Relationship

Reasons why women find it hard to leave abusive relationships

By chance getting into an abusive relationship is usually a sign of bad luck.
 As your peers and age mates are enjoying wonderful marriages and relationships. It is sadder when your relationship is facing challenges of abuse and various fights.
The situation is even very worse for women who still cling to the relationship despite it being faced with numerous challenges. But what might be the reason why many women would still cling to a relationship years after separation or even divorce? How hard is it for them to just leave and move on with other new life. Start here and find out why:
1. Distorted thoughts. Many women in abusive relationships being controlled and hurt is traumatizing, and this usually leads to confusion, doubts, and even self-blame. Their perpetrators usually harass and accuse women victims, which wears them down and causes despair and guilt on the women part making it hard to leave the relationship.
2. Fear. The threat of bodily and emotional harm to the women is powerful, and abusers use this to control and keep women trapped. Female victims of violence are much more likely than male victims to be terrorized and traumatized. This eventually holds them back in making the right decision.
3. Wanting to be a savior. Many women have described to have a helping desire, or love their partners with the hopes that they could change the relationship to the better. It is through the hope they tell themselves that keeps them going on with the relationship anyways.
4. Putting children safety first. Majority of women also put their children first, sacrificing their own safety for their children. This makes them unable to leave the abusive relationship even if their husband marries several wives thereafter.
5. Family expectations and experiences. Many women post descriptions of how past experiences with violence distorts their sense of self or of healthy relationships. This make them judging that all men are the same and you just have to live with the situation, hoping that one day things will be okay.
6. Financial constraints. Many women do refer to financial limitations, and these is usually connected to caring for children. Thus, they have little or no option when their husbands take all the wealth and leave them in debts.
7. Isolating the woman. A common tactic of manipulative partners in a relationship is to separate their victim from family and friends. This way they have no control over their lovers and this leaves women with no option but to stick to his husband.
8. Damaged self-worth. Many women do relate to the damage of self that is the result of degrading treatment. Many women felt beaten down and of no value. To be of value they just continue clinging to abusive relationships to be of significant value.

About Jojo Green

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