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Why Does She Stay?

Three reasons why young women stay in destructive relationships and what we can do about it!
-August 2005-
 

When people think about violence in a relationship, there is a common question that comes to mind, “Why does she stay?”  This question is usually followed by the statement, “I wouldn’t stay if someone did that to me!”  The truth of the matter is that abusive relationships do not begin with a slap or busted lip, it starts with the breaking of one’s will, the erosion of one’s self-esteem, and isolation from loved ones.  When a person is stripped of all of these elements it becomes relatively easy to gain control over them.    

 

From the perspective of a young woman in high school or college, the reasons for staying in an unhealthy relationship increase greatly for three reasons:   

 

  1. Their friends are in unhealthy relationships, so abusive relationships seem normal.  We learn what is acceptable and unacceptable by experience. In other words, we live and learn.  Teens have little to no dating experience when they enter into a relationship filled with the “L-Word,” so what they lack in experience, they make up for in emulation.  Teens will emulate the relationships they see around them, whether this be on television, at home between parents, or from each other. 

 

There is no way to get around the issue that teens look to each other for advice.  Our teens spend between eight and ten hours away from home and with friends.  If their friends are in unhealthy relationships, they will view their own destructive relationship as normal.

 

  1. Female competition causes young women to put up with unhealthy behavior.

Competition between females has been such a hot topic in the past year that books and movies have been made to deal with this “Mean Girl” phenomenon.  You would be surprised at the number of teens that tell me they stay with an abusive partner because “all of the other girls want him, and I’ve got him!”  Truthfully…when I look back on my relationship, this is one of the reasons why I stayed.

 

  1. Lack of Self-Confidence.
Another word for self-confidence is self-value. The message behind self-value is this: what you value, you take care of. You don’t allow people to destroy the things you value. If a young woman has a lack of self-confidence or self-value, then it is easy to see why someone who makes them feel pretty would have so much power and influence in their life. It is easy to see why a young woman with little to no self-esteem would be easy prey for an abusive boyfriend as I was.

Luckily, there is something that we can do about this and save our young women from years of emotional, physical, and mental battery:

·        Speak to the young women in our lives about healthy and unhealthy relationships.  Being proactive and educating our young women about dating violence, healthy relationships, and their worth, are the best methods of prevention; however, education is a great intervening tool as well.  As stated before, young women look to each other for validation that their actions are right.  How will the young woman in your life know that she is on a destructive path unless you tell her? 

·        Encourage our young women to work together and not against each other.  We can do this by creating mentoring programs in our local communities as well as developing activities that require young women to work together.  Establish a book club and create a reading list that empowers women. “He Loves Me Not, But I Love Myself! A young woman’s guide to understanding a conquering dating violence,” is a great prevention and intervention tool.  Go to www.tamikajohnson.com, for a book club reading guide.

·        Show our young women that they are leading ladies, people of value.  That they were born for greatness! 

·        Stop asking “why do you stay?” and start asking, “Do you deserve this treatment?” and “What is your value?” the last thing you want to be is judgmental and asking these questions will cause your loved one to think about her situation rather than 

·        Impart words of life such as “You are destined for great things, this is the reason he won’t leave you.  If you were such a bad person, do you think he would stick around?”

 

 


This article was written by Tamika Johnson, Author of "He Loves Me Not, but I Love Myself! A young woman's guide to understanding and conquering dating violence."
Article may not reprinted without permission from the author.
 
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Article may not be reprinted without permission from the author. 

Tamika Johnson
Leading Lady Enterprises
P.O. Box 35, Worton, MD 21678
 
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