Thinking about “ choice”
So, recently we all saw, heard or participated in a bit of
hullaballoo about the Fifty Shades of Gray film.
I won’t dissect the books and movie here except to say it is
a story of abuse, control, gaslighting (look that one up if you don’t know it),
mind games, manipulation and false views of love, intimacy, choice and
consent. As one reviewer said, “If
[the male protagonist/abuser] lived in a shack instead of a penthouse, this
wouldn’t be a feature film, it’d be a plot for Criminal Minds!”
Some brilliant somebody suggested that, instead of paying $
to see porn masquerading as story, we all boycott the flick and donate to our
local domestic violence shelter instead.
I cheered. Good
idea!
Then, something happened that really threw me off the
bridge. A Christian leader I
respect - who recently risked a lot to write a book confronting traditional evangelical
views barring women from positions of leadership in the Church - posted on his
Facebook page the
suggestion that
people not donate to domestic violence shelters but INSTEAD to ministries
fighting sex trafficking. Why? Because, he wrote, trafficked women “don’t have
any choice.”
I read the words. Twice. I realized I wasn’t breathing. I
felt shocked. As if I had been slapped.
I took a mental step backward. Perhaps this Christian leader
didn’t fully understand what he was saying. Did he really believe that women
who experienced domestic violence CHOOSE to be abused?
Yet, as I read and re-read his words I couldn’t understand
them any other way…he clearly communicated that donations would be better given
to anti-trafficking work than to domestic violence shelters. He suggested
donors could be certain no woman helped by a sex trafficking ministry had
“chosen” to be a victim. The
unspoken communication was, of course, that women in domestic violence shelters
may have chosen to be abused.
So, I need to write – and this writing and reading community
needs to dialogue – about choice. And consent. And women. And Domestic
Violence.
CHOICE is a decision freely made. Without coercion, force,
or fraud. Without fear and confusion, manipulation or control.
Choice must include:
*
viable, real options to choose between
* sufficient power that one’s decision has impact on the situation
* ABILITY to understand, evaluate, and choose between available options
* CAPACITY – emotional, spiritual, mental or intellectual – strength
* safety, access to survival resources (food, $$, shelter, protection)
* physical and emotional freedom to choose
* sufficient power that one’s decision has impact on the situation
* ABILITY to understand, evaluate, and choose between available options
* CAPACITY – emotional, spiritual, mental or intellectual – strength
* safety, access to survival resources (food, $$, shelter, protection)
* physical and emotional freedom to choose
I believe that, in the absence of any of these components, a
woman is not freely making a real choice. When abuse, coercion, threats or
emotional/mental manipulation create fear, loss of confidence, and loss of
identity, self-worth and value, real choice simply doesn’t happen.
“But she stayed” we often hear. I wonder if that idea influenced the Christian leader who
seems to believe trafficked women don’t “choose” but women in domestic violence
do?
A woman may stay in an abusive relationship. In reality, research
shows women who leave actually plan to
leave an average of 7 times before they either succeed, give up, or are
murdered. Why? Because leaving requires resources, confidence, money, safe
opportunity, and support – before, during and after. Many women CHOOSE to
leave, TRY to leave, and end up staying because they can’t get “everything”
together.
Women stay because they are afraid. They have reason to be
afraid because they have been battered, threatened, injured and controlled.
They fear their partner will harm, kidnap or kill them, their pets, family and
friends, or their children. Fear is not
choice.
They stay because they have been taught in church that
marriage is forever and they should go back, pray, and try again. Religious control is not choice.
They stay because they have no money, no job history, or
little education. They fear they can’t support themselves. Lack of survival resources is not choice.
They stay because they hope that maybe – this time – his
promises to change are true. Believing a
lie is not the same thing as choosing to be abused.
A dear, wise and beloved friend who escaped a physically and
emotionally abusive relationship says it was and is important to not see herself as a helpless victim.
She wrote, “I did make choices – not always good ones, but I made them.” What we both understood in the
resulting conversation was that she did choose
to try again….or to accept unacceptable behavior….or to believe his claims that
“it would never happen again.” She
did choose to stay until she finally chose to leave. However, what she never
chose was to be abused.
So, Fifty Shades of Gray has had its day. This week I heard
the first news story of a death resulting from some foolish person trying to
duplicate what he saw on the movie screen.
I hope Domestic Violence shelters saw an increase in
donations. I hope the leader I respect – and anyone else in need of “new
thinking” – comes to see choices and the women who make them with new eyes.