Virginia's voicemails from Clint Burrows
NASA

No title available
wallacepolsom

@theartofmadeline

PR's Tumblrdome
No title available
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"

JVL
Claire Keane
will byers stan first human second
cherry valley forever
Cosimo Galluzzi
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
Sweet Seals For You, Always
$LAYYYTER
todays bird
noise dept.

Kiana Khansmith
occasionally subtle

seen from Singapore

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Türkiye
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Malaysia

seen from Türkiye
seen from Türkiye
seen from Bangladesh
@dezire72-blog
Virginia's voicemails from Clint Burrows
Hey is there a really clear definition of what constitutes abuse, because I feel like my siblings and I have been emotionally, psychologically, and/or verbally abused, but only every now and again. My mother has a lot of issues and they frequently get projected onto me, and my step-father, we'll he's just an asshole. But they're nice a lot of the times. I don't know mate. I'm just tired.
I think it is tricky and dangerous to give a definition of abuse because it has so many forms and faces it is impossible to outline its every aspect. However, I will try: emotional abuse is abuse that targets a person’s emotional health.
Some forms of emotional abuse include but are not limited to:
Gaslighting and invalidation of feelings, experiences, abilities, etc;
Guilt tripping;
Public humiliation;
Isolating from friends and family;
Victim blaming;
Constant criticism;
Certain forms of negative reinforcement, such as neglect or threatening abandonment, to control behaviour;
Refusing to allow privacy or personal space, monitoring and controlling forms of communication and self expression, including destroying these things;
Destruction of significantly personal items.
But is all that real abuse? YES
A relationship can be unhealthy or abusive even without physical violence. Verbal abuse may not cause physical damage, but it does cause emotional pain and scarring. It can also lead to physical violence if the relationship continues on the unhealthy path its on.
Sometimes verbal abuse is so bad that you actually start believing what your abusers say. You begin to think you’re stupid, ugly or fat. You agree that nobody else would ever want to be close to you. Constantly being criticized and told you aren’t good enough causes you to lose confidence and lowers your self esteem. As a result, you may start to blame yourself for other’s abusive behavior.
Remember — emotional abuse is never your fault.
Let me know, please.
When [an abusive man] tells me that he became abusive because he lost control of himself, I ask him why he didn’t do something even worse. For example, I might say, “You called her a fucking whore, you grabbed the phone out of her hand and whipped it across the room, and then you gave her a shove and she fell down. There she was at your feet where it would have been easy to kick her in the head. Now, you have just finished telling me that you were ‘totally out of control’ at that time, but you didn’t kick her. What stopped you?” And the client can always give me a reason. Here are some common explanations: “I wouldn’t want to cause her a serious injury.” “I realized one of the children was watching.” “I was afraid someone would call the police.” “I could kill her if I did that.” “The fight was getting loud, and I was afraid the neighbors would hear.” And the most frequent response of all: “Jesus, I wouldn’t do that. I would never do something like that to her.” The response that I almost never heard – I remember hearing it twice in the fifteen years – was: “I don’t know.” These ready answers strip the cover off of my clients’ loss of control excuse. While a man is on an abusive rampage, verbally or physically, his mind maintains awareness of a number of questions: “Am I doing something that other people could find out about, so it could make me look bad? Am I doing anything that could get me in legal trouble? Could I get hurt myself? Am I doing anything that I myself consider too cruel, gross, or violent?” A critical insight seeped into me from working with my first few dozen clients: An abuser almost never does anything that he himself considers morally unacceptable. He may hide what he does because he thinks other people would disagree with it, but he feels justified inside. I can’t remember a client ever having said to me: “There’s no way I can defend what I did. It was just totally wrong.” He invariably has a reason that he considers good enough. In short, an abuser’s core problem is that he has a distorted sense of right and wrong. I sometimes ask my clients the following question: “How many of you have ever felt angry enough at youer mother to get the urge to call her a bitch?” Typically half or more of the group members raise their hands. Then I ask, “How many of you have ever acted on that urge?” All the hands fly down, and the men cast appalled gazes on me, as if I had just asked whether they sell drugs outside elementary schools. So then I ask, “Well, why haven’t you?” The same answer shoots out from the men each time I do this exercise: “But you can’t treat your mother like that, no matter how angry you are! You just don’t do that!” The unspoken remainder of this statement, which we can fill in for my clients, is: “But you can treat your wife or girlfriend like that, as long as you have a good enough reason. That’s different.” In other words, the abuser’s problem lies above all in his belief that controlling or abusing his female partner is justifiable….
