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One of the best resources for survivors of domestic abuse are other survivors... you are not alone in this world! Don't allow your abuser a victory by forcing you to keep the toxic poison trapped inside, thus destroying your life. If you will communicate with other survivors about your experiences, and listen to their stories -- then you will finally be able to find peace and live a much happier life. For more information about how to share your story, please click here...


Monday, March 23, 2009

A Horrific Crime of Domestic Violence



A Horrific Crime

"Every 15 seconds, a woman is beaten by her husband or partner in the United States.* Yvette Cade never thought she'd be included in this statistic…then she married Roger Hargrave.

When Yvette first met Hargrave, she says he always smiled and had a "great personality." As a single parent raising a young daughter, she says she also admired the care and concern he showed for his son from a previous relationship. Yvette soon married Hargrave, but their happiness began to fade after only a few months.

Carol Bryant, Yvette's aunt and the one who introduced the couple, says Hargrave started drinking a lot after the wedding and then began verbally abusing her niece. "You couldn't even call their home without having to listen to him in the background making vulgar remarks and screaming and hollering," Carol says.

Yvette's family feared that Hargrave's erratic behavior would turn violent. Within months, their fears became a frightening reality." Hargrave's insults soon escalated into physical abuse, Yvette says. At first, she says she wore long sleeves to hide the bruises and dark sunglasses to shield her black eyes from her family. "I thought that he loved me, and I just thought that these are problems that we can work through," Yvette says. "I was blind."

After her family realized what was happening, Carol says they advised Yvette to leave her husband. Hargrave finally moved out and the two separated…but Yvette says her estranged husband continued to torment her and her daughter. "I felt like a prisoner in my own home," she says.

In July 2005, Yvette got a protective order against Hargrave. Two months later, Hargrave asked the court to lift the order, claiming he and Yvette would attend marriage counseling. Despite Yvette's desperate pleas and pictures documenting the physical abuse she suffered, the judge, Richard Palumbo, dismissed Yvette's case and lifted the protective order. He later said it was a clerical error. He has since retired.

On the morning of October 10, 2005, just three weeks after Yvette's protective order was lifted, Hargrave showed up at the cell phone store where his wife worked. Yvette was busy helping customers when, suddenly, Hargrave began pouring clear liquid from a soda bottle onto her head and upper body.

Yvette says she was so focused on not causing a commotion in front of the customers, she didn't realize she was covered in gasoline. As Yvette ran out the back door into the parking lot, Hargrave followed her. "He caught me, grabbed me, and I felt something on my back," Yvette says. "The next thing I know, I was on fire."

Frantically, Yvette ran back into the store covered in flames. "I just went to the sink, and I began to hose my face, and I remember thinking to myself that my face was melting," she says.

When help arrived, Yvette was rushed to the emergency room. Hargrave was arrested and charged with attempted murder.

Yvette spent several months in the hospital and endured 17 surgeries before returning home. Today, she continues to struggle with extreme physical pain and the emotional shock of being burned alive. The burnt skin on Yvette's arms has contracted, making it difficult for her to move them. Lack of mobility makes everyday tasks like brushing teeth and getting dressed extremely difficult.

Yvette's ears melted during the attack and she lost an earlobe. To prevent scar tissue from forming on her face, she wears a plastic face mask 23 hours a day. She also has to wear pressure garments—tight clothes that keep the skin from becoming bumpy. Some days, Yvette says it's just too painful to get the garments over her arms.

Despite the scars, Yvette maintains a positive attitude about her new appearance. "I don't care what people think when they look at my face," she says. "I know what it feels like to be pretty, so if they don't like it, that's too bad."

Yvette says that while she was enduring Hargrave's verbal and physical abuse, she felt embarrassed, ashamed and guilty—most of all for exposing her young daughter to the situation. "Children are innocent, and they don't deserve to see those images," Yvette says.

"So often what happens is you see this happening in your own family and you say, 'I will never be this kind of woman,'" Oprah says. "Then she grows up and she ends up with somebody who does the same thing to her, because that's what she knows."

