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Relationships

too scared to report dv attack ( unpleasant details of injuries)

265 replies

metoo72 · 09/07/2016 07:44

Hi

Five weeks ago I was viciously assaulted twice in one night by my partner. I don't know what the protocol is for posting details about assaults - I do know that since I was hurt, every time domestic violence is mentioned, on the tv, in papers etc. I find it very stressful, so I don't want to upset or offend anyone who might be in a similar or worse situation. I do know the injuries I suffered are much less serious than those inflicted on some women but I desperately need advice.

After saying goodbye to friends after spending a nice night out, my partner who was very drunk, pushed me over onto my back in a car park, there had been no argument preceding this, but there had been some stress in the relationship for the month or so before after I discovered that he had lied both to me (about the person he was) and about me in order to shift blame to me for something he had done. By my own admission, although we hadn't argued about this I had gone on like a broken record, asking why he had lied to me and about me - mainly because I didn't understand how a partner could do that. I'd also told him a few home truths about his behaviour - he told me this put him under great stress. We have been together for three years and in that time there has been no serious violence although there was an occasion where he kicked me multiple times bruising my leg and another time when he shoved me. On this occasion I ended up with black bruised elbows, cuts to my hands from the gravel and feeling very battered and bruised. I was obviously upset and shouted at him to go away and leave me alone - he took a taxi back home. After wandering around in shock for a while I stupidly did the same.

I had been through the door only a few minutes and was still wearing my coat when my partner launched himself at me and knocked me to the floor in the hall by the front door. He was on top of me, grabbed my head (by my hair I think) and slammed it into the skirting board. We have very large oak skirting boards. I remember feeling dizzy and sick and knowing that something wasn't quite right with the side of my head. I tried to lift my head to tell him this, I remember it being very hard to do because in retrospect I know I was concussed..I managed to lift my head a few inches at which point he grabbed me by the throat and slammed my head down two or three times into the floor. I know I blacked out for a short time. When I came to and struggled to get up I noticed a large dark patch on the carpet and remember at first being very confused about what it was until realising it was blood. I managed to crawl away to the end of the hallway by the bathroom and just lay curled up on the floor - I know I was drifting in and out of consciousness but I don't know how long I was there, maybe 15 minutes. When i managed to lift my head I saw that my partner was by the front door trying to clean up the blood from the floor and the wall where there were bloody hand prints (i'd touched my head before using the wall to haul myself up). I know it sounds pathetic, but I haven't had a head injury before and I didn't know how much the scalp can bleed and I thought I was on my way out...I remember asking to go to hospital and also asking my partner to tell my Mum I loved her. I think I blacked out again and recall my partner calmly removing my boots, putting them in their usual place and the returning to cleaning. I have no idea why he would remove my boots and he since says that although he remembers cleaning up the blood he cannot remember removing my boots. He has also since said that he was cleaning up the blood due to being in a state of shock and when we saw a counsellor together a few weeks after the attack, she said this can happen.

I finally managed stress that i wanted to go to hospital enough that he could help me and he called an uber taxi on my phone. We went together to the hospital but once there I said I wanted to go in myself. I stupidly lied and said that I had fallen over while drunk and the wound in the side of my head was glued / stitched.

The next day I was very fragile and had bruising and pain all over my body from being pushed or held down, my throat was very sore from being grabbed and remained so for a week or two although there was no bruising to the throat. It took a couple of weeks for me to recover physically and in this time I visited my GP to check the huge lump on the back of my head (because of the amount of blood on the side of my head i hadn't even realised the back of my head was injured when I went to A and E and they didn't check that area) and told her the truth.

I know this sounds pathetic. I know this post and me being here and eating dinner and watching tv with my partner after the attack and not reporting it sounds like a joke and I have no excuse or sensible reason for not leaving...I can't explain it myself.

I have called the domestic violence helpline and spoken to my GP and as I have gradually started to come out of shock and realise that he has committed a serious crime I am feeling such an anger. Some of this anger has come out verbally...eg 'how could you leave me lying there' 'why did you do it' etc etc. again I have gone on like a broken record because I am struggling to understand but because this stresses him, now I feel like I am emotionally abusing him!.

Two weeks ago I was struggling to try and accept what had happened and I said that I wished I could report the assault. My partner immediately called his older sister. I have posted to mumsnet before and ironically it was about this older sister bullying me. I don't know whether I sound unhinged to be suddenly having problems with two people in the space of a year but in all honesty I am well over thirty, have lived with more than one partner since leaving home and I have never before had any conflict either with them, their families or friends..I've never fallen out with anyone at work or been over sensitive.

