Over the years, people have worked to expand the experience women experienced in violent relationships. Over the past few decades the causes of internal and external risk factors, related factors, and intimate partner violence are rapidly increasing. Despite an increase in the number of support groups, there remain obstacles that prevent women from seeking help to get rid of violent relationships. When I read the story of Rhodes, I learned many obstacles to understand "Why can not she leave?" Although the direct answer to this question may not be obstructive, I think that the long system played a role.
My politics is very clear when helping women in violent relationships. Please do not reach out before they ask you. Because they are in an abusive relationship, their consent is being violated everyday. By my assumption that her situation has entered their lives, how can I break it further? I must rule over my Messianic complex.
Women maintaining a violent relationship with men and women contribute to their own suffering with their abusive partners every day. Abuses of human relations include, but are not limited to, physical abuse, psychological abuse, verbal abuse, and emotional abuse. Some women may not even notice that they were abused when they occurred. Women may think that they can not do better than the people they are. Also, why they keep building relationships with them, there is the possibility of leading to self-esteem and frustration. Unfortunately, most women can not get rid of abusive relations until it's too late. More and more women are abused by places that are ultimately murdered and in most cases are composed of intimate partners.
Women are violent in relation to men and are often violent for self-defense and violence may occur in a homosexual relationship with women, but the most common perpetrators of violence against women are males An intimate partner or former partner. In contrast, men are more vulnerable to violence by strangers and acquaintances than people closer to them (2). 1 Many countries use the term "domestic violence" to refer to partner violence, but this term may also include child abuse, elder abuse, or family abuse. "Abuse" refers to a severe and escalating form of partner violence characterized by multiple forms of abuse, intimidation and intimidation, and the increasingly owned and controlled behavior of abusers.