How to Spot a Dangerous Man
How to Spot a Dangerous Man
Before You Get Involved
By: Sandra L.
Brown, MA
Women erroneously think that a dangerous man in a relationship is only a
violent man. While the violent man is indeed one of the categories of
dangerous men, there are seven others that are often overlooked. These
omitted categories are exactly how women get into dangerous
relationships. These lapses in information leave women without the
knowledge to respond to the face of dangerousness when he is in their
life through a relationship. Since much of the information about ‘what’
makes a man dangerous has not been taught to women, they do not
recognize nor respond to covert dangerousness.
Most women have
learned to ignore their red flags during a relationship—their biological
response system that tells them that something is not quite right. Our
research indicated that 100% of women understand red flags, have red
flags, and many of them go on to ignore the very red flags that can
alert them to unsafe relationships. Women sited various reasons for
ignoring red flags which included societal training that women should be
polite, gender differences that taught them that women are to be
hyper-tolerant to less than appealing male behavior, and female role
modeling in their childhoods where women in their families tolerated
dangerous
male behavior in relationships, renamed the behavior to something less
threatening, and then stayed.
Overtly lacking
in today’s women’s programs are the outright names of dangerous
diagnosis, the labeling of specific dangerous behaviors, and the
teaching of why dangerousness is not
something that can be treated, more
less cured. Most women cannot cite any elements that make a man
‘incurable.’ They don’t understand that the issue of dangerousness is
based on a person’s inability to grow or change, in or out of the
relationship. And furthermore, they do not know what ‘an inability to
grow or change’ looks like or acts like.
No wonder record
amounts of women are or have been in as many as four to five dangerous
man relationships before they changed their patterns. Often the only
reason change came at all was because of extreme
violence and subsequent near death
injuries. Others were killed in the relationship. Sadly, once a woman
has dated one dangerous man her chances of being in a relationship with
more dangerous men dramatically increase. This is because one of the
notable side effects of being in a relationship with pathologically
dangerous men is that women begin to normalize abnormal behavior until
dangerous men look normal and are the only types of men they date. Even
more shocking, women will adapt their own behaviors in the relationship
to the pathologically ill man so that his behaviors are less disturbing
to her. This results in the woman mimicking sick behavior and also
learning to tolerate this type of behavior by increasing her negative
coping skills which allows her to deny, justify, minimize or in any
other way ignore or discount dangerous behavior.
Universal signs
of a bad relationship choice can be learned and should be by all women.
But until recently, the categories and types of dangerous men were known
only to the therapists who treated them. The 7th Great Wonder
of the World (psychopathology) was undisclosed, unexplained, and never
taught to the lay public. Women’s patterns of perilous relationship
selections continued on without the benefit of knowledgeable
intervention that included how to spot dangerousness. Girls, teens, and
women are all told not to date ‘bad men’ but no one taught them what bad
men were or what made them bad.
A woman’s
capacity to choose differently is only as effective as the information
she has to choose wisely. Women begin to make different relationship
selections when they understand the incurableness of some men, what
makes them untreatable and unsafe, and how he can impact her long term
quality of life by his own destructive dangerousness. Women can
understand and do respond when they have the information to choose
differently in relationships. They also learn to choose differently when
they learn to reconnect to the red flags that their bodies are faithful
to send them. Information and awareness become powerful tools for
healthier relationships and long term change.
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