
12 Ways To Tell Whether Your Partner
May Turn Into An Abuser
- Heavy drinking or drug abuse (especially if he uses substances as an
excuse for what he does: "The alcohol made me do it.")
- Abuse during the courtship period is a guarantee of further abuse that
will become more frequent and severe. Don't marry him with the belief that
"I can change him." You won't.
- Morbid jealousy. This may be a bit flattering at first, but will be a
curse later on. You will never convince him that you are innocent of his
accusations.
- Past child abuse and/or witness of marital violence. This happens in
some cases. Children learn what they live. Boys tend to copy their
fathers. Abused children discipline their own children as they were
taught. He may be a "violence carrier".
- Inability to handle frustration. If he blows up and explodes at small
things, and reacts with a tantrum over minor things, he may act out
frustration with violence in a marriage. How he deals with anger is the
key.
- A violent temper. This speaks for itself. If you feel fear when he acts
out his anger, that fear is a warning signal. Listen to it!
- Cruelty to animals, abuse and mistreatment of pets, great enjoyment of
hunting for the sake of killing animals could help you to face this
question: What makes you know he will treat you any differently?
- Preoccupation with weapons. They are an extension of self. A person is
what she/he lives. If he ever "playfully" points a gun at you or ever
gestures at you with another weapon, what could happen if he became very
angry with you?
- Mental illness. A person with an unsound mind or without any sense of
moral responsibility or guilt may not be in control of his actions. Does he
act in ways that you feel are abnormal or strange?
- A poor self-image; insecurity about his own masculinity. If he feels
compulsive about always being "one up" and dominating and he lives out a
macho role at all times, you will be subject to his control and possibly
treated like one of his possessions. He may feel he has the right to
treat you like his property, to do as he pleases.
- A pattern of blaming others, particularly his wife, for his problems. If
he never accepts his faults and responsibilities when things go wrong, be
ready to be blamed for everything.
- Acceptance of violence as an appropriate problem-solving method. Do you
want a man who talks out or acts out his anger?
Front Page
DV Information/
Native American/
Legal Advocacy/
General Information
|