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Relationships

Mumsnet has not checked the qualifications of anyone posting here. If you need help urgently or expert advice, please see our domestic violence webguide and/or relationships webguide. Many Mumsnetters experiencing domestic abuse have found this thread helpful: Listen up, everybody

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For anyone desperate to leave an abusive relationship but reluctant to move into a refuge

302 replies

TimeForMe · 26/03/2010 19:33

After many years of living with a miserable, abusive bully I finally had enough and called Women's Aid for help. They were wonderful and put me in touch with my local refuge who were equally as wonderful. Within half an hour of making the call I was found a place in a refuge which I gratefully accepted. I had a few things to organise so arranged to go in the next day. A mini bus was sent to collect me, DD and all the belongings we could manage to take. Upon arriving I was greeted with a smile and a welcome cup of coffee. All my belongings were unloaded and taken up to our room. DD was shown around by the child support worker then taken to the play room where she had a brilliant time playing while I had a weep and a chat and filled in all the paperwork. From the moment we stepped inside that door DD and I were supported and taken care of like never before. From that moment I felt like a huge weight had been lifted from my shoulders, it was like stepping into heaven.

For years I had thought about ringing Women's Aid and asking for help but the thought of a refuge put me off. I had a vision in my mind of what it would be like, the kind of people that would be in there. I couldn't have been more wrong. DD and I have our own bedroom, bathroom and kitchen. We share a lounge with the other ladies in there along with a laundry room which has the most fantastic washing machine and dryer!! The refuge is clean, it's warm and it's wonderful! The support workers are fantastic and have helped me every step of the way with everything, claiming benefits, housing applications, counselling and supporting DD. Whatever I need they provide.

The main reason I put off going into a refuge was because of DD, I was worried about how it would affect her. How I wish I hadn't worried and had done it sooner. DD has flourished. Away from the abuse and the tension in the house she has really grown in confidence and is a happy, smiling, laughing little girl. I thought I was protecting her from the abuse, I thought I hid it well but since moving to the refuge, since seeing the changes in her I now know different. I wasn't really protecting her, she was, in her own little way, taking care of me. Now she has a happy, relaxed mummy she has no need to do that and so can enjoy being a little girl, probably for the first time in her seven years. It's wonderful to see

The reason I wanted to start this thread was to try to reassure anyone who thinks they are trapped in an abusive relationship, really not wanting to go into a refuge, they have nothing at all to worry about. Nothing to lose but everything to gain. You won't be judged, you won't be questioned, you will be welcomed with open arms and taken care of. You will be free to talk until your heart is content and cry as much as you like. You will have someone who understands what you are going through and all those problems you thought were too big to handle will suddenly seem small because you will have someone to share them with, someone to help you. You won't have to answer to anyone, you can come and go as you please, totally free of abuse.

You can stay as long as you like too. The support workers are just that, support workers. They don't try to influence you either way. If it's just a break from the abuse you need and then you choose to go back, that's fine. If the relationship is over and you want to stay until you are rehoused then that is fine too. It may be that for the first time in a long time the decisions are all yours, you are in control of your life!

If you are in an abusive relationship, tolerating it because you think you have no choice, because you think a refuge isn't for you, I hope my post has helped you in some way. I didn't think a refuge was for me either but it turns out that it is more of a home than the house I lived in ever was.

OP posts:
IfYoureHappyAndYouKnowIt · 04/04/2010 07:28

Easter bump...

TimeForMe · 04/04/2010 11:15

milkmonsters I wouldn't have cared if my DD and I had been given a bedsitting room, it would still have been better than the the situation I was living in.

I wasn't looking for and nor did I expect hotel standards and I didn't come here to meet friends either, I came here to get away from the abuse I was suffering from at home. The help and support I have received has been second to none and I am sure that, regardless of the standards of accommodation the refuges are able to provide, any woman at the end of her tether with any form of abuse will be most grateful for that.

As for your statement that it isn't a guaranteed ticket to a council house, no it may not be, but it is a guaranteed ticket to a far happier and abuse free life.

OP posts:
TimeForMe · 04/04/2010 11:24

And you know what, I left a large detached house complete with a huge conservatory, a house full of luxury with all the mod cons, a huge garage with 2 cars, a beautiful garden all in a lovely area and here I am, living in a refuge that feels more like home than that house ever did. The day I left that house I didn't know where I was going and what I was going to but I knew that it had to be better than living there. I have no luxuries but I am safe, I am warm and I have constant help and support around me. And I am happy!

I couldn't have done this without Women's Aid, I don't think I would have survived without their help. The day I made that call I saved my own life.

OP posts:
LadyBiscuit · 04/04/2010 11:33

Thank you for posting TimeForMe - I am really heartened to hear how happy you and your DD are and hope you continue going from strength to strength

TimeForMe · 04/04/2010 11:38

Thank you LadyBiscuit. Thank you too to everyone else for your lovely words and good wishes

OP posts:
blinder · 06/04/2010 15:22

Nice responses timeforme.

