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I don't think anyone can really give even one sided advice at the time due to the lack of information and the vague wording used. When you say aggressive it could mean so many different things from physical assault to him just saying how he feels and you not liking his thoughts. So it makes it very hard to say anything in regards to that. Also a bit where I was very confused was when you approached him about something he did to hurt your feelings, I think this is key in understanding his response to you. Without it one could say anything from emotional and mental abuse or simple an issue he believed you were wrong and he told you his feelings and it upset you so he doesn't want to talk about it again.
There is a wide range of advice that could be given here due to the lack of information no one can really help you with your situation.
I am not saying he was right or that you were right I am simple saying it's hard to advise on such a vague topic.[/qu
so tense
AL, I was addressing this OP and her perceived safety, and she was looking for support, not for answers about why he might be acting that way towards her. If you have something against the way I respond and post to an OP, then address me....don't take it out on an OP who is obviously hurting.
I'd say the same thing about telling a woman to call the police on her husband because she said she feels sad because of her husband and won't say why. Its a knee jerk hostility towards a guy you don't know who may or may not have done something worthy of her feeling sad. Everyone is an authority about a situation after they have heard one side of an argument... until they hear the other side of the argument.
In our rush to share sympathy tears maybe we should seek to understand the specifics prior to offering judgement either way. All I did was make a guess the OP neither confirmed or denied. Actually, she lashed out at me instead.
Either way the assumption has a way of being incorrect causing damage.I believe the phrase in question was, "he became aggressive and handled me wrongly". The OP was very vague of course, and this could mean anything from, "he rolled his eyes at me" to "he punched me in the face".
Within the framework of compassion, I'd say that it is better to say, "call the police if he hit you" to a woman whose husband rolled his eyes, than to say, "quit sitting around thinking up things to complain about" to a woman that was punched in the face.
Wouldn't you?
I'd would much rather be corrected on the former than the latter, myself.
Either way the assumption has a way of being incorrect causing damage.
Let's say husband rolls eyes and she does call the police because she views that as aggression and explains it to the police in a similar way and it ends in his arrest for rolling eyes. That still will result in considerable damage not just to said person but also the marriage.
The best thing to do is not offer advice on topics that are certainly not explained especially with such polar opposites that are possible.
In my opinion both are equally wrong.
No one said "call the police", they said "call the police if he hit you". Surely an important distinction...
Yet and still to a man that's never called his wife out of her name or laid a finger on her the assumption the advice particularly when the spouse doesn't exactly totally refute it adds to damage of the marriage, a loss of believability for physically abused women and tension in a marriage.
??Perceived Safety?
might be acting ??
Yet and still to a man that's never called his wife out of her name or laid a finger on her the assumption the advice particularly when the spouse doesn't exactly totally refute it adds to damage of the marriage, a loss of believability for physically abused women and tension in a marriage.
If your wife said, "Help!!" Wouldn't you want the people around her to err by calling an ambulance instead of assuming that she was just yelling for no reason and telling her to quiet down?
Maybe I wrote that poorly add me to revise my statement.I think you're making an assumption that he has never done this before.
I'm a little confused. You are studying to be a lawyer. Yet you don't think police should be called when a woman has been physically violated and assaulted by her husband? Do you think calling police is more damaging than the original assault, or not calling the police which will set a precedent that it's okay for him to hit her and she won't call? Where does a woman draw the line and finally make that call?
Would you say the same thing if it were a parent hitting a child? Or a child hitting a parent? Or a friend hitting a friend, or a stranger hitting a stranger? Hitting and mishandling are assaults. Period. Against the law. In fact, where I live, if you even touch someone against their will, it is considered an assault and is grounds for arrest.
I have not been injured physically only emotionally.
Maybe I wrote that poorly add me to revise my statement.
What I am saying is that let's say it isn't abuse. Let's say she calls the police because she believes that "rolling eyes," for example is seen as aggressive and the police arrive. They tell him he can either leave or be charged with domestic violence due to the fact there was no noticeable damage. He refuses as he should and is arrested for domestic disturbance or other related crimes. That man is now in a situation that rolling his eyes doesn't deserve.
I am a firm believer in if you get hit call the police. If my wife hit's me she is going to jail, man or woman, friend or foe people should not go around hitting each other let's be clear on that. However the accusation of a possibility of physical assault is very serious particularly when it is a husband harming a wife. The reason being if the accusation is false it doesn't just disappear it changes one's out look on certain situations.
Also I am not making an assumption I am simple saying that more information is needed in order to give any sort of advice due to the extreme differences are possible using hypothetical situations to demonstrate those possibilities.
I think she cleared up the question of physical abuse on post #12 .
he has no remorse for his actions he became aggressive and handled me wrongly. though he made reason in his own mind, of his frustration that turned aggressive.
Am I still angry about this and my wife's lackadaisical response of course, I know what they feel about men. Did that lead to several arguments if course. It changed my entire perspective on women in supposed abusive situations.
ValleyGal said:Thanks for clarifying. I might have misread what you said. This is one subject I get defensive about really easily due to my own history with being assaulted by an ex. Sometimes this leads me to read into things...my apologies.
