I would suggest you go to the bank you have the loan with, and ask if you may speak to your loan manager and explain the situation. You would be surprised the understanding they have if you give details of your physical abuse and verbal and mental torture.
They may suggest a lawyer, which is a great option. You cannot be blackmailed, it is like being in a prison with no bars. Leave them! You'll be glad you did. Sell the house and split the profits. Get an AVO. Anything, just don't stay whoever you are. Good luck it was the best thing I ever did. The freedom you will feel, you will never give it up that easily again.
Answer Leaving to gain control in an abusive relationship won't help you much. You will never gain control over a person who is mentally sick by leaving him or her. This person needs help and either you stand by them while they get professional help or you leave because you feel it's the thing to do. Don't leave for all the wrong reasons and later regret your move, if you have children and this person won't go for help, then leave as fast as you can because your children will eventually be affected by your choice to stay in an abusive relationship. Good luck
When you are in a very bad abusive relationship, you should use caution while building your plan to get to a safe place. Seek local resources that might be useful, including advocates that can help in putting together a safety plan and in utilizing whatever legal resources might be useful or necessary in your plan. Build your plan erring on the side of paranoia -- leaving an abusive relationship is the most dangerous time in an abusive relationship. When you have a plan, follow it, even when you're scared. It is very unlikely that anything in your relationship will change until you are in a safe place.
When he's not there, take your pet, and leave. Look for a police station, and have them direct you to a safe house. leave while he goes to the store and pack up all your stuff and leave and if it is your house pack up all his stuff and put it in the middle of the street andlock all your doors and if he trys to get in call the police and make sure your friends are with you to have witnesses.
It exist because the person being hurt stays in the relationship thinking the abuser will stop. Face reality this person has issues and they will not just up and change. I would advise anyone who is in an abusive relationship whether physical,emotional or verbal get out while you still can, because the abuser is not going to change magically.
More than likely While some relationships are independently dysfunctional, a true abusive personality tend to take the same behavior from relationship to relationship, so the odds are good the he will treat his next partner the same way he treated you.
If the garage is attached to the house, even with a breezeway, then you need to leave the house as well. The fumes from these bombs can make you ill.
Sally and Minerva are two characters in "The House on Mango Street" who end up feeling trapped and constrained by the men in their lives. Sally is forced into a controlling marriage, while Minerva is stuck in an abusive relationship. Both characters depict the struggles and limitations faced by women in their community.
Yes, absolutely. You've got to remember that an abusive cycle is exactly that - a cycle, and the 'going ok' phase will not last. Be safe. Leave while you can. Definitely. It's okay to leave anytime you wish. That's your right. Don't feel bad about it or feel like you have to even tell the abuser of your decision. Do what is best for you - leave and the sooner the better. Yes, and it's probably better for you than leaving during a fighting stage. If you try to leave while in a fight with your abuser, they will probably manipulate you into staying. However, if you blindside them while things are going well, they wont have the time to manipulate you, ESPECIALLY if you cut off contact. Always have a plan when you leave, that way very little can go wrong.
House Sparrows have been known to have a commensal relationship with humans. They benefit from nesting in man-made structures and feeding on human-provided food sources, while humans usually do not benefit or harm from the presence of House Sparrows.
Abusive and controlling. He needs to get some help. That is not a healthy relationship. One person should never be the parent. Both partners are equals. If you don't think he'll get help, or if you ask and he refuses, you need to leave him. It's not healthy to live that way. It will probably just get worse and could turn into physical abuse. By transforming you into "his child", your boyfriend is avoiding adult, mature intimacy - while maintaining absolute control over you. Both are abusive behaviors. Yes. He's being controlling and establishing power over you.
Yes, husband can refuse to leave the house unless an order of court compels him to do so. If, for example, the parties are in the process of getting divorced, a party might be more reluctant to leave the house because he, in those circumstances, wants to protect his "right" to live in the house and not give the impression that he is happy to forfeit his right to live in the house. If the husband is abusive, the wife can apply for a protection order until the divorce is finalized, and ask that the husband leave the house in the interim. The court can then decide whether the request should be granted or not. yes they can but you should let them go because they might hurt you
They are probably having sex. Its natural. Just leave, get out of the house for a while, and ignore it.