domestic violence resources help is available by calling 1-800-799-7233 or 800-787-3244 or visiting the website www.safe4all.org
Why Don't You Just Leave?
When I began to have the courage to speak up about the abusive marriage I was in, I was often asked by others "why don't you just leave?" The truth is I did on three separate occasions before I finally left for good. There are a myriad of reasons why the abused stay in abusive relationships. On the list here http://www.domesticviolenceroundtable.org/abuse-victims-stay.html outlines the motives for staying rather than leaving. For me, it was the attachment I had to this man who was also my children's father. I had come from a divorced home and did not want my son to grow up without his father. I also believed he would change. After all his mother told me, "just turn the other cheek" when he would do something I felt were abusive. But as time went by, I thought if I did leave, where would I go? I had talked to my mother several times about my situation. She was unsupportive and unwilling to take my son and I in. Over and over again, she said, "you made your bed, now lie in it." If I did not have my mother to turn to, where else were we going to go? It was not like I had a well-paying job that would have afforded me to find an apartment on my own. At the time, there were also few to no shelters available to people in my situation. I was a mother with a child with disabilities who also happened to be a boy. Right away that immediately prevented entry. Last but not least, I risked losing my surviving child to the state as if there was any hint of domestic violence, child protective services were mandated to remove children. Eventually, I just accepted that it was better to stay then fight what was bigger than me but it did not stop from trying.
We had just gotten a computer with the internet. The research skills I acquired as a reporter during high school came in handy. I began to search for help outside of my state. I hit upon a shelter run by the Sisters of Mercy for women and children. After speaking with the director of the program, I made plans to leave my job and within days we did.
My son and I stayed there for about a month with the hopes I would find a job and an apartment. Unfortunately finding a job in this area was difficult as one needed a car (I don't drive) to get to most places out of the area and I did not have child care. Through the shelter staff, I was able to get a subsidized apartment that required some type of income. I had no choice but to apply for public assistance. When abuser found out I did this, I received a phone call from him pleading with me. "If you take me to court for child support, I will kill myself. Come back home now!" I believed him as he had an uncle who actually committed suicide some years before we were together. I waited a few days before I repacked our bags and boarded the bus back home.
Though he promised, things at home did not change as he had promised they would. Instead of finding a job, he suggested that we live on public assistance to support ourselves until one us found employment. Somehow he convinced me that I was better suited to find work as he said, "you're the smarter one. The one with more experience." Once again I had believed him as it was true I was the one already supporting us for years before I left. As for being the "smarter one," I let you decide that one. :0)
I put up with this so-called life that was only getting worse as time went by. He was the decision-maker on everything in the house. From the time I woke up in the morning, to what was for dinner, what clothes I could wear, the bank account where my pay checks were deposited to, whether or not my son would receive his suggested therapies for his disabilities. The list goes on and on. I was becoming more and more miserable. My son wasn't faring any better.
Once again I began to look for outside help. I found an agency that served victims of domestic violence. The Violence Against Women Act of 1994 (VAWA) http://www.thehotline.org/get-educated/violence-against-women-act-vawa/ had been passed which made it a little easier to find services. Though I did not let on, he decided to leave too, but did not go very far. His mother then resided in the building right across from us. This was his way of isolating me because he had convinced her and his sister to move in the area a few years back. He never gave me his keys to our apartment, which under the law was still his residence. He came and went when I was at work moving his belongings out. The fact he lived so close also allowed him and his family to literally spy on my movements.
I felt actually worse. One night he came by to talk about us getting a divorce. I did not entertain the conversation any further after he asked me to pay for it. After all, he did not have a job to retain an attorney. I figured if he really wanted one, he would seek one and pay for it himself. Before he left, he made a threat. "If you don't (give me a divorce), I will do something to hurt your heart."
This statement alone was enough for me to secure an order of protection against him. Before it may have not been so easy to prove, but given my pleas and probable desparation in my eyes and words the judge sided in my favor. However in New York, restraining orders from either criminal or family court are not usually permanent. This meant going back and forth to court every two months to renew it. I will blog about this experience in another post.
After a few months, he managed to convince me yet again he was a changed man. He began coming over for dinner regularly, spending a little time with his son, and then expecting for us to be initmate with one another.I did not reject these advances as I missed him. I missed us. He was taking advantage of me, but I did not really see it as that right away until I began asking him for my needs to be filled. Come back home, get a job, be there for our son, move away, let's have another child.
