Thank you for posting. This topic is so important to me. My mother treated my father this way. She tried to murder him in front of me more than once. I did not deal with this until I saw a movie called "Men Don't Tell"starring Peter Strauss (1993) and I watched in stunned silence as aspects of my childhood were played out on weekend TV. Even though this movie brought a realization to me, I actually did not deal with it (because men aren't abused. men are abusers is what our society and says loudly. Who would believe me?) About 20 years after I saw the movie I began experiencing unrelenting flashbacks of these DV scenes. I was angry. Someone should have called the police. Someone should have put her in jail. Yet, reality is no one would believe a woman could be this way. I am glad you share your story and hope it helps some men who have suffered from DV. I copped this belief that all women are evil even though I'm a woman. This is one of my "stuck points" as CBT would call it. I would like to change this belief because it's not true. Everyone has choices at any given moment. Not all men are wicked, which I know because my dad was a kind person, and he became an abusive to his children later to please her. He did everything he possibly could to make her happy, and it was never enough. She never became happy until he died. I truly am sorry you lived through this and that your heart was ripped to shreds. My abusers all left me and left me devastated as well, and this issue is what I am trying to deal with in my own life, but at times it feels like it is too much. It's why therapy does not work for me. Love is so so painful. I just don't think anyone can understand why I would miss and long for the abuser. So please if I ever post about my own DV issues as an adult (which I probably won't though) if I ever do, you are welcome to comment because the pain is equal. Men suffer. Their troubles are worsened because boys aren't supposed to cry. It's a terrible thing to do to a boy or girl, tell them not to cry, or shame them for crying, or threaten them with violence if they cry. People joke about it, but it isn't funny. Because I used to attend sex addicts anonymous meetings 26 years ago, I heard many stories of men having been sexually abused by women. People joke about it and say, lucky him. Yet, it isn't funny. It equally messes with the mind and the body no matter the gender.