Rating: Summary: Yep, I was abused... Review: ... by my older sister when a child and adolescent and first gf in college.Since then I have "merely" been verbally and psychologically abused by successive gfs. There's a reason I am 34 and unmarried.
Rating: Summary: One of the Most Important Books Ever Written About Violence Review: Abused Men: The Hidden Side of Domestic Violence. Philip W. Cook. Westport, Connecticut: Praeger Publications, 1997. More than twenty years ago, Murray Straus and Richard Gelles published their first landmark study and Erin Pizzey wrote Prone to Violence, both documenting the dreadful truth that women and men commit violence against their spouses with roughly equal frequency at all levels of severity. And yet today, nearly all Americans still buy into the media-created myth that domestic violence is something men almost exclusively do to women. Philip Cook's badly needed book is the first to comprehensively focus on men as victims of domestic violence. Cook's achievement is admirable. Not only does he cover his topic succinctly and thoroughly, meticulously documenting each step he takes, but he also delves into a number of pertinent related issues lesser authors might have missed entirely. Cook starts with the facts, noting that in about half of all domestic violence cases, both partners are engaged in mutual combat. In 25% of the cases, the man is the aggressor, and in the other quarter of the cases, the woman is the aggressor. Cook succinctly summarizes differences between male and female patterns of violence and injury: men tend to use bodily force more and to injure women more severely when they do so. Men rarely use violent women's favorite weapons, knives and guns. Multiple injuries are less common for men but their single injuries caused by weapons often require medical attention. Cook always manages to keep his eye on the larger picture, discussing the disturbing circle of violence often created when battering is witnessed by children. He ties in men's much greater chances of being victimized by violent crime in general and also comments on sentencing discrimination against male criminals. Old gender stereotypes do us all a great disservice, encouraging a reflexive blaming of one sex which makes healing more difficult by obscuring individual circumstances. Cook encourages us to give up competing to be victims, to resist the suggestion that attempting to understand a family dynamic in which both men and women contribute to violence is "blaming the victim" and instead to work together to end this abomination. Chapter Two contains a number of real-life stories from battered men, which help depict the issue into three dimensions. The men's honesty is astonishing. We learn that often it is not so much fear of being labeled a "wimp" as a sense of responsibility toward their family which prevents them from leaving. As men's traditional supporter role comes to be devalued and diluted, tension may develop as one party in a partnership comes to see himself or comes to be seen by his spouse as not bringing much to the partnership. Cook packs Chapter Three with practical tips including how to recognize and deal with battering as a man, how to choose a counselor, how to decide whether to stay at home or leave, visitation, restraining orders, and finding emotional support. Cook next discusses societal challenges to understanding this problem including conspiracies of silence and violence. He describes in detail the ordeals endured by writers on anti-male violence such as Gelles and Suzanne Steinmetz, including shootings, bomb threats, death threats, career threats and actions, and attempted character assassinations. Other forms of suppression, while less direct, may be no less insidious. One survey failed to report its male victimization rates, which became known only after other researchers obtained the computer tape. Lamentably, it is still true that virtually no men's shelters exist anywhere in the country, and almost no hotlines will advise male callers. Cook concludes with a chapter offering a multi-pronged approach to reducing all forms of domestic violence. Automatic arrest laws need to be passed and enforced, particularly on behalf of male victims. Mutual rather than unilateral restraining orders should become the norm. Free or low-cost legal representation should be potentially avaailable to both sides in a domestic dispute. Deferred sentencing programs should be expanded to involve the offender in counseling and education. Cook proposes the creation of a multidisciplinary task force which would include shelters, police, district attorneys, social service agencies, probation departments, and the courts. Concerted, standardized data collection is sorely needed. Domestic relations cases must be taken out of the adversarial court system and turned over to mandatory mediation or arbitration. A sex abuse review panel should be created to root out false accusations and eliminate the use of "hired gun" psychological experts. Cook somewhat surprisingly calls for men's shelters only in large urban areas; his data seem to suggest a broader need for them. Men's crisis hotlines are urgently needed. Cook has written a remarkable, invaluable book. As he poignantly quotes, "Violence, like sex, never occurs in the abstract... Souls are... saved, or lost, only one at a time."
