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PARENTGUIDE
PARENTGUIDE

When Dating Becomes Dangerous
Helping teens avoid abusive relationships.
by Judith Kahan

PARENTGUIDE News February 2006


If your teenager came home with a black eye or a broken arm, you would do everything you could to separate your child from the person who inflicted those injuries. But physical violence is just one form of relationship abuse, and not the most prevalent form. In the United States, one in five teenage girls experiences physical or sexual abuse while dating, while one in three experiences emotional abuse. Emotional abuse is harder to see— it leaves no physical scars— so it’s essential that parents and teens learn the warning signs.

Teens are inexperienced at forming relationships, and they are loath to admit that their relationships are going badly. They love love. Many consider factors of emotional abuse, such as blaming, intimidation, isolation, coercion and threats, as “just part of being in a relationship.” In New York City, where the Center Against Domestic Violence is based, one study of 500 teens found that as many as 23 percent had been intimidated, threatened, hit or slapped by their partner and 25 percent reported emotional abuse, being verbally abused through insults, humiliation and embarrassment. Yet only 14 percent of these teens described themselves as being in abusive relationships.

If it’s hard for teens to recognize emotionally abusive relationships, it’s even harder for the teens’ parents. All we can do is note the changes in the child’s attitudes and behavior and try to figure out if the emotional shifts are typical of adolescence, or signs of relationship abuse.

Signs of abuse
In its early stages, emotional abuse often manifests itself in behavior that young people, and often even adults, may read as signs of love. Your daughter might say, “Joey always waits for me after school to make sure I get home safely.” You and your daughter need to figure out if Joey is doing this because he has concerns about her safety or because he’s trying to monitor who she talks to and what she does. The latter are classic signs of abuse, but signs that might be easily missed by a young person flattered that someone wants to pay so much attention to her.

Emotional abuse is not limited to girl victims. Girls, too, can be the abusers. Has your son dropped out of extracurricular activities? Does he have to check with his girlfriend before he makes plans with others? Do you hear him making excuses about why he can’t see his old friends? Abusers like to keep their victims close and isolate them from friends and family who might interfere with the abuser taking total control.

Has your cheerful and outgoing teen become withdrawn after beginning a relationship? Has your teen changed the way he or she dresses? Emotional abusers use criticism as a weapon to keep the victim dependent on them. They instill the idea, “You’re so unattractive/stupid/useless that you’re lucky to have me.” The ugliest criticism can be read as affection by a teen with shaky self-esteem: “He (or she) is only trying to help me be a better person.”

What can a parent do?
While relationship abuse may start out as occasional outbursts, over time it can become more frequent, more serious and more frightening. The abuse may stop for days, weeks or even months, and everything may seem all right, but the abusive behavior always resumes and often escalates.

Arm yourself and your teens with the facts about abusive relationships, and you can help them avoid this life threatening and all-too-common problem.
If your teenaged son or daughter is in an abusive relationship, teach your child that:
•the abuser will not change.
•the abuse will get worse— and more dangerous.
•he or she is not in control of the abuser or the abuse.
•it is possible to have a healthy, abuse-free relationship with someone else.
Below are a few questions from a quiz the Center Against Domestic Violence uses in workshops with teens. Go through the questions yourself. See how sensitive you are to the subtle signs of abuse. Then have your teens take the quiz, and engage them in conversation about these situations. You’ll find the answer key at the end of the article. Talk through the answers. Discuss what kind of response might not be abusive in any given situation. If you need some extra help to get the discussion moving in the right direction, log on to www.centeragainstdv.org/isitabuseif.html.

Is it abusive if?

1. Susan finds an unfamiliar telephone number on her boyfriend’s cell phone and calls to see whose it is.
•Abusive •Not Abusive •Unsure
2. Kristen tells her boyfriend Leon, in front of their friends, that Leon would look better if he lost a few pounds.
• Abusive •Not Abusive •Unsure
3. Lucy continues to wear short skirts, even though her partner asked her not to.
•Abusive •Not Abusive •Unsure
4. Andre and his girlfriend Sara are kissing and getting close to having sex. Sara says to stop; she’s not ready. Andre says she’s teasing him and it’s not fair.
•Abusive •Not Abusive •Unsure
5. Rona tells her boyfriend she will break up with him if he doesn’t give her an expensive present for her birthday.
•Abusive •Not Abusive •Unsure
6. Fred waits outside the school building for his girlfriend every day after school.
•Abusive •Not Abusive •Unsure

Judith Kahan is chief executive officer of the Center Against Domestic Violence, a Brooklyn-based nonprofit organization that in 1976 opened the first battered women’s shelter in New York State. The Center still runs that shelter, along with two others and a host of school and community-based education and awareness programs.

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