Friday, July 31, 2009

STOP BEING SO PASSIVE, PROJECT AN AIR OF CONFIDENCE





Success in life is achieved by recognizing different challenges and adapting and responding to them appropriately. Realistic female personal safety relies on the same abilities. Each assailant and each victim is an individual, the circumstances of an assault will always be different; a guaranteed defense or strategy against a specific attack does not exist. However, if you educate yourself about the nature of the interaction between women and their assailants, you will be better equipped and prepared to stop potential assailants and to respond more effectively to every aspect of a potential attack.

In our training courses all students are simply amazed by how clearly they can protect and defend themselves while under an attack. Some females initially believe that they will not be able to think during the simulated attack (final class exercise that the student uses what she has learned mentally and physically-techniques against a male instructor wearing protective High Gear). Thinking, strategizing and adapting to situations as they change are as important as the physical defense skills. "Self-defense" means sending the right body and verbal signals before the assault/attack. During an assault it means empowering yourself by making decisions, not giving up and know that you can think your way through the experience. You can respond to an assault effectively.

There are two phases of an attack, "targeting" and "testing". The "targeting" stage the assailant searches for his victim. During this phase it is critical for females to possess confident and relaxed body language. Body language communicates how comfortable you feel about yourself. In personal safety/self-defense, effective body language conveys a sense of confidence. If you doubt that body language works, think about it from the assailant's perspective. If you were a man who attacks women, whom would you go after? A woman appearing weak, afraid or powerless or a confident woman? An assailant does not want to pick the confident woman because he attacks to demonstrate power and control. This man is insecure to begin with, he must search for a female whose behavior and/or actions would satisfy his needs. An assailant does not assault females who present a possible challenge. He picks a sure bet. If you convince him that you are not that woman, he will look elsewhere. Unfortunately, he can find a female who will fit his criteria.

Body language clearly communicates two things: first, the female is exhausted and/or too tired to protect herself; second, the female staring at the ground is afraid to look anyone in the eye or she is not aware of her surroundings. Either way she is an easy target.

Females have been raised to be entirely too passive. You have to possess a dare attitude, not cocky but confident. Eliminate the "I'm a victim" and "I'm a wimp" look. Think about how you portray yourself - how you carry yourself. It does not have to give the outward expression of negativity; you can give off an air of confidence. The physical and mental signals that you want to send to everyone, especially a potential assailant is......"Don't even think about it. I am not something to be messed with."

There are ways to walk more safely. Keep your head up, look ahead, drop your shoulders (no hunching). Walk with a relaxed step (not too long or too short) and keep your hands out of your pockets. In your mind compare a female looking down at the ground and the one just described. Who is the easier target? Who appears more vulnerable? These changes in your outward expression may be trivial or minor but they make an enormous difference.

Assailants choose their victims similar to how predators choose their prey. They always go after the sick, isolated, young or old because they are an easy kill. Consider potential assailants as animals that will prey on you if given the opportunity. If you look strong, alert and healthy you have a much better chance of being left alone.




Take care and STAY SAFE!
Anny Jacoby
A Success Survivor
The Realistic Female Self-Defense Company
"Raising female awareness and skills to reduce susceptibility in response to violence."
www.annyjacoby.com
www.realisticfemaleselfdefense.com


If you are in an abusive relationship, you need a plan.
Moving Out, Moving On; authored by Susan Murphy-Milano will guide you through the necessary steps of ending a relationship safely.
You can purchase your copy HERE.


Feathers_by_eclecticdesign (2)For scheduling training, appearances or speaking engagements for Anny, please contact ImaginePublicity.

contact@imaginepublicity.com


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Thursday, July 30, 2009

PICKING UP THE PIECES AFTER RAPE/SEXUAL ASSAULT





Picking up the pieces after rape/sexual assault can be the most challenging and difficult process to recovery. In a blink of an eye one's beliefs are shattered, one's bodily integrity and security is destroyed and you will question most intimate relationships. In spite of all, your life will continue - it's up to you to put the pieces back together. As much as you want to forget the whole ordeal, "it" has become part of you. Your response must be to take care of yourself as how you respond will have a major impact on the rest of your life. How do you get through the process of recovery? Healing is a continual process and journey. You must attempt to reach a point in which you can express your feelings, live with the memories of your experience and integrate them into who you are in a way that you can acknowledge and accept.

