The statistics are heartbreaking--nearly 700,000 children are abused every year. Emotional abuse is the making of a child to lose their self worth, and affects them mentally, causing extreme feelings of pain the victim is having to go through. Most of the victims are females, some say that’s because females are more sensitive. Those of the abusers that are males, nearly fifty percent of them were not the victim’s biological father. Imagine hearing a mother/father say her/his child isn’t worth the time or isn’t accepted for being who they are, some of these children go through this on the daily. Emotional abuse goes very unnoticed, and is often times mistaken for regular life. Emotional abuse can be considered the worst form of abuse due to …show more content…
People who suffer from emotional abuse have increased their risk of major depression.
The victims often end up taking drugs as a way to cope when dealing with both emotional abuse and depression.
Along with depression, anxiety is another one of the main mental illnesses.
18% of victims suffer from both depression AND anxiety at the same time.
Most people say that the worst part in anxiety is the feeling that no one believes in you.
Emotional Abuse causes low self-esteem which causes anxiety.
While both anxiety and depression play big roles in the mental illness, eating disorders do as well.
When an abuser calls the victim certain things, such as “fat” and “unwanted”, it often leads to eating disorders such as Anorexia Nervosa.
Words are capable of twisting a child's heart to losing their self worth, leading to eating disorders.
30% of victims suffering from emotional abuse lead to an eating disorder.
Not only does emotional abuse cause mental illnesses, but it also does affect a child’s education, creating educational delays.
In a victims education, they tend to become frustrated with teachers.
One example of frustration with teachers is the student throwing temper
Emotional abuse is one of the most harmful abuses for a child because it has the potential to impact their entire life in such a negative aspect. Emotional abuse is doing things to hurt the child emotionally or hurt their feelings and often making them feel unwanted and useless. A child is most often emotionally abused by a parent or trusted adult because the child is seeking approval from them and that causes them to be emotionally hurt a lot more when the adult says degrading or hurtful things. A child that has been emotionally abused may not care about things that are going on around him/her, might not react as a normal child would to pain, avoid a certain person or caregiver, act more fearful, angry and sad than normal, his/her grades in school may go down and they may even result to harming themselves.
Emotional child abuse is a pattern of behaviour that attacks a child's emotional development and their overall sense of well-being. This can include excessive or aggressive and unreasonable demands that can put expectations on a child beyond that of their capability. For example, three-year olds cannot be expected to be able to sit quietly for an extended period of time, due to the fact that they just simply do not have the physical control of their bodies yet. However still, you would find many parents placing this unrealistic expectation on a young child, only to end up getting frustrated due to the lack of the child's compliance.
Emotional abuse may include screaming, yelling, biting, name-calling, lack of love/affection, and so on. Children may be emotionally scarred when the y are labeled as stupid, ugly, crazy, or unwanted. Emotional abuse includes acts of omission by the child’s primary caregivers that could cause behavioral, emotional, or mental disorders. In some cases of emotional abuse the child’s caregiver may use excessive and bizarre forms of punishment like torture, or locking a child in a dark closet. These things emphasize the need for the intervention of The Child Protective Services.
Emotional abuse can be described as constantly mistreating a child and therefore affecting their emotional state and development.
You’re Ugly! Stupid! Can you do anything right? I wished you were never born! Does any of these words sound familiar or bring back memories. If they do then you are not alone, there are many people on a daily basis who suffer from verbal-emotional abuse. In today’s society too many of our children live in homes where they face verbal-emotional abuse on a regular basis. In this paper we will discuss what verbal emotional abuse is, why so many children face verbal-emotional abuse and how to tell what the signs of verbal emotional abuse are in order to assist a child in need.
