Magazine
for Hypnosis and Hypnotherapy
Healing Invisible Scars
By Maurice Kouguell Ph.D, BCETS
"Only sissies worry
about things like that - why can't you take
care of yourself?"
“If you had the
slightest wish to pass this course. you'd at least try
to understand the material."
“Do you have any
good reason why you can never do anything
right?"
"You think you did
pretty well - I suppose you don't care - well young man let me tell
you......"
"Hey, are you paranoid or something?"
"Wow, that dress
almost makes you look thin."
"You're always making
a big production out of things, can't you tell that I was just
kidding?"
"My supervisor doesn't
stop criticizing me for everything and anything I do, and to make things
worse he does it in public most ot the time."
A teacher tells
one of her students, "You know Bob, any other teacher would have probably
failed you and given you the F you deserved. If you had paid more attention
in class you would have written a paper worth handing in."
Child to parent:
“If you really loved me you wouldn't always be so mean, and you'd buy
me a car for my graduation just like all the other kids have.”
"Now look what you
made me do. I hope you're pleased with yourself now."
If any of the above
statements make you feel uncomfortable or bring about some physical
discomfort then you know that you have been verbally abused in the past.
So verbal abuse is language that does harm to you and is not accidental.
We acknowledge physically challenged people, for their difficulties
are obvious. However, there is an impressive majority of people walking
around with invisible scars and they too need to be acknowledged.
Suzette Haden Elgin,
the author of the series of books on 'The Gentle Art of
Verbal Self Defense', states: "Verbal abuse is like smog or toxic waste.
If you're only around it occasionally it's a nuisance, but when your
exposure to it regularly it can kill you just as surely as being
run over by a truck ". She adds that the list of diseases known to be
stress related (which are caused frequently by verbal abuse) include
heart disease and depression, as well as a host of others.
When there is family
violence the neighbors or the victim might reach out and call the police
to be protected. When there are scars on a victim, the authorities,
physicians and school personnel, report them for the protection of the
victim. However, a very high percentage of people are the victims of
verbal aggression and go without any protection, but live with anger,
fear, guilt, and frequently have few, if any, outlets to ventilate their
feelings. The victims of verbal abuse have no place to go to be protected
or hide. There are no shelters available to them. On the other hand,
verbal abusers are often admired for they come across as being strong,
if not witty and ruthless, and since they instill fear in the audience,
confronting or reporting them is a frightening experience.
What is verbal abuse
or verbal violence? While the physical attack is obvious and can be
recognized and leaves scars, it is over relatively quickly and you can
carry the evidence against your attacker. Verbal violence is quite different,
except when on rare occasions you are accused publicly and can charge
your abuser with slander. Verbal aggression is frequently so well hidden
that we may fail to recognize it. Instead of acknowledging that you
have been abused verbally you may tend to take on the blame, to add
it to your own misery.
When someone screams at you and calls you names you may know that you
are being verbally abused. But when an individual looks at you, perhaps
even lovingly and says "Even you should be able to understandwhy you
are wrong" or when you are told, "if you really love me you would do
better." Just stop and think for a moment of the repercussions you may
experience when you fail at accomplishing a certain task. The issue
is compounded now not only by your own failure but by proof that you
do not love the person who made the statement -Suzette Hadon Elgin,
the author of 'The Gentle
Art Of Verbal Self Defense.' offers the following:
Q1: What is verbal
abuse?
A: Verbal abuse is language that does harm and is not accidental.
Q2: Since “nothing
really happens.” isn't verbal abuse harmless?
A: No. Verbal abuse is extremely dangerous, and can be just as life
threatening as a loaded gun. If you suffer from exposure to long term
verbal abuse for
example, if you work all day every day under the supervision of a person
who constantly insults you and does everything possible to make you
feel inferior you're going to be under a kind of severe chronic stress
that will damage your body and your mind.
Q3: Who are the
worse verbal abusers - men, or women?
A: Neither. One is just as likely as the other. Anyone can be a verbal
abuser, including small children and people who are physically very
frail. Women are a bit more likely to be verbal victims, because they're
so often outranked in our society, but male verbal victims are by no
means rare.
Q4: Where can verbal
victims go for help?
A: Almost no help is available unless the individual has access to a
professional therapist. You can't call the police or a social service
agency and complain that you're being verbally abused, and there is
no Verbal Abusers or Verbal Victims “Anonymous.” There have been some
encouraging new developments recently however.
Q5: I'm a verbal
victim. What can I do?
A:The most important thing you can do is something you've already done
becoming aware of the fact that you are a verbal victim. The next most
important thing is to break out of the self-reinforcing feedback loop
you ‘re caught in. When you serve as a ‘verbal victim you're feeding
the verbal abuser's habit; the longer you keep that up, the worse the
habit will become. The only way to break out of the loop is by refusing
to participate. You have to make it absolutely clear to the abuser -
gently - that you won't play that game any longer.
