DV affects all women, whether they wear pearls or tattoos

Written by: crabbypatter

 

I think it’s important to add my voice to the outrage. 

 

I’m going to do it from another perspective.  Lest people paint my sisters as a gang of combat-boot wearing, libber mental cases, I had to chime in as a woman who lives on the other side of the political divide.  I jumped the chasm as a result of my ex-husband. 

 

I don’t suffer the same fate—or share the same personal outrage—as my friends here; their pain is far beyond anything I’ve experienced. A helplessness that I, thankfully, did not have to live through. 

 

Though I was primary caregiver for my two sons, my abusive ex-husband did threaten to take the children from me when I told him I was filing for divorce.  He snarled in my face, “You’ll NEVER take the children from me!” In that moment, I understood how women abduct their own children.  Just as he would never let me “take the children from him,” those are the same children he could never bother with.  His indignation at having to experience their joy and laughter—we’re talking the good stuff of parenting, not the dregs here—and his anger at how the children wrecked his life, were suddenly important when I wanted to take them away from the abuse.

 

He realized that he could have his career and look like a fantastic dad while I did all the work, so he relinquished their care, assumed a miserable martyrdom at my leaving him.  From that day forward, I had to hear from people who ran into him their weekends together how fantastic he was as a dad: how lucky they were!  I smile through gritted teeth because I know the truth would never ring true to them.

 

No, my anger at my ex has faded to a pity of sorts. A sadness at a dream that was bigger—much bigger—than my reality has taken the place of anger.  A resignation that in addition to my titles (wife, mother, ex-wife, sister, friend, co-worker, daughter), I could add the titles that sound so foreign to me: Victim. Survivor. Advocate. Vigilante. 

 

My anger from my situation comes from having to defend and explain again and again.

 

There is a blame that falls to the women in a domestic abuse cases.  At once, she is blamed for not leaving. She is blamed for not trying harder. She is blamed for exposing her children to abuse. She is blamed for creating a broken family. She is blamed for not conforming, for trying harder.  She is blamed for standing up and speaking out.

 

As I read my dear friend’s rant about Sarah Palin, I think about how easy it is for us to find a woman (any woman will do) and paint a target on them.  The Republicans have targeted Hilary since the last election. McCain sneaked his running mate into the running in a strategic move that nobody saw coming—and she was subjected to an immediate barrage of criticism. 

 

As I watched Palin’s speech during the GOP convention, I was proud of her grace and eloquence. Just as proud as I was that Hillary was able to let down her shield a bit and shed a few tears on her campaign trail—Lord knows I wondered what it would take to make her shed tears if she didn’t during that whole horrid, very public Monica Lewinsky episode.

 

What I find difficult to swallow (if you’ll pardon that phrase so closely placed to the name Monica Lewinsky), is how quick women are set up to jump to the defense of a man, how quickly we’ll turn against our own. How quickly we “ewwwww” the semen-stained blue dress and let history embrace that detail, while the President behind it meanders off, scott-free.

 

Turning against our own is often how we end up in domestic abuse relationships in the first place. The abusive men are quick to eliminate the women that are most dear, strong in spirit, and most apt to call them on their crap, breaking down our defenses and support networks in one fell swoop. They alienate us from them, and leave us standing vulnerable, depending on them to be friend and lover. It’s a dangerous stance to take.

 

Making the decision to leave my ex-husband was difficult.  Our relationship had been eroding, and what little remained was quickly washed away with the tears I shed alone, pregnant, watching the waves roll onto the shore of a Wisconsin lake one frigid January after he had finally crossed the line from verbal and emotional abuse to physical abuse.  It’s textbook: they escalate when a woman is pregnant.

 

My friends—our friends—turned on me, too. I spent years contemplating what it would be like to leave him.  We’d seen probably half a dozen counselors together and separate to resolve “our” issues.  I tried everything I knew how to do. I gave up designs to have a career so I could cater to his. I gave up interests. Physical activity. Family. Friends. When he finally pushed me to give our children a hostile home environment, I knew I had to leave.

