LIFE IS A FANTASY!
A pink-eyed rabbit, fuzzy white
Hops in bedrooms filled with fright
A child of six with much to know
Her father's basest feelings show
She knows of LOVE, only through him
He satisfies his every whim
He leaves, she wipes him
from her chin!
Her mother NEEDS to see the best
He answered her God request
To have a roof to comfort bring
A yard where all the birdies sing
Tell me how she could really know
What source for learning could she go?
Her mother regularly beaten if not worse
The cycle of violence - a woman's curse
Conflicting visions, dependencies
One can endure many idiosyncrasies
She could not make him defendant be
Denial, avoidance... she disbelieves
The rabbit hides beneath tall trees.
At thirteen a step-grandfatha'
Finds a well-trained girl that oughta'
Do what powerful men request
Never knowing what is best
And run away she does at last
Freedom can be such a 'blast'
A rabbit's foot upon a chain
The FANTASY her 'safe' domain
How long in life must it remain?
To protect her from these men
Who always for her lips, do 'yen'
A state trooper in Tennessee
Like every other man does see
Her lips so full and luscious red
Through the bars, not in a bed.
This life men bring to little girls
Even when their hair yet curls
The visions in her soul I saw
Ripped my soul - made it raw
I can understand the rage and WILL
To take a life and even KILL
Just forgive and let it go
The therapists say, what do THEY Know?
My lady had no obvious mental issues but she did grind her teeth while sleeping for a few days at first. But she had attempted suicide and the noted fat clinic in Hilton Head which her mother sent her to; at the time her mother finally started believing what her daughter had been telling her; said they could not address her real causal issues. I tried hard and there were many improvements but it is hard for all people who care. This article investigates some of the blowback that is very real despite appearances.
This is a paper which goes into great detail for those who really care. I am removing the link active elements to fit the policy here.
http://ift.tt/1M5D0r6 and%20Mental%20Illness%20in%20Women.
The Doctor of Psychology who I call my 'twin' (born the same day one astrological cycle older) was the key force behind amnesty for women in jail during the late 80s and into the 90s. Gloria Allred rode her back and took most of the credit. Even after getting the state of California to legislate amnesty for women who had killed their intimate partners who abused their children or the mothers - few were set free. Multiple reasons and issues became obvious including what had happened to my twin when she was raped continuously by every member of the staff as well as by the inmates in orgiastic sessions. She gave herself to higher ups to avoid the frequent rapes and eventually only serviced the prison doctor. The damage done in jail (Don't tell me about rehabilitation - my twin did develop an easy and short two week course but the system likes keeping their charges and building empire.) is extensive. In many cases they claimed the files were lost witnesses no longer available etc. Yes, the legislation only gave women a new hearing.
The quote that follows is from a CDC report which addresses a lot of the costs and gives the impression all issues are being considered. My experience tells me psychologists won't address victim participation in case it leads to lawsuits - same with family participation. The police would love to employ interventions and get real action but they too are stopped from doing much more than taking the abuse of family violence into their lives. The police get attacked but that is not the abuse I am talking about.
In the late 20th C. the US Surgeon General C. Everett Koop called Family Violence an epidemic or pandemic even though the numbers or percentages are hard to gather due to reporting concerns already mentioned as well as the further victimization of those who do open up.
"The achievements made in the prevention of youth violence throughout the 1980s and 1990s
were published in Youth Violence: A Report of the Surgeon General, which provided a comprehensive
synthesis of the state of knowledge about youth violence, including what was
known about the different patterns of offending, risk and
protective factors within and across various domains (e.g.,
peer, family, school, and community), and about the effectiveness
of prevention programs.16 The report also highlighted
the cost effectiveness of prevention over incarceration
and set forth a vision for the 21st century.
The early successes in youth-violence prevention paved the
way for a public health approach to other violence problems
such as intimate partner violence, sexual violence, and child
maltreatment. Efforts were made to document each problem,
understand the risk and protective factors associated
1993
A special issue of Health Affairs
addresses violence as a public
health issue the first special issue
to examine violence as a public
health problem.
