"For years I thought I was the only one. I thought it was my fault. Learning that my experience was part of a pattern—that there was a name for what he did—was the first step toward freedom."
I met him when I was 22. He was charming, attentive, everything I thought I wanted. The changes were so gradual I didn't see them happening. First, he didn't like my friends. Then he needed to know where I was at all times. Then the first time he grabbed my arm hard enough to bruise.
Each incident had an explanation. Each was followed by apologies, by promises, by being the man I'd fallen in love with again. I kept thinking if I just tried harder, if I just didn't make him angry, things would be okay.
It took me seven years to leave. Seven years of escalating violence, of isolation from everyone who cared about me, of believing his voice in my head that told me I deserved it, that no one else would want me, that I couldn't survive alone.
The turning point came when I found a website—not unlike this one—that described the cycle of abuse. Reading those patterns was like reading a script of my life. For the first time, I understood that what was happening to me had a name, and that it wasn't my fault.
I'm sharing this because someone reading needs to know: you are not alone. What's happening to you is not normal, not love, and not your fault. And you can survive leaving. It's the hardest thing I've ever done, but five years later, I'm alive. I'm free. I'm me again.
Related Resources:
- National Domestic Violence Hotline: 1-800-799-7233