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The Sadist Devdas!

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ROLE
MODELLING
The most common reason why women put up with abuse is probably
role modelling — in that they may have grown up in families where their
fathers, uncles or brothers may have abused or dominated the women, and they
have learnt to accept it as the norm.
Such tolerance also has a lot to do
with social pressures, thinks actress Nandita Das. “Let’s face it
— ours is an unequal society. It doesn’t take kindly to women
speaking out. In fact, even in the so-called educated, economically-strong
social circles, a divorcee woman is not looked upon kindly.”
And
yet, many women HAVE walked out of such abusive relationships. “You and I
enjoy more freedom than our grandmothers because of these few women who stood
up, despite it being tough,” asserts Das. “I’ve no right to
look down upon a woman who may not have the courage to stand up to such
violence,” adds Das.
WOMEN AS ABUSERS
Sometimes, the woman can play the role of an abuser. As vice president, Kinetic
Motor Co, Vismaya Firodia, rightly points out, “It’s not always
about men abusing women. Women can also be controlling and abusive of their
partners — not necessarily physically but emotionally. Irrespective, the
effects on the victim are similar, so I would not term it as a gender issue but
a sick, dysfunctional relationship dynamic.”
She adds, “No
victim of abuse likes being controlled. The abuser works on weakening the victim
mentally by isolating her from friends and family, and the ruin of self-esteem.
This can be a very potent mixture in making the victim mentally
powerless.
So while as an outsider, it is easy to question why anyone would
put up with such treatment; for someone who is actually being subjected to it,
the perspective is lost and the strength hard to find.”
However,
like all malaises, a victim of sadism could seek to change her situation by
pyschotherapy to gain in confidence, or as Dr Chugh says, “seek to
identify the crevices, to recognise how they came about in one’s pysche
and then learn healthier and better coping strategies.”
Got comments or questions? e-mail us
femina@timesgroup.com with ‘mind set — abusive relationships’
in the subject line.
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