Please read the attached article about Puerto Rican model and
television host, Jaslene Gonzalez. She was been a victim of domestic
violence and dispels many of the common myths.
http://www.suntimes.com/lifestyles/splash/19498299-418/jaslene-gonzalez-shatters-common-myths-about-dating-violence.html
Tuesday, April 23, 2013
Sunday, April 7, 2013
Why Laughter Really is the Best Medicine
“Your
sense of humor is one of the most powerful tools you have to make
certain that your daily mood and emotional state support good health.”
~ Paul E. McGhee, Ph.D.
Laughter
is a powerful antidote to stress, pain, and conflict. Nothing works
faster or more dependably to bring your mind and body back into balance
than a good laugh. Humor lightens your burdens, inspires hopes, connects
you to others, and keeps you grounded, focused, and alert.
With
so much power to heal and renew, the ability to laugh easily and
frequently is a tremendous resource for surmounting problems, enhancing
your relationships, and supporting both physical and emotional health.http://www.helpguide.org/life/humor_laughter_health.htm
Violence Against Women Act: A Divorce Lawyer's Perspective
On March 6, President Obama signed the Violence Against Women Act (VAWA) into law. The topic has been in the news often lately with the passage of the new VAWA in February by the House and the Senate, and the story of the reporter and his wife in Connecticut.
While the act encompasses more crimes than domestic violence it is
domestic violence that is the most insidious. Despite stories of this
kind being commonplace, it seems that only when celebrities are involved
in these situations that they are considered newsworthy.
In researching this article I came across a mind boggling statistic: Three women are killed in the United States every day because of domestic violence. That statistic does not account for the thousands of non-fatal attacks, most of which are not reported. All 50 states have laws designed to protect victims. However the victim must be proactive; they must call 911, she (or he - by no means are victims only female) must decide to follow through with the criminal case, with the protective order, and in some cases, with the divorce. None of this is easy.
Simplistically, victims can be described as falling into two categories. First, there are those who end the relationship at the first instance of violence, like the woman in this series of graphic pictures. Then there are the victims who return to batterers and begin the dance that can end with serious injury or death. This dance continues, sometimes for years with the batterer vicious, controlling and brutal then sweet and remorseful in a spiraling cycle. In this cycle, the victim typically becomes increasingly codependent and leaving becomes harder and harder.
This is a serious problem across the entire socioeconomic spectrum. I think that sometimes the wealthier the family, the more economic control the batterer has, and perhaps the victim has more sense of shame at allowing the battering to continue. Also, wealthy batterers can afford to continue the abuse in the legal system. I have often been told by female clients that her husband will break her in the divorce process, and then we see him try to do just that. The divorce process ordinarily is bad enough for the litigants, but when one of them is bent on destruction it becomes much worse emotionally, and much, much more expensive.
However, the cost of the process is not worth the cost of a woman's - or man's - life. It is better to get out than to stay. As that above-mentioned slideshow of photos documenting a night of domestic violence reveals, kids get involved. They hear the fights, try to intervene and often get beaten as well.
All divorce lawyers have had to cope with clients who have returned, often repeatedly, to batterers. This is hard to handle, but it is worse when there are kids involved. The harm to children from being involved in or exposed to domestic violence has been well documented. Massachusetts, for example, requires the courts to consider if there are any domestic violence issues when setting parenting time. In fact, the Department of Children and Families in Massachusetts considers domestic violence cause for removing kids from their mom if she fails to leave the batterer.
Domestic Violence breeds more domestic violence. It is quite clearly defined that daughters of violence grow up to be victimized, and sons of violence grow up to be batterers in higher percentages than children who have not been exposed. This is a crime where the damage is clearly generational, and the VAWA reminds us of this. Prosecution of these crimes is hard because so many victims recant. But it is necessary for current and future victims to end the ongoing cycle of violence.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/nancy-van-tine/violence-against-women-ac_2_b_2862034.html
In researching this article I came across a mind boggling statistic: Three women are killed in the United States every day because of domestic violence. That statistic does not account for the thousands of non-fatal attacks, most of which are not reported. All 50 states have laws designed to protect victims. However the victim must be proactive; they must call 911, she (or he - by no means are victims only female) must decide to follow through with the criminal case, with the protective order, and in some cases, with the divorce. None of this is easy.
Simplistically, victims can be described as falling into two categories. First, there are those who end the relationship at the first instance of violence, like the woman in this series of graphic pictures. Then there are the victims who return to batterers and begin the dance that can end with serious injury or death. This dance continues, sometimes for years with the batterer vicious, controlling and brutal then sweet and remorseful in a spiraling cycle. In this cycle, the victim typically becomes increasingly codependent and leaving becomes harder and harder.
This is a serious problem across the entire socioeconomic spectrum. I think that sometimes the wealthier the family, the more economic control the batterer has, and perhaps the victim has more sense of shame at allowing the battering to continue. Also, wealthy batterers can afford to continue the abuse in the legal system. I have often been told by female clients that her husband will break her in the divorce process, and then we see him try to do just that. The divorce process ordinarily is bad enough for the litigants, but when one of them is bent on destruction it becomes much worse emotionally, and much, much more expensive.
However, the cost of the process is not worth the cost of a woman's - or man's - life. It is better to get out than to stay. As that above-mentioned slideshow of photos documenting a night of domestic violence reveals, kids get involved. They hear the fights, try to intervene and often get beaten as well.
All divorce lawyers have had to cope with clients who have returned, often repeatedly, to batterers. This is hard to handle, but it is worse when there are kids involved. The harm to children from being involved in or exposed to domestic violence has been well documented. Massachusetts, for example, requires the courts to consider if there are any domestic violence issues when setting parenting time. In fact, the Department of Children and Families in Massachusetts considers domestic violence cause for removing kids from their mom if she fails to leave the batterer.
Domestic Violence breeds more domestic violence. It is quite clearly defined that daughters of violence grow up to be victimized, and sons of violence grow up to be batterers in higher percentages than children who have not been exposed. This is a crime where the damage is clearly generational, and the VAWA reminds us of this. Prosecution of these crimes is hard because so many victims recant. But it is necessary for current and future victims to end the ongoing cycle of violence.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/nancy-van-tine/violence-against-women-ac_2_b_2862034.html
Thursday, April 4, 2013
Monday, April 1, 2013
Presidential Proclamation: April is Sexual Assault Awareness and Prevention Month
http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2013/03/29/presidential-proclamation-national-sexual-assault-awareness-and-preventi
Former NFL Players Speak Against Domestic Violence at Dallas Rally
NFL Hall of Famer Roger Staubach expressed dismay last Saturday that public campaigns and rallies must still be held to tamp down the instances of domestic violence that leave women battered and bruised.
Dallas Mayor Mike Rawlings and other city leaders have waged a public campaign against domestic violence after a series of high-profile crimes in which woman were killed or attacked, allegedly by men.
"You can call a man who hits a woman a lot of things, but you can't call him a man," Rawlings said.
Lara Gaither, outreach director for the Genesis Women's Shelter in Dallas, said that over the last year or two, overall crime has dropped in Dallas. The exception is cases of domestic abuse.
"We can't end domestic violence until men are part of the solution," Gaither said before the rally.
This rally underscores the need for education among young men about controlling their emotions and not letting anger escalate into aggression and violence. To read the entire article, see below.
http://abcnews.go.com/Sports/wireStory/nfl-players-speak-domestic-violence-18797968#.UVmvPiNhuZI
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