Are you in a healthy relationship? How can you tell? Do you feel safe, valued, and supported?
According to BPD Central, healthy relationships include non-threatening behavior such as “talking and acting so that your partner feels safe and comfortable doing and saying things.” Other signs are:
Respect
• Being emotionally affirming and understanding.
• Valuing opinions.
Trust and Support
• Supporting your partner’s goals in life.
• Respecting your partner’s right to his or her own feelings, friends, activities and opinions.
Honesty and Accountability
• Accepting responsibility for self.
• Acknowledging past use of violence and / or emotionally abusive behavior, changing the behavior.
• Acknowledging infidelity, changing the behavior.
• Admitting being wrong when it is appropriate.
• Communicating openly and truthfully, acknowledging past abuse, seeking help for abusive relationship patterns.
Shared Responsibility
• Mutually agreeing on a fair distribution of work.
• Making family decisions together.
Abusive relationships look the exact opposite of a healthy relationship:
Intimidation
• Making your partner afraid by using looks, actions, gestures.
• Smashing or destroying things.
• Destroying or confiscating your partner’s property.
• Abusing pets as a display of power and control.
• Silent or overt raging.
• Displaying weapons or threatening their use.
• Making physical threats.
Using Emotional Abuse
• Making your partner feel bad about himself or herself.
• Calling your partner names.
• Playing mind games.
• Interrogating your partner.
• Harassing or intimidating your partner.
• “Checking up on” your partner’s activities or whereabouts.
• Humiliating your partner, weather through direct attacks or “jokes”.
• Making your partner feel guilty.
• Shaming your partner.
Using Isolation
• Limiting your partner’s outside involvement.
• Demanding your partner remain home when you are not with them.
• Cutting your partner off from prior friends, activities, and social interaction.
• Using jealousy to justify your actions. (Jealousy is the primary symptom of abusive relationships; it is also
a core component of Love Addiction.)
Minimizing, Denying and Blame Shifting
• Saying the abuse did not happen, or wasn’t that bad.• Shifting responsibility for your abusive behavior to your partner. (i.e: I
did it because you ______.)
• Saying your partner caused it.
To learn more – go to http://www.recovery-man.com/abusive/abusive_signs.htm .
Most communities have resources for those who fear abuse or trying to escape from it – here is a national reference http://www.ovw.usdoj.gov/domviolence.htm.
Many excellent non profit organizations are working to reduce dating and domestic violence including Courage to Change and their brother organization It Stops with Me.
Courage is Change, It Stops with Me, and Red Tent Club are efforts to stop violence and support young women. The aim of the Red Tent Club is to provide a space for young women to create community, to be accepted, to learn tolerance and to create healthy relationships with peers. Young women learn to find their voice, the power of intuition and to increase confidence in their abilities.
Web and social media addresses: www.courageischange.org, www.itstopswithme.org
I wish you only healthy, strong relationships! But if you fear that you are in an abusive relationship – please reach out to a local organization for help!