The older sister immediately called my partners parents and gave them the impression that the violence went both ways. I know this because my partners mum immediately called him and she has quite a loud voice so i could hear what she was saying...i also spoke to her myself and she said the sister said we had been 'fighting' not only did the sister give her parents this impression but she invented an imaginary story about why we were arguing (there had been no argument).

At the moment I seem to be swinging between anger (and wanting to report what happened) and fear. Although i am not physically afraid of my partners sister I am frightened of her emotionally - for most of last week I developed a paranoia that I myself would end up in prison if she invented stories about me being the aggressor. I know this sounds insane, however I can only imagine its part of me being a stupid pathetic deluded victim and in shock - I have also become isolated from friends and family and have no one close by at all. Another strange thing was that despite my injuries (I now have a ringing in my ear that wont go away and constant nausea and nightmares) I seem to have become more fixated on trying to understand why my partner did this and what issues he might have, than my own safety. I also became very concerned about the fact this parents and been lied to by the sister and asked him to call them and explain that there was no provocation - I dont know why I give a Sh@? about what they think - i don't...but it was more the being lied about. Even I know that my concern should be my safety and not what the family of my attacker think and I can't explain it.

My partner did call his parents to set them straight - he didnt admit to the full assault but said he had pushed me in an argument and I'd fallen... after this his mum asked me to come to lunch and his dad told my partner 'these things happen'. Neither apologized for what had happened to me. My partner said that this is because they didn't know how to deal with the situation. They seem very much more concerned with him.

I'm worried that if I report the assault my partners family will try and cover for him...he is practically middle aged, but they treat him like a hapless child who has a lot of stress...he was married some years ago and had an affair and even then they treated him like the poor victim. My partner is very quiet and shy and apparently gentle in public....and I am scared that no one will believe me if I report the attack - or that the sister who seems to hate me for no apparent reason will lie. Im scared she might say I threatened him or attacked him..this makes me feel so victimised and I'm struggling to accept the unfairness because during the attack i didn't even have a chance to defend myself and certainly didn't hurt him.

I just wondered if anyone else had felt fear about report an attack due to the threat of not being believed. I suffered from slight depression last year after being ill with a thyroid illness and did ask the GP for anti depressants - I'm worried this will be dragged up and they will make me look like some kind of nutter.

Due to the attack I asked my partner to go to counselling...he has been alone and we've been together. I think the counsellor is blaming the attack on my partners anxiety. In the joint session my partner was honest with the therapist and told her the full details of the attack.

I know all this sounds stupid...I know people will say to walk away or man up and I agree...I never thought I'd be so pathetic. But the intimidation feel from this family is bigger than my confidence and the possibility that as a victim i myself might be accused of something I haven't done or being accused of emotional abuse myself (i had moaned on and on about my partner lying to me and this is what led him to be so stressed) frightens me so much I can hardly sleep. I'd really appreciate any advice from anyone who has been in a similar situation.

OP posts:
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ricketytickety · 09/07/2016 08:32

And another thing.

He/his family will always say some of the following:

  1. She wound him up
  2. It wasn't violence - he just pushed her
  3. They always fight. She gives as good as she gets. In my case, I did stick up for myself and had been convinced that was me being abusive. I was also convinced that I instigated the 'row' by getting frustrated at his smaller abusive actions which were like a tap dripping. That way I was framed as 'grumpy' and 'controlling', so I had zero sympathy from friends and family. I was on edge a lot of the time and can see why people thought it was me. It's very clever. But won't convince the professionals as it is a common tactic.
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londonrach · 09/07/2016 08:34

Leave! Today, now. Ring womans aid, woman refuse. Number. 0808 2000 247. Where is he now. Next time he could kill you. Hes not worth it. Who cares about his family. Look after yourself xxxx

england.shelter.org.uk/get_advice/homelessness/emergency_accommodation_if_homeless/womens_refuges

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Thereshegoesagain · 09/07/2016 08:34

-the story your sister told is irrelevant
-the opinions of his parents are irrelevant
-he's sorry/not sorry is irrelevant
-you argued/didn't argue is irrelevant
-alcohol was involved is irrelevant
-counselling is irrelevant
What IS relevant is that he attacked you twice.
The second time knocking you unconscious and instead of phoning an ambulance, he cleaned up the blood-he thought he'd killed you.
Next time ( there will be a next time) he might.
Leave.

