You would need to request a restraining order including an order to vacate the home. You should consult with an advocate at your local family court or with an attorney.
You would need to request a restraining order including an order to vacate the home. You should consult with an advocate at your local family court or with an attorney.
You would need to request a restraining order including an order to vacate the home. You should consult with an advocate at your local family court or with an attorney.
You would need to request a restraining order including an order to vacate the home. You should consult with an advocate at your local family court or with an attorney.
Leave!
Not if you don't use your spouse on the application as a co applicant or "additional income". If you don't need their income, then leave them off and no, it should not affect.
Just ignore it. Verbal abusers feed off of your reaction. If you don't give them a reaction they will leave you alone. And if they don't, find out what hurts them the most and use it against them. Simple as that.
If your spouse refuses to get Mental health treatment you need to leave and seek a counselor yourself to deal with your emotional issue incurred from the abuse. as hard as it is and as much as we think it will kill us...it won't...but our spouse might...
Not on a general basis, but if one partner wants to get a divorce from the other they can use 'emotional abuse' as a way to get that divorce. If one is emotionally abused, it is just as bad as being physically abused (you just can't see the scars) and the victim should leave their abuser.
I think so. I think this is verbal and mental abuse. Any way you look at it, it's abuse. Hope i helped. It sounds like mental abuse to me. But you know what? You can leave him! You don't have to stay and take it.
It can depend entirely on which jurisdiction or state you live in. Some states have laws against "Curse and Abuse," or "Fighting Words," while others do not and consider such non-physical verbal attacks as a manifestation of "free speech."
The leave your spouse takes just after having a baby is called maternity leave.
Wow, I have never heard of this abuse before, but I will try to answer the question. You do not tell a difference because there is none. Why even put an "abuse" label on it? A person who is greedy and selfish is going to spend the money on themselves regardless of their spouse's needs, causing the spouse to go without. I suppose it would then be sensible to label it "monetary abuse," but I would just leave it as being married to a greedy and selfish person.
Never submit! Just leave their asses!
* Most talk is about abused women, but now the medical profession has found that there is 'male abuse.' Most men are brought up to never hit a woman (and most don't.) Some women can be just as nasty as male abusers and control their spouse. Verbal abuse would be to put her spouse down by saying such things as: 'You'll never get anywhere in your life,' what woman would ever want you!' Many men don't like confrontation with a woman or women and try to avoid it (smart!) The male will take the verbal abuse. In some cases the female verbal abuser will save the best abuse in the privacy of their own home and act totally different to their spouse when out in public to make it look like all is well between them, but every so often a woman may bring her verbal abuse along with her to harass her spouse out in public. Women can also use physical abuse (more common than you think) by slapping a man's face for no reason; kicking; scratching; biting or throwing things at him or hitting him with any object she can find around the house. More often than people think men will cover up the bite marks; scratches; bruises, but sometimes the males come to work with black eyes; a tooth missing or split lip. The male will laugh it off and generally say he fell or had a fight with another male. Abused males fear criticism by their family and friends and fear they will not be believed because physically men are stronger than women and thus, they hide their misery and put up with the abuse (some abused men will leave the relationship and move on.) It wasn't until the last eight to ten years that programs for abused men were setup and more and more abused males are coming out of the closet so to speak and seeking help from these programs. No one; spouses; friends; parents; children or the elderly should ever be subjected to verbal or physical violence.
If you are legally "competent" - at 18 you are probably legally emancipated in your state. You can leave home (if physically/mentally capable) but without any signs of physical abuse, I doubt that your grounds for suit are valid.