Emotional Abuse Causes Depression

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#1 Sep 29 - 11PM
Anonymous (not verified)
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Emotional Abuse Causes Depression

What is Emotional Abuse?

Abuse is any behavior that is designed to control and subjugate another human being through the use of fear, humiliation, intimidation, guilt, coercion, manipulation etc. Emotional abuse is any kind of abuse that is emotional rather than physical in nature. It can include anything from verbal abuse and constant criticism to more subtle tactics, such as repeated disapproval or even the refusal to ever be pleased.

Emotional abuse is like brain washing in that it systematically wears away at the victim‘s self-confidence, sense of self-worth, trust in their own perceptions, and self-concept. Whether it is done by constant berating and belittling, by intimidation, or under the guise of "guidance," "teaching", or "advice," the results are similar. Eventually, the recipient of the abuse loses all sense of self and remnants of personal value. Emotional abuse cuts to the very core of a person, creating scars that may be far deeper and more lasting that physical ones. In fact there is research to this effect. With emotional abuse, the insults, insinuations, criticism and accusations slowly eat away at the victim‘s self-esteem until she is incapable of judging the situation realistically. She has become so beaten down emotionally that she blames herself for the abuse. Her self-esteem is so low that she clings to the abuser.

Emotional abuse victims can become so convinced that they are worthless that they believe that no one else could want them. They stay in abusive situations because they believe they have nowhere else to go. Their ultimate fear is being all alone.

Types of Emotional Abuse

Abusive Expectations

* The other person places unreasonable demands on you and wants you to put everything else aside to tend to their needs.
* It could be a demand for constant attention, or a requirement that you spend all your free time with the person.
* But no matter how much you give, it‘s never enough.
* You are subjected to constant criticism, and you are constantly berated because you don‘t fulfill all this person‘s needs.

Aggressing

* Aggressive forms of abuse include name-calling, accusing, blaming, threatening, and ordering. Aggressing behaviors are generally direct and obvious. The one-up position the abuser assumes by attempting to judge or invalidate the recipient undermines the equality and autonomy that are essential to healthy adult relationships. This parent-child pattern of communication (which is common to all forms of verbal abuse) is most obvious when the abuser takes an aggressive stance.

* Aggressive abuse can also take a more indirect form and may even be disguised and "helping." Criticizing, advising, offering solutions, analyzing, proving, and questioning another person may be a sincere attempt to help. In some instances however, these behaviors may be an attempt to belittle, control, or demean rather than help. The underlying judgmental "I know best" tone the abuser takes in these situations is inappropriate and creates unequal footing in peer relationships. This and other types of emotional abuse can lead to what is known as learned helplessness.

Constant Chaos

* The other person may deliberately start arguments and be in constant conflict with others.

* The person may be "addicted to drama" since it creates excitement.

Denying

* Denying a person‘s emotional needs, especially when they feel that need the most, and done with the intent of hurting, punishing or humiliating (Examples)

* The other person may deny that certain events occurred or that certain things were said. confronts the abuser about an incident of name calling, the abuser may insist, "I never said that," "I don‘t know what you‘re talking about," etc. You know differently.

* The other person may deny your perceptions, memory and very sanity.

* Withholding is another form of denying. Withholding includes refusing to listen, refusing to communicate, and emotionally withdrawing as punishment. This is sometimes called the "silent treatment."

* When the abuser disallows and overrules any viewpoints, perceptions or feelings which differ from their own.

* Denying can be particularly damaging. In addition to lowering self-esteem and creating conflict, the invalidation of reality, feelings, and experiences can eventually lead you to question and mistrust your own perceptions and emotional experience.

* Denying and other forms of emotional abuse can cause you to lose confidence in your most valuable survival tool: your own mind.

Dominating

* Someone wants to control your every action. They have to have their own way, and will resort to threats to get it.
* When you allow someone else to dominate you, you can lose respect for yourself.

