|  Healthcare Training Institute - Quality Education since 1979CE for Psychologist, Social Worker, Counselor, & MFT!!
 Section 
10Physical Violence in Relationships
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 The 
last section, talked about interventions for clients who are on an emotional roller 
coaster of fear, guilt, feelings of going crazy, and anger. Healing and Recovery 
can be difficult processes for your clients. In the process of recovery, individuals 
are presented with many opportunities to recover themselves. Marian, 
a 33 year old secretary, was in the Lifetrap of physical abuse. Marian 
recently separated from her physically-abusive husband. Marian stated, "Rob 
used to be so caring then all of the sudden, our honeymoon was over. About a year 
into our marriage, Rob turned on me and started hitting me whenever things didn't 
go his way. I thought it was my fault, so I constantly stayed on edge, trying 
to make sure that everything was perfect for him. When things weren't perfect, 
Rob was capable of torture. One time, he broke my arm and kept pulling on it saying 
it wasn't broken. Then he refused to let me go to the doctor to have it looked 
at."  Marian described to me the first time she tried to leave Rob. "He 
  begged me to stay and said that things would change. I stayed but things only 
  seemed to get worse. I was paralyzed with fear. When I finally had had enough, 
  I left without warning while he was at work and moved in with a coworker. I've 
  filed for divorce, and I'm only corresponding with him through lawyers now. Things 
  are starting to get better, but I can't help but feel like this is my fault, because 
  I'm not good enough."  ♦ Four Concepts for Acting on Your Own Behalf There 
are, of course, many approaches for battered women. But, here are a few. I suggested 
that Marian think about what made her feel good about herself. I told Marian 
that she might keep four concepts in mind when acting on her own behalf:
 -- 1. 
She should protect herself.
 -- 2. She should develop her talents with 
dedication and discipline.
 -- 3. She should determine her needs and make 
plans on how she intends to meet them.
 -- 4. She should build structure 
into every day of her life.
 Through 
my work with Marian, I found that the more important part of the recovery process 
was "taking back." Marian needed to determine her needs and "take 
them back." One way that I recommended she do this was by making a list. 
Once Marian had written down her needs, she could think of things which she could 
do to begin to meet them. Writing her needs down brought acknowledgement to them, 
and validated Marian's feelings. For example, some needs Marian wrote down were 
finding a place on her own and making sure she has enough money to support herself. I 
found, with Marian, that once she'd left Rob and decided to date again, she needed 
to recognize herself. By recognize herself I mean: I discussed with Marian about 
being her own choice-maker, discriminator, and action-taker in order to avoid 
being abused; by having her limits respected; and by affirming that, "Today, 
I must act on my own behavior." ♦ Seven Things Every Survivor Needs to RememberHere's 
a checklist of the Seven Things Every Survivor Needs to Remember. Ask yourself 
if you're currently treating an abuse survivor with which these need to be reviewed. 
I find I've dealt with these for so long that I can easily overlook providing 
my client with this basic information to help them grow past their physical-abuse 
lifetrap. Here is the checklist:
 -- 1. Healing and recovery take 
time.
 -- 2. The process of healing and recovery can be helped along but 
can't be rushed.
 -- 3. Healing and recovery are processes, so one doesn't 
see a lot of hard physical evidence that one is recovering.
 -- 4. Increased awareness is a result of healing and recovering.
 -- 5. Healing and recovery 
lead one to the truth.
 -- 6. In recovery, a woman's feelings inform her 
so she has more than just an intellectual understanding of what is or was going 
on.
 -- 7. Healing means increasing self-esteem and awareness.
 Reviewed 2023
 
 Peer-Reviewed Journal Article References:
 Brock, R. L., Barry, R. A., Lawrence, E., Rolffs, J., Cerretani, J., & Zarling, A. (2015). Online administration of questionnaires assessing psychological, physical, and sexual aggression: Establishing psychometric equivalence. Psychology of Violence, 5(3), 294–304.
 
 Cross, E. J., Overall, N. C., Low, R. S. T., & McNulty, J. K. (2019). An interdependence account of sexism and power: Men’s hostile sexism, biased perceptions of low power, and relationship aggression. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 117(2), 338–363.
 
 Hammett, J. F., Karney, B. R., & Bradbury, T. N. (2020). When does verbal aggression in relationships covary with physical violence? Psychology of Violence.
 
 Roberson, K., & Pieterse, A. L. (2021). Internalized racism and self-esteem: Do depressive symptoms matter? Cultural Diversity and Ethnic Minority Psychology, 27(3), 531–536.
 
 Testa, M., & Derrick, J. L. (2014). A daily process examination of the temporal association between alcohol use and verbal and physical aggression in community couples. Psychology of Addictive Behaviors, 28(1), 127–138.
 QUESTION 
10What is a key concept in dealing with your client who has experienced 
physical abuse? To select and enter your answer go to .
 
 
 
 
 
 
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