Update us. How are you enjoying settling in?

spybear · 06/04/2010 21:23

Can I just add that I as a child (7yrs) moved into a women aid refuge with my mother and sister, fleeing my abusive father.

Such a releif to get away from him, even though I left my school, my house, the rest of my family. We didn't even take our clothes or toys.

But it didn't matter to me, mu mum tried to hide the stuff that went on between them, but I KNEW. so if anyone is worried about uprooting their DC's, then in my experience as a child then they will be greatful to feel safe.

Excellent post Timeforme.

TimeForMe · 06/04/2010 22:15

My little girl is 7yrs old too Spybear and her relief is so obvious. I don't doubt for one minute that I have done the right thing

Thank you Blinder. We have settled in really well and with all the support and excellent counselling I have made such good progress, I no longer feel like a victim and that feeling is wonderful. I am now a survivor!

OP posts:
blinder · 07/04/2010 23:14

It sounds like perfect timing timeforme. To let go of the victim feeling and know that it is in the past is so good! I remember feeling like no-one could put me back in that position again.

Hope you've been enjoying the Easter break with your dd too.

SolidGoldBrass · 08/04/2010 00:35

Best of luck to you TimeForMe and well done for posting this. I think it is very important that women know this kind of thing: anyone who has read Erin Pizzey's early books on setting up refuges might well have a mental image of sleeping on mattresses on the floor 15 to a room etc - while that was undoubtedly a lifesaver at the time for many women, knowing that you're likely, these days, to get reasonable standards of privacy and comfort could well make all the difference to women suffering abuse that they keep telling themselves is 'not that bad yet' when it is that bad...

TimeForMe · 08/04/2010 17:09

Thank you SolidGoldBrass for your good wishes. Your post highlights exactly why I started this thread. I was one of those women who had visions of what a refuge would be like so I too convinced myself that things weren't really that bad when actually they were far worse than even I realised. It's only now, with the help of counselling, that I know I had minimalised my situation and what was happening to me in order to cope. I cannot begin to tell you what this place has meant to me and DD and I would encourage any woman who is tolerating an abusive relationship to give Women's Aid a call. They are truly wonderful!

OP posts:
TimeForMe · 02/07/2010 16:55

Giving a tiny little bump in light of the many recent threads involving abuse.

A little update on my situation. DD and I are now living in our own little house and are very happy indeed. Life is peaceful and clam and full of fun and happiness. Womens Aid are still in the background with their support if I should need it and that is a good feeling. I live alone with DD but feel far less lonely than I ever did living with my ex

OP posts:
NicknameTaken · 05/07/2010 10:45

That's great news, TimeForMe, and hopefully it will inspire other women who need it.

jetcat · 05/07/2010 10:53

Huge huge congrats to you and your DD TimeForMe - thats such a wonderful story

NotSuchASmugMarriedNow · 05/03/2011 16:41

I've been reading through some old threads trying to get as much information as I can on domestic abuse and I came across this thread and thought it was important so i'm bumping it.

TimeForMeIsFree · 15/03/2011 14:37

Bump

Terraviva · 31/05/2011 16:11

There seem to be a lot of threads about domestic violence and abusive relationships at the moment, so am giving this a bump.

Thanks TimeForMe for the OP and link :)

Selks · 31/05/2011 16:19

What a great post OP. Well done for getting out.

TimeForMeIsFree · 31/05/2011 17:25

Thank you Smile

I am now a self appointed advocate for Women's Aid. If it wasn't for the Refuge and all the fantastic support I wouldn't be living the wonderfully happy and abuse free life that I am now.

Life in a Refuge really is not something to be afraid or ashamed of. It is a golden stepping stone to the life you deserve.

Selks · 31/05/2011 22:15

best wishes for a happy and stress free future Smile

LadyBlaBlah · 31/05/2011 22:30

Nice thread. Smile

TimeForMeIsFree · 31/05/2011 23:17

Thank you Smile

Jaspants · 03/06/2011 20:04

Bumping for someone who has posted in AIBU but might find this useful

bbbbob · 03/06/2011 20:19

What a fantastic post. I am in tears.
25years ago I begged and begged my mum to leave my abusive dad. The place you described sounds like heaven. Though I realise things might have been different all those years ago. I remember telling my mum I'd live in a tent, anywhere just so we could escape.
My mum didn't leave. Well she kind of did in a way. Sadly she left in a coffin after taking an overdose.
What you have done for you and your daughter is amazing, brilliant, brave and wonderful and I truly wish you both a happy, healthy and fun life together.

WhoWhoWhoWho · 03/06/2011 20:21

I think this thread is FAB Smile

Once upon a time under a different talkname I sat in my local women's aid refuge and cried while DS played in the play room. I was offered an immediate place for me and DS and whilst I didn't take it, I knew that I could, that there was a place of warmth and support for me where people told me it wasn't my fault, I didn't deserve it, and it was that bad. I'll never forget what a great place it was and how supportive they were to me. I did leave and they helped me with forms, support, security on new house, etc.

I'm two years on from leaving and I couldn't be happier. Smile Anyone on the cusp of leaving - DO IT! You won't regret it but you will regret all the lost time when you stayed.

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