An Open Letter to An Abusive Husband (Jessica’s Story)


Deeper Than Bruises: An Open Letter to An Abusive Husband (Jessica’s Story)

Jessica spent years enduring her husband’s covert abuse.

From name-calling to gaslighting, Jessica was often bewildered by her husband’s incessant tirades against her.

“The kind of abuse I experienced was so hard to explain,” she shares. Yet she does explain in this open letter, providing us with a harrowing picture of a wife losing her identity in the face of ongoing psychological abuse.

Keep reading to learn:

  • What covert abuse can look like behind closed doors
  • How abuse will strip away victims’ identities, even making them believe the abuse is their fault
  • How it is possible to break free and find the road back to recovery

Without further ado, here is Jessica’s story.

Walking on Eggshells

I had done or said something that set him off. 

My intentions did not matter. He had already assigned enormous meaning to whatever I did or didn’t say or do, and my attempt to clarify, explain, empathize, or talk through it had no bearing on anything. 

I had caused him to attack me or ice me out and I was now to be punished for an undetermined amount of time. 

Sometimes I could feel his whole demeanor shift out of the blue: a dark coldness would grow until it seemed to consume him. 

Those were the days I really had to walk on eggshells because one misstep on my part would catapult him into an angry flurry of condemnation toward me. 

Panic would set in:

Had I vacuumed today? Was everything in its “proper” place? Did I shower too long? Were there still dishes in the sink?  

It was almost as if I had to hold my breath while in his presence because he would interpret even a glance from me in his direction as disrespect or hatred toward him. 

Yet I knew, deep down, that no matter how hard I tried, the storm would hit. 
Because in his world, everything was always my fault.

The Search for Help

As a Christian woman, my heart was always for my marriage. 

My prayers were not just for my husband’s heart to be kind and loving. I prayed for myself as well. I begged God to make me into what my husband needed. 

I sought support from my church and through counseling. Over the course of our marriage, we saw five different marriage counselors for extended periods of time, met with three different marriage mentor couples, and two different pastors. 

All for the purpose of helping us in our marriage. 

When he eventually refused to go to counseling anymore because he did not like what the therapist was saying to him, I kept going. 

The advice I would often get, while well-intentioned, usually had nothing to do with my husband and everything to do with me. 

Actually, the advice was usually for me to model the words, actions, and heart I wanted from him. 

Essentially, I was encouraged to be his “teacher” and while I waited for him to change, I should just be patient and keep praying. 

Yet the abuse continued. The crazy-making, gaslighting, character assassinating, name-calling, and regular berating continued. 

Over seven years I waited.

Behind Closed Doors

What was so hard was how well he presented to other people. 

His generosity and over-the-top kindness to the outside world laid the foundation for his “good guy” persona. 

But at home, he was someone entirely different. 

I lived in a warzone of landmines I would inadvertently trip with just a word or a look. 

In his mind, I was always failing. 

For example: 

I made a home-cooked meal from scratch almost every night. He would always “offer” to do the dishes. 

However, this was not a genuine offer because if I took him up on this offer, I was sure to be punished for it later. 

He would insist on doing them and then attack me for being so selfish as to make him do the dishes after he worked so hard that day. 

I would then be called selfish, unloving, and ungrateful. 

It was the same story:

  • if he took out the trash
  • came home to any sort of mess in the house
  • if I was on the phone when he got home from work
  • if I sat down to watch TV
  • if I spent too long in the boys’ room putting them to bed
  • if I spent any time at all with friends
  • or if I did something for myself.

I never knew what would set him off, and I never knew how long it would last. I did, however, know it would always involve him attacking my character and calling me names.

The Lunch Incident

I can recall one incident where we had gone to lunch with a couple he knew through his business. 

During our three hours together, I left the table for five minutes to use the restroom and again for ten minutes to say hello to a friend. 

Both times, I returned to our table with smiles from my husband and immediately engaged in conversation with his friends. 

As we walked out with the other couple to leave, he held my hand. 