It's not possible to "heal" from a rape/sexual assault in the traditional sense of healing. It's not like a fractured bone; set it, cast it and the bone heals. Recovery from rape is more like being cut, a deep cut that requires stitches inside and out. As the cut goes through the healing stages it becomes less visible as layers of skin grow over it, but you will always see the scar. Personally I feel that the word "healing" is far from adequate when dealing with sexual assault. The word "healing" indicates false assumptions and expectations that survivors will be able to put the trauma completely behind them someday. A victim is ashamed, even though IT WASN'T HER FAULT. A victim feels a personal weakness that prohibits "healing". The recovery process after any kind of traumatic abuse and/or assault means that you must accept that you have had an experience that you will carry with you. Through the pain of acceptance you will learn so much about yourself. It can be a reference point for you as you face future challenges.

No two people react the same to a sexual assault, no two people recover or heal in the same manner. If your reaction is different, there is nothing wrong with you. Every individual reacts and responds differently when we experience terror and powerlessness.

There are many common reactions to sexual assault and normal. Many survivors have found it helpful to talk to rape crisis counselors. Counselors are trained to listen and they understand the many feelings that are part of Rape Trauma Syndrome. They will try to help you think through your feelings in the way that is best for you.




Take care and STAY SAFE!
Anny Jacoby
A Success Survivor
The Realistic Female Self-Defense Company
"Raising female awareness and skills to reduce susceptibility in response to violence."
www.annyjacoby.com
www.realisticfemaleselfdefense.com

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Susan Murphy-Milano and Anny Jacoby on BTR, Juror Thirteen 7/29



Join us Tonight on Juror 13's show Hosted By Denny Griffin join Anny Jacoby and Susan Murphy- Milano as we discuss verbal self defense strategies and how to be safe in any environment.

Time: 9:00 PM Eastern 8:00 PM Central 7:00 PM PST

Denny Griffin- and Jurorthirteen.com on Blog talk Radio
Show Link: http://www.blogtalkradio.com/dennisngriffin

Call in with your questions or comments at 646 478-0982
Check out his BLOGS! http://dennisngriffin.wordpress.com/
To check on upcoming shows or comment on Denny's show... Click Here!



N.Y. L.I. - TEACHER, ROTHBARD, A SEXUAL PREDATOR......THE RIPPLE EFFECTS

Last week, Daniel Rothbard, a New York, Long Island (Suffolk County) teacher and camp counselor was accused and charged with felony charges of rape, criminal sexual act and sexual abuse and the misdemeanor, endangering the welfare of a child. Rothbard has pleaded not guilty.

Rothbard posed as a 17-year-old (actual age 28) on MySpace and used text messages to arrange "a meeting" with his alleged 15-year-old female victim. A police officer during a routine
patrol discovered them having sex in a parked car at Westbrook Elementary School in West Islip.

Rothbard is now considered a sexual predator which describes a person seen as obtaining or trying to obtain sexual contact with another person in a predatory manner. A predator hunts down its prey, so the sexual predator is thought to “hunt” for his or her sex partners. People who commit sex crimes, such as rape or child sexual abuse, are commonly referred to as sexual predators.

Due to the fact that I am a parent and advocate, I stand strong in my defense for our children. Understanding of the ripple effect on many individuals (the victim; the family, friends, colleagues and ultimately the predator's family, and same) involved in this crime committed by a sexual predator is imperative. Over time we will look at numerous effects, the ripple effects of sexual abuse.

Today, my first concern is for the child/children. Unfortunately, this young lady and her friends are the first nor will they be the last. Many organizations are fighting strongly for our children and I commend each. Keeping the topic in the forefront, being diligent in our crusade, being harmed with the right information will help to assist our children and families affected by this crime.

Your support of your children will make a huge difference to her/him, the victim who has been sexually assaulted. Begin by letting your child know that you want to listen. It doesn't matter so much as to what you say but how you listen. Find time to be alone with her. Let her talk without interrupting her. Show interest in what she says by sitting close and facing her. Listen intently, look at her to let her know that you are still with her and listening. Let the stalls and silences happen, it's okay. If she needs help to continue talking, try to repeat back to her the things that she said. BELIEVE HER - people rarely make up stories about a sexual assault or the events leading up to the crime. Let her know that you care. This may be the first time any family member has every encountered such an ordeal. Your expression of sympathy is comforting to her.

Reassure her that SHE IS NOT TO BLAME. Blaming questions are not helpful. Instead, "This is a difficult time and we, together will get through it - we are family."

Let her be in control of who knows about the details of the sexual assault. Keep whatever she says between you, the police and the attorney are to be just that. She may not want to go to school until things have settled down - we can't blame her, can we? She may be treated differently by others now. Again, it must be instilled in her that she did not do anything wrong - and that she is the victim.