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123MothergotafleA · 09/07/2016 08:42

Exactly as rickety tickets said. It's no use trying to understand his behaviour, he is operating on a completely other set of rules. In other words, he's got mental health issues, and so have his family.
Just walk away, no, make that " run", and don't wait around for any sign of remorse or improvement in behaviour.
Psychopaths are not going to do that.

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trafalgargal · 09/07/2016 08:45

Domestic violence tends to escalate.
It doesn't just get better it gets worse.
The fact he left you lying bleeding on the floor and his only action was to clean up the evidence speaks volumes. Get out of there, ring Women's Aid NOW and get yourself to a place of safety. He has crossed a line there's no turning back now. Your safety comes above stuff, possessions or what anybody thinks.

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Wdigin2this · 09/07/2016 08:45

There is only one way to deal with this situation....leave now!
If you stay and try to rationalise the whole thing, next time (and there will be a next time), he could injure you so badly, you'll die right there on the floor, and if that sounds dramatic, good....listen up because this is a dramatic situation!!!!
If you have any close family, whether or not you've seen much of them lately, just take important stuff, and as much money as you can put together....and damn well run!!
Please don't overthink this, don't hang around trying to understand why he did it....it was because he's a violent bully and he got away with it, don't trust him, it WILL happen again!!!!

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thisisafakename · 09/07/2016 08:47

Please, please leave. Domestic violence nearly always escalates and next time he could kill you and if not next time, the time after that. 2 women each week are killed by current or former partners. Get the hell away from him and ensure you are safe. I would also urge you to report it, but the priority is your own safety.

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MorrisZapp · 09/07/2016 08:47

The police don't give a shit what criminals mums think. They don't ask for their opinion. Their interest is in the victim and the perpetrator, his parents aren't part of their investigation.

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something2say · 09/07/2016 08:49

I am a DV advisor. All of what you are experiencing is normal xxx

The main advice I have is NOT to talk to him about it as he wont agree. It may place you at risk and he uses violence to shut you up, so stay shut up for your safety.

But the relationship may well be over. Can you leave, flee the home and stay somewhere?

Also can you find a local DV advocate who can give you a proper plan xxxx and be there to listen and reassure and help you decide what to do next xxx

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glintwithpersperation · 09/07/2016 08:52

It sounds as if you have experienced a traumatic brain injury. This may be clouding your thinking. This man is appalling and you are at great risk, You must leave.

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Simatmum · 09/07/2016 08:57

Good advice given here - leave, Women's Aid will help you, so will the police - you can get to a place of safety before he does it again. Don't respond to his attempts to speak to you or meet you.

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MazzleDazzle · 09/07/2016 09:01

You are in a very dangerous situation.

He could have killed you.

You were bleeding heavily and unconscious, yet he didn't call an ambulance? He cleaned up! WTF.

His family sound mental. They are enabling his dangerous behaviour.

Am I right in saying you've been together 3 years? This does not sound like new behaviour. Abusers don't start by slamming heads into the wall. He has done this before.

You need to talk to the police or Women's Aid. Is there anyone at all in RL who can support you? I know you say you've grown apart from friends and family, but if they knew I'm sure one of them would help.

You have suffered a severe trauma. Flowers

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SeemsLegit · 09/07/2016 09:02

Oh and it doesn't matter what lies his sister tells, she wasn't there and didn't see him violently attack you

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DorotheaHomeAlone · 09/07/2016 09:08

I'm a trained couples counsellor and I just wanted to reiterate what a pp said. Your counsellor is failing you and placing you at greater risk. She should have immediately stopped your sessions when she learned about this and should not be validating his attempts to minimise this. I know it may take you a while to leave. If so, please stop the joint sessions if you can they are dangerous for you. And ignore her collusion with him. He has done a terrible thing to you. I hope you stay safe and find your way out soon.

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Believeitornot · 09/07/2016 09:13

Imagine if a stranger had done this to you?

Imagine if you end up having children and your children witness this?

My mum was with someone who beat the crap out of her. Once he broke her leg and I will never forget her calling me for help and I was about 8. I was terrified, too terrified to do anything because I didn't know if he'd get me.

There is no excuse for his behaviour. None. He's minimising it and he will twist your thoughts so you take some, if not all, of the blame. You're already doing it.

Walk away. You can not fix him.

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ILoveAGoodBrusselSprout · 09/07/2016 09:13

Please please please leave him. Everything ricketytickety says is right. As I was reading your post, I could see that he was cleaning his crime scene as he thought you were dying, and he left you there.

