Thank you for working with Avniel where he is at. It seems to be bringing out more insights.
I am wondering, and it is hard to know, if Avniel would view it somewhat differently if his father took physical abuse from his mother, but did not give in to beating his children. How much of the anger comes from that part of the equation?
I had some family where the wife was continually verbally abusive to the husband. I don't think there was violence, but I don't know. She did threaten suicide as well at times.
However the husband was the most patient and loving man I have ever seen, and just took it--and he still loved her despite all of it. Nor did he give in to her on important family decisions just because she was angry. He just remained calm through it, then moved on. And I don't mean he overruled her all the time either. He just brushed it off and moved on as though it hadn't happened. I didn't view him negatively for that, but positively.
Now had he turned around and taken it out on everyone else, that would have been a different story. The issue is not just that Avniel's father wouldn't stand up for himself. Rather he would actively participate in beating his children to placate her. He had the strength to stop it, and didn't, but instead tried to deflect the abuse to his kids. I can well imagine being more angry with him than even her. Actively beating his own children as a way to shield himself is not a choice he should ever have made. And he does deserve blame for that.
The situation here is different than someone who is being abused by a spouse in two important ways.
1. Avniel was a child and had no way out except through his father, who wouldn't provide it.
2. His father not only refused to stand up for himself and his children, but used his children as a shield, and passed on the abuse to them.
Now Avniel, I can certainly understand why you would be resentful toward your father. Do you on some level feel you should forgive him, as Christ forgives?
I think that there is a problem with men that are open and able to be truthful about their feelings. Out of everyone there was only one person that actually tried to understand me and get insight into my perspective. Instead of trying to understand why I would relate and appreciate Ray Rice's right to defend himself, people would rather disregard that aspect of abuse because it's easier. I would say women in America do not hold themselves or other women accountable for any of their choices. In a culture and a society where Ray Rice's own friends as men spoke out against what he did, the media spoke out against what he did............did a single woman say anything about his wife charging at him? Of course not if she was the one hurt that is victim blaming she got knocked out.
Therefore me holding all parties accountable makes certain women uncomfortable because there is really no accountability culturally for women. Me as a man coming in here and saying if someone hits you and you hit them back while they are still in your personal space isn't abuse. What that does is change how we as a society look at abuse, we change the gender aspect of it and we take the term victim from the person that really is the aggressor.
Anytime a person can tell another person that "if you give men permission to hit other's back you are placing people in danger" who is in danger? The man that is being hit is already in danger, the only person that isn't in danger is the attacker. This mentality that women can hit men and men should never hit back, is about keeping power. If society questioned women and men based on who hit who first and used that as a means to determine who is the victim, women that abuse men would have a dangerous mentality.
By stating that Ray Rice's wife was not a victim but an aggressor causes women to get uncomfortable because if it is true then a lot of "abused" women would have to reexamine their position as victims. Similar me stating that women and men that are being abused(actually abused and not the aggressors) need to take responsibility for entering into a relationship with an someone that would damage you. Wait that's blaming the victim? Perhaps it is but to me people that decide to enter into a situation and that situation turns sour they have to own up to at the very least getting into that situation. The only people I can not blame are the children who have no choice in the manner, they don't get to pick.........I again bring up the term accountability.
I think if he took the physical abuse and did not hit us I would have respected him a little more not much more. I think based on family history and who my family is I couldn't respect him not even as a man but as an adult. ALl the adults I grew up around in my family were very proactive in political movements, the streets, the drug trade, their profession and my family prided themselves in being stand up individuals. It's those people in my family that make me not able to appreciate and respect my father's position. Not because he's a man but because he is an embarrassment to me. I view him as weak a person that allows himself to be a doormat and the fact I share the same DNA bothers me. I come from a family of warriors no matter what aspect of life we all are warriors. I think that what Valley did was an example of what a warrior looks like.
My father had a similar personality I viewed it as weakness because he put up with. Being in his field he had to know something is not right mentally and love someone enough to demand that they get help. I think even if there is nothing physical going on that still is something that needs to take place. I think many times we mistake cycles of acceptance as love but in reality it's really just being an enabler and allowing cycles of oppression to continue. At the very least hurt people hurt people unless they understand that they hurt and get an actual understanding of what their hurt. I think love at the end of the day is being truthful even if it hurts that other person particularly when it is a health thing.
I have forgiven him however I do always have to recognize character. Certain character flaws to me are not respectable particularly due to what I have seen a man go through. I think what made the loss of respect was seeing a human being allow themselves to broken down. I don't pity many people and pity isn't a positive thing there is a loss of respect there for sure but I wouldn't say I am not forgiving.
I typically don't care it probably made me less sensitive and more likely to avoid certain people and forms of communication but other then that I have an issue I do not like people touching me. My wife can hug me and I don't mind my family touching me but other then that I just don't want to be touched. I knew this about myself and I married a woman that has never physically harmed another with intent to do harm. I can't be around women and people that have a hand issue because I am not going to back down. I grew tired of that as a child so as a personal defense I avoid certain people. It works for me and my life and I am comfortable with it. I made myself a promise I would never allow myself to pushed around and so far it has actually helped me.
My thing is I can be whatever anyone wants me to, my mother too.....you can talk about my entire family(except threats to my daughter and wife me I am fine) however do not put your hands on me. I don't believe that comes from a point of anger I think that comes from a point of principle I don't put my hands on anybody so please don't put your hands on me I have had bad stimuli in the past.
I think where my anger comes in is my view on single mothers and dead beat fathers. I get angry because of their flaws and faults and the things that they did and the way they were not able to protect their daughter I was the innocent one that suffered. I think my anger is more so directed to abused women that communicate like my mother, black single mothers and dead beat fathers. I think then the more I have studied the black community post diaspora I felt more angered at them. I feel like these 3 are the destruction of the black community......when I see Chicago all I see are angry abused and neglected women with daddy issues raising boys that hate themselves because their mother hates them. They kill each other because that is how much they value others that look like them. Black boys are typical taught to hate each other at home typically by single parent households. They are taught this by women that were broken by their father a long time before they ever thought about men. These same women have sons and the anger of their grandfather comes on their boys that really never have any type of love. That's why in a sense I can relate to the streets because I know that feeling of self hatred, of being angry, of being sad, crying every night asking God why and waking up and having to pretend everything was ok. The reason why so many young black men smoke weed is because weed has saved many of their lives. They self medicate to not even think about the hatred the world feels towards them and they feel towards themselves and their own mother has against them.
I think my anger comes at the groups and the system that creates them. Also a little bit at people that communicate like they have been abused it reminds me of my mother so I tend to stay away from them or get angry and lash back verbally.