The Sunday Post (Inverness)

Men beaten by partners reveal ordeal to save threatened lifeline

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Colin, 47, works in financial services. He spent years silently terrified he might die at the hands of his wife.

Colin says his wife broke his nose twice, smashed a telephone into his face, repeatedly chased him with a knife and bludgeoned him with bottles, lamps and even picture frames.

He explained his injuries claiming he had “fallen” or he had “walked into a door” to family and friends.

Colin, at 6ft, 1in, said: “I towered over my wife. But I was the one who was afraid of her, not the other way round.

“I’d have to lock myself in the bathroom when she chased me with a knife, or she’d pick up the nearest thing to her hand and hit me as hard as she could.” Four years ago, Colin was suffering depression, terrified he’d lose everything he had spent a lifetime building-up because of the abuse. He said: “I’d become adept at using make-up and arnica to cover the bruising and reduce the swelling.”

“For years I stayed silent. As a man, you feel ashamed a woman is beating you.

“You fear being ridiculed.” Tom, 48, from Fife, is a social worker. Despite his training, he ignored all the warning signs and escalating rows after meeting his girlfriend in 1999, and ended up suicidal and trapped in a violent marriage. He said: “Doing what I do, you’d think I’d have known better and finished the relationsh­ip as soon as it became abusive. “We married in 2002 and I took her back three times despite being attacked with knives, and

even having a chip pan thrown at me. “The verbal and physical abuse got so bad, I was suicidal and at my lowest ebb, driving into a wall

seemed like a good way to escape. “She’d attack me at night, when I was trying to

sleep, threatenin­g me with a knife. “We separated, but she’d driven such a wedge between family and friends, I was on my own. “I told the police, but she only got a warning.” Each time Tom took her back, the violence escalated. She would smash the TV, throw ornaments, spit, scratch and punch him.

Tom said: “I felt trapped. “Several times the police thought I was the abuser, but eventually they saw it was my wife who was the violent one, not me.

“AMIS was my lifeline and got me

through.”

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