How to recognize it is very well covered here. How to respond is
much less certain. I have recommended this one many, many times, both
to clients and other practitioners. Evans does a great job of
differentiating between personal power and power over
another person. If you have any doubts about whether you are in a
verbally abusive relationship, on either side of the equation, this book
will help you to see what is.
As for what to do about this situation, I do not recommend that you take
her advice on how to confront an abuser, or that you use this book in a
purely self-help context. A relationship based on domination reaches
its own equilibrium. Upsetting the balance of power can sometimes have
dangerous consequences. Ideally both people in such a partnership
should have effective, competent counseling to ease the transition in a
change of the basis of the relationship. That said, it's hard to beat
this book for clarity on a subject that can be very confusing, in that
the person in the abusive role blames anything and everything on the
other person.
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