You are important and valuable and mustn't go through something like this again - and, if you stay with him, I think you will, I'm sorry.

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DoreenLethal · 09/07/2016 09:17

Would a man ever say 'I can't leave her because of what the family might think'? No - of course they wouldn't.

You need to leave now or you might be leaving in a body bag. That's the reality I am afraid.

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ricketytickety · 09/07/2016 09:18

Your fear doesn't make you pathetic, either. It's a natural response to extreme violence. Especially as your shit joint counsellor allowed him to discuss such a horrific thing in front of you. You're incredibly strong.

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Aussiemum78 · 09/07/2016 09:21

He's assaulted you four times now.

He's blaming you for it and his family are dysfunctional.

You did not cause this and you can not change him. This is the type of man he is. You deserve better.

You have one very big trump card on your side - there is a hospital record and a counsellors record of the assault in addition to your statement which will help the police to charge him and get a conviction.

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GlitteryFluff · 09/07/2016 09:26

Please leave. Do everything you can to leave.

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FuzzyEyes · 09/07/2016 09:27

From the assault you describe - banging your head and grabbing the throat, seems like he could have killed you - which might have been his intent even if just during the attack. It was extremely serious.

The fact that these two people are brother and sister is probably why they both perpetrate bullying behaviour - so it isn't about you having 'problems with people'.

You were in shock, so forgive yourself for any of your autopilot behaviour after the attack. If you have posted about the bullying sister in MN before the incident, then you can show it at any point (in court/to police/to relatives) if anyone starts to believe their side of the story - it will be dated and so was your hospital visit - the chronology is clear.

Good luck with getting away and I hope he is put away for what he did to you - make sure you get any medical help you need and use the services you need Womansaid, etc.

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HandbagCrazy · 09/07/2016 09:27

Have you read the replies OP? We all believe you. Every single one of us think you're telling the truth.

Your 'partner' showed you what he's capable of that night. You could have been dying and he was clearing up the mess.

I think you need to accept, he isn't going to agree with you and accept responsibility (and is it any wonder, his family have never made him deal with anything). If he was going to be decent, he would have called an ambulance, would have been horrified by what he'd done, would have left the home so you could feel safe, would not have passed any blame back to you, would not be lining up other people (family) to try and discredit you.
Also, if a counsellor knows about the attack and is still seeing you together, they aren't any good. A good counsellor knows this is no longer a safe space for you.

Your P is a bastard. And in mine (and many other posters) experience, if you let things slip back to normal now, he will take that as confirmation that there are no negatives to being violent (as he has done with previous incidents), so it will happen again.
His family do not matter. If I told you my DH attacked me, and his mum told you it was half my fault, would you believe her??

And Flowers for you OP, because 15 years later, I still remember how much I ached and how bewildered I was when ex attacked me and ended up pushing me down the stairs.

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Gazelda · 09/07/2016 09:27

OP, you sound as though you are still in shock, unsurprisingly. You should return to your GP about the continued ringing in your ears.

But honestly, your priority should be in getting support to leave your attacker.

He will do it again. He hasn't had to pay for what he's done to you, so likely feels as though it was justified in his head.

Seek help to leave him, I think you need strength from someone else to get you through this.

You deserve to feel safe in your home.

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DelphiniumBlue · 09/07/2016 09:29

Leave before he kills you.
Oh, and you don't need his permission to do so.
Have you anyone you can stay with temporarily? If you can get out today, please go now. Don't worry about things,possessions, just go. And don't ask his permission, or even tell him. Like the DV poster said, don't talk to him about it, that could endanger you more.

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QuiteLikely5 · 09/07/2016 09:34

The good old 'why'

You can ask that question and indeed find the answer but knowing the reason why will not solve your problem.

I will tell you why, it's because this man has suffered or witnessed DV as a child growing up and he is now the person he is due to it.

You truly cannot help him, I'd bet my life he did this to his ex wife, his family are colluding in the abuse because they probably realise they are guilty in causing it.

He will not change, you though sweetheart sound like a wonderful person and articulate to boot so please do what you have to do to get away from him.

Of course he was cleaning up the crime scene, isn't is scary how he was waiting for you in a blind fury at the house?

You almost certainly need to ring your police station and ask if you can talk to a DV officer.

I suspect this man will have form.

Accept that a relationship with this man would mean you being on the road to nowhere.

Please, please be safe

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