Impacts of Male Intimate Partner Violence on Women: A Life Course Perspective
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Participants
2.2. Procedure
2.3. Analysis
3. Results
- Trajectory 1: the abusive relationship and its shorter-term impacts;
- Transition: separation and its impacts;
- Trajectory 2: life after the abusive relationship;
- Turning point: healing through helping others.
3.1. The Cohort
3.2. Trajectory 1: The Abusive Relationship and Its Shorter-Term Impacts
“He got in the car and tried to run me over. He was driving on … the front lawn of the houses trying to run me over, like, for whatever reason it was my fault that … he’d done all his money and that he didn’t win at … gambling. So it was, like, well, someone has to pay.” (WMG002)
“I kept thinking, which many women do: if you love more, if you give more, if you sacrifice more, then he will slowly come around that you are worthy and you’re a good enough woman.” (WMG078)
“You can’t do high-powered work and have two kids and run a family and deal with abuse. I just got … burnt out and I had to stop. And once the money stopped coming in, well, the problems just really escalated, really escalated, because he didn’t have the money to gamble with anymore.” (WFA006)
“I’d learnt not to do anything to make him angry, because it was frightening … he would go into rages … like a ferocious animal and I’d already become affected by the complex trauma, and so I just froze and became withdrawn. So, this was happening … cyclically … I was with him for a long time.” (WMG001)
“I was too embarrassed to tell anybody really. I became quite withdrawn from the world. I lost quite a few of my girlfriends because it’s embarrassing. Them and their partners are going on holidays to the Gold Coast, and I’m sitting in a TAB [betting outlet] being abused.” (WFA027)
“We lived for 10 years in separate rooms … I was so unhappy, and I was just doing my own thing. I was using the casino for an escape, to get away. So, I started into poker machines … I started to drink more … I was terribly, terribly unhappy.” (WWG005).
3.3. Transition: Separation and Its Impacts
“I went and found him at the TAB … I just got really brave and angry at the same time, and I thought, ‘No, I can’t do this anymore’ … in the safety of the TAB, I declared it was over.” (WFA006)
“There was a big shift in me after everything went out of the bank account … that was the last straw … I just freaked out, because I was already beyond stressed and I sort of broke down and screamed and cried … I made a decision then, the switch was flicked, and I’d shut off from him, that was it, I was done, yeah.” (WMG001)
“[State legal service] who focused on domestic violence … Absolute life saviour … a half day intervention … outlining that I would be dead if I didn’t follow their instructions and do exactly what they needed me to do.” (WMG084)
“I couldn’t get rid of him, so I had to leave that place and move … living with my family in someone else’s house … that’s when he was getting really, really, really, really angry … when he started stalking ... I suffered for nearly six years ‘til … he went to jail … for stalking, for deprivation of liberty too. He was under my house with a knife, and I was his captive for three and half to four hours.” (WMG007).
“He dragged me through the family law system over a period of five years and … just continued to gamble and drive himself further into debt … whatever he gambled was my loss as well.” (WFA003)
3.4. Trajectory 2: Life after the Abusive Relationship
3.4.1. The Legacy of IPV for the Women’s Mental Health
“There are moments where, you know, you’re going to be overcome with grief and pain. I mean there are days when I cry, because grief is a very volatile emotion, and there are days where the grief washes over me. There are days when I just can’t do any work, or I just can’t function properly, because that’s part of the post-traumatic stress disorder … You’ve just got to … recognise the pain and the grief, you can’t deny it.” (WFA006)
3.4.2. The Legacy of IPV for the Women’s Finances
“He has eroded … the assets I actually had acquired before I met him … I came into this marriage with 80 per cent more…of that particular house than I’ve gotten out of it … I deeply resent my assets going towards paying off his debts.” (WFA003)
“I’m worse off … I’ve lost my money, and I’ve lost my ability to get a job … I’m still in debt … I’ve got no assets … and I’ve got like 10 years before I retire.” (WFA012)