A ripple effect will be felt by the victim's family - this is an upsetting event for everyone. Some victims reject those who can be most helpful in this time of crisis. You may become rejected as a parent or friend because you are a clear reminder of the assault that she is trying so desperately to forget. Give her the time and space that she needs, she will return. It's important for you to take care of yourself too. But don't ever give up on her. Read her emotions, body language, verbalization - continue to love her unconditionally and allow the healing process to take place. Everyone heals and transitions in their own and time.

I encourage everyone to seek help and guidance from qualified licensed individuals to work through this horrific event in her life. With love and knowing that you know that it wasn't her fault will help tremendously.

One of the many ripple effects.

Thank God for his unconditional love which gives us continual strength.

Take care and STAY SAFE!
Anny Jacoby
A Success Survivor
The Realistic Female Self-Defense Company
"Raising female awareness and skills to reduce susceptibility in response to violence."
www.annyjacoby.com
www.realisticfemaleselfdefense.com

Monday, July 27, 2009

Susan Murphy-Milano and Anny Jacoby-This Week on BlogTalkRadio

(2)The week is scheduled to be a busy one for Anny Jacoby and Susan Murphy-Milano as they have been scheduled to speak on several fronts.

Tuesday, July 28, Anny Jacoby will be speaking to the Women's Roundtable at the Chapel Hill-Carrboro Chamber of Commerce in Chapel Hill, NC. She will be talking to the group about Personal Safety and how to use your instincts to keep you out of danger.(8)

Wednesday, July 29, the weekly BlogTalk Radio show “The Susan Murphy-Milano Show” will feature guests discussing domestic abuse and strategies to safely leave a bad relationship.

Wednesday, July 29, Denny Griffin and Juror 13 welcome both Anny Jacoby and Susan Murphy-Milano, a powerhouse duo, to the show to educate women on the perils of abuse, keeping safe, and using what God has given you to survive a bad relationship.

Friday, July 31, Anny Jacoby will be appearing on “The Kim and Kjel, Crime and Mystery” show talking to women about personal safety issues and staying safe using your mind, body and spirit.

Join in on the discussions using the following links!

The Levi Page Show

The Susan Murphy Milano Show

The Denny Griffin Show

The Kim and Kjel, Crime and Mystery Show

Feathers_by_eclecticdesign (2)For scheduling appearances or speaking engagements for Susan or Anny, please contact ImaginePublicity.

contact@imaginepublicity.com

Sunday, July 26, 2009

N.Y. L.I. TEACHER, DANIEL ROTHBARD DISCOVERED BY OFFICER HAVING SEX IN CAR WITH 15-YEAR-OLD GIRL


Newsday.com, Long Island, NY Crime, July 23, 2009:

A Nassau teacher and camp counselor accused of having sex with a 15-year-old girl used text messages and the social networking site MySpace to arrange a meeting with his alleged victim, Suffolk authorities said Wednesday.

The online relationship between Daniel Rothbard, 28, of Merrick, and the girl began several days before a police officer discovered them Tuesday having sex in a parked car, according to Det. Lt. Matt Sullivan of the Third Precinct.

Using the screen name "DJ" or "D to the J" and claiming to be 17 years old, Rothbard also communicated online with the girl's friends. "He was asking them online for sex," Sullivan said.

Rothbard is a math teacher at the Willow Road Elementary School in Franklin Square, where he has been employed for four years, according to a statement from Elizabeth Lison, superintendent of Valley Stream Union Free School District 13. The district is consulting with legal counsel regarding his employment, she said.

Rothbard also worked as a summer counselor for about 15 years at Rolling River Day School and Camp in East Rockaway.

"We are all in shock - his closest friends, his family. He has a lot of close friends here and it is amazing that not one of them had an inkling," said director Mark Goodman. The camp has fired him and sent letters to families recommending they ask their children whether anyone asked them "to keep a secret," Goodman said. "We certainly have no reason to think that anything happened at camp."

Rothbard was having sex with the 15-year-old about 8:25 p.m. Tuesday when the officer found the pair outside Westbrook Elementary School in West Islip, according to a Suffolk prosecutor. Police believe Rothbard and the girl met for the first time Tuesday.

"We believe there is every possibility that there are other victims," Sullivan said.

Rothbard pleaded not guilty in First District Court, Central Islip, to felony charges of rape, criminal sexual act and sexual abuse, as well as misdemeanor endangering the welfare of a child.

His attorney, Todd Greenberg of Forest Hills, said Rothbard is married and has no criminal record. "We know him as a very decent and hardworking young man," Greenberg said.

District Court Judge Salvatore Alamia held Rothbard on $5,000 cash bail or bond. Rothbard's mother stood up at the arraignment in a show of support for her son. She declined, through her son's attorney, to speak to a reporter.