Q6: Most verbal
abusers don't really mean any harm. Aren't so-called verbal victims
just neurotics with no sense of proportion?
A. Whether the abusers deliberately cause harm is irrelevant. And once
they know that's what they're doing, they have no excuse for continuing.
When chemical companies dump toxic wastes into the water system, they
don't do that because their deliberate goal is to poison people. They
do it because it's convenient and it's cheap. But we do our best to
make them stop, all the same, and the poisoning is just as real as if
it were deliberate. As for verbal victims being “Just neurotics,” it's
not neurotic to feel pain when you're injured or to object to experiencing
that pain. Quite the contrary
Q7: What's the worst
kind of verbal abuse?
A: That depends on the people involved. It's like asking what is the
worst kind of physical abuse ... a question with no ready answer. Certainly
long term verbal abuse, of any kind, is worse than short term verbal
abuse.
Q8: What do verbal
abusers say when they realize what they're doing’?
A: Two things. “Well, at least I never hit anybody!” (And they are proud
of that.) “I don't mean to hurt anybody!” (And they consider that a
complete excuse.)
Q9: What do verbal
victims usually say when they realize that's what they are?
A: Three things. “Well, at least he/she
never hits me!” “I knew I was always miserable, but I didn't know why—now
I know”. “It's all my fault .... I shouldn't be so sensitive.”
Q10: Isn't assertiveness
training the best way to end verbal abuse’?
A. No. If you always say the wrong thing — as either victim or abuser
— assertiveness training will only teach you how to say the wrong thing
far more effectively and more articulately. This is not an improvement.
Assertiveness training can be very valuable, but it doesn't get at the
basic problems typical of most verbal abusers and verbal victims. First
they need to get their act together, then they might want to consider
assertiveness training.
Q11: What's the
most important thing to know about verbal abuse?
A: The most important thing to know is this: verbal violence is at the
root of physical violence. When children who hurt others with words
are always told not to worry about it —“Oh, Mary Lou’s just being a
baby ... she can't take a joke!” .. “Oh, Tom's just making moun-tains
out of molehills ... he'll get over it!” — those children learn that
it's okay to cause others pain. And they become callous about others’
suffering. The step from indifference to verbal violence to indifference
to physical violence is a very small one. The only way we're ever going
to get rid of physical violence in this country is by starting by getting
rid of verbal violence.
Q12: Isn't a verbal
abuser/verbal victim pair just one more example of the codependency
problem?
A: In some ways, yes, because verbal abusers are dependent on the attention
they get from their victims ... attention is their “fix.” But there
are some critical differences. Unlike a chemical dependency, verbal
abuse cannot be done alone; it's impossible without a participating
victim. Unlike drugs and alcohol, attention isn't in itself harmful.
And you can help verbal abusers by showing them that the link they've
set up for themselves up between verbal abuse and getting attention
is a false link -- by giving them attention when they have not resorted
to verbal abuse. A verbal abuse dependency isn't a situation where the
codependent partner is helpless to make things
better and the abuser has to do it all alone. This is very different
from the other kinds of dependencies, and the differences are all positive
ones.
One needs to distinguish between people who accidentally hurt one another
and people who intentionally repeat the same pattern. It has been said
that the origins of verbal abuse come from the time where very small
children are taught that they are not responsible for the pain they
cause with hurt because the people they hurt are sissies and wimps or
neurotics. Some children have been taught that if people hurt as a result
of their action, it is their fault. It is a very thin line from hurting
with words to hurting with physical violence.
There are ways of handling verbal abuse. Traditionally,
people have tried to pro-tect themselves against verbal abuse in three
ways: 4
1. By being verbally
abusive back at the attacker.
2. By trying to reason with the attacker.
3. By trying to arouse my sympathy in the attacker ... by pleading,
for example, or crying.
Unfortunately these
methods only make matters worse.
The Gentle Art of Verbal
Self Defense system is different. It teaches people to respond to verbal
abuse with techniques that make it impossible for the attacks to succeed,
and at the same time defuse the hostility that the attacker would otherwise
carry away from the encounter. It teaches people how they can make sure
that the attacker is not rewarded, and does not get the desired attention
and emotional feeding, while at the same lowering the level of tension
and bad feeling in the language environment. For people who are themselves
verbal abusers - often because they are unaware that there is any other
way to handle disagreement, or any other way to get attention - the Gentle
Art of Verbal Self-Defense techniques offer new ways to accomplish both
of those things, without loss of honor or self-respect.
Maurice Kouguell
Ph.D., BCETS. (Click here for Biography)
Director: Brookside Center for Counseling and Hypnotherapy
997 Clinton Place, Baldwin New York 11510
phone/fax 516 868-2233 e-mail contact@brooksidecenter.com
Brookside Center Web Site http://www.brooksidecenter.com/
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