At Mamamia, we have a year-round commitment to highlighting the epidemic of domestic violence in Australia. During May, Domestic Violence Prevention Month, we will not only raise awareness of the personal impact of violence, but do our best to ensure victims have access to help, and encourage those who abuse to take responsibility and seek help for their behaviour.
This post deals with domestic violence and might be triggering for some readers.
*Name has been changed for anonymity.
September 2013 was the month everything changed for Sandy, despite the fact she'd found the courage to leave her relationship five years earlier.
She'd put up with more than a decade of emotional and financial abuse, stalking, coercion and gaslighting. But as Sandy's ex, Joel*, would remind her over and over again: "I am not abusive. I've never hit you. You're overreacting."
Walking up to the front door of her home, with three primary school-aged kids clambering at her feet, Sandy was overpowered by the strong stench of gas.
LISTEN: Courtney Ugle isn't letting her past dictate her future. Post continues.
A week earlier she'd found herself shouting, "we are never going to be in a relationship ever again," after Joel had turned up unannounced at her home once again.
"No us, no kids," he'd replied. She hadn't thought much of it, because he'd always been very good at the dummy spit.