CDC establishes the Division of
Violence Prevention within the
newly created National Center for
Injury Prevention and Control. The
Division leads CDCs
efforts to prevent injuries and
deaths caused by violence.
CDC publishes The Prevention
of Youth Violence: A Framework
for Community Action to mobilize
communities to effectively address
the epidemic of youth violence
sweeping the nation.
5
with each type of violence, and begin building the evidence-base for prevention. In 1994,
for example, the CDC and the National Institute of Justice collaborated on the first national
violence-against-women survey. Conducted over the next two years, the survey produced
the first national data on the incidence, prevalence, and economic costs of intimate partner
violence, sexual violence, and stalking.17 In 1994, Congress passed the Violence Against
Women Act (Title IV of the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act)landmark
legislation that established rape prevention and education programs across the nation, in
Puerto Rico and six other U.S. territories and called for local demonstration projects to coordinate
the intervention and prevention of domestic violence. The CDC was given the federal
responsibility to administer both efforts. The appropriations for these programs and their
subsequent reauthorization from Congress were instrumental in building the infrastructure
and capacity for the prevention of intimate partner violence and sexual violence at the local
and state level.
Moving Forward in a Global Context
As public health efforts to understand and prevent violence gained momentum in the United
States, they garnered attention abroad. Violence was placed on the international agenda in 1996 when the World Health Assembly adopted Resolution
WHA49.25, which declared violence a leading worldwide public
health problem. The resolution requested the WHO to initiate public
health activities to: (1) document and characterize the burden of
violence, (2) assess the effectiveness of programs, with particular
attention to women and children and community-based initiatives, and
(3) promote activities to tackle the problem at the international and
country level. In 2000, the WHO created the Department of Injuries
and Violence Prevention to increase the global visibility of unintentional
injury and violence and to facilitate public health action. The
organizations World Report on Violence and Health, published in
2002, is used throughout the world as a platform for increased public
health action toward preventing violence.18
Violence"
A pink-eyed rabbit, fuzzy white
Hops in bedrooms filled with fright
A child of six with much to know
Her father's basest feelings show
She knows of LOVE, only through him
He satisfies his every whim
He leaves, she wipes him
from her chin!
Her mother NEEDS to see the best
He answered her God request
To have a roof to comfort bring
A yard where all the birdies sing
Tell me how she could really know
What source for learning could she go?
Her mother regularly beaten if not worse
The cycle of violence - a woman's curse
Conflicting visions, dependencies
One can endure many idiosyncrasies
She could not make him defendant be
Denial, avoidance... she disbelieves
The rabbit hides beneath tall trees.
At thirteen a step-grandfatha'
Finds a well-trained girl that oughta'
Do what powerful men request
Never knowing what is best
And run away she does at last
Freedom can be such a 'blast'
A rabbit's foot upon a chain
The FANTASY her 'safe' domain
How long in life must it remain?
To protect her from these men
Who always for her lips, do 'yen'
A state trooper in Tennessee
Like every other man does see
Her lips so full and luscious red
Through the bars, not in a bed.
This life men bring to little girls
Even when their hair yet curls
The visions in her soul I saw
Ripped my soul - made it raw
I can understand the rage and WILL
To take a life and even KILL
Just forgive and let it go
The therapists say, what do THEY Know?
My lady had no obvious mental issues but she did grind her teeth while sleeping for a few days at first. But she had attempted suicide and the noted fat clinic in Hilton Head which her mother sent her to; at the time her mother finally started believing what her daughter had been telling her; said they could not address her real causal issues. I tried hard and there were many improvements but it is hard for all people who care. This article investigates some of the blowback that is very real despite appearances.
This is a paper which goes into great detail for those who really care. I am removing the link active elements to fit the policy here.
http://ift.tt/1M5D0r6 and%20Mental%20Illness%20in%20Women.