 

But my friends—our friends—didn’t see the man I lived with.  They told me it was difficult to navigate a marriage with young children.  They told me that he spoke highly of me, that he loved me and our sons very much. They asked me if I thought it through.

 

These were educated people.  As the friends of my professor (then) husband, they were doctorate-holding professionals.  They were liberal. They were feminist. They were pro-woman, pro-choice, anti-domestic violence, pro-programs to address all social injustices. These were women that I would attend domestic violence rallies with, before I knew that I was in such a relationship.  They’d tsk-tsk the abusive offenders and embraced those women who didn’t know better than to leave.

 

Until they knew that I was one of them.

 

My democratic, green, pro-woman, feminist friends turned a blind eye to me when I confronted them with evidence of my “feminist” soon-to-be-ex’s emotional battery, verbal assaults and physical attacks. They swept it under the carpet of “He’s such a beloved and well-respected guy.”

 

When faced with the option of embracing a woman in need or embracing the abuser who was one of them….they chose him. 

 

I left the party that supported women in theory, but not in action. 

 

My conservative friends? Those who were supposed to hold the family together at all costs? The “Focus on the Family” people I sniggered about?  They supported me and listened. They believed me. They stood by me. I was touched by how my republican friends rallied around me and my boys.

 

My anger comes from the party and people who were supposed to get my plight. Those people who looked through me (without a greeting) rather than at me, despite years of companionship.

 

So, love Sarah. Or hate Sarah. Love Hillary. Or hate Hillary. I’m looking past the politics to the women themselves.  Women with husbands.  Women with daughters.  Women who are just as vulnerable as I was. As we all are.

 

1 in 4 women will suffer physical violence at the hands of their partner: husband, boyfriend, significant other.  According to the U.S. Department of Justice, every two minutes a woman in the United States is raped. Approximately 28% of victims are raped by husbands or boyfriends, 35% by acquaintances, and 5% by other relatives.

 

The numbers are there. We women are here. They are one of us, regardless of the color political banner above their heads.

 

In our pearls and combat boots, with coiffed hair and tattoos, we need to begin to acknowledge our commonalities and stand together. The men have made it too easy for us implode.

Thinking about Sarah Palin

Written by: civillydisobedientbitch

I’ve been mulling over this for a while now. I’ve needed that time to process because, to be quite frank, this disobedient bitch was so incredibly pissed off when McSame announced her nomination to VP that I just about literally foamed at the mouth.

It’s not pretty when I get to feelin’ rabid, but it’s not conducive to articulate communication, either. I had to sit on this one.

First up: Sarah Palin ain’t no damn feminist. She’s not a socialist, either. Why am I conflating those two political philosophies? Because one is defined in one’s public life by one’s policy, ok? For the less than literate, than means you ARE what you DO in the public sphere. You don’t get to lay claim to some label or another merely because it’s clever and politically expedient. I don’t get to call myself a neocon just for shits and giggles simply because I feel like it, yanno? I highly doubt that Dickless Cheney would fail to call ME out if I labeled myself a neocon and started some blog espousing Marxist feminist philosophy, all the while claiming that this was the REAL neocon philosophy. It’s what those of us with an education like to call incongruous, to say the least.

And let’s not forget, she has enjoyed all those advantages necessary to allow her rise to power ON THE BACKS of feminists who FOUGHT and BLED for HER right, and every other woman’s right, to operate in the world as a human being, not some action figure piece of meat.

Palin’s policies are about as anti-feminist as you can get. Plain and simple. If you want some proof, feel free to hit cnn.com, or msnbc.com, or any other damn MSM news outlet online for a laundry list of things she actually DID when she was in power. When she was actually DOING things, yanno, instead of hiring out administration duties to someone else.

So, now that we’ve disposed of this wrongheaded notion that Sarah Wolf Killer Palin is some sort of feminist icon, let’s move on, shall we?

I personally can’t stand the woman’s policy positions. I have no clue on Goddess’ green earth what she’s like as a person so I am just not going to even SPECULATE how I’d feel about her, person to person. Hell, I hear she’s quite charismatic. I might even like to do some shots with her or something. Until the issue of banning books came up, I suppose. Then we’d have to have a good natured bar fight, beat the crap out of each other, then stagger home together, arms around each other’s shoulders through some sodden, half-melted Alaskan winter twilight. But I digress.

