Things I’ve learnt that have enabled a much better understanding of #coercivecontrol
A THREAD
On evidence:
People will focus all their attention on the minutiae but you need to look at it in context- at the big picture. #evidence #understandingcoercivecontrol
On people:
The "halo effect" is deeply underestimated.
This is when one trait of a person or thing is used to make an overall judgment of that person or thing. It supports rapid decisions, even if biased ones. #unconsciousbias #understandingcoercivecontrol
On trauma:
Fight or flight are not the only responses to trauma and trauma does not have to be a life sentence.
The louder and more emphatic the denial, the more aggrieved and outraged the person that is denying, the more you have to look beyond it. #understandingcoercivecontrol
On enablers:
Coercive control absolutely relies on enablers. Without them the controller would not have the power to do what they do.
By scrutinising a victim’s past in a quest for “proof” we often take attention away from the abuser. #understandingcoercivecontrol
And, most importantly....
On generalisations:
Coercive control is specific to the victim. It relies heavily on knowledge of the victim, their histories, their fears and their weaknesses.
What is controlling in one relationship is not necessarily controlling in another.
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First and foremost, a climate where bullies are rewarded.
When they’re not held to account but rewarded with getting their own way because others are too scared to confront them, that is the perfect Petri dish for #coercivecontrol
Different rules for different people.
Making allowances for, or ignoring bullying/inappropriate/abusive behaviours of people we like or admire.
Holding them to a lower standard because they’re family, or a celebrity, or wealthy, or we benefit in some way from looking away.
I detest the term *parental alienation* with a passion and now I won’t use it.
It used to be called ‘Threat Therapy’.
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I’ve been told, frequently, that not all perpetrators are men, that mums get *alienated* too and that denying the existence of PA means denying that abusers DO and WILL maliciously sever a relationship between parent and child.
And yes, all of the above IS true.
But refusing to use that term is NOT the same as denying that this happens.
So, for avoidance of doubt, here is why I believe the term *parental alienation* should not be used:
Adolf Eichmann was aided by a Franciscan monk who helped him obtain an Argentine visa and who signed an application for a falsified Red Cross passport.
Eichmann masterminded the Nazi network of death camps that resulted in the murder of approximately 6 million Jews.
Josef Mengele fled to Argentina with the help of a Catholic clergy member.
Nicknamed the “Angel of Death” he conducted experiments at Auschwitz particularly on twins, pregnant women and the disabled. Mengele even tortured and killed children with his medical experiments.
“On one occasion, she said, male officers taped her phone to the ceiling, telling her: “We’re gonna watch your arse when you climb on the table.””
How a dead officer’s iPhone exposes misogyny, corruption and racism in a police force
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Ricky Jones, a retired police officer knew where many of Gwent police’s skeletons were buried, but it wasn’t until his death that his own began to emerge.
In 2020, he jumped to his death from a bridge.
He left behind his wife and three daughters.
To the outside world Jones was a respected former copper and family man. But behind closed doors he subjected his family to decades of #domesticabuse.