Read Why Does He Do That?: Inside the Minds of Angry and Controlling Men Online
Authors: Lundy Bancroft
An eye-opening education for people interested in working toward family court reform, this book documents the obstacles that abused women can encounter while attempting to protect their children from abuse, even in cases where extensive evidence exists. (I don’t recommend this book for abused women to read themselves if they are currently involved in litigation—it’s very frightening, and most cases don’t go as badly as the ones presented here.)
NCSEA provides information on child support collection, with links to specific child support resources in your geographical area.
F
OR
M
OTHERS OF
S
EXUALLY
A
BUSED
C
HILDREN
Written by a smart and compassionate attorney, this is a critical book for any woman who has reason to suspect that her child has been sexually abused by the child’s father or stepfather, whether or not the child has explicitly disclosed.
A
BOUT
G
ENERAL
P
ARENTING
I
SSUES
The books listed in this section are general parenting guides, full of tremendous practical help and insight. I have found all of these titles to be terrific. However, two words of caution: First, these books tend not to address the impact on children of exposure to a man who abuses their mother, including the role that abuse plays in as much as half of divorces. Second, with the exception of
Real Boys,
these books do not offer detailed guidance to parents who have a gay or lesbian teen (though
Reviving Ophelia
touches on the issue briefly).
You can also find additional parenting resources in your phone book, such as parental stress hotline numbers, Parent’s Anonymous, and various kinds of parent education classes, or do an Internet search for “Parent Education.”
F
OR
W
OMEN
I
NVOLVED WITH
L
AW
E
NFORCEMENT
O
FFICERS
SABLE offers a booklet called
Police Domestic Violence: A Handbook for Victims
for $5 (including shipping) from the above address.
F
OR
W
OMEN IN
F
AITH
C
OMMUNITIES
This website offers many readings and resources regarding the abuse of Christian, Jewish, and Islamic women, and a collection of interfaith writings and organizations. A terrific resource for women whose spiritual or religious involvement is an important part of their lives.
Fortune offers clarity, advice, and validation, along with new interpretations of scriptural texts, to help abused Christian women escape entrapment and draw strength from their spiritual beliefs. (I am not currently aware of similar books for women of other faiths, but you may find one, as new resources on abuse appear every day.)
A
BOUT
A
BUSIVE
M
EN
The organizations listed here offer literature, videos, and training for people interested in starting or improving counseling programs for men who abuse women.
F
OR
T
HOSE
A
SSISTING
A
BUSED
W
OMEN
An outstandingly caring, practical, and wise book for the loved ones of an abused woman. If you are trying to assist a woman who is in a bad relationship,
read this book.
It will help you to feel better
and
make you a much more effective helper. (However, one word of caution: A section at the end of the book on reporting child abuse contains information that I find ill-advised. Before you involve child protective services with a mother you care about, call a program for abused women in your area and seek advice about whether and how to make a child-abuse report.)
This is a professional book, but it is very readable and helpful for anyone who wants to understand what is really involved when a woman is considering leaving an abusive partner, and it provides guidance for how to help a woman be safer
even if she can’t leave or doesn’t want to.
The authors talk about much more than just safety planning—they address the full range of practical realities that abused women face in a way that I have found in no other book.
Dr. Herman’s book is the bible of trauma, especially for those kinds of traumatic experiences for which the society tends to blame the victim or deny the reality of her/his experience. An outstandingly brilliant work.
A
BOUT
O
VERCOMING
P
ARTNER
A
BUSE IN
C
OMMUNITIES
Join this organization to support policy and service development to benefit abused women and their children NCADV also has various resources that you can order (at a discount if you are a member) and listings of other sources of information.
This terrific work elucidates the cultural influences and institutional actions that support abuse and gives to-the-point suggestions for concerned community members on how to end the abuse of women.
This excellent book describes the special challenges faced by abused women who live far from large population centers, who may be very isolated and may face local communities that are not supportive of escaping abuse. Groundbreaking and insightful, with concrete strategies for how agencies and institutions can better serve abused women in rural areas.
Detailed guidance on how to draw from the United States’s premier model of collaborative work in communities to assist abused women, hold abusers accountable, and change community values about partner abuse.
This highly readable book provides the most reasonable and persuasive explanations that I have encountered of how pornography can shape men’s ways of perceiving and interacting with women, and of the various excuses that groups and individuals use to avoid looking at the damage that pornography can do.
This powerful and disturbing video reveals the attitudes toward women that are taught by today’s music videos. Available from MEF, 26 Center St., Northampton MA 01060, 1-800-897-0089, www.mediaed.org.
This widely acclaimed video created by Jackson Katz shows how popular portrayals of masculinity force boys and men into unhealthy roles and teach males to be abusive toward females. (See ordering information under previous listing.)
Transforming Communities has a tremendous collection of resources and ideas for how to combat the abuse of women and children.
F
OR
M
ALE
A
LLIES
Many opportunities exist for men who want to be active in stopping the abuse of women, and more appear every day. Below are just a few examples.
Public speakers, counseling groups, and opportunities for activism.