The Doctor of Psychology who I call my 'twin' (born the same day one astrological cycle older) was the key force behind amnesty for women in jail during the late 80s and into the 90s. Gloria Allred rode her back and took most of the credit. Even after getting the state of California to legislate amnesty for women who had killed their intimate partners who abused their children or the mothers - few were set free. Multiple reasons and issues became obvious including what had happened to my twin when she was raped continuously by every member of the staff as well as by the inmates in orgiastic sessions. She gave herself to higher ups to avoid the frequent rapes and eventually only serviced the prison doctor. The damage done in jail (Don't tell me about rehabilitation - my twin did develop an easy and short two week course but the system likes keeping their charges and building empire.) is extensive. In many cases they claimed the files were lost witnesses no longer available etc. Yes, the legislation only gave women a new hearing.
The quote that follows is from a CDC report which addresses a lot of the costs and gives the impression all issues are being considered. My experience tells me psychologists won't address victim participation in case it leads to lawsuits - same with family participation. The police would love to employ interventions and get real action but they too are stopped from doing much more than taking the abuse of family violence into their lives. The police get attacked but that is not the abuse I am talking about.
In the late 20th C. the US Surgeon General C. Everett Koop called Family Violence an epidemic or pandemic even though the numbers or percentages are hard to gather due to reporting concerns already mentioned as well as the further victimization of those who do open up.
"The achievements made in the prevention of youth violence throughout the 1980s and 1990s
were published in Youth Violence: A Report of the Surgeon General, which provided a comprehensive
synthesis of the state of knowledge about youth violence, including what was
known about the different patterns of offending, risk and
protective factors within and across various domains (e.g.,
peer, family, school, and community), and about the effectiveness
of prevention programs.16 The report also highlighted
the cost effectiveness of prevention over incarceration
and set forth a vision for the 21st century.
The early successes in youth-violence prevention paved the
way for a public health approach to other violence problems
such as intimate partner violence, sexual violence, and child
maltreatment. Efforts were made to document each problem,
understand the risk and protective factors associated
1993
A special issue of Health Affairs
addresses violence as a public
health issue the first special issue
to examine violence as a public
health problem.
CDC establishes the Division of
Violence Prevention within the
newly created National Center for
Injury Prevention and Control. The
Division leads CDCs
efforts to prevent injuries and
deaths caused by violence.
CDC publishes The Prevention
of Youth Violence: A Framework
for Community Action to mobilize
communities to effectively address
the epidemic of youth violence
sweeping the nation.
5
with each type of violence, and begin building the evidence-base for prevention. In 1994,
for example, the CDC and the National Institute of Justice collaborated on the first national
violence-against-women survey. Conducted over the next two years, the survey produced
the first national data on the incidence, prevalence, and economic costs of intimate partner
violence, sexual violence, and stalking.17 In 1994, Congress passed the Violence Against
Women Act (Title IV of the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act)landmark
legislation that established rape prevention and education programs across the nation, in
Puerto Rico and six other U.S. territories and called for local demonstration projects to coordinate
the intervention and prevention of domestic violence. The CDC was given the federal
responsibility to administer both efforts. The appropriations for these programs and their
subsequent reauthorization from Congress were instrumental in building the infrastructure
and capacity for the prevention of intimate partner violence and sexual violence at the local
and state level.
Moving Forward in a Global Context
As public health efforts to understand and prevent violence gained momentum in the United
States, they garnered attention abroad. Violence was placed on the international agenda in 1996 when the World Health Assembly adopted Resolution
WHA49.25, which declared violence a leading worldwide public
health problem. The resolution requested the WHO to initiate public
health activities to: (1) document and characterize the burden of
violence, (2) assess the effectiveness of programs, with particular
attention to women and children and community-based initiatives, and
(3) promote activities to tackle the problem at the international and
country level. In 2000, the WHO created the Department of Injuries
and Violence Prevention to increase the global visibility of unintentional
injury and violence and to facilitate public health action. The
organizations World Report on Violence and Health, published in
2002, is used throughout the world as a platform for increased public
health action toward preventing violence.18
Violence"
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