One in three girls will be in a controlling, abusive dating relationship
before she graduates from high school - from verbal or emotional abuse
to sexual abuse or physical battering. Is your daughter in danger?
Dr. Jill Murray speaks on the topic of dating violence at high schools
around the country, reaching more than 10,000 students, teachers, and
counsellors each year. In every school she visits, she is approached by
teenage girls in miserable relationships who, when confronted with the
option of breaking up with the boy, exclaim, "But I love him!"
Many young women - and their parents, aren't even aware of the
indications of a potentially abusive relationship. What's most alarming
is that these warning signs are also some of the behaviours that girls
find most flattering:
A boy pages and calls a girl often - but as a form of control, not
affection.
He wants to spend all his time with her, but eventually won't allow her
to spend time with her friends.
He says "I love you" very early in the relationship.
These behaviours can escalate into blaming, isolating, manipulating,
threatening, humiliation, and sexual and physical abuse.
In But I Love Him, Dr. Murray identifies these controlling, abusive
patterns of behaviour and helps you get your daughter out of the
relationship without alienating her. You will learn what draws her to
this type of relationship, why she has a hard time talking to you about
it, the special barriers teens face when breaking off a relationship,
and what's going on in the mind of a teen abuser. Dr. Murray will help
you show your teen what a respectful relationship looks like, and teach
her the importance of respecting herself. edition.