Bullying is another factor that may cause anorexia. Being called fat is one moment that is hard to forget whether the person calling you fat is doing it in a sarcastic manner or not. Once someone is called fat he or she may take this as a challenge to lose weight. I can also personally relate to this cause also because when I was in ninth grade I was always called “fat” even though I was stick skinny. Every time I was called fat I thought that everyone was serious even when he or she said it was a joke. Each time I got called fat I just hated the way I looked a little more. Calling someone fat isn’t something to joke around about. A survey done by the eating disorder charity, Beat, in 2012, showed that seventy-eight percent of anorexic high-school students said bullying was a contributing factor to starting his or her anorexic lifestyle (Girtz,
However, all forms of child abuse carry emotional consequences because the child's psychological and emotional development inevitably suffers from all forms of abuse. An intervention model that would focus on emotional abuse could also focus on preventing other forms of abuse because violent behavior towards children often comes from the same underlying causes, and most risk factors for child maltreatment are associated with caregiver, family, and environmental factors (McDonald, 2007). With this in mind, a possible solution would have to include early detection, but the intervention would most likely focus on factors that cause all types of child abuse. Despite the widespread occurrences of all forms of abuse, emotional neglect or maltreatment are practically impossible to detect while they occur and impair the child's normal development and social integration. Emotional abuse includes includes verbal, mental, and psychological maltreatment of children, and it is frequently overlooked by the community and mental health professionals who do not define emotional abuse as a suitable factor for diagnostic purposes (as cited in Schneider, Baumrind, & Kimerling, 2007). In reality, emotional abuse is frequently used in many families, it occurs in several worldwide cultures, and it carries significant consequences that should not be overlooked.
The effects emotional abuse has on a victim will stick with them for their entire life. Even the smallest event can, and usually will, trigger horrific memories that create anxiety and makes it a struggle to interact with others. It causes the victim to withdraw from society because they feel they are not worry of social interaction. When a person is repeatedly told they are stupid, worthless or any other degrading comments, they begin to believe them. Even worse, they start to believe they deserve the comments and think they have to change who they are as a person to fit the expectations of the abuser.
“You are as dumb as a doorknob.” “You will never be smart.” These are just a couple of harsh phrases I heard during my childhood. Along with the mental abuse, there was physical abuse. My dad was never around when I was young. He was always traveling for work, or didn't come home until late at night. My mom was verbally and physically abusive during the day, then when my dad came home, my mom would tell him made up stuff that happened during the day. We would then receive a beating from my dad. It was routine; bending over his office desk, getting hit with a 2x4 on the backside. Depending on what my mom told him, it would sometimes result in my brother or I being sent up to our room while the other one was thrown against a wall and beaten.
Eating disorders are real, complex and devastating conditions that can have serious consequences for health, productivity and relationships. The two most common
Emotional abuse is defined by its devastating effects on a person. It is seen in the forms of domestic abuse, bullying, and child abuse. Research shows how someone who has been emotionally abused develops personality disorders, has low self-esteem, and even has suicidal thoughts. Although there has been research that provides a general idea of emotional abuse and its effects, the research should take a deeper look at how the smallest details affect someone. My position differs from those who claim they know the true definition of what emotional abuse is. It doesn’t include parents or abusers who claim to know how to define it. Emotional abuse should be looked at with a magnifying glass because the smallest details are what allow people to see how emotional abuse affects a person’s behavior and mental state, and the smaller details allow people to give a clearer definition of what emotional abuse is.
But, this does not account that there are many social, economic and cultural reasons a woman might chose to stay in an abusive relationship.
According to NSPCC.com, it can lead to major depression eating disorders or can lead to self-harm. Emotional abuse can restrict a child's emotional development, including their ability to feel and express a full range of emotions appropriately, and to control their emotions. Children who don’t get the love and care they need from their parents may find it difficult to develop and maintain healthy relationships with other people later in life.
The effects of emotional abuse are often silent. The wounds of verbal and physiological abuse leave scars. Most times the effects are overlooked, misread, or treated as weak. Just because emotional abuse is less visible than physical abuse does not change the long-lasting impact it has on a person.
“As long as he doesn’t put his hands on her” My brother’s attitude toward emotional abuse is not something he learned from a stranger but rather a ubiquitous attitude shared with my family. A family that is now facing an increasingly bigger issue that no one will say out loud. (Voldemort is plotting to kill my family.) Emotional abuse is becoming increasingly popular in my family and nobody seems to want to talk about it. A family who has no quims about busting a door down or two if they feel you might be in danger, suddenly holding their tongue when you really are. It makes sense that a family as rough and tumble doesn’t want to talk about feelings or emotions. Emotions deal with feelings and feelings lead to communism. The point is that it’s a problem and we don’t want to deal with it.