Emotional Blackmail

* The other person plays on your fear, guilt, compassion, values, or other "hot buttons" to get what they want.
* This could include threats to end the relationship, totally reject or abandon you, giving you the the "cold shoulder," or using other fear tactics to control you.

Invalidation

* The abuser seeks to distort or undermine the recipient‘s perceptions of their world. Invalidating occurs when the abuser refuses or fails to acknowledge reality. For example, if the recipient tells the person they felt hurt by something the abuser did or said, the abuser might say "You are too sensitive. That shouldn‘t hurt you." Here is a much more complete description of invalidation

Minimizing

* Minimizing is a less extreme form of denial. When minimizing, the abuser may not deny that a particular event occurred, but they question the recipient‘s emotional experience or reaction to an event. Statements such as "You‘re too sensitive," "You‘re exaggerating," or "You‘re blowing this out of proportion" all suggest that the recipient‘s emotions and perceptions are faulty and not be trusted.

* Trivializing, which occurs when the abuser suggests that what you have done or communicated is inconsequential or unimportant, is a more subtle form of minimizing.

Unpredictable Responses

* Drastic mood changes or sudden emotional outbursts. Whenever someone in your life reacts very differently at different times to the same behavior from you, tells you one thing one day and the opposite the next, or likes something you do one day and hates it the next, you are being abused with unpredictable responses.

* This behavior is damaging because it puts you always on edge. You‘re always waiting for the other shoe to drop, and you can never know what‘s expected of you. You must remain hypervigilant, waiting for the other person‘s next outburst or change of mood.

* An alcoholic or drug abuser is likely to act this way. Living with someone like this is tremendously demanding and anxiety provoking, causing the abused person to feel constantly frightened, unsettled and off balance.

Verbal Assaults

*

Berating, belittling, criticizing, name calling, screaming, threatening
*

Excessive blaming, and using sarcasm and humiliation.
*

Blowing your flaws out of proportion and making fun of you in front of others. Over time, this type of abuse erodes your sense of self confidence and self-worth.

Understanding Abusive Relationships

No one intends to be in an abusive relationship, but individuals who were verbally abused by a parent or other significant person often find themselves in similar situations as an adult. If a parent tended to define your experiences and emotions, and judge your behaviors, you may not have learned how to set your own standards, develop your own viewpoints and validate your own feeling and perceptions. Consequently, the controlling and defining stance taken by an emotional abuser may feel familiar or even conformable to you, although it is destructive.

Recipients of abuse often struggle with feelings of powerlessness, hurt, fear, and anger. Ironically abusers tend to struggle with these same feelings. Abuser are also likely to have been raised in emotionally abusive environments and they learn to be abusive as a way to cope with their own feelings of powerlessness, hurt , fear, and anger. Consequently, abusers may be attracted to people who see themselves as helpless or who have not learned to value their own feelings, perceptions, or viewpoints. This allows the abuser to feel more secure and in control, and avoid dealing with their own feelings, and self-perceptions.

Emotional abuse victims can become so convinced that they are worthless that they believe that no one else could want them. They stay in abusive situations because they believe they have nowhere else to go. Their ultimate fear is being all alone.

Understanding the pattern of your relationships, specially those with family members and other significant people, is a first step toward change. A lack of clarity about who you are in relationship to significant others may manifest itself in different ways. For example, you may act as an "abuser" in some instances and as a "recipient" in others. You may find that you tend to be abused in your romantic relationships, allowing your partners to define and control you. In friendships, however, you may play the role of abuser by withholding, manipulating, trying to "help" others, etc. Knowing yourself and understanding your past can prevent abuse from being recreated in your life.

