Also studies show that relationships with physical violence are more likely to have long-term stable outcomes.
Source?
Lmfao... He's trolling.
Also studies show that relationships with physical violence are more likely to have long-term stable outcomes.
Source?
Lmfao... He's trolling.
I think about deserved to have someone who enjoys having sex weird him and I think Delora deserves someone who respects her boundaries and doesn’t beat or rape her. That being said, loneliness is hard to live with, so I think Trypt is right that they’ll get back together at some point, even though it’s not for the best. What will Bo do on his own and who gets the land? These are the important questions.
Also studies show that relationships with physical violence are more likely to have long-term stable outcomes.
Source?
Swear I seen something along the lines of that years ago on ScienceDaily, but I couldn't find either that nor something good enough to cherry pick. But I did find this:
Using survey data from a project funded by the U.S. National Institute of Mental Health, the researchers explored the experiences of 611 urban-dwelling, low-income American women.
Overall, 42.8% of those surveyed said they had been abused by their intimate male partners in the year preceding the survey.
Psychological abuse was significantly more of an ongoing problem than physical abuse, while sexual abuse was reported as least common.
A relatively small number of women (2.3%) perceived their partners as extremely controlling, while 1.2% reported that their partners engaged in extreme generally violent behaviours.
But a considerable number of women felt their abusive male partners still possessed some good qualities: more than half (54%) saw their partners as highly dependable, while one in five (21%) felt the men in their lives possessed significant positive traits (i.e., being affectionate).
"The importance of listening to women's voices cannot be highlighted enough and needs further exploration," says O'Campo.
Also studies show that relationships with physical violence are more likely to have long-term stable outcomes.
Source?
Swear I seen something along the lines of that years ago on ScienceDaily, but I couldn't find either that nor something good enough to cherry pick. But I did find this:
Using survey data from a project funded by the U.S. National Institute of Mental Health, the researchers explored the experiences of 611 urban-dwelling, low-income American women.
Overall, 42.8% of those surveyed said they had been abused by their intimate male partners in the year preceding the survey.
Psychological abuse was significantly more of an ongoing problem than physical abuse, while sexual abuse was reported as least common.
A relatively small number of women (2.3%) perceived their partners as extremely controlling, while 1.2% reported that their partners engaged in extreme generally violent behaviours.
But a considerable number of women felt their abusive male partners still possessed some good qualities: more than half (54%) saw their partners as highly dependable, while one in five (21%) felt the men in their lives possessed significant positive traits (i.e., being affectionate)."The importance of listening to women's voices cannot be highlighted enough and needs further exploration," says O'Campo.
does being murdered and left in a ditch count as a long term stable outcome, cos technically things aren't changing anymore
I think about deserved to have someone who enjoys having sex weird him and I think Delora deserves someone who respects her boundaries and doesn’t beat or rape her. That being said, loneliness is hard to live with, so I think Trypt is right that they’ll get back together at some point, even though it’s not for the best. What will Bo do on his own and who gets the land? These are the important questions.
They bought land?
Also studies show that relationships with physical violence are more likely to have long-term stable outcomes.
Source?
Swear I seen something along the lines of that years ago on ScienceDaily, but I couldn't find either that nor something good enough to cherry pick. But I did find this:
Using survey data from a project funded by the U.S. National Institute of Mental Health, the researchers explored the experiences of 611 urban-dwelling, low-income American women.
Overall, 42.8% of those surveyed said they had been abused by their intimate male partners in the year preceding the survey.
Psychological abuse was significantly more of an ongoing problem than physical abuse, while sexual abuse was reported as least common.
A relatively small number of women (2.3%) perceived their partners as extremely controlling, while 1.2% reported that their partners engaged in extreme generally violent behaviours.
But a considerable number of women felt their abusive male partners still possessed some good qualities: more than half (54%) saw their partners as highly dependable, while one in five (21%) felt the men in their lives possessed significant positive traits (i.e., being affectionate)."The importance of listening to women's voices cannot be highlighted enough and needs further exploration," says O'Campo.
Is there a comparison with non abusive couples?
Dude this doesn't mean it's stable, if anything those numbers could account for shit like Stockholm Syndrome, or their Optimism Coping might be what's keeping the relationship together. They may even have views of "All Men" being like that if not poor modeling off of a father figure, there's a lot more to account for here.
Feeling like you have the freedom to leave and choose not to's the stablest outcome.