I had a flight attendant that came to work on my plane one evening. I seldom notice F/As, but every now and then, I have reason to communicate with one or two. The one evening, I asked the Purser who was in charge of feeding the pilots and she told me Barbara was. I asked her if she would feed us early because I do not like to eat late due to going to bed in a hotel at 11 at night.
When she brought the food into the cockpit and handed me my napkin, I noticed her hand was full of scratches and cuts and then her sleeve moved up her arm and I saw some bruising. I asked her how did she get them. She was lying to me and I knew it. There was no doubt, the bruising was from applied pressure.
I told her if she is being abused, she needs to call the HELP line United had setup. She wouldn't and a few weeks later, I got word that she had the heck beat out of her by her live-in boyfriend and she told the cops at the hospital who it was, but he was n the run. The cops soon caught him and after all was said and done, he ended up with being sentenced to a 20 years in state prison. I think he got out in 10, but she had divorced him and was warned if he went within 500 feet of her, he would serve the other 10 years.
I cannot imagine calling a phone help line set up by my employer, which tells you what kind of employers I've had.
There is a psychological thing called "trauma bonding" and I give credit to the mostly young people who post over at Reddit for telling this reader about it.
But when people wonder, "Why didn't she just leave him?", besides the fact that the abuser has probably told her all kind of hellfire and legal ramifications will rain down upon her if she leaves, it is this bond of trauma that is hard to break.
https://psychcentral.com/relationships/what-is-trauma-bonding#trauma-bonding
https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/basics/trauma-bonding
From the article above:
"A trauma bond in a relationship involves a foundation of abuse, which may hinge on tactics such as threats of harm, manipulation, control, shaming, gaslighting, and sabotage, mixed with intermittent moments of calm and displays of affection. This pattern of highs and lows increases a victim’s unhealthy attachment to the abuser, which helps maintain the relationship."
Now, the problem with our legal system, is that some of these TACTICS, like
threats of harm, manipulation, shaming, and gaslighting, are also used by DEFENSE LAWYERS. They are used by prosecutors too, but the defense lawyer is the one defending the abuser so a victim often has to put up with this crap if she/they go to court for a trial about the abuse or a divorce. Questions like, "Isn't it true, Ms. Vintage, that you said such-and-such to so-and-so?" and then the lawyer states something I never said or did.
But the framing of, "Isn't it true?" frames the question
like an accusation, so an accusation will actually influence the minds of those who hear it. Just the manipulation of the words can influence the minds of a judge or jury. Experienced judges can see through that. They know what's going on. But juries? Not always. And when you go to court you usually know nothing about the judge. Your lawyer might, but, maybe not.
We don't have Yelp for judges, right? The reason we don't have that is because lawyers and judges will jump on those opinions expressed on Yelp, or a Yelp-like site and prosecute the posters for defamation.
Example: I heard someone say once, just a layperson talking about a case, regarding a man who had been accused of a serious felony, "Well, he must have done it because otherwise why would he have been arrested?"
A lot of laypeople, many laypeople, do not understand that
police and lawyers make mistakes all day long. The court is there not only to prosecute true criminals but to fix the mistakes of the police and lawyers.
Ah, but the mistakes can be made in minutes or hours. Then it can take decades and tens of thousands of dollars to fix them. It's all very ****ed up.
This is why I think, if we really want to fix the system, we need
Lawyer Grants. Establish a fund, make it gov't. funded, but people can donate into it if they choose to, and people can apply for Grants to pay their legal fees. Some will get rejected, but many more will most likely be granted. Establish this Grant Fund so the Average Jill can hire the best lawyers - the lawyers who actually understand Trauma Bonds and won't ask stupid questions like, "Well, if he really did abuse her why didn't she leave him sooner?"
However, I have digressed. No doubt the flight attendant did not call the help line because of the shame she carried from the abuse and maybe the trauma bond.