Words Cut Like a Knife (aka - the effects of emotional abuse)
“You’re useless,”
“You never do anything right,”

If I were to sit down with a friend, black eye on display, and tell them that my partner had been physically abusing me it would be hard for them to disagree. The evidence in all its black, red and purple glory would be staring them in the face.
If I were to sit down with a friend, looking just the way I normally do, and tell them that my partner had been emotionally abusing me it would be hard for them to agree. The evidence would be locked away inside my mind, hidden from their view.
Or would it?
When I was in the city a couple of week’s ago I was strolling around one of the bigger book shops checking out all the books I had missed and/or wanted to read if only I could summon the focus to get through more than a page and I stopped – dumb founded – in a section which I just couldn’t believe.
Tragic Life Stories!
“Your photos are so boring, so uninspiring, why do you even bother?”
“You’re just contaminating me with your negativity,”
“You never do anything to help anyone - ever,”
There was crime, science fiction and fantasy, teenage fiction, literature, classics, history, biography, art, politics, adult, photography and then right in front of me in prominent display – tragic life stories. What the hell? Since when did this become its own genre? There were literally dozens upon dozens upon dozens of books all about exactly the same topic. Which is important, don’t get me wrong, but when I hopped over to the psychology section (if you can call it that) I could not see one title which examined abuse of any kind; it was just all comic-esque books about how eating an apple on the 14th July can stop depression for life, or that coloured day book; a collection of cute animal pictures with semi-topical lines derived from self help books (another genre I can’t stand – they’re written for people who are going through a relationship breakdown, of course they’re going to say you can learn a lot from pain. Which you can. But they never say you can learn more from happiness do they? Of course not, as this is the last thing the hurt person reading it is going to want to hear. I can categorically say that I learnt more about life from my happy moments than from all of my painful moments combined - but we’ll get to that in my last post on Friday) Give me The Black Day Book or the wonderful novel Happiness any day; exactly the same thing but streaked through with brilliant irony which teaches far more than a jaunty little sentence of self-help bullshit.
But I digress.
Tragic Life Stories and the complete absence of psychology books about abuse. That’s where I was.
“You never take my feelings into account ever,”
“Your sex is so boring, it never excites me,”
“Get your back waxed, it’s horrible,”
There is absolutely nothing wrong with telling stories about abused childhoods, relationships or lives – especially if it’s about bringing this topic to the fore. Abuse destroys lives. Simple fact. As I browsed the titles, and every single cover looked exactly the same I should point out – virtually identical cover art, font, title, everything – they were all about sexual or physical abuse. It was as if emotional abuse doesn’t exist, as if we can all whole heartedly believe in every form of abuse under the sun except this, or perhaps because we can’t believe in something that doesn’t have any evidence to back up the claims. Both physical and sexual abuse can leave physical evidence that the abuse has taken place; emotional abuse, not a jot.
“It’s not that I find you physically repulsive, it’s more that you’re just not at all interesting,”
“If you were beaten as a child you wouldn’t think like that,”
“You’re such a pathetic retard,”
Hence why if you sit down to tell someone you’ve been emotionally abused chances are they’re not going to believe you. Surely they’re just words taken out of context and if you had a “thicker skin” it would be doing no damage at all? Nope, can’t agree with this at all. Emotional abuse is just as if not more damaging than all other forms of abuse and I’m sick of it continuing to be the Loch Ness Monster of the abuse debate. It causes life long potentially irreparable damage; just as physical and sexual abuse. In fact emotional abuse often (not always) leads directly into physical and sexual abuse.
“You never do anything to care about anyone - ever,”
“You’re always so selfish, it’s always about you!”
“No-one gives a shit about what you’re going through, why should they, it’s not important?”
So what evidence, what damage, does emotional abuse cause? Let’s use me as a case study (I mean, who else am I going to use, this is my insipid ramble here!) What are the consequences of emotional abuse?
(The quotes you are reading by the way, weren’t just said once, they were said on multiple occasions throughout and after my relationship. The reason it is so hard to get people to believe in emotional abuse is that it just looks like you’re not taking criticism well, but they just don’t seem to realize how frequent and repetitive this criticism is that’s being thrown at you.
No matter what you are doing. No matter how much of yourself you’re putting in. No matter how honest and open you’re being. No matter how deeply and positively you believe in something. No matter how you are saying something. No matter how it’s being done.