I was feeling so grateful for a good afternoon together with no blow-ups. He was happy with me… until we were alone in the car where he berated me for “abandoning” him for “over an hour.”

Then came the character attacks, telling me how selfish and unloving I was, how I humiliated him, how his friends looked at him with such “sadness” that he had me for a wife, how awful I was, and on and on and on. 

These insults cut me to my core and hurt more than a physical punch. 

Of course, I defended, thus engaging with his lies, trying to convince him he was wrong about me.

Losing My Identity

Having those character attacks screamed over you daily — it changes you. 

It robs you of your identity.  

This is the crazy-making. 

The only way I could bring “peace” back to our relationship after an episode like this was to grovel, beg for his forgiveness, promise to do better and come into agreement with his abusive words. 

So that is what I would do. But every time I did that, I sacrificed a piece of my heart and soul. Until eventually I was a walking shell of who I once was.

Poor Advice and No Support

I was desperate to have a healthy marriage. 

I was willing to own every part of me that was broken in order to stay married. 

The problem was I also owned all of his brokenness. 

Unfortunately, some Christian leaders or therapists we sought for help enabled me to continue that. 

I was told to “love him through it,” “model it for him,” “be the example,” “keep praying,” and “just be patient.” 

Most therapists were too afraid to call out any of his narcissism or covert abuse in front of him because they said he just was not capable of hearing it; that he would just end therapy. 

So, in private with me, they would acknowledge this was his diagnosis. 

However, that did me no good because they continued to meet with us as a couple and kept treating us for a “broken marriage” when the root issue was his covert abuse. 

A False Sense of Safety

He was so good at lulling me in. 

Desperate for connection and intimacy with him, I would think “this time” could be the one where I could open up and be vulnerable. 

But he would always eventually use any information I shared in vulnerability with him against me, wielding my fears and insecurities like a sword. 

If I was struggling with how to connect with my son and how to discipline him, he would initially listen, leading me to believe we were partnering to find a solution together. 

Until it served him to use against me: “You’re a terrible mother,” he would say. “He doesn’t feel safe with you. He’s afraid of you. Your children will grow up to hate you. They only tell you they love you because they fear you. You are evil!”  

When I shared my childhood traumas with him, mistakes I had made in my life, regrets I had, they would always be thrown back in my face whenever it served his ego. 

He used them as evidence against me in order to condemn me. 

It was his way of keeping me in a state of shame for my past. I was easier to control and manipulate then. 

The Breaking Point

Until I heard the word ENOUGH! 

It was in my head, out of my body, perhaps a voice from heaven. 

But it was loud and clear, and it spoke to the core of my being. ENOUGH! 

I had lost my dad and could not grieve because my husband was so determined to keep me solely focused on his wants and needs. 

I was exhausted physically, emotionally, and spiritually.

His usual tactics with me stopped working – probably because I was just too tired to entertain his antics. 

How Grief Opened My Eyes

In the rawness of my grief, I finally saw that his brokenness had nothing to do with me. 

I could not pray him into a different being. He would never stop berating me. And my love for him would never be enough. 

His sick value came from making me feel like nothing, from breaking my spirit. 

I had waited longer and worked harder than I ever should have. 

Something in me snapped. 

My eyes were opened for just long enough to see that he was the selfish one and these were his issues. 

I could not keep living this way; I wanted to die. I had sacrificed every part of my self worth.

I had lost my father traumatically over the period of a few months, handling all the nuances of his care and death by myself. 

Not only did my husband never once ask if I was okay or how I was doing, but he got angry and attacked me for being “self-absorbed and selfish” because I was not solely focused on him. 

He did not even stay with me at my father’s memorial because he had a haircut that day and, in his words: “Someone needed to work and look good in this family.” 

Leaving Him

I finally left because staying would have killed me. 

It was enough… enough of the verbal and emotional abuse. 

It was ABUSE. 

