Why
do men control, dominate or own a woman in a relationship? By Swati
Sucharita

Othello did it, (fatally), Devdas followed and now we have a
Salman Khan flexing his muscles at his lady love. It was probably a case of reel
life imitating real life when Aishwarya Rai, while enacting Paro, got a royal
gash on the forehead from co-star Shah Rukh in
Devdas
; now she has publicly admitted
that Salman had “hurt her physically many times without leaving any
marks...”
How does one explain macho-sadism, the tendency in men to
control, dominate or own the woman in a relationship? Sometimes, it could happen
the other way round, with gender roles getting reversed. Why do relationships
turn violent?
V FOR
VIOLENCE
Bangalore-based writer and playwright Mahesh Dattani terms the
recent Salman-Aishwarya episode “a typical example of co-dependency in
relationships”. Mahesh, who has researched abusive relationships for his
plays, feels that in the case of an abuser and abused, “both are victims
of their own personal demons.
The male may feel the need to prove his
machismo for whatever reason. Jealousy, possessiveness, sense of ownership or
simply an affirmation of masculine traits. The female may feel a need to be
loved, which is translated in some bizarre way as a need to be
‘owned’.”
In the Bimal Roy film, Devdas clearly
establishes his sense of ownership by hitting Paro with a cane on her forehead,
permanently disfiguring her beautiful face. “A male mark that tells the
world ‘I have been here’,” as Dattani describes it.
“Paro does not reciprocate by accepting being owned. She goes ahead with
her arranged marriage.”
HE LOVES ME; SHE’S
MINE
According to Dattani, for women, the classic co-dependency line is:
“It means he truly loves me.” For men, it is usually “She is
mine. I can do what I want with her. Or I am a man, and big boys know how to
keep their women. When two people with such perverted needs meet, the result is
unhealthy.
Psychiatrist Dr Belinda Veigas Muller in Goa, believes that
women can’t be happy in such relationships. “Women may tolerate
being dominated or abused by men and may even find it satisfying. But they will
not say, ‘I like it’, unless it is taken in the context of sexual
sado-machoism games.”
BEHIND THE MASK
Pyschiatrist Dr Sanjay Chugh analyses such relationships thus: “Like
water, our feelings trickle down through cracks and crevices, seeking out little
pockets of neediness and neglect, the hairline fractures in our character
usually hidden from public view,” he explains.
“In its icy,
black depths dwell strange and twisted creatures, it’s best not to
disturb. It is probably these that get someone like Ash to accept such abuse.
The persona that is evident to the public eye is obviously not the real Ash,
just something that she feels compelled to wear as a mask, probably because she
herself would have invested so much emotionally to get this mask on in the first
place.”
Encouraging violation by someone who loves you cannot be
emotionally sound, but the victim perceives that benefits can be gained from it,
feels Dr Muller.
* It can ensure control over the other by instilling
guilt feelings in the violator — ‘See what you did to me’. *
It can make the person feel like a martyr, self-righteous or virtuous —
‘See how bad he is and see how good I am’. * It could in sympathy
and admiration from family, friends and acquaintances — ‘See what
she puts up with’. * It can assuage guilt feelings that could be real but
which are more often subconscious and false — ‘I deserve
punishment’ and the punishment makes her feel less guilty and better.
Role Modelling