I LIKE ballsy women. Except for when said ballsy woman would chain ME down with HER choices.

But I am SICKENED by the “cutesy” action figures, man, and let’s not even get into the VPILF jokes. Disgusting; it’s all just so damn vile. I don’t give a CRAP about her family life, her husband, her kids, or what she cooked for dinner or ordered in. It’s IRRELEVANT. And sexist. Not to mention the fact that there’s something really creepy about dolls made to represent real people. It’s like you’re trying to OWN that person or something, by having a simulacrum of them. Not cool. It’s a way of reducing her. Whether that person is some douchebag rethug frat boy wanking off to the “Sarah Palin Action Figure in a Catholic Schoolgirl Outfit” or some wannabe so-called “progressive” male closet misogynist Dem snickering about it, you’re still reducing her.

Do not reduce this woman.
She is a real threat. Not for the reasons that she undoubtedly dreams about, but because she is an incredible conundrum with which the left must deal.

This is the Left’s bad Karma, methinks. They shat all OVER HRC and nobody, and I mean NOBODY called that bullshit for what it was until AFTER it was clear that Obama had won. But they failed to clean their own house and clarify their reasons for wanting B-Rock instead of Hillary in a CIVILIZED way. Instead, they talked about shrill voices, wrinkles, and pantsuits. And now they get the immense pleasure of answering for it in the face of Sarah Barracuda.

Remember, shall we, that the incredible baggage with which HRC was saddled, was a result of YEARS of slander and nonsense slung by the RIGHT, the Karl Roves of the world, and NOT the left. Does anyone here actually remember the Ken Star Witchhunt called Whitewater of the late 90s? Yeah, I thought so.

And the Left got so damn SCARED that they backed themselves into a defensive little pissant corner and sold one of the finest minds of the late 20th-early 21st century right down the river. Not that I’ve heard or seen HERwhine. The lady has class, folks. Major class.

So why am I ranting here on a blog about surviving DV in the face of a crap legal system, about Sarah Palin?

Because we need to get clear on some things, people. We need to get clear about issues surrounding equity and fairness. We need to DEEPLY examine how some women, like Sarah Palin, get the gravy by playing by the Boy’s Rules, while the rest of us get screwed.

Sarah Palin was LUCKY, or better yet, PRIVILEGED. She’s white, middle class, and insulated. She also had the good fortune and/or judgment to marry a man who clearly behaves as a partner and ally. Good for her, I say, in all sincerity.

Some of us, however, are NOT white, middle class, insulated, or lucky. SOME OF US, Many of us, grew up WITHOUT those privileges and as a consequence, ended up with abusive asshole men. And in the process of trying to be “good girls” we did the whole wife/mother thing, then realized one day that Asshole wasn’t going to get a job/was drunk AGAIN/Hit me again/Wants to KILL me and decided it was safer to go than stay.

Sarah Palin, do you hear me?

What I want to know, and what I don’t see this woman evincing, is ANY sort of understanding of circumstances beyond her own. Like I said, she GOT there on OUR backs – so what is she giving back?

Would Sarah Palin come down to Georgia and reform a corrupted court system that gives custody to proven abusers? Or come down to Kentucky like an Alaska blizzard with her talk of reform to make a damned homicidal maniac at least pay child support to his ex?

Sarah Palin, would you fight for me? For my sisters, for my friends?

I don’t think so. She made rape victims pay for their own rape kits while mayor of Wasilla, Alaska. I don’t know if this woman even has the heuristic framework POSSIBLE to know what it’s like to be where we are.

How I wish it wasn’t so. Because she’s a bruiser, no doubt. Still, the woman may have balls bigger than Texas, but she ain’t got no heart. And she ain’t got no soul.

May standard is, if a dude would get called an asshole for it, then fair play. If not, then shut the fuck up and go home.

See AlsoMcCain and Palin Don’t Care About Women

Published in: on September 16, 2008 at 1:06 am  Comments (1)  
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