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MerrilyMerrily

(218 posts)
Tue Sep 23, 2025, 12:12 PM Sep 23

A neighbor lost her abusive husband

I am not sure how to deal with her. I knew the couple for the last 20-some years of the husband's life. Other neighbors, and his daughter, knew him much longer. He was not shy about saying horrible things, including threats, to his wife in front of, well, anybody. I could give dozens of examples I witnessed myself, and he was flat-out awful. His wife also told me, her daughter and her friends and other neighbors about many, many other instances that were behind closed doors. Sometimes she would say she wished she could leave, other times she would complain to me that her daughter and some friends were trying to pressure him into leaving. I mostly avoided giving her my own opinion, especially after the first time she did a 180.

When he died, he was in his 80s and had been in a nursing home for about a year. His widow wrote a brief obituary calling him a "loving husband" who shared "60 wonderful years" with his "loving wife." Now, she seems really angry that no one she turns to for sympathy for her loss is sympathetic enough. Last night, she stopped her car on the road while I was walking to tell me that one of our neighbors, a farmer woman who is always straightforward and blunt (usually she cracks me up) actually said her husband was "a fucking asshole." The widow told me that 1) she never wanted to see her daughter or her teen-aged grandchildren again (she did not say why) and 2) if her friend the lady farmer pulled into her driveway to chat (which she has done a few times a week for about 40 years), she was going to get her shotgun and let her have it.

My response was tell her I did not want her to ever say such a thing again and walked away, leaving her standing in the road next to her car. An hour later she called to say she was sorry she said that thing about the rifle, that she was a good person who would never hurt anyone, but no one understood that she was going through hell with all these people turning against her after her loss.

I could be wrong, but something about the way she delivered this speech really bothered me, like the apology was fake and I was supposed to feel guilty for my response.

Anyone here have any experience with the aftermath of a long abusive relationship? At the moment I hope not to run into this lady at all for a long time, but my dog and I walk almost every day and this is not likely.





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A neighbor lost her abusive husband (Original Post) MerrilyMerrily Sep 23 OP
Have seen this Timewas Sep 23 #1
Stockholm Syndrome is a real thing genxlib Sep 23 #2
Recommend counseling. Buzz cook Sep 23 #3
That was not a loss Bayard Sep 23 #4
Thank you all for your thoughts MerrilyMerrily Sep 23 #5

Timewas

(2,531 posts)
1. Have seen this
Tue Sep 23, 2025, 12:30 PM
Sep 23

It comes down to the abused person actually believes they deserve the treatment are the ones at fault for what happens to them.

genxlib

(5,997 posts)
2. Stockholm Syndrome is a real thing
Tue Sep 23, 2025, 12:32 PM
Sep 23

Some people are frightened to leave the prison that they have been in. It is easier to make up a sanitized version of the past than face an uncertain future.

I would be inclined to show compassion because it just seems like a lingering effect of the abuse.

Bayard

(27,184 posts)
4. That was not a loss
Tue Sep 23, 2025, 01:39 PM
Sep 23

But in the wife's mind he has morphed into a saint. You can't change that.

MerrilyMerrily

(218 posts)
5. Thank you all for your thoughts
Tue Sep 23, 2025, 04:35 PM
Sep 23

If I can find a way to suggest that she talk to someone professional who understands, I will do that. And I had not considered that she might be frightened of leaving "prison" after so long inside the walls. That is a good analogy.

And oh my, I agree it is above my pay grade.

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