Verbal Abuse: It Can Be Insidious
HealthyPlace Mental Health Newsletter
Here's what's happening on the HealthyPlace site this week:
- Verbal Abuse: It Can Be Insidious
- Share Your Mental Health Experience
- "The High Cost of Mental Illness" on HealthyPlace TV
- "How to Stop Verbal and Emotional Abuse" on HealthyPlace Radio
- From HealthyPlace Mental Health Blogs
- Teaching Your Closed Minded Child To Be More Open Minded
Verbal Abuse: It Can Be Insidious
On the HealthyPlace Support Forums, one of our adult members, taebofreak, shares his experiences being a victim of verbal abuse.
"My father has his own ideas about me and voices them pretty often. He assumes the worst about me and thinks I am an idiot. All he does is criticize me and drag me down when I make any progress." (Full text of taebofreak "Verbally Abusive Father" post.)
It's easy to recognize that for what it is: verbal abuse. HealthyPlace verbal abuse blogger, Kellie Holly, provides a different twist. Her soon-to-be ex-husband wasn't into name-calling. His tactics revolved around trying to make her feel inadequate and dimwitted. He would tell her to do one thing, she'd do it, and the next week he'd say "I never said that." Then, he'd chastise her for it.
The point is - both are forms of verbal abuse. The second example though may be more difficult to recognize. But the one thing all verbal, emotional, psychological abusers have in common is that everything is your fault and in the end, you begin to believe it too.
Your Thoughts
Read and/or respond to taebofreak.
Join us on the HealthyPlace Mental Health Forums and Chat
You must be a registered HealthyPlace member. If you aren't already, it's free and takes less than 30 seconds. Just click the "register button" at the top of the page.
At the bottom of the forums page, you'll notice a chat bar (similar to facebook). You can chat with any registered member on the forums site.
We hope you'll be a frequent participant and share our support link with others who may benefit.
------------------------------------------------------------------
Mental Health Experiences
Share your thoughts/experiences on "verbal or psychological abuse" or any mental health subject, or respond to other people's audio posts, by calling our toll-free number (1-888-883-8045).
continue story below
You can listen to what other people are saying by clicking on the gray title bars inside the widgets located on the "Sharing Your Mental Health Experiences" homepage, the HealthyPlace homepage, and the HealthyPlace Support Network homepage.
If you have any questions, write us at: info AT healthyplace.com
------------------------------------------------------------------
"The High Cost of Mental Illness" on HealthyPlace TV
Between 1985 and 1995, says Mark, "I lost just about all that was dear to me—friends, family, business, home, and possessions—and for the next six years I plumbed the depths of experience and my own psyche, living on the mean streets of San Francisco as a homeless junkie. It damn near killed me." That's the high price he paid for being misdiagnosed with depression when he had bipolar disorder - on this week's HealthyPlace Mental Health TV Show. (TV Show blog)
Coming in February on the HealthyPlace Mental Health TV Show
- Who Needs ADHD Coaching?
- Exercise Addiction
- Difficult Issues Facing Adult Survivors of Child Abuse
If you would like to be a guest on the show or share your personal story in writing or via video, please write us at: producer AT healthyplace.com
For all previous HealthyPlace Mental Health TV archived shows.
How to Stop Verbal and Emotional Abuse
Are you in a verbally, emotionally abusive relationship? Shelly and Dr. Michael Marshall, co-authors of the book "Respect-Me Rules," say you can empower yourself and stop the abuse. That's on this week's HealthyPlace Mental Health Radio Show.
From HealthyPlace Mental Health Blogs
Your comments and observations are welcomed.
- Verbal Abuse and Brainwashing (Verbal Abuse and Relationships Blog)
- Internalizing Fear and Hatred of Mental Illness (Breaking Bipolar Blog)
- Traumatic Anxiety Changes Lives (Treating Anxiety Blog)
- Communication Breakdowns Lead to Frustrated Parents (Life with Bob: A Parenting Blog)
- Managing Self-Sabotaging Behaviors Part 1: Acceptance (Dissociative Living blog)
- Spouse's Day (The Unlocked Life Blog)
- Reclaiming Your Strength During ED Recovery (Surviving ED Blog)
- Getting Better Should Not Make Things Worse (More Than Borderline blog)
- The Better You Listen (Part 2) (Work and Bipolar or Depression blog)
- Dissociative Identity Disorder and Self-Sabotage
- Blended Families and Children with Mental Illness (2 of 2)
- Leaving an Abusive Relationship
- Coping with Trauma Anniversaries and Anxiety
Feel free to share your thoughts and comments at the bottom of any blog post. And visit the mental health blogs homepage for the latest posts.
Teaching Your Closed Minded Child To Be More Open Minded
Here's an email sent to The Parenting Coach, Dr. Steven Richfield:
"Any advice on how to get through to two closed minded teenagers? My husband and I feel like our words can't get through."
Are you in a similar situation? Here's Dr. Richfield's insight and advice on how to help your child be more open minded.
If you know of anyone who can benefit from this newsletter or the HealthyPlace.com site, I hope you'll pass this onto them. You can also share the newsletter on any social network (like facebook, stumbleupon, or digg) you belong to by clicking the links below. For updates throughout the week,
APA Reference
Staff, H.
(2011, January 28). Verbal Abuse: It Can Be Insidious, HealthyPlace. Retrieved
on 2024, November 5 from https://www.healthyplace.com/other-info/mental-health-newsletter/verbal-abuse-it-can-be-insidious