Rating: Summary: One of the Most Important Books Ever Written About Violence Review: Abused Men: The Hidden Side of Domestic Violence. Philip W. Cook. Westport, Connecticut: Praeger Publications, 1997. More than twenty years ago, Murray Straus and Richard Gelles published their first landmark study and Erin Pizzey wrote Prone to Violence, both documenting the dreadful truth that women and men commit violence against their spouses with roughly equal frequency at all levels of severity. And yet today, nearly all Americans still buy into the media-created myth that domestic violence is something men almost exclusively do to women. Philip Cook's badly needed book is the first to comprehensively focus on men as victims of domestic violence. Cook's achievement is admirable. Not only does he cover his topic succinctly and thoroughly, meticulously documenting each step he takes, but he also delves into a number of pertinent related issues lesser authors might have missed entirely. Cook starts with the facts, noting that in about half of all domestic violence cases, both partners are engaged in mutual combat. In 25% of the cases, the man is the aggressor, and in the other quarter of the cases, the woman is the aggressor. Cook succinctly summarizes differences between male and female patterns of violence and injury: men tend to use bodily force more and to injure women more severely when they do so. Men rarely use violent women's favorite weapons, knives and guns. Multiple injuries are less common for men but their single injuries caused by weapons often require medical attention. Cook always manages to keep his eye on the larger picture, discussing the disturbing circle of violence often created when battering is witnessed by children. He ties in men's much greater chances of being victimized by violent crime in general and also comments on sentencing discrimination against male criminals. Old gender stereotypes do us all a great disservice, encouraging a reflexive blaming of one sex which makes healing more difficult by obscuring individual circumstances. Cook encourages us to give up competing to be victims, to resist the suggestion that attempting to understand a family dynamic in which both men and women contribute to violence is "blaming the victim" and instead to work together to end this abomination. Chapter Two contains a number of real-life stories from battered men, which help depict the issue into three dimensions. The men's honesty is astonishing. We learn that often it is not so much fear of being labeled a "wimp" as a sense of responsibility toward their family which prevents them from leaving. As men's traditional supporter role comes to be devalued and diluted, tension may develop as one party in a partnership comes to see himself or comes to be seen by his spouse as not bringing much to the partnership. Cook packs Chapter Three with practical tips including how to recognize and deal with battering as a man, how to choose a counselor, how to decide whether to stay at home or leave, visitation, restraining orders, and finding emotional support. Cook next discusses societal challenges to understanding this problem including conspiracies of silence and violence. He describes in detail the ordeals endured by writers on anti-male violence such as Gelles and Suzanne Steinmetz, including shootings, bomb threats, death threats, career threats and actions, and attempted character assassinations. Other forms of suppression, while less direct, may be no less insidious. One survey failed to report its male victimization rates, which became known only after other researchers obtained the computer tape. Lamentably, it is still true that virtually no men's shelters exist anywhere in the country, and almost no hotlines will advise male callers. Cook concludes with a chapter offering a multi-pronged approach to reducing all forms of domestic violence. Automatic arrest laws need to be passed and enforced, particularly on behalf of male victims. Mutual rather than unilateral restraining orders should become the norm. Free or low-cost legal representation should be potentially avaailable to both sides in a domestic dispute. Deferred sentencing programs should be expanded to involve the offender in counseling and education. Cook proposes the creation of a multidisciplinary task force which would include shelters, police, district attorneys, social service agencies, probation departments, and the courts. Concerted, standardized data collection is sorely needed. Domestic relations cases must be taken out of the adversarial court system and turned over to mandatory mediation or arbitration. A sex abuse review panel should be created to root out false accusations and eliminate the use of "hired gun" psychological experts. Cook somewhat surprisingly calls for men's shelters only in large urban areas; his data seem to suggest a broader need for them. Men's crisis hotlines are urgently needed. Cook has written a remarkable, invaluable book. As he poignantly quotes, "Violence, like sex, never occurs in the abstract... Souls are... saved, or lost, only one at a time."
Rating: Summary: Hurtful and horrifically damaging Review: Anyone with any experience in domestic violence knows that the abuser in the situation will immediately claim their partner abused *them*. I work with First Step, a nonprofit organization to help the victims of domestic violence break out of abusive relationships. I have seen abusive men scream that the woman had 'clawed his face' or 'slapped' him. From experience I can say that nine times out of ten this 'abuse' is done out of fear, often when the abuser has the victem pinned against the wall. A case I just assisted on involved a woman who slapped her husband after he had pinned her to a wall. He punched her in the face and broke the woman's nose. He still maintains that he was in the right, and that he was the abused. This is a techinque of power, of making the woman feel guilty and weak. No violence is acceptable, but making the claim that men are abused to a larger extent than women only helps further sterotypes benificial to violent men.