It
Will
Be
Attacked.
There is a list on this blog which I wrote in mid 2006; everything on that list was attacked and criticized by my abuser with the knowledge of everything that was on the list as I had told her about it and shared its content with her.
The other problem with simply retyping comments that were said to me throughout this post is that their context is lost, and with emotional abuse it is often the context in which something is said that elevates it from mere criticism into overtly abusive territory. Take for example the following:
“Yep, I made the right decision in breaking up with you,”
Fair enough. We’ve all thought this at some point in time and whether or not we actually decide to say it is up to the individual. But when taken in context, this sentence takes on a slightly different and – for me – more potently damaging aspect.
I was phoned on a Sunday afternoon by my ex-girlfriend asking if I wanted to come round for a cup of tea. We were trying at this stage to be friends, possibly the worst mistake of my life, but having nothing better to do, and valuing the friendship we once had (as I still do), I agreed.
We met in a park and being Easter I took along a couple of cream eggs, as really, cream eggs are just delicious. We chatted for a bit before ending up strolling down Smith Street and then journeying back to her house. She was peckish, I was peckish, and we were both bored so decided to cook up something to eat before going to the cinema. She was also tired, so went to have a nap whilst I wandered to the cinema for a schedule before coming back to her place and cooking a fairly simple pasta and sauce meal. Due to the timing of the cinema the dishes were left, and we went to watch the always enjoyable Audrey Tatou. Walking her home she invited me back in and we began a lengthy conversation touching on various subjects which at times became quite deep and meaningful and as the evening drew on she said how it would be easy for her to flirt with me in order to get me to spend the night.
I’d never hidden the fact from anyone that I was still in love with her, never did, never have, never will – as I even stated in my first post on emotional abuse how I still loved her. We talked about what she was saying and it resulted in the fact that because she was lonely and at times needed company it would be nice to spend the night with someone, to which she also added that she also understood how it would appear that she would be using me, knowing how I still felt about her. Fuelled by mild narcotics and love I agreed, and we spent the night.
It was actually rather miraculous I was able to get it up that night given the fact my body was pumped full of anti-depressants and diazepam, but I did, albeit a little awkwardly (not surprising when you take into account that impotency and reduction in sex drive are two of the most common side effects of this form of medication).
Anyhow, the following morning whilst we were both still dozing, she rolled herself on top of me with her head resting on my bare chest. Aside from underwear we were both wearing not much else. So as she rested her head on my chest and the rest of her body lying on top of mine, she played with my chest hair with one hand, opened her mouth and with a smile said: “Yep, I made the right decision in breaking up with you,”
And I suppose it’s probably just me thinking that maybe that wasn’t quite the nicest thing to say. Not quite able to believe those words had just been spoken I just lay there in shock, and it wasn’t for quite a while that she moved herself from on top of me and we both set about getting up, dressed and ready for the day. I gathered my bits together, threw them in a bag and wandered into the kitchen to bid farewell. To say I was hurt by her sentence was an understatement. I gave her a hug and left. A few minutes later I received a text message saying I had left a few bits at her place which she didn’t want, which I had, and so returned to get them and was met with a tirade of anger about how I hadn’t stuck around to do the dishes or help her with the laundry. Which, to be honest, just pissed me off!
I had made her dinner whilst she slept, had long emotional conversations with her, spent the night with someone who had ripped the heart from my chest only a couple of months before because she was lonely and needed company, and who had upon lying half naked on top me that morning told me she was happy she had broken up with me. And yet I was at fault because after being so obviously used I hadn’t stuck around to do the boyfriend thing of helping her with her laundry and her dishes.
Similarly with the context of:
“You and Grace aren’t friends, you never were, you never will be, she doesn’t care about you and she’s tired of being there to listen to all of your pathetic little problems. You’re on your own,”
After having had a nervous breakdown, a painful relationship breakup, being diagnosed with leukemia, falling back into self harm, depression, suicidal thoughts and still suffering from glandular fever (all of which – besides the leukemia - she knew) – the last thing I needed was to be told I was on my own. Whether what she said was true or not I always thought of Grace and myself as friends, and to be told this was not how she felt hurt like buggery, especially given the state my mind and physical health were in at the time.