Yvette hopes that by telling her story on The Oprah Winfrey Show, her daughter will learn from her mistakes and be less likely to fall victim to abuse...

...Only months after being burned alive, Yvette's progress has surprised doctors. She was told to expect six to eight months of recovery time in the hospital, but she made it home in three.

Hargrave, found guilty on three counts—first-degree attempted murder, second-degree attempted murder and first-degree assault—was sentenced to life in prison. He is appealing the conviction. Does Yvette have anything she wants to tell the man accused of burning her alive? "If you don't have anything good to say," Yvette says, "don't say anything at all."

If you are involved in an abusive relationship, Oprah says it's no accident you're hearing Yvette's story. "This is a message to you today to do something about it—to let her life be an example for your life, to take her strength and her bravery and her courage and allow you to have the same."

Find original article here.

Saturday, March 21, 2009

I Admitted It... Domestic Violence in My Life

I Admitted It...

The following interview portrays a womans knowledge on domestic violence. Here, a twenty one year old woman shares her life experience now with strength...

Danielle: How was the beginning of your relationship? Was it somewhat on a normal basis?

Joanna: It was better than normal, almost perfect I would say. He had put forth much, if not all desire to have me while I was running the other way. I made him desire me, thinking it was right at the time. With all the attenion and promises he would declare, all I thought about was knowing I would be sure to have someone love me forever.

Danielle: How far into the relationhip was it before it became physical and what triggered the abuse?

Joanna: About seven months into the realtionship I found him becoming very demanding and dominatng. He would show a jealous side to him where he would demand total respect from my friends and myself putting his self into the center of attention, only that of what a weak man would show. A coward, of course!

Danielle: How did he handle his anger? Was it mental, physical or both?

Joanna: It was mostly physical anger, through insecurities and with self-frustration that I believe he took out on me feeling as if he was tryingto discipline me to have me become a "stronger" woman. Although it was both mental and physical, I was being brainwashed into thinking that what was happening or going to happen was the way it was "supposedto be." I was ripped apart by being slapped in the face, punched in the head, kicked in the ribs, and even more painful being whipped with phone cords a belt and even choked with a cable wire. Sometimes there is no measure to the pain endured during physical abuse but many women feel when their other is mentally abuseing them it has alot to do with thir physical status or by their professional status, but within my story, it was, it was not like that. My mental abuse was based on my social status, leveling our cultural background.

Danielle: Why did you allow the abuse to contine without breaking away after the first time it occurred? Are you still enduring the abuse?

Joanna: Sometimes a bad man is like a bad dream that just will not go away. The way we fall asleep we fall in love, the way we dream we scream. Love is blind. We have to wake up...eventually, right? I stopped dreaming.

Danielle: Do you presently come in contact with him? And if so, do you allow him to take advantage of you?

Joanna: I do speak to him today because i feel he makes me a stronger person. I know! I know! Your wondering? Well, I see it this way; if you experinece something in life, which you are able to overcome, you should be willing to speak about it and how you survived it. Never regret anything you do in life, because the things that you regret are the things that make you a stronger person today. With all that has happened to me there is no greater feeling in the world being granted the chance to measure the value of true love.

Danielle: What advice can you give to abused individuals around the world?

Joanna: A persons body is a gift no ther should take over. You as a person having personally experienced abuse know it has been more challening than ever alone trying not to focus on the physical pain but the mental strength it has brought you up until this day. From my first encounter of abuse in shock and stability, the pain has run dry. Women have to be able to understand you must overcome what others do to you and understand nobody is better than another in this world.

Danielle: What advice would you give to those that have never been in an abused relationship, who might one day encounter it?

Joanna: There are so many women that have experienced abuse and so many that know someone who has been involved domestic abuse that I hope they would learn from others mistakes. But the advice I would give them is to make sure you know the person you are with, pay attention to certain signs and when you notice those signs get out no matter what.