Rating: Summary: Abused men feel pain too Review: Congratulations for writing a book on this subject. You may save some lives. I work for a voluntary organisation in the UK called ManKind that helps male victims of domestic violence, as until we set up this chairty last year there was nowhere for abused men to turn. Some of the other reviews here show a major problem we have: wherever we go to try for funding or even charity status we seem to meet people who say: no, abused men don't exist, or that if they do they ask for it, or they enjoy it (when I have received a phone call from a man in tears who has just been stabbed in the arm and thrown out of his (their) home with his (their) two children, I can't believe that people can make this claim), or they should be able to look after themselves. What matters is that being abused, verbally or physically, by someone who you love or who you are in a relationship with, is absolutely terrible, about the worst thing that will happen to anyone unfortunate to experience it. I know because it happened to me last year, out of the blue, but it trapped me and took me to the edge of a cliff. This abusive relationship (I'm 6ft andover 12stone, she's 5ft 4in and 8 stone) left me with more than 100 bruises and cuts, three bust ribs and mental scars that will take years to heal. NEVER ONCE DID I HOLD HER, THREATEN HER OR HIT HER BACK. I believe she is very unwell and was, as is often the case in abusive relationships, hitting someone else (in her mind) when she hit me. Incidentally, ManKind chairty has started to help female abusers as there is nowhere they can turn in the UK either - further evidence that this problem has just been ignored until now. Now if you still believe that men are making up this problem, does that mean the many calls I've had from women who regret and can't understand verbally abusing and physically beating their male partners are just made up too? Abusive violence in all its terrible forms degrades, harms, creates a cycle of violence, and kills - and WE SHOULD ALL WORK TOGETHER TO STOP IT. By helping fill a gap and make people aware that men are battered too (and it's usually the caring type of men who fall into being abused as they stay around hoping they can help) and need help and helping them, and that female abusers need help too, certainly the charity I work for is in no way meaning to take any resources or energy or attention from groups helping abused women or abusive men. I would ask those who feel this way to think about a man (that is; a son, a husband, a friend, a colleague, a daddy, a human being) who has lost sense of himself, is being controlled and used by another human being to project their bad feelings onto, and is feeling suicidal (I have heard of men who have committed suicide over the abuse they have been given, made worse by the fact that they were not aware that this does happen, thus increasing their sense of isolation and "wimpishness"), and put their energies to helping to bring harmony where there is harm, light where there is darkness, love where there is hate, and hope where there is despair.
Rating: Summary: An inspiring healing book Review: First I must address several grievous mistake in the review written by Detroit velvet. 1. This individual states that it is wrong to say more men than women are abused. That is grossly incorrect. Sociologists and scientists all over have stated time and again that indeed more men than women are abused. 2. This individual further implies that ALL MEN lie about being abused, while it is true that some men are abusive it is ludicrous to make the blanket statement that all men are abusive, thereby liars when caught claiming victimhood. What utter nonsense!
Detroit velvet is in dire need of a reality check. If the men who are abusive can lie claiming abuse then why is it so impossible to assume that women who claim abuse may in turn be lying and in fact are the abuser?
I have to wonder how many women have physically, and mentally abused their male partners then when the partner left claimed the role of the victim instead.
Men don't tell because they face monumental obstructions by authorities and peers. Mentalities such as 'men love it' or 'you deserved it' or 'you're lying' or 'you're such a whimp, suck it up'.
I was kid and had a girl friend who beat and belittled me then would come back claiming she was sorry and loved me so I took her back, time and again finally I had enough and left. She claimed abuse. I NEVER HIT A WOMAN IN MY LIFE - EVER!
Later I had another girl friend while not a hitter was very verbally abusive, after having enough I left, and then another and another, all angry and some hitters.
Then I met my wife, who was very much a hitter, and extremely emotionally abusive. Again I never raised a hand to her or any woman. After eleven years (and two children) of trying to make it work, hoping she would change, I couldn't take the depression and the abuse any more, I left. I have been in counseling since and trying to break the cycle of picking the SAME WOMAN over and over again.
This book is a real help and acknowledgement to those of us who to varying degrees have lived though abuse. I wish our anti male prejudiced media and society treated this abuse with equal concern and diligence as they do abused women and children.
Just a couple after notes here.
1. With all the press over abuse why is this segment so blatantly ignored?
2. If a man is bitter and prejudiced against women he is a chauvinist pig and a mental and social caveman. What then is a society that views a gender such as men the Detroit velvet and other like this individual, view them? Wow! Talk about hypocrisy!
