Might the Emotionally Abusive treat pets like they do animals? (mine did)

Narcissistic, sociopathic, psychopathic people dont see you.

They just dont.

They only see you as an extension of themselves

Or as something to take from.

A tool.

You are their entitlement.

Thats the humans. Or the items they see, that they take.

But what about animals? The pets in the home?

What happens when such a person also has a pet? or if there is one in the home?

Research here indicates how pets are used as part of Domestic Abuse

And here too

They can be used as a way of keeping someone in a DV relationship, pets can be abused themselves.

One of the ways that I have heard repeatedly is that physically violent people (often men) enact their physical violence out on their pet. The stats in this piece are frightening and awful.

But I am wondering something else, something more subtle.

How might the way an emotional or psychological abuser treat a pet be an indication of abuse?

Can I tell you a short story please? About my psychopathic parent and what she could/couldnt do with animals?

When I was about 4, for some reason, probably to be helpful, my parents decided to look after 4-5 3-4 month old kittens, whilst the owner was away open holiday I guess, but I cannot remember. In our old house my Dad was in the process of blocking off one of the old chimney breasts, the other was kept open for fires. But there was a large bricked hole in the wall which, with blankets, could act as a bed for the kittens, and could also be blocked off to keep them in there at night. If I remember too, the kittens were only allowed downstairs. I dont remember much about the stay of the kittens themselves. Only that in the last 24 hours before the owners returned, they tried to escape by climbing the chimney. I think 2 or 3 of them went for it, climbing up. One parent shrieked and got upset, whilst the other and I tried to get them down, using broom handles etc, and they did, eventually, sooty and black, they were white ish to start with. Trapped kittens trying to escape.

Here’s another.

My Dad loved guinea pigs, he’d had them as a child. We weren’t allowed pets (aside from a goldfish that lasted 3 years that was won at a school fair) But we could have guinea pigs, if they stayed in the shed. Yup. Nothing was allowed in the abusers domain they she didnt want or like or distracted from her and definitely not an animal. That reminds me. She hated when her favourite people had pets, and she hated the pets too.

Completely unnecessary photo of a guinea pig, One of my childhood ones did look like this cutey.

But back to the guinea pigs.

During the winter they would be allowed on a Saturday or Sunday inside the house for about an hour whilst my dad cleaned out their cage. In the Summer they could be left outside eating grass and in their outdoor cage. So the two of them, salt and pepper their names, were placed in a large flat plastic sheeting covered in hay etc and allowed to run around and we could groom them, stroke their hair etc and cut their nails. All the things that were required to look after them. We all loved them.

Well, three of us did.

One person would sit in the corner and have nothing to do with them. I remember us, naive and young, pleading that ‘mum should have a guinea pig too’ – and she would so so reluctantly make a big deal of having one on her knee, and then get all nervous, shaky and fearful it would move, scratch.

In Short, Psychopath, emotionally neglectful and abusive mother, couldn’t even stroke the guinea pigs.

The guinea pig could not give her anything. She had no maternal instinct what so ever. Not even to pets. She hated other pets as I said above.

She didnt even stroke the guinea pigs, might be the thing I wrote on her tombstone.

Thats my experience of the emotionally abusive and animals. Want to avoid them, can’t relate to them, cant be seen to be attentive of them, neglectful and hating of them.

So I am wondering, might other emotionally abusive, emotionally immature people extend their same behaviour to humans to their pets?

Physical abuse is obvious and tragic, but what about pets that are emotionally abused and neglected. Animals that are a tool and not an animal with needs. Treating a pet with the same way they treat a human, as just an extension.

Theres a definate link, but am just wondering if emotional abusive behaviour towards pets goes a bit under the radar. Do you have any examples?

Any thoughts? Might you have examples like this, of weird behaviour towards the family pets by someone psychotic or emotionally immature in the family?

Comments

3 responses to “Might the Emotionally Abusive treat pets like they do animals? (mine did)”

  1. rwileecoyote avatar
    rwileecoyote

    Interesting thoughts… not something i had considered, obviously i have seen pets been treated badly, and i suppose that could be translated into other areas of life. Good post!

    1. James avatar

      Thank you! And absolutely

  2. Peggy Stewart avatar

    Yes, I can totally relate. My Dad was an alcoholic until I was 15, in his drunken rages, he’d often get one of his guns, (he used to hunt quail & pheasant), he’d sometimes threaten to blow his ____ head off! More often, he’d kill dog’s instead. Then weep, and act shocked…really dad?! We had poodles when I was in elementary school, one Daddy let out to potty, (whole drunk) he forgot to let our beloved fur baby back in. The next morning, precious Stoney wasn’t lying at my feet ( as normally did), so I got up, going outside, yelling for him, then ran through yard to driveway, looked down long stretch of road, seeing a little white form partially laying on edge of pavement & grass. I ran, crying back to house…mom went to investigate, and to my & our entire families horror, Stoney had been hit and killed by automobile in the cold, dark night😭💔. I was in 7th grade, and I was devastated😱. I was also extremely 😠 angry, so I busted the glass out of our front storm door, and remember falling in grass, wailing to the highest. In addition, we’d gone on family week vacation, houseboat on lake. Had another poodle. Cocoa. I didn’t realize until grown, the cruel, insensitivity that my mom, didn’t make arrangements for a neighbor to let Cocoa out to potty! I do remember when we got back, mom found that Cocoa had urinated on our dining table. She beat him for that! INSANITY. When I grew up, I expressed my pain and anger at her, and added, “although you didn’t make arrangements for someone to take him out he, being the intelligent, wonderful dog/our baby! was still being obedient ( and it makes my body tense, to think how long he must’ve tried not to potty, suffered…and was then abused for NOT PISSING on ANY floors!!! That’s only a miniscule example of the horrors my siblings and I endured. I ran away from home at 17, thinking was escaping terrible childhood, married my boyfriend, thinking “grass would be greener” oh…my….I could never have FATHOMED I’d be in worse environment. By the grace of God, I am now almost 60 year’s old, divorced, and I live alone with my beloved fur-baby that I say…I rescued him from 4 lane busy highway, in another state…but I believe, he rescued me. God Bless. I genuinely enjoy your writings, sir. However, I’m sorry you’ve experienced such trauma and pain.

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