“I have so much more respect now for a manager I never met than I have for you, she was a much better manager,”
“You treated her so badly when she was at the hostel, she hated you,”
“Your hugs were suffocating; I never really liked them,”
Words alone though aren’t all the emotional abuser will use.
There were the with-holding and refusal to do anything which she knew I would like or wanted, such as:
- The information that she had a boyfriend was something she didn’t share with her mother and despite knowing how much I wanted to meet her family it was never to be – despite several opportunities when it could have happened.
- Or the utter refusal to do something sexual to me she knew I wanted, without ever explaining why. It was in a sense with-holding something from me she knew would bring me pleasure as a means to retain control over the relationship.
Then there were the dramatics:
- The “climbing of a construction site” and storming into my room at 10pm to make sure I was okay after she had broken up with me because she hadn’t been able to get in touch since breaking up with me. (i.e. because I had been in Port Fairy without a phone battery or charger)
- Or the storming out of the room at random intervals because I wasn’t doing what she wanted me to do and testing whether I’d chase after her or not, despite the fact she never really actually told me what she wanted to be doing. I was supposed to guess that.
Then there were the actions:
- Such as the throwing of a glass of water over my head in a relatively crowded restaurant on New Years Day because my preference of Bond actor differed from hers and she needed me to realize how stupid it was to prefer that actor over her own opinion.
Then there was the fact that my feelings never mattered:
- The apparent refusal to accept I was suffering from glandular fever; so was expected to wander around a town, go for a half hour horse riding session and then hike 6km to a bus stop whilst initiating in-depth emotional conversations without actually feeling any pain. Despite the fact that whilst she had glandular fever I was on the receiving end of an hour long tirade for suggesting we walk less than a kilometer from a train station to our destination in the city. (I wasn’t taking her health or how she was feeling into consideration)
- My mental illness was not under any circumstances to be discussed in detail ever. Whenever I tried to raise the topic of depression, self harm or social anxiety it was instantly rejected out of hand as depressing and not worth talking about in any way. So I learned to never even attempt to bring it up first.
- Or the fact that all of the above examples can be listed under this also. My feelings about what I wanted or desired were not a good enough reason to do something, the fact that her not introducing me to or telling her mother/family about me made me feel she was completely ashamed of me but that never mattered or that maybe throwing a glass of water over my head for no real reason made me feel completely humiliated and the fact that my physical illnesses were merely me being pathetic and weak for suffering from conditions such as glandular fever.
Then there was the always present never allowing me to forget the mistakes I had made in the past, with the constant use of lines beginning with:
“You know 12 months ago you did this…”
“Two weeks ago, you did this…”
“Why, 11 months and 2 weeks ago, when you did this…”
Before going into lengthy detail about incidents I had myself forgotten and/or overcome the regret in my mind, only to have the whole situation constantly resurrected in my head to feel the pain of them all over again.
Plus the fact that no matter what I was going through she had always been through something of equal nastiness or in most cases something far worse:
- You’ve had a breakdown? Well I was having a breakdown as well.
- You’re suffering from depression? When I was a teenager I also suffered from depression and I wanted to kill myself but I got through it so you should just get over it and that’s that.
- You’ve not got any money? Well neither have I, despite the fact that I’ve just bought a $300 pair of boots, have three jobs and am receiving a few hundred in benefits every couple of weeks, I have no money either.
- Or the all time classic! When I sat down with her one afternoon to tell her I’d been diagnosed with leukemia. Before I could even get out fully what my situation was: “I’ve been in exactly the same situation as you have so you’re not going to get any sympathy from me, so don’t even bother going into it, I don’t want to hear,”
And that’s just the tip of the ice-berg. Yet through everything, through all of the occasions that I tried to find out why she was saying these things, or why she was criticizing and hurting me so much, the answer was always the same. It was either: ‘I don’t know,’ or, something familiar with cases of emotional abuse, ‘I was just trying to change you,’
As a result of emotional abuse I have changed! As a result, I:
- have lost all sense of self belief, self esteem and confidence. I have been reduced to a scared, frightened wreck, unable to believe I am capable of doing or achieving anything. I think that’s fairly obvious from a lot of the posts on this blog.
- cannot trust anyone, anywhere, and doubt I will be able to again.
- do not believe a single word of praise which is given to me.