Whether anyone saw it, no matter what he told people, the smear campaigns he would launch through emails about how evil I was, how I did not belong on any ministry teams at church because I was so cruel and unloving to him… ENOUGH! 

Breaking Free

I had finally started letting friends into my truth, pulling the curtain down, and sharing the ugliness with them. 

I was breaking free from his isolation. It was how he kept me under his control, telling me I was not allowed to share our “issues” because that would make me an unloving and non-submissive wife. 

Those I shared with spoke truth in love to me and called it what it was – ABUSE. 

Pastors, therapists, mentors, all well-intentioned professionals, struggled with calling it actual abuse. 

Because he didn’t hit me? Because I would engage in the fighting, trying to protect my heart? Because they did not want to condone divorce? 

True, there were no stitches or black eyes to give way to my broken spirit. 

No, the bruising and pain I endured went much deeper than surface wounds. 

It cut me to my core. 

It left me exhausted and paranoid, questioning my value and worth constantly, battling voices in my head that tore me down, the lies he spoke over me for years, which became my sick truth. 

Oh, this kind of abuse is the most insidious because it eats away at you from the inside out and only those you are vulnerable with can see how deeply damaged you are. 

It is covert abuse at its finest.

And its perpetrator maintains a calm, smiling image, playing the victim card, gaslighting you, often a do-gooder to the outside world. 

My husband has joined multiple non-profit organizations where he gets accolades galore from acquaintances on social media, feeding right into his narcissism. 

Ironically (or more expectedly), he is now accusing me in court of perpetrating the very abuse he lobbed at me our whole marriage so he can avoid paying support. 

The Road to Recovery

I left my four-bedroom home two-and-a-half years ago with no job or income, moving my children and me into a single room in someone else’s house. 

Leaving him did not stop him from being an abusive narcissist. But it stopped me from being on the receiving end of his abuse. 

It gave us the space we needed to process and gain perspective. 

It allowed actual healing to begin and growth to happen. 

I had to rewrite eight years of verbal assaults spoken over me. 

I had to practice healthy communication and conflict resolution. I had to heal. None of that could have happened while living with him. 

I had lived in a constant state of survival, never knowing what would set him off and how I would be assaulted. 

My children had learned to live in it too, having to run to their rooms to hide or jump into the car to flee at a moment’s notice. 

Two weeks after we had left, as we sat in the little room we were renting, my then 8-year-old said to me, “I like it here. My stomach doesn’t hurt here.”  

“What do you mean?” I asked, confused. 

“My stomach hurt all the time at our other house, but it doesn’t hurt here. I like it.”

Those words ripped the air from my lungs. 

I had tried so hard to protect my kids from the abuse, to have plans in place when he would start in on me about something because when he started, he would not stop. 

Perhaps because the insults were not being hurled at them, I didn’t see them as victims. 

Perhaps because I had devised escape plans, which we learned to execute quickly and I had tried to make it more “fun” than flight, I thought they were fine. 

In this moment, my 8-year-old destroyed the façade I had been operating in and showed me the ugly truth. I needed to hear that. It kept me from going back to my husband.

Finding Validation and Shedding the Lies

Not long after I left, I reached out to his ex-wife. 

He had painted her out to be everything he had accused me of being, and I realized that perhaps her experience with him was like mine. 

I was still searching for validation that it wasn’t my fault, that I hadn’t somehow caused him to treat me this way. 

My conversations with her brought validation to both of us. 

When we talked, I learned he had done the same things to her. 

He tore her apart and condemned her with the same words he used to condemn me. It was no more her fault than it had been mine. 

I was not crazy. 

I did my fair share of unhealthy things, but the abuse was not my fault. 

It was never, ever my fault.

A Note from MEND

We are so appreciative that Jessica shared this story so that others might put into words their own story

If you would like to share your story, please email us. We would love to offer you a safe space. 

Also, if you know someone whom you think is being emotionally abused, we can offer support and training for you to help them through their situation.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked

{"email":"Email address invalid","url":"Website address invalid","required":"Required field missing"}

Related Post