To go to the original article, click here

Get Me Out of Domestic Violence - I Cannot Breathe


GET ME OUT....... I CANNOT BREATHE

WOMEN DON'T STAY BECAUSE THEY WANT TO PUT UP WITH DOMESTIC VIOLENCE

SOMETIMES THEY STAY BECAUSE THEY HAVE TO AND THERE ARE MANY REASONS FOR EACH INDIVUAL CASE WHY THEY DO IT.
DON'T BE JUDGEMENTAL UNTIL YOU KNOW THE FULL STORY.
THREATS ARE VERY REAL !

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A Warning List for Domestic Violence


What is Abuse? - A Warning List

People often think of domestic violence as physical violence, such as hitting. However, domestic violence takes other forms, such as psychological, emotional, or sexual abuse.__Domestic violence is about one person in a relationship using a pattern of behaviors to control the other person. It can happen to people who are married or not married; heterosexual, gay, or lesbian; living together, separated, or dating.__If your partner repeatedly uses one or more of the following to control you;
0. pushing, hitting, slapping, choking, kicking, or biting
0. threatening you, your children, other family members or pets
0. threatening suicide to get you to do something
0. using or threatening to use a weapon against you
0. keeping or taking your paycheck
0. puts you down or makes you feel bad
0. forcing you to have sex or to do sexual acts you do not want or like
0. keeping you from seeing your friends, family or from going to work
YOU HAVE BEEN ABUSED!!__Remember threatened or actual physical violence may be illegal. Consider calling the police for help

To link back to the original article click here

Friday, March 20, 2009

A Real Man Doesn't Commit Domestic Violence

Let Us Be Men

"Years ago, when my brothers and I were boys, our mother had radical cancer surgery. She came very close to death. Much of the tissue in her neck and shoulder had to be removed, and for a long time it was very painful for her to use her right arm.

One morning about a year after the surgery, my father took Mother to an appliance store and asked the manager to show her how to use a machine he had for ironing clothes. The machine was called an Ironrite. It was operated from a chair by pressing pedals with one's knees to lower a padded roller against a heated metal surface and turn the roller, feeding in shirts, pants, dresses, and other articles. You can see that this would make ironing (of which there was a great deal in our family of five boys) much easier, especially for a woman with limited use of her arm. Mother was shocked when Dad told the manager they would buy the machine and then paid cash for it. Despite my father's good income as a veterinarian, Mother's surgery and medications had left them in a difficult financial situation.

On the way home, my mother was upset: How can we afford it? Where did the money come from? How will we get along now?Finally Dad told her that he had gone without lunches for nearly a year to save enough money. Now when you iron, he said, you won't have to stop and go into the bedroom and cry until the pain in your arm stops. She didn't know he knew about that. I was not aware of my father's sacrifice and act of love for my mother at the time, but now that I know, I say to myself, There is a man."

-Elder D. Todd Christofferson

To link back to the original article click here

Comments from Perpetrators of Domestic Violence

1. Pain comes in many ways and I have given a lot to my wife, and I regret it. -Michael
2. I feel like this DVD helps a lot. I have a baby and that phone call on the introduction of the movie gave me chills all over my body and the picture of the baby that got beaten up and killed. Just made me realize a lot of stuff. –Blanca
3. I feel touched and moved by the stories that the speakers have told and I appreciate their time. I also feel that this has helped me in my situation, and has helped me think, calm down, and just talk. –Damian
4. I feel touched. I know my actions were wrong. From being a victim myself, I can not believe I harmed another person. –Billie Sue
5. Me pareció muy bien porque aprendí que en vez de llevar violencia a la casa es major llevar amor y confianza para la familia. –Efrain

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Poem for victims of Domestic Violence

You are the trip I did not take;_
You are the pearls I cannot buy;_
You are my blue Italian lake;_
You are my piece of foreign sky.

("To My Child," quoted in Charles L. Wallis, ed., The Treasure Chest [1965], 54.)