Rating: Summary: Ah, those pesky statistics.... Review: First, let me say that this book is perhaps one of the most important books you will ever read. Not just because of the implications to public policy, but because a male friend or relative you know may be abused and you're not aware of it. It's a huge problem, as the author argues. Regarding the statistics, one reviewer wrote "The information that half of abuse is by women is a deliberate misreading of research that was done that did not distinguish between types, severity, and lethality of behaviors, nor offensive or defensive." What this reviewer is ignoring is the fact that Mr. Cook is quoting the exact same source that battered women's advocates quote. The next time you hear someone say "A woman is battered every X seconds...", be aware that they are not actually quoting the FBI or the DOJ, what they are quoting is the Family Research Laboratory, which is where that number originated. What they've done is left out the other half of the statistic. (Probably because it's not politically convenient for them to quote the whole thing.) "Ah, but it doesn't distinguish between types, severity, and lethality of behaviors, nor offensive or defensive!" What they again fail to mention is that that also applies to the "female" half of the statistic. To say that a woman is battered every X number of seconds without examining whether or not it was done in self defense, whether or not it was "mild" abuse, whether or not it resulted in death, is rather dishonest if you're going to insist on applying that strict analysis to the "male" half of the statistic. Apply it to both, or don't. In other words, you can't have your cake and eat it too. What they are essentially saying is "It's not abuse when it happens to a man." That, my friends, is pure BS. I confronted a battered women's advocate with the actual numbers once during a United Way meeting in which she was trying to raise extra funds for her shelter. After displaying a shocked look on her face (probably because she was caught off-guard), she simply responded "I've never heard those numbers before. It may be that men are unwilling to come forward with their stories of abuse." And there you have it. If men are unwilling to come forward with their stories of abuse, then the "women make up 95% of DV victims" statistic obviously becomes questionable. If men aren't willing to tell their tales, then the battered women's advocates have no idea that their "95%" number is actually accurate. Then why do they continue to perpetuate that myth? Follow the money trail.....
Rating: Summary: Ah, those pesky statistics.... Review: First, let me say that this book is perhaps one of the most important books you will ever read. Not just because of the implications to public policy, but because a male friend or relative you know may be abused and you're not aware of it. It's a huge problem, as the author argues. Regarding the statistics, one reviewer wrote "The information that half of abuse is by women is a deliberate misreading of research that was done that did not distinguish between types, severity, and lethality of behaviors, nor offensive or defensive." What this reviewer is ignoring is the fact that Mr. Cook is quoting the exact same source that battered women's advocates quote. The next time you hear someone say "A woman is battered every X seconds...", be aware that they are not actually quoting the FBI or the DOJ, what they are quoting is the Family Research Laboratory, which is where that number originated. What they've done is left out the other half of the statistic. (Probably because it's not politically convenient for them to quote the whole thing.) "Ah, but it doesn't distinguish between types, severity, and lethality of behaviors, nor offensive or defensive!" What they again fail to mention is that that also applies to the "female" half of the statistic. To say that a woman is battered every X number of seconds without examining whether or not it was done in self defense, whether or not it was "mild" abuse, whether or not it resulted in death, is rather dishonest if you're going to insist on applying that strict analysis to the "male" half of the statistic. Apply it to both, or don't. In other words, you can't have your cake and eat it too. What they are essentially saying is "It's not abuse when it happens to a man." That, my friends, is pure BS. I confronted a battered women's advocate with the actual numbers once during a United Way meeting in which she was trying to raise extra funds for her shelter. After displaying a shocked look on her face (probably because she was caught off-guard), she simply responded "I've never heard those numbers before. It may be that men are unwilling to come forward with their stories of abuse." And there you have it. If men are unwilling to come forward with their stories of abuse, then the "women make up 95% of DV victims" statistic obviously becomes questionable. If men aren't willing to tell their tales, then the battered women's advocates have no idea that their "95%" number is actually accurate. Then why do they continue to perpetuate that myth? Follow the money trail.....
Rating: Summary: This Book Covers the Topic Well Review: Having done a lot of research on this topic myself, I was very impressed with the quality of Phil Cook's research on this issue. I was impressed and surprised at how many aspects of of the "battered men" issue it covered. I'd recommend it for anyone who is being abused, or who knows anyone in this situation. It's also good for anyone who'd like to understand this situation.
Rating: Summary: A welcome and long overdue book! Review: I was most impressed with the empirical data in this book. The author obviously went to great lengths to ensure his research was accurate and detailed. This book will be of enormous benefit to those men who are currently suffering or who have left domestic violence situations. We need much more written on this subject to open a long overdue discourse and minimize the stigma against male victims of this all too common tragedy.
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