As time went by, I started having suspcions he was not being faithful, which made me stop engaging in sexual acts with him. It did not stop him from trying. The final straw was the morning he came by under the guise of taking his son out for the day. He appeared to beligerent or maybe drunk. While my son was taking a bath and as I was getting some of his clothes ready, this man decided to rape me. He wanted me to "prove I wasn't sleeping with that ----. You're mine," he yelled. As he had his hands around my neck, looking straight into my eyes he said, "I should have squeezed harder."
As soon as he left, I called the police. They came by and took a report. With this report, I went to court the next day and was able to get a criminal and family court of protection keeping him away. It worked as he followed the orders. I also begged my mother to come home. Within three days, my son and I were out of harm's way and safe.
Tuesday, October 2, 2012
Domestic Violence Awareness Month Day 2
As I shared in yesterday's post, I was a victim of and survived domestic violence. I am now thriving. The journey of arriving to this point has been far from easy, but my will and determination got me here.
Help is available
I can outline the stops I made along the way, but the truth is what worked for me may not work for you. However I encourage to find the strength within yourself to make the call or walk into an agency to a place that provides assistance to people affected with domestic violence. For nationwide services you can call the National Coalition Against Domestic Violence 800-799-7233 800-799-or 1.800.787.3224 TTY visit S.A.F.E. (http://www.safe4all.org/help/)for referrals in your area.
How I began.
I started by sharing what was happening at home with a very supportive supervisor at work who referred me to the company's EAP. D. confirmed I was indeed being victimized and pointed me to outside resources. Fortunately the state lived in at the time and the FMLA ( http://www.nolo.com/legal-encyclopedia/domestic-violence-leave-taking-time-30129.html) protected my job as I took time off of work to go to court and tend to appointments.
On a mission
Once I started, I did not stop..I had both my son and I lives to save. Like most wars or conflicts, my battle was long. It did not end until almost three years later. During that time, there were court dates, numerous counseling sessions and support groups to attend, even court ordered supervised visitation for me to see my son who I lost custody of for awhile. I also enrolled in a paralegal program to learn the laws and how to apply them to both my cases that were in criminal and family court. I also joined VOW. (www.wowbwrc.org) These activities kept me busy and put me on the path I knew one day would have greater meaning not just for myself but others too.
What's your story? Tell me here by leaving a comment or like my Facebook page. http://www.facebook.com/DomesticVIolenceAffectsEvery1
I believe our experiences are meant to be shared to heal and empower ourselves as we help others.
Monday, October 1, 2012
National Domestic Violence Awareness Month Continued
For Anonymous and Confidential Help 24/7:
1.800.799.SAFE (7233) or 1.800.787.3224 (TTY)
or visit www.ncadv.org
For safety tips on internet safety, http://www.ncadv.org/protectyourself/InternetSafety.php
I have invited you to like a Facebook page I created http://www.facebook.com/DomesticVIolenceAffectsEvery1very simply because I wish to raise awareness about domestic violence aka intimate partner violence.
You may (or not) know I was once a victim of domestic violence and that my abuser was a man I was married to and had children with. I spent many years alone and suffering because I did not know I was victim as I was never hit. At least this is one myth that was dispelled as there are many other forms of abuse which the page will highlight. (In the meantime in the upper left hand corner, is the Power and Control Wheel.)However, I was abused in other ways: emotionally, sexually, psychologically, and financially. Though over time, I began to share how I was feeling with others. These women some who never divulged directly if they had walked in my shoes, let me know in other ways I was not alone. They directed me to places where I could and did get help. They say leaving is both the hardest and most dangerous time for a victim, as this will only give more power to the abuser. Through writing, taking college level courses on the law, the support groups, victim advocate agencies, the judges and courts, I was able to get out--alive. I can't say it was smooth sailing after doing so, because it wasn't. In fact, it was much harder. I was now raising my son by myself who had been diagnosed with emotional and behavioral problems on top of his developmental delays. I myself was given diagnoses of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder and Depression. There are times something will trigger a flashback, but I have found ways to deal with them.
Peace,
Suzanne aka MzMariposa de Canarsie --
"Strength does not lie in what you have. It lies in what you can give."
-Yogi Tea Wisdom
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