The idea that a woman can ‘just leave’ an abusive partner is, sadly, still something that causes great shame and stigma in society today. Women don’t choose to enter into abusive relationships, and they certainly don’t stay out of choice. Yet all too often, women experiencing domestic abuse are blamed for circumstances beyond their control – circumstances that are created by the perpetrator – and this significantly affects their future safety and recovery.
Another issue that women shoulder the burden of blame for when already experiencing domestic abuse is comorbid substance use. Within our services at Phoenix Futures, we know that a large percentage (65%) of women entering residential rehab also report experiencing domestic abuse and, of these women, 57% also have parental responsibility. This demonstrates a clear overlap between domestic abuse and drug and alcohol use, which can be driven by many complex factors but which will almost certainly include a need to self-medicate to cope with the ongoing trauma.
And just as we still hear society uttering the words ‘why can’t she just leave him’ we also still hear the words ‘why can’t she just stop drinking/using’. This is an incredibly naive and oversimplified view of the extreme trauma and overbearing responsibility that women – especially mothers – all too often face in these situations.
Read more:
- The hidden homelessness crisis is fuelled by the scourge of domestic abuse
- Dispersed accommodation is the future for helping domestic abuse survivors escape homelessness
- There’s a looming crisis for trans and non-binary survivors of domestic abuse
If we’re not living through this kind of trauma ourselves, we (and by ‘we’ I mean both the general public and some social care and health professionals) might assume that women are choosing to ‘let him in’ or ‘choosing alcohol over their children’. But imagine a situation where a woman has seen the danger she faces if she doesn’t go along with her controlling partner’s demands. She might feel that opening the door to him is the only way to keep her and her children safe in that moment. Feeling traumatised and suicidal, she might feel that using drugs or alcohol is the only way to keep herself going – for her and her children. These are not choices. They are coping mechanisms.
Mothers are particularly demonised when it comes to their own and their children’s safety, often more so than the partner causing the harm. As a mother, they are considered the responsible one, something that was explored in the new TV drama series All Her Fault – when a mother and father spoke at a press conference about their missing child, and all questions (and assumptions of responsibility) were directed towards the mother. Even in 2025, this inequitable perception is sadly still a reality.