Stopping Abuse

I read over on Roc Rebel Granny about blog against abuse day, which was last Thursday. I didn’t read about it in time to do a blog post at the time. Coincidentally, I read about a study which suggests that teens with several close friends, especially same sex friends, are less likely than other teens to be in abusive relationships. Here is the article, in its entirety:

Teenage girls who stick close with their circle of friends are less likely to take abuse from the boys they date, a new study suggests.

The intricacies of the teen years include more than the physical sprouting and associated zits. Teenagers begin to define their sense of self as individuals while forming friendships and potentially romantic relationships.

The new research, published in the Sept. 20 issue of the journal BMC Nursing, sheds light on the teen-dating scene and finds that a close-knit circle of same-sex friends provides structure for teenage girls as they navigate the dating course. The maintenance of a strong friendship circle reduces a teen girl’s uncertainty about abuse, and in turn protects her from it.

In this study, teens defined abuse, whether physical, verbal, or emotional, as an act in which a boyfriend intended to hurt a girl.

Each year, one in 11 adolescents reports being a victim of physical dating abuse, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. That could be an underestimate as past research has shown teen girls often falsely deny being in a violent or abusive relationship.

Lifecycle of dating

For the new study, Sharyl Toscano, a family nurse practitioner and assistant professor of nursing at the University of Vermont, interviewed 22 girls aged 15 to 18 from two Massachusetts high schools. The teenagers answered questions about their own dating experiences, those of friends, the influences on those relationships and any experiences of abuse.

The results revealed seven stages in the dating cycle, including:

  • Group meeting: The couple-to-be generally meets when their circles of same-sex peers interact.
  • Talk and exchange: They get to know each other by talking on the phone or chatting via the Internet.
  • Couple-group dating: They start to go out together with other couples.
  • Independent dating: They date independently of their friend circles.
  • Re-entering group as a couple: They join their friend circles as a couple.
  • Break-up: For whatever reason, they split.
  • Re-introduction into group: The two re-join their respective circle of friends as independent members.

The level of intimacy and length of time spent in each stage varied among the participants. Teens reported a strong desire to have a boyfriend, enough so that during the early stages, they weren’t choosy about this significant other. As the relationship progressed, they said intimacy, both physical and emotional, were important.

During the early stages, teens also got “healthy dating” practice.

“In the early stages of dating, the entire group (circle) will go out to the movies or some other activity together,” Toscano told LiveScience. “During these outings, the teens develop essential skills of dating, including but not limited to warding off unwanted sexual advances.”

Safety net

Keeping ties with a circle of friends can reduce the likelihood of dating abuse, Toscano found, because if a teen is uncertain about abuse, she can turn to the group for a reality check and, if needed, protection from further harm.

Overall, this circle sets the social rules and norms for the dating relationship, acting as a safety net against anyone not abiding by the set rules. Outside of group guidance, teen girls could see physical abuse as play fighting, control as protection and sexual pressure (even rape) as normal sexual tension, Toscano said.

One participant reported cutting herself off from her friends because they didn’t like her boyfriend, and when abuse did occur she hid it.

Other factors also contributed to the likelihood of dating abuse. Teen girls were more likely to tolerate abuse if they feared losing the guys, had lost their virginity to them or were sexually involved with them.

Abuse basics

The teens reported that “intent to hurt” was the defining factor as to whether an act constituted abuse of any kind.

Emotional abuse was the most common form of abuse reported. Typically, the emotionally abusive partner would try to isolate the couple from the circle of friends. Once “intimacy” was established, the abuser would further control his girlfriend with suicidal threats, Toscano said.

Physical abuse reported by subjects included hitting, touching in harmful ways and making physical threats.

The teens had a tough time defining sexual abuse and reported that once they had succumbed to sexual pressure, they didn’t feel justified in refusing the second time. One student explained how sex makes it more likely that a girl will stay in an abusive relationship, saying, “When you finally open up to someone and you get so close to them, it just doesn’t matter if they treat you like crap.”

I wonder if we can expand this, to say that anyone with a close group of friends is less likely to suffer from abuse? Emotional abuse, elder abuse, verbal abuse, etc. Anyone with enough power over their life to get out of a situation (child abuse being one case where it’s rare for the victim to have any degree of power…) would be more likely do be able to do so, more likely to not get into an abusive situation in the first place, it seems to me, if they have friends who are close enough and strong enough to say, “This isn’t right. Don’t let this person continue to do this to you. Let me help.”

I found this article to be very interesting, and one that made a lot of sense. I hope that all of my readers’ children have good friends in their lifes. Friends who will help to protect them if, God forbid, something should go wrong in a relationship. Actually, I hope we all have good friends to help us as well. Because abuse doesn’t have to be from a romantic relationship. It can be from a parent, a child, a boss, whomever. And if we have someone in our lives to give us a reality check, and help us to stop a crappy situation before it gets worse, that’s pretty damn  valuable.

5 Comments

  • Gina

    I think a lack of support system, both for abuser and abusee can exacerbate the problem. For example, Hubba-hubba’s uncle, (now deceased) had Parkinson’s hit him fairly hard at an early age and his wife became his sole caretaker. She lived in Pennsylvania and had little help, and after 10+ years of deteriorating health, became angry with him often. Hubba-hubba and I personally thought it bordered on abuse, but knew that she was just frustrated and alone and we talked to her about it, but she kept insisting she was fine. So hard.

  • Maya's Granny

    When I worked with women who had been abused, isolation was always a factor. This is also true of kids — they don’t bring other kids home with them and often they aren’t allowed to go to other kids houses.

  • ann adams

    Thank you for this. It doesn’t matter if it’s late. I wouldn’t have know to post if not for one blogger that promoted it.

    You probably know that one of the ways to spot an abuser early on is the insistence on isolating their potential victim. No friends, no family contact. The woman (and yes, it’s usually a woman) feels more and more helpless. Of course, she has nowhere to turn or she thinks she doesn’t.