By NCFM
āIām going to stab youā: Calls for more support for male domestic violence victims
By Kristina Kukolja
Women outnumber men as targets of intimate partner violence in the reported statistics, but itās the minority of cases of male victims that appear in the collected data, and in the courts, that shine light on what those affected believe is a social taboo that needs to be broken.
Advocates say thereās a growing body of research to suggest that men are suffering at the hands of female partners, and not in negligible numbers.
One recent study out of Britain has looked at controlling behaviours, verbal and physical aggression in relationships among students.
āWomen are perpetrating verbal and physical aggression significantly more than men are, but theyāre also perpetrating significantly more controlling behaviours than men are as well,ā lead author, Dr Elizabeth Bates from University of Cumbria, said.
Dr Batesā study challenges widely accepted notions of motivation for abuse.
āA lot of the traditional feminist approach to studying domestic violence has portrayed the idea that men are motivated by patriarchy and this need to dominate and control women in relationships, ā she told SBS.
āA lot of research has explored the different motivations and it can be very similar for men and for women ⦠like personality disorders, levels of self-control, levels of empathyā¦ā
Ben, a 50-year-old Sydney man whose name has been disguised to protect his identity, says the violence in his home became more pronounced when, several years ago, he suffered serious health problems, leaving him partially paralysed.
āWhen I came out of hospital I was in a wheelchair and I was supposed to have a shower chair for showering in,ā he told SBS.
āMy ex-wife said āA real man doesnāt need a shower chair, you can stand up in the shower.ā And to have a shower I ended up having to sit on the floor.ā
He says the physical abuse āgot to the stage where sheād actually sharpened knives in the kitchen and said āOne of these days Iām going to stab youā.ā
āThere was a time where, again, I was sitting in the shower because I didnāt have a shower chair and she came barging in and said āYou might have the doctors convinced that thereās something wrong with you, but I know better. Thereās nothing wrong with you. Youāre just lazy. Iām going to make you get to work whether you want to or not.ā
āAt that time she had me curled up in a foetal position in the shower where I was literally sucking my thumb, crying out āIām better off being dead than this.āā
Greg Andresen is a researcher with the One-In-Three Campaign, an organisation he says takes its name from a body of international and domestic research that suggests up to one in three victims of intimate partner violence are actually male.
āWe still have this idea that men are supposed to be tough, strong, able to protect themselves, able to defend themselves, be independent,ā he said.
āThese sorts of things conflict with our idea of a man as a victim, a man being abused in the home because we feel āHow could that happen to a man?āā
āThe sense of shame, admitting as a man that youāre being abused, that embarrassment, that social stigma, that feeling that theyāre unable to protect themselves, that theyāll have a loss of independence. But thereās also a fear of being laughed at, of ridiculed.ā
Ben says he sought help from the NSW Department of Human Services hotline for domestic abuse, but was turned away.
He says he then wrote a letter to the Human Rights Commission but found they werenāt able to help.
ā(I) got a phone call back from them saying they only look at women and children being abused by men, and itās not in their charter to try and fix or even look at men being abused by women.ā
At the time, Ben says he found two pilot programs for gay men on the police website, but nothing for men who were in relationships with abusive women.
That was in 2009.
Today, there appear to be more potential avenues for men to seek help, such as dedicated menās mental health help lines and programs run by independently funded NGOs.
But often references to programs on government websites for men relating to domestic violence, for example, are still directed at men who need help addressing their violent behaviours.
Mr Andresen says the options for male victims are still too limited.
āAll of the domestic violence lines are advertised as if theyāre for women only,ā he said.
āThey fear thereās nowhere to escape to, often with children. No shelters for men. They feel that their experiences will be minimised. They might be blamed for the abuse.
āThey fear they may be arrested if thereās a situation where itās not clear who was the abuser and police may arrest them.ā
Mr Andresen believes itās time for state and federal governments to step in with funded awareness campaigns.
āThose campaigns have to be carefully designed so that the complement campaigns about violence against women and donāt damage the effectiveness of those campaigns.ā
āWe also need, at least, a modicum of support services for those men who, when they do come forward, they have the support they need ā whether thatās counseling or accommodation, assistance through the legal process.ā
TOMORROW: Women from multicultial backgrounds speak out on the difficulties they face when tackling domestic violence.
Readers seeking support and information can contact:
Mensline: 1300 78 99 78
National Sexual Assault, Family & Domestic Violence Counselling Line: 1800 737 732
Lifeline: 13 11 14
Kids Help Line: 1800 551 800
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