'Why I Stayed': Ray Rice video rekindles US debate on abusive relationships
Only Janay Palmer can say why she stuck with Ray Rice, but experts say women stay in abusive relationships for many reasons, including love and fear. Another question: Why do men use violence?
Baltimore Ravens running back Ray Rice speaks alongside his wife, Janay, during a news conference at the team's practice facility in Owings Mills, Md., May 23, 2014.
Patrick Semansky/AP/File
Los Angeles
The 鈥淲hy-I-Stayed鈥 Twitter hashtag has gone viral, and聽domestic violence is headlining late night TV and talk shows, as Americans try to fathom how it could be that Janay Palmer stayed with Ray Rice after he knocked her unconscious in an Atlantic City hotel elevator.
Only Ms. Palmer can say why she stuck with, and in fact married, Mr. Rice after the videotaped knockout punch that has now led to the suspension of his NFL career. But after watching the violence that headlined Tuesday night鈥檚 鈥淣ightline鈥 on ABC, many wonder how聽a relationship聽with聽that level of abuse could continue.
The possible reasons are many, say experts.聽Love and fear usually drive these decisions,聽says Deborah Cohan, assistant professor of sociology at the University of South Carolina Beaufort. Women are socialized to forge and nurture relationships, so asking why they don鈥檛 leave emotionally fraught situations typically goes against their deepest聽impulses. But there are many other reasons, she says.
鈥淐hildren, finances, health or disability of their partner, themselves, or their children, immigration status, isolation, religious upbringing, threats that the abuser may have made regarding killing her or himself, racial loyalty,鈥 are some of the obstacles to exiting a bad relationship, she says.聽There may also be hesitation if聽religious or medical institutions are not responsive, she notes.
In lower-income families, leaving home might mean taking the kids to the uncertain safety of a shelter, and disappearing might mean giving up a much-needed job.
Women also face societal pressures that make it harder to tackle abuse, says Theresa Severance, sociology professor at Eastern Connecticut State University in Willimantic. Our culture places a high value on family and marriage, she notes.
According to the , 32 percent of women are physically assaulted by a partner in their lifetime.聽
Nonetheless, women may feel pressure from family, friends, and clergy to "hang in there" at all costs, especially if there are children, Professor Severance says via e-mail.
鈥淢aybe she really loves him and just wants him to stop,鈥 she says. Maybe she thinks it was an isolated incident and things will get better, or maybe she thinks she can change or 鈥榝ix鈥 him,鈥 she says.
鈥淢aybe compared to other women she might know who suffer abuse, she thinks she's relatively better off,鈥 she says, adding that typically it鈥檚 not a single reason, 鈥渂ut a confluence of multiple factors.鈥
One myth that needs聽to be dispelled, however, is the notion that women don鈥檛 ever leave abusive relationships, says Kris Macomber, adjunct professor of sociology at Meredith College, an all-women鈥檚 school in Raleigh,聽N.C.
鈥淚n fact, survivors of domestic violence often leave many, many times before they are able to stay away and live violence-free lives,鈥 she says.聽聽聽
Women often stay in an attempt to keep themselves safe, she notes.
鈥淵ou might ask yourself, how can that be? Here鈥檚 how. Many women who are killed by their intimate partners are killed when they have left, or once they have threatened to leave,鈥 she says, adding that sometimes the choice to stay is a way to keep themselves or their children safe and alive.聽
鈥淚t鈥檚 important not to assume that the decision to stay is a sign of weakness or passivity,鈥 she adds.
In fact, statistics show that more than 70 percent of domestic violence murders happen after the victim has left the relationship.
鈥淥n average, it takes a victim to leave before staying away for good,鈥 according to the National Domestic Violence Hotline鈥檚 website.
鈥淏oth men and women sometimes stay in relationships in which they are battered or abused by their partner,鈥 says Robert Epstein, senior research psychologist at the nonprofit American Institute for Behavioral Research and Technology in Vista, Calif. Worse, adds Mr. Epstein, both men and women will stay in relationships in which they abuse or batter each other.
鈥淭he reasons vary, but the main factor is self-esteem,鈥 he adds via e-mail.
While both men and women in abusive relationships may suffer from lack of self esteem, the relationships are often addictive, points out psychologist Sherrie Campbell, author of 鈥淟oving Yourself: The Mastery of Being Your Own Person.鈥 聽
鈥淭hey cannot live with each other and they cannot live without each other,鈥 she says via e-mail.
Men who are narcissists have a grandiose attitude about life, themselves, and their sense of entitlement, she adds. When you add fame and聽high-stakes careers with millions on the line to a narcissistic personality, she says, 鈥測ou get someone who will show psychopathic tendencies.鈥
Since the battered women鈥檚 movement formed in the 1970s, victim advocates and activists聽say they face more questions about women鈥檚 behavior than the men, says Professor Macomber.
It isn't fair to only question the victim鈥檚 behavior or put the responsibility of maintaining an abusive relationship on them, advocates say.
鈥淚t鈥檚 equally important to ask questions that direct focus and attention towards men鈥檚 use of violence in the first place,鈥 Macomber says.
These would include asking: Why do so many men abuse their female partners and聽why is men鈥檚 use of violence so commonplace and far-reaching, she says.
鈥淚t鈥檚 2014, and we鈥檙e still asking the same question,鈥 says Macomber. 鈥淔or no other type of crime do we place as much responsibility for the crime on the victim than we do for victims of domestic violence.鈥