- have inflicted self-injury on several occasions as a direct consequence of the emotional abuse I suffered.
- am literally afraid to talk to anyone in fear of a repeat of what happened to me. My ability to communicate has been destroyed, and any chance of emotional, open and intimate conversation has been lost.
- suffer from flashbacks and daily replays of moments and quotes from that time.
- have ended up in hospital as a result of some instances of the self injury inflicted as a result of the abuse.
- lost my college course due to my problems, issues and circumstances being unimportant compared to hers.
- have found my depression and related mental illnesses relapse to the worst point in my life to the point I don’t believe I’ll be able to get over it.
- spent several hundred dollars that I couldn’t afford on psychologists and counselors in an effort to overcome the PTSD, anxiety, panic and related disorders which the abuse created.
That’s a fair whack of damage; internal, external, physical and financial – all with long reaching and devastating consequences on the rest of my life. So for my abuser, rejoice, because you definitely succeeded in changing me. And for those who think emotional abuse is merely friendly criticism that’s being taken in the wrong way.
WAKE UP!
There is so much more that needs to be done to make people realize that this is not acceptable behavior. It is almost impossible for both the abuser and abused to realize and understand what is happening during the relationship, even if this is the case the abused will often be unable to break up the relationship because their love of the person is far too strong to be able to do this. The abuser has control, which is what everything is about, which is why there is the criticism, the games, the tests and manipulation. They must at all times ascertain their control over their relationship and the people in their life, and most often, do not even realize this is what they are doing.
If you are being emotionally abused find a friend, find someone you trust and talk to them about what is going on. If they don’t believe you then find someone else. Emotional abuse exists, it is destroying lives, and more needs to be done. Those Tragic Life Stories littering the shops are not just books – they are lives – real human people who are never going to be the same and who will not be able to live the life they want. This is the damage of abuse. Physical, Sexual, Emotional, whatever – abuse should not be tolerated.
Every quote, every incident, every moment detailed on this page and thousands more replay in my head virtually all day every day. Nothing I do makes it go away, nothing I do seems to be able to make it stop. That’s what emotional abuse does. Is it any wonder I hate myself? Why I cut myself? Hit myself? Believe my hallucination so much? Abuse sucks, and until you’ve experienced it, I don’t think you’ll ever fully understand it’s long reaching soul destroying consequences.
“You should tape record your voice, it’ll make you realize how boring and monotonous it is, and so you should just kill yourself,”
“Your kisses were terrible, I never enjoyed them, my ex was the most perfect kisser in the world,”
“You never say anything interesting – ever,”
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April 8th, 2008 at 6:02 pm
One of my roommates in college was emotionally abused and controlled by her boyfriend. She was a social work major, but she didn’t see it. Once she broke up with him, he got violent as well. I saw the toll his words took on her and how his actions pinned her down. She was a loving, giving person and he took advantage of that. She was fortunate that his behaviors were so egregious even if not physical that her friends caught on and then she caught on. I imagine that if she’d been living with him, it would have been a whole lot harder to see…
I’m not sure if this would help, but books on abuse in a library that uses the Dewey Decimal system should be in 362.7. For better or worse, they circulate pretty well. I hope that it’s people getting the help they need, but I wish that the help wasn’t needed in the first place. I don’t know how many we have for emotional abuse vs. emotional combined with physical.
Relationships are a mixed bag in 646.7, but some libraries include books on abusive relationships there. Otherwise it’s mostly relationship improvement books.
April 9th, 2008 at 2:23 am
You’re too much in love wih her that you’ve sacrificed a lot. If that will be chanelled to someone who reciprocates, love will grow. She is spilled milk, go find another who cares. Until her mind opens, she will be a slave of the devil who uses her capacity to verbal-abuse and make it her strength.
Life must go on. We always have a choice, choose wisely.
Get busy with something else that you have no time to think about anything that has to do with her. When you have found those avenues, post a temporary goodby to this blog and make another one that has something to do with everything that you’re doing/getting busy about to replace your thoughts about her and everything that she had said and done.
Why make another blog? Because while you’re under “self-treatment” by doing something else and blogging about it to mark your improvement and make a habit out of it, doing so on the same blog will only give you the itch to check your previous posts and will only dampen your spirits again. When you are over it, you can get back to test how well you are.