Lundy Bancroft, Why Does He Do That? Inside the Minds of Angry and Controlling Men (via seebster)
Emotional abuse works like this: You are screamed at, and then, not knowing any better, you stand up for yourself. You think this is a way of being strong. You think this is a defense tactic.But this only provokes more screaming. Going silent provokes more screaming too, but usually it keeps the threats to the minimum. It keeps it just at screaming and not: a shove down the stairs, or order to pack your stuff and get out. So you learn how to go silent. How to play dead. How to cry without making a noise. How to swallow noise. How to wipe your cheeks, get out of the car, and go about your day. You learn. And when the screaming has stopped, when the two of you are in the car or out to dinner and they’re all smiles, all asking for favors, all questions, you are still hurt and annoyed and want to ask them, how? How can you speak to me like that? How can you pretend you did not say those things? How can you have forgotten? But you’ve learned. So you listen to, “Can I borrow your key”s and “how was your day”s and you play dead. You swallow the noise. And sometimes it doesn’t matter who is speaking to you, it doesn’t matter if they’re a friend, it doesn’t matter if their criticism is constructive, it doesn’t matter. You’ve learned. Any sort of speaking, any raising of the voice, any insult and you play dead.
Good Girl, Lora Mathis (via cylon)
If someone abuses you, they don’t love you. There’s no grey area.
Do not allow him to consume you. If he does not call, go to sleep. If he does not message, put your phone away and have a fantastic day anyway. If he acts distant when you are with him and refuses to tell you what is wrong, don’t wait for him, go home and do something you love. If he tries to insinuate you do not need your friends now that you have him, spend more time with your friends. If he tries to teach you a lesson through the silent treatment, ignore him completely. If he plays with your feelings constantly, walk away from him. If he acts like your body is his entitlement when you are not ready, walk away from him. If he says terrible, unforgivable things and threatens to leave you after every argument, walk away from him. If he forbids you from doing anything you love, walk away from him. If he claims ownership of your accomplishments, walk away from him. If he demeans you or disrespects your being a girl and refuses to stop when you tell him it hurts, walk away from him. I cannot stress this enough, you live for yourself first. He is a secondary character in the story of your life. Do not allow him to turn you into a secondary character in your own book.
Nikita Gill, Advice to Teenage Girls Finding Their Way Through Love. (via meanwhilepoetry)
If you like, you can read my interests and likes.
Hi.
Why would you repost this specific post of mine on every site you visit? Please leave me alone.
TW for domestic violence, abuse
Source
Something we live every day.
TW for domestic violence, abuse
Source
True
you will be hurt more often than you will be loved, and i am sorry that this is true.
- premonition, f.gabdon (via thegabdonwrites)
my alone is both my best friend and worst enemy.
- conundrum, f.gabdon (via thegabdonwrites)
We have lived A hundred different lifetimes - You and I - Together in my head; Every single one A softer, more loving version Than the reality In which we exist.
- hundred lifetimes, f.gabdon (via thegabdonwrites)
It is only once in a while that you see someone whose electricity and presence matches yours at that moment.
Charles Bukowski (via moon-quotes)
Tell her you love her if you miss her so much. Let her break your heart again and again, as many times necessary. Kill your ego and exhaust yourself from trying to show her how much she means to you. She will never come back, but life with no regrets is better than a mind burning itself in dignity.
Ishkhan Hovhannisyan (via wnq-writers)
Before I met you, I was a person. Believe it or not, I had thoughts and complexities Beyond your existence. As we spoke, I shocked you with my openness, An openness I tried to transmit Across all my relationships and interactions, Because I hate keeping track Of who I told what. But you thought you were special, That you’d given me this gift Of light in darkness, A single companion to embark on my journey. You thought you were my answer, That I needed you, But haven’t you realized by now I’m more than the questions I possess? My questions do not need an answer, Don’t you ever ask just to hear your words released into the atmosphere, Setting your mind free from the confines of their binary? Don’t you ever speak just to see what might happen? My words don’t have as much weight as you think. But I’m too serious, Holding onto something that you claim just isn’t there, Where you’re just casual, Never struck by casualties in this warfare. You say you’re here for my convenience, Because surely without you I would wilt like an ill-nurtured flower, And you’re obligated to care for me. I’m not looking for answers, don’t you see? Of all the questions I’ve thrown out into the universe, The least relevant pertain to you and me. My body is deteriorating and no one can tell me why And you think my greatest tragedy would be in your goodbye.
“Holding on for Me,” by Grazia Curcuru (via prosebyday)
He was like fireworks; he came in with a big entrance, lit up my life in a thousand colors, and then left me staring at a pitch black sky.
m.ch (via wnq-writers)
That was the way it really was.
Have you ever thought that maybe you are a narcissist? Maybe you are. Read on and find out what kind of person you really are.
Signs you need to be aware of.