Singers Rihanna and Chris Brown perform at the Z100 Jingle Ball 2008 at Madison Square Garden on Friday, Dec. 12, 2008 in New York.
Evan Agostini / AP
Pop star Rihanna and her R&B star boyfriend, Chris Brown, struggle with the public fallout of a private dispute
HEALTH

The Shadow Of Shame

The author of a new memoir about an abusive marriage discusses why it's still so hard to be open about domestic violence and what we can learn from the tabloid frenzy over the Rihanna-Chris Brown incident.

 

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As Los Angeles police continue to investigate a reported domestic assault involving R&B singer Chris Brown and pop star Rihanna, the tabloid frenzy over the talented couple's relationship continues to build, with vocal fans taking sides and stoking rumors. Brown has issued a statement apologizing for "what transpired" and says he's seeking counseling. Meanwhile, Rihanna's father told People magazine this week that he hopes his daughter will someday speak out and "stand up for women all over the world."

Whatever the facts of the Brown case turn out to be, author Leslie Morgan Steiner says the coverage is a reminder that it's still not that easy for women to talk about domestic abuse and that this issue affects a far wider swath of the American public than most people think. She should know. Harvard-educated and a successful journalist, Steiner was assaulted more than 20 times before she finally told friends and got out of her abusive marriage. Eventually, she worked up the courage to research the issue and write about it in her soon-to-be released memoir, "Crazy Love" (St. Martin's). Steiner talked to NEWSWEEK's Patrice Wingert about the complex reasons women stay in violent relationships and why those who have been abused still struggle with feelings of shame and self-blame. Excerpts:

NEWSWEEK: The media doesn't spotlight domestic violence very often, but these incidents are actually much more common than people think, aren't they?
Leslie Morgan Steiner: Much, much more common. It affects millions of people. What's different [about the Brown arrest and the reported domestic assault] is that it's playing out so publicly. Going through it privately is hard enough. But since denial is the most dangerous thing about domestic abuse, the fact that this happened in a public way will make it very hard for her to go back into that relationship.

You were a confident, successful, woman in your mid-20s when this happened to you. Did you see yourself as vulnerable at all?
No, I didn't. A lot of people assume that I must have had really low self-esteem at the time, but it wasn't that. In some ways, I was too confident. I had just graduated from Harvard, which some people thought was a big deal, and I had a great job at Seventeen magazine and a New York apartment and I was meeting men everywhere. I was on top of the world. When I met my future husband, he told me about his very abusive childhood, and I never really doubted that I could help him. I was very naive in that way. I didn't realize what kind of psychological problems this kind of history could create. He was my first love, and I threw myself into loving him unconditionally.

Research tells us that children who are abused often grow up to be abusers. And yet, when someone we love has a history of abuse, we don't expect that rage to be turned on us.
Yes, you totally got it. It never occurred to me, all the times he shared his very painful stories about how he was abused as a kid, that he would hurt me. I never felt fear. I only felt sympathy. I didn't understand that cycles of violence are passed from generation to generation, and I'd never known anyone who was abused. I thought it only happened to poor women with children and without options.

It seems that many women, the first time they get hit by a boyfriend or husband, search for reasons to explain it away, maybe because they can't believe that the guy they love could possibly be an abuser. Does that sound right to you?
Yes, it does, and this is something people don't understand. Abuse almost never happens on the first date. It happens after you're really enmeshed in the relationship, trapped even. It's common for these incidents of violence to occur after certain milestones of relationships have been reached, moving in together, getting married, being pregnant, leaving your job to stay home with the kids. That's when violence escalates, and all that makes it easier to deny, too.

It seems like you also kept believing that your love could rescue him, and that after so many people had let him down, you didn't want to do that, too?
That's true. Our culture encourages women to be the nurturer. I felt strong because of my love for him, and he bought into that, too. He thought I was strong enough to help him. But I didn't notice, until his friend pointed it out to me, that I had reached the point where my voice shook whenever [my husband] came into the room. When I realized that, it pierced through all my denial, and I had to confront the fact that I was afraid of my husband.

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Member Comments

  • Posted By: DrJane @ 03/16/2009 11:21:03 PM

    Thank you to Leslie Morgan Steiner. As a therapist, I have worked with a number of successful women who carry tremendous shame for not being able to stop abuse once it happens. They tend to feel overly responsible for others actions, magnifying their self-blame. This memoir will empower many who are living in silence and fear.

  • Posted By: Getitout @ 03/11/2009 2:30:42 PM

    I have heard that Chris and Rihanna sign a 10 million dollars contract after that incident. No wonder Rihanna decided to go back with Chris, all about that dollar.

  • Posted By: alesamayi @ 03/05/2009 1:57:53 PM

    As of today - neither of these young adults have learned ANYTHING!!!! Both of these young adults have only added to the undercurrent of Domestic Violence in the U.S. Rihanna has lost any and all respect ever afforded her and should immediately have all commercial endorsements stripped. I am a Critical Care Registered Nurse and treat victims of Domestic Violence on a daily basis. Rihanna has just made the medical communities already difficult time - of getting the victims to come forward - THAT MUCH MORE DIFFICULT!!!!!!!!! SHAME ON BOTH OF THESE YOUNG ADULTS!!! They truly do not have a clue.

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