http://www.eqi.org/eabuse1.htm

Jan 29 - 8AM
Barbara (not verified)
Anonymous's picture

Emotional Abuse Causes Depression & Guilt

READ TOP POST ~~~~~~~~~ The truth will set you free... but first it will piss you off - Gloria Steinem Visit My Abuse Website
Sep 30 - 7AM
MissM
MissM's picture

understanding the depression

this at last explains why I'm so depressed and ashamed. The burst of denying, minimizing, silent treatment, invalidation. He couldn't say it to my face though. No he hid behind text msgs for this. To my face, he was sorry and didn't mean to hurt me by seeing someone else, and 'everything will be fine'. Once out of sight tho, he ignored me for a week then launched just enough veiled venom to seal me into this hell i'm in. How clever of him. And that is how he chose to end it. He is an armed cop trained in hostage negotiation, psych tactics and it scares me that he KNEW just what to say, how to say it and then wall me in with silence. Worst of all, he was a great friend and we both know what it feels like to be betrayed and to watch a loved one die of cancer. And he threw this all in my face at the end. Thank u for the article.
Sep 30 - 8AM (Reply to #2)
Barbara (not verified)
Anonymous's picture

MissM

are you in counseling? this predator BRAINWASHED you!!! get help! http://abusesanctuary.blogspot.com/2006/10/as-you-work-toward-emotional-healing.html http://abusesanctuary.blogspot.com/2007/01/abusive-relationships-and-toxic-guilt.html http://www.lisaescott.com/forum/2009/04/18/youve-been-brainwashed-part-i http://www.lisaescott.com/forum/2009/04/10/am-i-who-he-says-i-am http://www.lisaescott.com/forum/2009/04/14/pain-stinks-dont-go-through-it-nothing ~~~~~~~~~~~~ "Pathologicals only discard the best, most precious of gems of people... not the worst. They despise the strong, principled, decent & honest. Their discarding of you is then their highest commendation of your worth!" - A.V.
Sep 30 - 9AM (Reply to #3)
MissM
MissM's picture

Barbara - brainwashing

what kind of counselor should I approach? I'm reticent i'll be seen as just someone who went thru a bad break up and can't get over it. Thats kind of the impression my friends have had of me, which is why I stopped talking about it with them even when they were doing all the asking. Is it a CBT therapist i'd need maybe? Thanks for the links, they so eloquently define what I struggle to put into words. Does anyone else find it hard to effectively word what they have been through? I
Sep 30 - 1PM (Reply to #5)
Barbara (not verified)
Anonymous's picture

MissM

CBT is usually best. This place: http://www.sidran.org/sub.cfm?sectionID=5 can help you find someone with experience in treating PTSD. You may have to go to a couple different counselors to find one who gets it. Get a copy of WOMEN WHO LOVE PSYCHOPATHS and take it with you to loan to the counselor. If they don't believe you - find a new one. But definitely FIND one. ~~~~~~~~~~~~ "Pathologicals only discard the best, most precious of gems of people... not the worst. They despise the strong, principled, decent & honest. Their discarding of you is then their highest commendation of your worth!" - A.V.
Sep 30 - 11AM (Reply to #4)
LAex
LAex's picture

MissM

I found a therapist through a friend whose wife is a therapist. My friend and wife live in a different state but she looked up therapists in my city who were trained in the same manner as herself. If you have someone you know who can "recommend" a route, then ask that person. I see a psychotherapist and absolutely am thankful for her in my life. As you have read on this board, find a counselor/therapist who is caring and knowledgeable in this area. The goal is to get you healthy the therapy is not to judge you. My guess is that you have "judged" yourself enough - get some quality support to assist you through the thoughts and feelings. Talking about it....my therapist is the only person who knows the full story of MarineOfficer. It took a couple of months for me to finally spill all of the beans about what he did, how I felt, what I did, etc... It did take awhile to sift through and talk about it - mostly because I did not want to believe it. However, after talking about it and listening to myself talk about it - I became more clear about on what actually occurred and that HE was the ASS and that what he did was wrong and planned. Similar to your exCop, this guy was good at manipulation and even stated that he was early on in our relationship (RED FLAG). It is time to take care of you - you deserve a happy future with a man and people who can love and care. LAex