Aunt wonders if an abuser can change
Dear Amy: Several years ago, my niece’s boyfriend pulled a gun on her and broke her cheekbone. I was even more horrified when my niece decided to have a baby with her abuser.
I made it known that I wasn’t going to stick around the hospital room with this man. There was no way I could tolerate even seeing his face. My older sister feels the same way.
I have now been cut out of my great-niece’s life. My mother is angry at my sister and me for not forgiving my niece’s boyfriend, and for not giving him a second chance because “he has changed.”
I’d like to know what your opinion is. — Worried Aunt
Dear Worried: Some people are capable of great change, but change can only happen when contributing factors are faced and dealt with. These factors would include a history of violence in their childhoods, mental illness, and drug and alcohol use.
Family members face a terrible dilemma when they have an abuser in their midst. Your choice to distance yourself is a rational one, but in your focus on the abuser, you seem to have forgotten the survivor and her child. Your choice to keep your distance seems to be motivated by a desire to deliver a nonnegotiable consequence for her unhealthy choice.
Victims of violence often lose important members of their support system when they choose to stay with their abuser, but this support can sometimes be a lifeline for them.
If the abuser has not changed and the child is growing up in a tense and possibly violent household, access to you and your sister could be a true port in the storm.
You might warily move toward them, focusing more on your niece and her child.
Contact the National Domestic Violence Hotline. Counselors are available 24⁄7.