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Sensigirl's avatar

This is really interesting. I think this article clarifies some of the confusion around how people find themselves in coercive relationships, and how surprisingly difficult it is to identify them.

I’ve heard someone say that marriage is by its nature a controlling relationship, because you aren’t free to do exactly as you please. To a degree it’s true. You aren’t two completely independent individuals, and so what one of you does affects the other. If one of you gets a job, or takes up long distance running, or gets drunk every night, it affects the other person, and so there’s an element of checking in with that person to see how they feel about what you are doing. And/or that other person attempts to limit what you do to minimise the impact on them. So it’s not unusual to hear someone say “I’ll check with my partner”, or “I’d better not, I’ve been out every night this week”, or “my partner doesn’t really like it when…..”. I think for this reason it’s hard to notice the early warning signs, or to see how far the control has gone.

I expect that if someone said “my husband insists on oral sex or I can’t keep my pets” it would raise some eyebrows, but as she points out, it doesn’t start there, and by the time it gets to that place you probably want to keep that as much of a secret as he does.

I think it’s worth pointing out, too, that most people have some experience of controlling relationships, if they have ever been a child or gone to school. If a school or parent can tell you what to wear, what not to wear, how long to have your hair, what colour you can have your hair, whether or not you can pierce your body, what words you can and cannot use, what tone you can adopt, if they can restrain you, isolate you, and insist that you have swabs invasively taken from your body, it’s not entirely surprising that grown adults don’t always immediately recognise similar behaviours as unacceptable.

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