Collateral Damage: Qualitative Descriptions of Betrayal, Loss, and Grief Associated with Domestic Violence and the Family System
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Qualitative Methodology
3. The Sample
4. Overview of the Concepts
5. Institutional Responses to DV
6. Results
6.1. Betrayal as Collateral Damage
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- Friends I’d had for years supported my abusive ex regarding custody and testified against me. They still support him all these years later.
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- The betrayal I experienced intensified feelings of grief, loss, and isolation. I had no place to turn for understanding or healing.
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- I was alone and felt like an outcast. I am still recovering from the abuse that happened 28 years ago.
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- I felt like I could not be open about what I was going through. Luckily, I was able to get help from the local domestic violence agency when my church would not help me.
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- I have felt completely betrayed and ignored.
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- There was so much betrayal and collusion that I never saw coming.
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- The betrayal caused grief that I have been trying to heal from for years.
6.2. Loss as Collateral Damage
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- I was financially distressed and physically ill and was left to navigate it on my own.
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- I lost the support of friends and family, after telling my Catholic institution that I had experienced abuse. I was ostracized for naming the abuse.
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- There was zero help or support. I had to find support through other avenues, which felt very isolating. I had one member tell me that unless he was hitting, it wasn’t abuse.
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- My story is so anxiety-ridden that it caused me to lose friends. They no longer speak to me. They told me they could no longer sleep at night after hearing my story.
6.3. Grief as Collateral Damage
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- I felt unworthy and invalid… so I sank deeper into isolation and felt powerless and alone.
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- I had people ask why I wasn’t over it yet.
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- It added to my grief because I went to my church for help, and even though they knew about the physical abuse, they failed to see the safety concerns and dismissed my perceptions. It was a double betrayal. Once I was perceived to be the problem for not reconciling fast enough, it almost seemed like they deemed me unworthy of support because it was “my fault I was a single mom.” I asked a few times for specific things, and it was ignored. I felt very isolated.
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- The betrayal impacted HOW I grieved. I was hesitant to be vulnerable. I was criticized during counseling.
6.4. Survivor Recovery
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- I received healing through a support group I attended.
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- I was believed and provided with counseling. I felt validated.
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- When I disclosed my situation to my university, I felt they handled it well. My children and I were supported.
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- Much about how they handled my abuse and abuser was good in the moment. There were mistakes made, but I felt supported in the moment.
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- I was referred to a confidential support group at church. The group was life-changing and incredibly supportive. They provided me with a lot of resources, not only to recognize and open my eyes to the abuse I was in, but also provided a lot of information on how to handle things, from safety plans, journaling, to safety techniques.
- *
- I took my child to the doctor, knowing that would involve CPS, and more. It was one of the scariest moments of my life, yet I would choose to do it again. Those involved who helped me were the surgeon, CPS, the police, detectives, etc.
7. Discussion
8. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Goertzen, G.; Copello, E.; Yancey, G.I. Collateral Damage: Qualitative Descriptions of Betrayal, Loss, and Grief Associated with Domestic Violence and the Family System. Fam. Sci. 2025, 1, 13. https://doi.org/10.3390/famsci1020013
Goertzen G, Copello E, Yancey GI. Collateral Damage: Qualitative Descriptions of Betrayal, Loss, and Grief Associated with Domestic Violence and the Family System. Family Sciences. 2025; 1(2):13. https://doi.org/10.3390/famsci1020013
Chicago/Turabian StyleGoertzen, Geneece, Evan Copello, and Gaynor I. Yancey. 2025. "Collateral Damage: Qualitative Descriptions of Betrayal, Loss, and Grief Associated with Domestic Violence and the Family System" Family Sciences 1, no. 2: 13. https://doi.org/10.3390/famsci1020013
APA StyleGoertzen, G., Copello, E., & Yancey, G. I. (2025). Collateral Damage: Qualitative Descriptions of Betrayal, Loss, and Grief Associated with Domestic Violence and the Family System. Family Sciences, 1(2), 13. https://doi.org/10.3390/famsci1020013

