Why Women Bear Domestic Abuse? | Dr. Anu Mehta
I heard from several women crying in sadness as they talked about undergoing domestic violence.
- by Dr. Anu Mehta
- Jul 12, 2021
- 1230 views
Domestic Abuse?
During this
global pandemic, everyone has been ‘locked up’ in their houses. India’s
population, one incredibly used to domestic help had to learn how to do
everything, including the cleaning and cooking themselves for the first time.
Our nest, our symbol of rest, peace, love, and joy, became a battlefield, a
venting-ground, a golden cage, a jail, where frustration and aggression had
cast their spell. People were locked up with their loved ones in their new
Karma-Bhoomi, in their own homes.
I heard from
several women crying in sadness as they talked about undergoing domestic
violence. Their cases were a reminder to me that abuse is unfortunately
aningrained part of our culture and society. Either we have abused someone or
we have endured abuse in the name of love. I found Laxmi and many others like
Laxmi having sealed lips, and if any one of them had ever dared to speak, their
expression curtailed forever. I also wondered if the word SORRY could really
repair the injured soul and bring back the scattered respect.
Anita, Laxmi's
mother, was in disbelief that Rakesh had physically abused her daughter in
front of his parents. Five years ago, Rakesh had approached Anita for marriage,
as he was in love with Laxmi. Anita was happy that Laxmi had found a gentle,
respectful, soft-spoken man and blessed the couple.
Rakesh was the
youngest of the siblings and the only brother to two sisters. He was the owner
of a family business and was treated like a prince by his mother, father, and
grandmother.
Rakesh had
beaten Laxmi, even before marriage, but she had never complained earlier. She
thought he was showing her possessiveness and love. Her fear of losing love and
her need for harmony made her overlook his aggressive behavior.
The beating,
the speechlessness of her mother-in-law, and the haunting taunts of her
father-in-law had left a scar of feeling ashamed and disrespected. The whole
episode did not last for more than a few minutes, yet it had done the
collateral damage of a lifetime. Her sobs, her swollen lips, her tear-filled,
swollen, sad, light brown eyes screamed in shame — the shame of being subjected
to this inhuman behavior.
Laxmi asked
herself
Am I a good
girl?
Am I a good
girl?
I know I am a
strong woman,
People share
their feelings with me,
But my husband
has been kept away from any trauma,
They all
protect their little prince, of their qonderland, sometimes even from me.
I am a soft,
caring, and intelligent woman
But now I
question myself,
Did I do the
wrong thing by asking for help?
Will this kill
the dead relationship even further?
Do I have to
carry the skeleton of my broken heart and keep killing it again and again
Till every bone
of that skeleton falls apart?
Does my soul
have to go through osteoporosis?
Even though my
damaged soul looks intact,
it feels torn
and shredded into pieces.
As a child, I
got everything from my parents, that a son
would have got,
Short haircut,
and shorts.
Saree, bindi,
bangles, makeup, and boys were considered Taboo.
I felt like a
man in a woman,
My father sold
me dreams of being allowed to work,
Expression
robbed to maintain harmony.
I was never
encouraged to speak against sexual abuse,
I endured in my
childhood
By a man old
enough to be my grandfather,
When I spoke
after a decade,
my mother said,
If only I had
spoken early,
what was the
right time to tell?
Good girls do
not aggress
Good girls seal
their lip, and never raise their voices or raise their hand against perceived /
real injustice
This rigid
conditioning starves my soul of breath and nourishment
My safe
boundaries were in learning in prestigious institutes and doing a job,
I was
encouraged to earn, work hard, but never to spend.
Good girls save
money.
I always wonder
why I was encouraged to be an educator and not a model or an actress,
Would I have
lost the title of a good girl?
Good girls do
the job of bringing offspring to the family.
My parents now
wanted me to get married.
But my safe
companion were books, not men or women,
Book does not
create sexuality issues,
They only make
you pregnant with ideas and not a child!
Good girls are
virgins at marriage!
As a woman, I
had to learn to woo my man.
My parents
believed the way to his heart was through his stomach.
Ironically, I
discovered later that his heart is two inches below his stomach.
Good girls have
sex but do not talk about it.
During my marriage, my parents gifted me as Kanyadan,
The hypnotic
advice to compromise by my father has been my best friend since,
The warm
presence of my husband could not transform me from a virgin into a beautiful
mother,
I could not
conceive,
Test, insults,
trauma, IVF clinics, medicines
Feeling not
valued for, who I am, changed so much in me,
But I rarely
rested or complained.
Good girls
always accept changes happily, are willing to lend their bodies for anything to
satisfy their family.
Good girls do
conceive babies, not sex.
Now the doctor
is dictating when to connect sexually
so that our
baby could come home.
I wanted to
experience motherhood,
yet the idea of
motherhood scared me,
I am learning to value myself and my feelings
every day.
I am learned to
create that All is Well
Yes, I learned
the art of hiding tears and wearing a happy mask.
Good girls know
how to hide and wear a HAPPY mask!
I have a
beautiful home, but it is empty and loveless.
I could not
keep the good girl happy,
The gift of the
slap by my husband has woken me up,
Today, I have
broken my silence,
Today I am
vulnerable and confused,
The role of
being a good girl should have been applauded
with an Award
and not with a slap
Reading Laxmi's
Poem brought tears.
I asked Laxmi,
what does she want?
She answered
that she wants a marriage of respect. She is not quitting her marriage or
asking for DIVORCE. She wants love, support, and understanding. Unfortunately,
she has not been able to conceive. She also feels not valued as a human in this
family without motherhood. Only a child, preferable a baby boy could return
back her respect. She has a great desire to earn. She does not feel loved and
feels abused.
Do we need to
pause here and ask ourselves this question, is this ABUSE?
Should, not
being able to make a child, be a reason for domestic upset
Her husband,
was her Hero, now he has fallen from his altar
She has
understood that she needs to value herself and take action to bring a smile to
her face. Eventually, she will feel enough and complete with or without a
child. She is learning to value her imperfections.
Today she has
understood that she had paid a huge price, to be a Good Girl so she has snapped
out of my good girl dream,
Today she needs
to listen to herself and do what her heart desires.
Dr Anu Mehta is the pioneer and the
First Master Trainer in India and in Asia, in META-Health
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