MCSR describes its mission as being “to promote gender equity and build men’s capacity to be strong without being violent.” Many programs, including outreach to youth and education on teen-dating violence.
Information is available on the FVPF website about their program “Coaching Boys Into Men” (with a brochure that you can download), and a new initiative for reaching out to boys called “Teach Early” has recently been launched. (The FVPF website is also full of information and resources on many aspects of partner abuse, including guidebooks for health-care providers and many other materials.)
A new project that offers various ideas for how men can get involved as allies to abused women.
You can also visit the Campus Outreach Services website at www.campusoutreachservices.com: go to “Resources,” and then select “Men Against Violence Against Women Organizations,” and you will be provided with descriptions and links for
twenty
different men’s groups around the country that are focused on stopping the abuse of women.
Abandonment, fear of
Abused women
and abuser’s change of behavior
arrest of
counselors and
denial of abuse
social views of
support for
resources
See also
Women
Abuse-free environment
Abuse of women
physical
psychological
Abusers
and addiction
allies of
and arguments
arrest of
tactics after
breaking up with
brief separations
change of behavior
child abuse by
counseling of
resources
ending of relationship
leaving safely
and legal system
as parents
and pornography
as role models
and sex
traumatic bonding with
types of
Demand Man
Drill Sergeants
mentally ill or addicted
Mr. Right
Mr. Sensitive
Players
Rambo
Terrorists
Victims
Water Torturer
See also
Abused women; Abusive behavior
Abusive behavior
addiction and
benefits of
conciousness of
development of
ending of
respect and
violent
See also
Change of behavior
Abusive men.
See
Abusers
Accountability for actions
Accounts of abuse, differing
Accusations, distorted
Addiction
of abused women
as excuse for abuse
to sex
Admission of abuse
Advocates for abused women
self as
Aggression
reversal into self-defense
Aggressive personality, as excuse
Alcohol, and abusive behavior
Alcoholics Anonymous (AA)
Alcoholism
recovery from, and partner abuse
See also
Addiction
Allies of abusive men
Anger
at counseling program
denial of
of women
abusive men and
Anti-abuse movement, men in
Anti-female attitudes of boys
Antisocial personality disorder
Apologies
insincere
Arguments
Arrests of abusers, tactics after
Attachment, intimacy and
Attention, abusive men and
Attitudes
change of
contradictory
negative, toward women
Attorneys, abuse of power by
Authoritarian behavior
Authoritarian parents
Authority:
challenge to, anger seen as
parental
Batterers Anonymous groups
Battering men
and child abuse
See also
Abusers; Physical violence
Bedtime for Francis
, Hoban
Behavior, feelings and
See also
Abusive behavior; Change of behavior
Beliefs
contradictory
Benefits of abusive behavior
Blame, shifting of
abusers as role models
for breakup of relationship
among family members
to mother of abuser
“The Boiler Theory of Men,”
Boss, abusive
employees of
Boys, socialization of
Breaking up with abusers
Brewster, Susan,
To Be an Anchor in the Storm
Brief separations, abusers and
Bullying behavior
Caretaking, sense of entitlement to
Carrey, Jim
Change of behavior
abuser’s outlook on
assessment of
and benefits of abuse
context for
illusions of
predictions of
psychotherapy and
steps to
substance abuse and
Child abuse
Childhood abuse of abuser, myth of
Children:
of abused women
fathers as role models
and parents’ breakup
services for
abuse of women and
abusive fathers viewed by
of abusive parents
control of mother through
rights of
Chronic abuse
Chronic anger
Chronic infidelity
Clay, Andrew Dice
Clergypeople, and change of abusers
Collective punishment
Color, women of, abuse of
Commitment to change
Community:
and abusive behavior
and change of abusers
support for abused women
Complaints, discrediting of
Computer games, and abuse of women
Conflict, abusive men and
between women
verbal
Confrontation, abuser programs and
Confusion tactics
Conscience
Consequences of actions
and change of behavior
Contempt for women
Contrasting behaviors, public and private
Control
financial
loss of
as excuse for abuse
of partner’s thinking
sexual relationships and
tactics of
in arguments
vulnerability and
Controlling behavior
abusers as role models
excuses for
extreme
parenting and
Conversational control
Counseling:
of abusers
for children
Couples therapy
Courts
and abused women
and abusers
Criticism
abusers and
Cultural differences in abuse
Culture
and abuse of women
change of
Custody disputes
Custody evaluators
abuse of power
Cycles of behavior
Daily life, abusive men in
Danger signs of violence
Daughters of abusers
See also
Children
Decision-making, abusive control of
Deference, entitlement to
Defining reality
Degradation of women, pornographic
Demanding men
Denial of abuse
by victim
Denial of the obvious
Depersonalization of women
pornography as
Derision
Devaluation of partner’s labor
Discrediting of partner
Discrimination
violence against women as
Disrespect of women
Distorted thinking
District attorneys
Divisive tactics