It’s your life. Do something good to enhance it, not destroy it.
Sadly, her name does not fit her. In time she might also change but until you can handle it, I suggest not getting any contact with her whatsever. Move to another place if you can and don’t leave an address.
If I was in your situation, that’s what I’d do. We are both optimistic. The difference is your optimism was channeled the wrong way. I remember the animation movie Scooby Doo…
“We’re gonna dieeee!!!!”
“Be optimistic.”
“We’re gonna die fasterrrrrrr!!!”
What you need is to counter attack by way of changing what’s in your head. Mere removal of thought of her is just halfway. You’ve got to do something to REPLACE it with something that can keep you busy that there’s no time to even think about her at all.
Join a sports club.
Find a hobby.
Join community service projects.
Help somebody with a project.
By doing something for others, you draw the attention away from yourself, which in turn, actually helps yourself.
Start from scratch. Don’t think you cannot do it. Try it first.
It’s not the fall that counts but the number of times you stand up and take another step that gets you forward.
I hope that helps. :)
April 9th, 2008 at 2:42 am
It sounds like she has a lot of mental problems and needs help.
It’s very sad that you have gone through so much and my heart reaches out to you. I think that you are a very strong person and deserve so much more in life.
I hope that one day this girl won’t hold the power over you that she does now. I hope one day that you will be able to let all of this go and realize that she has a lot of issues and unfortunately you received the brunt of them.
You aren’t the things that she said. You are a very sensitive, strong, nice, and great person. I hope that you can see it for yourself one day because I certainly do.
May 24th, 2008 at 1:43 am
Firstly, thank you for doing your bit to promote understanding of emotional abuse! It’s an unfortunate truth that emotional abuse is the least understood among the general population, and also the form of abuse that is taken least seriously.
Like you I had the same shocking experience with the new genre of books, only where I was they were labelled “lost childhood”. Like you said, each one was identically packaged like they had come off a production line, but not one of them dealt with just emotional abuse. I guess it’s just not shocking enough to make the dollars.
As a victim of emotional abuse myself, as well as close friend to a number of abuse victims, it upsets me that more isn’t being done to combat emotional abuse in society. The scars that emotional abuse leave can become carefully camoflaged in our “normal” behaviour, making it even harder to recognise and heal the damage.
I hope you can find the healing you are looking for, and your life is saturated in positivity from this point forward.
~Shiv
June 30th, 2008 at 9:26 am
Hello. I believe depression and emotional abuse unfortunately go together. When I met my husband, I was in control of my depression by accepting my own feelings instead of reacting to them. Acceptance of feelings is the first stage to recovering from depression. My husband was emotionally abused as a child and ignored my feelings. This was just fine with me when I met him. I believed he had worked through similar feelings himself and had conquered them. I had a lot to learn. In fact, he has not worked through any feelings! As the years have gone by, ignoring my feelings and physical hardships has been an eye opener. When heavily pregnant he never lifted anything for me behinf closed doors but did ni company. Same scenario for playing with the children. I was so used to receiving no help, that he would whisper to me that “He’ll put the pram in the boot” when other watched on. The next stage to recovery from depression I believe is to try new things bit by bit, instead of benign acceptance. It is very hard to try anything new because my husband has something bad to say about all of my ideas that dervie from my emotions. If I go do it anyway, he abuses viciously for sometimes years. On some occasions I have wondered if he might hit though he never has. Anyway, getting back to my point. A depressed individual is attracted to an abusive individual because what we really want them to do for us is abuse the depression out of us! They get a weakened and often isolated target to avoid personal growth with. It is difficult to work on the relationship when both partners have issues. I beleive your friend had been emotionaslly abused by someone herself. I haven’t given up on my husband or my marriage yet, but I have come very close. I suggest that you work on your depression with your therapists. She is not qualified to help you. I also suggest that she seeks help (this is really really hard because she will say your suggestions are manipulative and attack you in some way). If you love her and want the relationship to success then you both have to seek help with an open mind and deal with the issues that cause pain. If you work onm your depression and she does not work on her ghosts of abuse, soon you will not find her attractive anymore. Nasty things are said and done when damage has been done. I can even detect an abusive “personality” in my husband that appears under stress every now and then. Good luck. I believe most people give up too soon and are afraid to really see what is happening.