"If you think I support domestic
abuse-- if you think my not explicitly writing, ad nauseum, "NO
TOLERANCE" or "IT'S NOT THE VICTIM'S FAULT" is evidence that I
think "sometimes the bitch deserves it "then I can tell you without
error that [this year] is going to be way too complicated a year for you to
endure, and you are seeing a psychiatrist, and it isn't helping. Stop being
you. The world does not have to validate your prejudices." ~ The Last
Psychiatrist.
Warning: Since I am writing about domestic abuse, I quote the Last Psychiatrist before people start accusing me of “victim blaming” or “excusing the abuser.” Obviously, people who injure other people are committing a crime and deserve to be in jail. But that doesn’t mean the victims have no responsibility for any self destructive behavior (which BTW is NOT a crime) they exhibit – like returning to their abusers again and again and protecting them by keeping the abuse secret.
As Michael Kerr once said, when it comes to relationships: “It’s
all my fault” and “I had nothing to do with it” are both irrational ideas. The
sad part about this is that absolving the victim of any and all responsibility for
their predicament often has the effect of making them feel more helpless, useless, and resigned to their fate. The people who
do this to them are without a doubt harming the very people they claim to be helping.
The book being reviewed here is
about upper class, affluent couples in which the men physically and mentally
abuse their wives. The author believes the couple dynamics in this population
are different than in those in poorer communities. Strangely, most of the women
she discusses are highly-educated professionals or have high paying jobs, and
some of them even earned more than
their husbands.
The most
interesting thing about this book for me is the author. As I read it, I kept wondering if she
thinks these women are as stupid as they act, although she is clearly
questioning that proposition. She spends half the book wondering about how such
bright, educated woman can believe their bullcrap excuses for staying in these
relationships, and blame themselves for the abuse (although some of them did
admit to provoking it, to supposedly make the beatings "more predictable" as if they weren't predicable enough), and
the other half buying into their rationalizations.
I find this interesting because, when I first started thinking about psychotherapy paradigms, I myself struggled with this question mightily. I called it the "question of stupidity," and resolving it led me to the concepts of mutual role functions support, the paradox of altruism, and something called dialectical causality.
Still, I wondered why the author didn’t question some of her own assumptions. For instance, she says most of these women she has interviewed did not come from families of origins in which there was significant spousal abuse. Well, maybe, but how can she know she is being told the truth about that?
These women often lied about the abuse
from their husbands to everyone for years, and even to other therapists, before
coming clean. Some of them told their mothers about it, and the author admits
that their mothers essentially blamed them for the abuse and told them to go
back to their husbands. And in her chapter on the children from these
relationships, she says, “…they too feel that they must hide the family
secret.” If the abuse victim grew up in such a family, wouldn’t that characterization
apply to her? So what on earth makes the author believe these women would suddenly
become paragons of honesty about their parents when they come to see her?
Some of the women also claimed to think that they would be left penniless if they were to leave their successful husbands, even though many have or had successful careers themselves, and that their husbands will be able to manipulate the courts so they would never get alimony or child support. Well, rich successful men sometimes are able to do that, but in what alternate universe are there no attorneys capable of forcing otherwise reluctant men to fork over the cash? Maybe these cases where the rich men prevail are won partly because their wives hired lawyers who secretly believe that she really did deserve what she got.
Why are they hiring such
terrible lawyers? Weitzman brings up the O.J. Simpson case as an example, but
apparently does not know how badly the prosecutors botched the case. (This
is brilliantly described in the book Perfect
Pitch by Jon Steel).
Then there is
the book’s title. These women allegedly hide the abuse because they sort of
think it isn’t supposed to be happening in their social circles, and they are
ashamed. But if someone is beating the crap out of you, why would you care
whether or not it was happening to anyone else? It’s clearly happening to you, and it’s clearly evil. If fact, if
you really thought your situation was that unusual, that would highlight how unacceptable it ought to be.
And another implicit premise here seems to be that being embarrassed is worse than having your jaw broken! Really???
The stories the author relates literally reek of gender role conflicts in both the husbands and wives, but gender roles barely rate a mention. Despite the author’s psychodynamic training, the concept of intrapsychic conflict seems foreign to her, let alone her having an understanding of family systems issues and the power of groupthink and kin selection.
For example, despite being successful career
women, many of these women expected, and were expected by their husbands, to do
all of the domestic chores and child rearing. One father wouldn’t even get up
to feed the baby when mommy was violently ill. A lot of the couples also
stopped having sex while the man was off having multiple affairs – the old
Victorian whore/Madonna conflict in the flesh.
The author
correctly points out that most of these men have narcissistic personality
disorder, but she does not understand the family dynamics of it. (As my readers
know, my views of that are different than the prevailing wisdom). She does make
the accurate point that one of the DSM criteria for this disorder, lack of
empathy, is incorrect. These men have very good empathy. The problem is they
use it in order to more successfully manipulate other people to get what they
want. Not having something is obviously not the same thing as using something one has
in the service of bad intentions.
The author
does acknowledge that these women did seem to ignore red flags when they first
meet their husbands, but seems to downplay the significance of this, and offers
no convincing explanations of why they would do this. In fact, as I like to
say, there are often more red flags than at a meeting of Chinese
communists.
Oh well.
"And another implicit premise here seems to be that being embarrassed is worse than having your jaw broken! Really???"
ReplyDeleteAmong certain wealthy people, reputation is more important than anything else.
"The author does acknowledge that these women did seem to ignore red flags when they first meet their husbands, but seems to downplay the significance of this, and offers no convincing explanations of why they would do this."
Maybe among upper-class heterosexual American men certain narcissistic traits are normative (especially businessmen, doctors and lawyers?), so they wouldn't stand out.
Hey, we're not ALL that bad!
Deletelol I wasn't including you (I was thinking of more traditional medical doctors and/or of Protestant background which I don't get that sense from you although I could be wrong)
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