Why I Stayed -Tweets That Everyone Needs to See. By Jared Keller - TopicsExpress



          

Why I Stayed -Tweets That Everyone Needs to See. By Jared Keller September 8, 2014 SHARE On Monday morning, TMZ released a damning video of Baltimore Ravens running back Ray Rices violent attack on his then-fiancée Janay Palmer in February. The brutal video showed Rice knocking Palmer unconscious before dragging her out of an elevator. On Monday afternoon, the Ravens got rid of Rice, and the NFL announced he had been suspended indefinitely. While many cheered the NFLs move to (finally) punish Rices vicious behavior, too many media outlets immediately fell into a tired pattern of victim blaming. Lets not all jump on the bandwagon of demonizing this guy, said Fox News contributor Ben Carson. He obviously has some real problems, and his wife obviously knows that, because she subsequently married him. Writer Beverly Gooden had heard enough. I was watching the responses to the TMZ on my timeline, and I noticed a trend. People were asking why did she marry him? and why didnt she leave him, Gooden told Mic. When I saw those tweets, my first reaction was shame. The same shame that I felt back when I was in a violent marriage. Its a sort of guilt that would make me crawl into a shell and remain silent. But today, for a reason I cant explain, Id had enough. I knew I had an answer to everyones question of why victims of violence stay. I cant speak for Janay Rice, I can only speak for me. Gooden decided to change the conversation. She called on her followers to share their stories of domestic abuse with the hashtag #WhyIStayed in an effort to draw awareness to the complexities of domestic violence. I want people to know they are not alone and that there are people who truly understand what they have gone through, said Gooden. When the overwhelming public voice is of shame, you can get lost in the guilt. You can feel voiceless. I want people to know that they have a voice! That they have the power. Thats so critical, that survivors feel empowered. Goodens message resonated. Within a few hours, thousands of Twitter users were sharing their stories. Domestic violence isnt a rare phenomenon in America. According to the National Coalition Against Domestic Violence, an estimated 1.3 million women are victims of physical assault by an intimate partner each year, and 1 in every 4 women will experience domestic violence in her lifetime. But these are just numbers, considered in the abstract, without faces and names. It shouldnt take a brutal video to make people care about domestic violence. All to often, it takes the spectacle of violence to thrust an issue endured in silence and solitude into the national spotlight. It is never as simple as walking out of the door, said Gooden. There are so many layers to domestic violence. And not just financial, although those are valid. But we are talking about human hearts. Its not easy to leave someone you love. Its not easy to leave when you have no resources and nowhere to go. Its not easy to leave when you are threatened with additional violence. Its not easy to leave when you remember how it used to be, or when they romance you during the good times, or when they promise it is the last time. Or when there are children involved. Because you believe in love and you believe in them. - Lisa
Posted on: Fri, 12 Sep 2014 18:23:44 +0000

Trending Topics



Recently Viewed Topics




© 2015