“I’m still bankrolling him … We’ve been forced to co-parent because … we have equal shared responsibility, and there is nothing equal, shared, or responsible about an abusive gambler. So, I continue to carry him, and I continue to carry his debts. He hasn’t honoured any of the court orders … things that he’s been told to pay and cover, he didn’t pay, and so that puts the burden on the responsible party, doesn’t it?” (WFA006)
3.4.3. The Legacy of IPV for the Women’s Relationships
“Still to this day I’m single … I’ve never really trusted anyone. I push people away … Your self-worth becomes quite low … You think you’re not good enough for them.” (WFA027)
“My daughter … screamed her head off at me and said ‘I hate you. I hate you’ … shot me full of holes because she said I should have left so that they never had to see that.” (WMG002)
“He used to manipulate my daughter and now he’s manipulating my grandson and that is family violence and it’s very, very psychologically damaging for my grandson to think that I would be harming him.” (WMG078)
3.4.4. The Legacy of IPV for the Women’s Gambling
“God I’ve got to go home to an empty house, I just don’t think I can take that, I need to go somewhere where I can just sit and have a drink, relax … you think, god, you’ve had this whole life … and here you are on your own, what’s wrong with you? … the loneliness-that’s a killer, just after all of that, you’re on your own … You could say I’m just empty, yeah … I still feel incredibly fragile and broken … there’s a big void, and it’s lonely.” (WWG061)
“My self-esteem was so low I actually felt the need to punish myself … for allowing myself to be in that position … I would punish myself financially until I basically ran out of money.” (WWG017)
3.5. Turning Point: Healing through Helping Others
“I do bring a wealth of experience for the victim/survivors and when I deal with men … I do it for the women and children behind them … I bring that context of gambling and family violence into my behaviour change program.” (WMG078)
“I speak on the topic of family violence … I’m a trained advocate with [a family violence response service], and I’ve done quite a lot of presentation work with the Financial Services Ombudsman … I’ve participated in the making of a video for the DV sector on strength and resilience … presented to numerous politicians on DV.” (WFA003)
“If I keep it to myself, it means I believe something is wrong, and I want to have my confidence back. That’s why I opened up and I said, ‘Now, I have to tell my story, to help other people’.” (WMG007)
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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No. | Participant ID | Age Group (Years) | State | Location |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | WMG001 | 50–59 | New South Wales | Metropolitan |
2 | WMG002 | 60–69 | Queensland | Regional |
3 | WMG005 | 50–59 | Tasmania | Metropolitan |
4 | WMG007 | 60–69 | Victoria | Metropolitan |
5 | WMG008 | 50–59 | Queensland | Regional |
6 | WMG078 | 50–59 | Victoria | Metropolitan |
7 | WMG084 | 50–59 | Queensland | Metropolitan |
8 | WWG003 | 60–69 | Victoria | Regional |
9 | WWG017 | 50–59 | Queensland | Metropolitan |
10 | WWG024 | 50–59 | Victoria | Metropolitan |
11 | WWG045 | 50–59 | South Australia | Metropolitan |
12 | WWG061 | 60–69 | Queensland | Metropolitan |
13 | WWG067 | 50–59 | New South Wales | Regional |
14 | WFA003 | 60–69 | Queensland | Metropolitan |
15 | WFA006 | 50–59 | Victoria | Metropolitan |
16 | WFA012 | 50–59 | New South Wales | Metropolitan |
17 | WFA021 | 60–69 | Queensland | Regional |
18 | WFA027 | 50–59 | New South Wales | Metropolitan |
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Hing, N.; O’Mullan, C.; Mainey, L.; Nuske, E.; Breen, H.; Taylor, A. Impacts of Male Intimate Partner Violence on Women: A Life Course Perspective. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2021, 18, 8303. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18168303
Hing N, O’Mullan C, Mainey L, Nuske E, Breen H, Taylor A. Impacts of Male Intimate Partner Violence on Women: A Life Course Perspective. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2021; 18(16):8303. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18168303
Chicago/Turabian StyleHing, Nerilee, Catherine O’Mullan, Lydia Mainey, Elaine Nuske, Helen Breen, and Annabel Taylor. 2021. "Impacts of Male Intimate Partner Violence on Women: A Life Course Perspective" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, no. 16: 8303. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18168303
APA StyleHing, N., O’Mullan, C., Mainey, L., Nuske, E., Breen, H., & Taylor, A. (2021). Impacts of Male Intimate Partner Violence on Women: A Life Course Perspective. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18(16), 8303. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18168303