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- #13
BloomInWinter
VIP Member
Sorry - am pretty fragmented these days so I am having a hard time being coherant.
Before texting, an abused person could at least get some respite from the barrage of degradating spoken messages simply by going out in the public. An abuser would have to leave that person alone or risk being overhead.
Abusive boyfriends, parents of abused teen girls, for instance, couldn't control every minute of her day because their behavior wouldn't be allowed on the school grounds. Now, though....we're seeing teen girls receiving dozens of abusive texts in just a few hours. ...and all throughout her day. ...and every time she responds thinking it will placate the abuser for a bit, she also is deepening the abuser's hold over her.
...and there's even less chance for teachers, friends, bystanders to intervene, much less perceive that an abuser is exercising control right in front of everyone.
If the schools put blockers up except in the offices, perhaps a few other 'open areas', then people could still communicate when needed, but the abused &/or text-addicted person would be seen entering this area far more, and some intervention might occur early. Or, they could at least have a safety zone by saying 'Mom, the teachers were watching! I couldn't leave to get to the open area...'
Having a few areas in public where people didn't have to listen to texting wouldn't be a bad thing for customer service, either, like in movies (happening now) and some restaurants. Places where emergency texting is not neded, is only for convenience but is also possibly intrusive to others (like a bathroom) could help our next generation have just a few moments where their every move isn't being critcized might help some break free.
On our campus, it's appalling the thousands of texts abused students are getting. Trying to help these victims is a struggle because they can keep feeding their abusive relationship with just a few clicks of the cell phone buttons. ...and abusers are, I think, learning to use abusive texting like a drug where they get a constant ego biscuit every time they've managed to trigger a response.
I do suspect there's a bit of hostage taking psycological processes at work. I just feel helpless at this point to do anything other than try to point out it out.
Sorry if I'm making no sense.
Before texting, an abused person could at least get some respite from the barrage of degradating spoken messages simply by going out in the public. An abuser would have to leave that person alone or risk being overhead.
Abusive boyfriends, parents of abused teen girls, for instance, couldn't control every minute of her day because their behavior wouldn't be allowed on the school grounds. Now, though....we're seeing teen girls receiving dozens of abusive texts in just a few hours. ...and all throughout her day. ...and every time she responds thinking it will placate the abuser for a bit, she also is deepening the abuser's hold over her.
...and there's even less chance for teachers, friends, bystanders to intervene, much less perceive that an abuser is exercising control right in front of everyone.
If the schools put blockers up except in the offices, perhaps a few other 'open areas', then people could still communicate when needed, but the abused &/or text-addicted person would be seen entering this area far more, and some intervention might occur early. Or, they could at least have a safety zone by saying 'Mom, the teachers were watching! I couldn't leave to get to the open area...'
Having a few areas in public where people didn't have to listen to texting wouldn't be a bad thing for customer service, either, like in movies (happening now) and some restaurants. Places where emergency texting is not neded, is only for convenience but is also possibly intrusive to others (like a bathroom) could help our next generation have just a few moments where their every move isn't being critcized might help some break free.
On our campus, it's appalling the thousands of texts abused students are getting. Trying to help these victims is a struggle because they can keep feeding their abusive relationship with just a few clicks of the cell phone buttons. ...and abusers are, I think, learning to use abusive texting like a drug where they get a constant ego biscuit every time they've managed to trigger a response.
I do suspect there's a bit of hostage taking psycological processes at work. I just feel helpless at this point to do anything other than try to point out it out.
Sorry if I'm making no sense.