Divorce, abuse of women and
Domestic abuse:
family courts and
social support for
See also
Abused women; Abusers; Abusive behavior
Domestic abuse task forces
Domestic-violence specialists
Domination, sexual
Double bind, abused mothers in
Double standards
Doubt of self
Early warnings of abusive behavior
Economic abuse, addiction as
Economic exploitation of women
Education about abuse
Emerge program
Eminem
Emotional abuse
of children
Emotional caretaking, entitlement to
Emotional problems
Emotions:
as excuse for abuse
suppression of
Empathy
lack of
Employees, of abusive boss
Employers, abuse of power by
Entertainment industry, and abuse of women
Entitlement
addiction and
arguments and
and breaking up
and change of behavior
conscience and
fathers as role models
to forgiveness
and jealousy
parenting and
remorse and
sexual relationships and
Environment, abuse-free
Escalation of abuse
Escape from abusive relationships
See also
Breaking up with abusers
Ethnic differences in abuse
Excuses for abuse
aggressive personality
alcohol
anger
cultural differences in
cultural influences as
discrimination
fear of intimacy and abandonment
hatred of women
interpersonal skill deficits
job stresses
loss of control
low self-esteem
mental illness
self-defense
strong feelings
victim status
Expectations, unrealistic
Explanations for abuse, mythology of
abused men
abuser as victim
aggressive personality
alcoholism
anger
childhood abuse of abuser
depth of feeling
discrimination
fear of intimacy
hatred of women
job stresses
loss of control
low self-esteem
mental illness
mistreatment by previous partner
skill deficits
suppression of emotions
Exploitation of women, economic, sexual
Externalization of responsibility, parenting and
Fairy tales, and abuse of women
False allegations of domestic violence
Families of abusive men
and change of behavior
decisions in
divisions in
Family court, abusive men and
Fantasies, romantic, of abusive men
Fathers, abusers as
children’s views of
and disrespect for women
Favoritism
Favors, excessive
Fear, abused women and
Feelings
as excuse for abuse
Financial control
Financial imbalance in custody disputes
Flirtatious behavior
Forgiveness, demands for
Former partners, warning signs
Forward, Susan,
Men Who Hate Women and the Women Who Love Them
Freedom, personal, interference with
Freud, Sigmund
Friends
of abused women
and change of behavior
Frustrations, taken out on partners
Fundamentalist religious groups
Games, sexual
Gay men
negative attitudes toward women
Generosity, excessive
“Gentle man” style of abuser
Girls, socialization of
Good times between abusive episodes
Grievances, cultivation of
Group counseling, for children
Guilt feelings, abusers and
Guns ’n’ Roses
Hatred of women, as excuse for abuse
Help for abused women
resources
See also
Hotlines for abused women
Herman, Judith,
Trauma and Recovery
Hoban, Russel,
Bedtime for Francis
Home, abusive attitudes learned in
Homicide
breakup and
Homosexuality
Hotlines for abused women
when to call
Household responsibilities
Human rights
Immigrant women, resources
Incest
Indebtedness, creation of
Independence, interference with
Ineffective abuser programs
Infidelity
Informational support for abuse
Internet, and pornography
Interpersonal skill deficit
Interpretations, twisted
Intimacy:
fear of
as excuse for abuse
loss of
Intimidation
Irresponsibility
Isolation
Jail sentences for abusers
Jealousy
sexual
unreasonable
Job stresses, as excuse for abuse
Joint custody, myth of
Judges
and change of behavior
Justifications
cultural differences
for double standards
Kindness, unpredictable, by abusers
Labor, uncompensated, by partner
Laws, and abuse of women
Learning of abusive behavior
Legal representation
Legal system
abusive men and
Leisure gained by abusive behavior
Lesbians, resources for
Lie-detector tests
Losses, abusive behavior and
Loss of control
Love
abuse and
Lying by abusers
after breakup
in custody disputes
denial of abusive behavior
to police
Male domination of legal system
Manipulative behavior
abusers as role models
and change
and child abuse
legal system and
parenting and
responses to possible breakup
substance abuse and
with woman’s relatives
Marijuana, and abusive behavior
Media, and abuse of women
Mediating the intimacy
Medication, abusive men and
Men:
abused by women, myth of
abusive.
See
Abusers
non-abusive
Men Who Hate Women and the Women Who Love Them
, Forward
Mental cruelty.
See
Psychological abuse
Mental illness
Mentality, abusive
Mind of partner, control of
Minimization of abuse
Misdirection of attention
Mistreatment by previous partner, myth of
Money, problems of
Mood changes
Morality, and loss of control
Mother, blaming of, by abusive men
Mother-child relationships
See also
Children, of abused mothers
Mothers, abused, social views
See also
Abused women; Women
Motivation for behavior change
Movies, and abuse of women
Murder of women by partners
postseparation
Music videos, and abuse of women
Mythology, of abusers
Narcissistic personality disorder
Needs, emotional, entitlement and
Negative attitudes toward women
Neutrality, myth of
New partners of abusive men
Non-abusive men
Objectification:
of children, of women
Obvious situations
denial of
Oedipus complex
Oppression, abuse as