The Different Faces of an Abuser
By Alberta
Parish
Perpetrators of abuse often never change even
as they grow older. Someone who was verbally abusive twenty years ago is
still verbally abusive today. Just like the schoolyard bully, abusive people
are often cowards and when you stand up to these individuals, they tend to
be either openly hostile to you or they ban you from their social circle.
This means you may never again get an invitation to come over to their house
for dinner, especially during the holidays. You stood up to the abuser! Now,
he or she doesn't know how to handle you and if the abuser doesn't know how
to handle you as the abuser has in previous years, he/she no longer feels
like they can deal with you. He/she no longer wants to deal with you.
What is abuse? Abuse, whether physical, emotional
or verbal, can rear its ugly head through anything or anyone whether it is
a spouse, relative, or your so-called best buddy. Abuse can be as simple
as someone consistently having negative comments to say to you and about
you (specifically to your face). Have you ever known a relative who always
had a negative comment for you every time you saw him/her? Have you ever
known someone who's always had very negative or unfounded opinions of you
and felt too free in letting you know just how much he/she disapproves of
you? Well, this is a form of verbal abuse.
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Breaking up with a sociopath narcissist? Be prepared for the battle
of your life! While you are an emotional basketcase, he is as Cold as Ice!
While you are left holding down the fort and dealing with the real-life
responsibilities, he walks away from everything leaving you to mop off
his stage and pay his bills. He will punish you in ways you couldn't possibly
have ever imagined...
....and not
even acknowledge it to himself! Why? Because he's off charming the socks
off of new women as if your years together didn't even
exist!
The sociopathic
narcissistic ex continually acts in abusive, bewildering and confusing
ways. He is not above committing destructive acts. When the breakup
becomes a reality, it is likely that his 'false persona' will completely
disappear all together and you will most likely experience the most hurtful
of behavior from him. He is completely lacking in empathy, and - since he
is not receiving any admiration from you anymore - he will dismiss you
and discard you as worthless to him, consequently dropping any fake
front that he use to put up in order to keep you in the relationship.
Click here to read 'The Counterfeit
Heart: Breaking Up With a Narcissist - the Sociopath in Your Life' by
Tigress Luv
When you mention the word 'ABUSE', most people
tend to focus more on physical and sexual abuse. However, verbal abuse, which
is an offspring of emotional abuse, is not to be easily discarded as if it
is something that is all in a person's head. There are serious problems that
arise from verbal/emotional abuse. Verbal/emotional abuse can be anything
from a partner cheating on you constantly to being constantly berated and
belittled for every thing you do or don't do. This means, nothing you ever
do is good enough in the eyes of the abuser. See, the abuser is really an
insecure person, and also extremely jealous. Therefore, he/she has to find
something wrong with you so that he or she can feel better about himself/herself,
because they see someone else's life more screwed up than theirs. An abuser
would also rather see you work like a slave on a dead end job than see you
succeed in your own business, whether that business is you being an
author/writer, entertainer, small business owner, or entrepreneur.
As true cowards, abusers often pick on those
that are truly defenseless, which are mostly children. Unfortunately, most
children who experience verbal abuse doesn't always first experience it from
other children, they experience it first in the home. They experience it
first from relatives. Domestic violence does not just include the physical
beating and/or torturing of a partner and children; domestic violence also
includes verbal abuse, which may come in the form of verbal threats against
a person's physical being, or unjustified harsh scolding concerning a person's
character or even his/her physicality.
Although I was fortunate enough to have a loving
and non-abusive mother, I still experienced verbal/emotional abuse growing
up. Today, I can look people straight in the face, say what I have to say
to that person whenever he/she crosses the line with me, and be done with
it. As a child, I couldn't do this. You know, when you're a child, you don't
always have a voice to let people know that they're hurting you by their
ill treatment of you. A child doesn't always have a voice to say, "I don't
like how you talk down to me, treat me like I'm unimportant, and say mean
things to me all the time." Because a child is often intimidated by his/her
abuser, that child may never utter a single word to anyone outside the home
about what he/she experiences inside the home on a regular basis. I believe
this is one reason why when children get to school, they act out all day
in their classrooms. Sometimes, this is a testament of the turmoil that a
child may be experiencing inside his/her home.
Whenever I think of an abusive person, I think
of someone who's a sociopath. Only an abusive sociopath would continue to
perpetuate abusive behavior whether they perpetuate it in the home, against
you, or in the workplace. Workplace bullies are abusive people period! Only
an abusive sociopath would think that he/she has done nothing wrong, and
feels that he/she owes no apology. Only an abusive sociopath would continue
to perpetuate abusive actions toward people they've already hurt in some
way. Yet, there are people like this occupying our personal space each and
every day. And we continue to deal with them, because some of them are our
friends, relatives, or a spouse. Where do you draw the line in the sand with
these people? At some point, you have to. And when you do, be prepared to
fight (I don't mean physical beating because you're an adult now). Just like
the schoolyard bully, you have to put an abusive sociopath in his/her place.
You have to say to yourself, "I'm not gonna take this shit anymore." You're
going to have to stand up for yourself when it comes to an abuser whether
this is family, a spouse, a friend, or your supervisor.
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