Christina Hernandez

Realated links:
UPI.com
WPIX.com
WCBSTV


What the hell is wrong with this poor excuse of a man?! and every other man that commits this type of crime?!

Hi
s sad, puppy dog eyes and face do not cut it. This SOB had access to so many young ladies holding two jobs, a teacher and a camp counselor. OH MY GOD! He was caught "red handed" by the officer and pleads "not guilty" - you have got to be kidding me. He is SCUM!

HE IS NOT A "DESCENT AND HARDWORKING YOUNG MAN"! He is a predator, preying on innocent young females and a child molester! How much more does this community and the families have to deal with? If he was so "hardworking and descent" he wouldn't have had time to get online and lure innocent children into his filth of a world. He knew exactly what he was doing.

And, I am shocked with the court system to allow him to walk out on "cash bail/bond" since they k
now that he approached other young ladies online and that the police believe that there are other victims! How could they set his bail/bond so damn low? Somebody better be making sure that he is not a flight risk.

Parents - please sit down calmly with your child if they have had any access to this DOG what-so-ever. Let you child know that you support her and that you are concerned for her safety. If she was lured, remember he lied, he deceived your daughters. Explain how imperative it is for this man to never assault or harm another innocent child again. And, that
if there was any contact that it wasn't her fault. She has been victimized. She was lured by a pitiful excuse for a man. Support your child with unconditional love. There are counselors at your local Rape Crisis Center that can assist your daughter and your families.

This type of man should be locked up and the key thrown away. Let Bubba take care of him, he doesn't even deserve "soap".

My heart goes out to his wife (God love her) and his family. This is his issue, not yours; unfortunately you have been victimized as well. You will all need time to process and begin your healing process. Reach out for support as well.

Mr. Rothbard (although you do not deserve to be addressed with any respect) you have shamed your wife, family, friends, colleagues and community. You cannot be allowed to "get away" with yo
ur actions. You have touched many innocent lives that will be scarred forever. It makes all parents sick to their stomach to think that we send our children to school and to camp to learn and to be children - you have taken away their innocence.

Parents - this is why I am on a mission to reach as many young ladies as humanly possible. Our young people must be more educated about awareness, warning signs/red flags and ultimately
how they can protect and defend themselves mentally, emotionally, spiritually and physically in the event of an altercation.

If there is anything that we can do to assist please do not hesitate to contact us.


Take care and be strong. STAY SAFE!
Anny Jacoby
A Success Survivor
The Realisitic Female Self-Defense Company
"Raising female awareness and skills to reduce susceptibility in response to violence."
www.annyjacoby.com
www.realisticfemaleselfdefense.com

Friday, July 24, 2009

STOP FOLLOWING ME!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!


You and your friend (you have taken our personal safety training but your friend hasn't for some reason) were walking in a very crowded area of town. You noticed that a man was following you but he always remained about five feet behind you. A few moments later, you realize that he had a bicycle chain and was wrapping it around his hands. You also realize that you were walking away from the busy streets full of people. You immediately grabbed your friend and walked to the nearest open populated building - a restaurant. Your friend had no idea that the man was behind both of you.

You always ride the subway home from work. Instead of taking the steps you take the elevator up to the main street. You noticed a couple of nights in a row that you saw the same man every time you got off of the elevator and he followed you for a few blocks. On the third night, he followed you again, but this time you abruptly turned around, faced him and screamed, "STOP FOLLOWING ME RIGHT NOW!" He ran away.

Although it is frightening, the good news is that assertive verbal self-defense works very effectively. The combination of being aware of your surroundings and then facing the person may be all that you have to do. It's better to escape without the verbal confrontation and sometimes you need it.

BE SAFE AND SMART!



Take care and STAY SAFE!
Anny Jacoby
A Success Survivor
"Raising female awareness and skills to reduce susceptibility in response to violence."
www.annyjacoby.com
www.realisiticfemaleselfdefense.com



If you are in an abusive relationship, you need a plan.

Moving Out, Moving On; authored by Susan Murphy-Milano will guide you through the necessary steps of ending a relationship safely.

You can purchase your copy
HERE.

Thursday, July 23, 2009

STOP FOLLOWING ME!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!


You and your friend (you have taken our personal safety training but your friend hasn't for some reason) were walking in a very crowded area of town. You noticed that a man was following you but he always remained about five feet behind you. A few moments later, you realize that he had a bicycle chain and was wrapping it around his hands. You also realize that you were walking away from the busy streets full of people. You immediately grabbed your friend and walked to the nearest open populated building - a restaurant. Your friend had no idea that the man was behind both of you.

You always ride the subway home from work. Instead of taking the steps you take the elevator up to the main street. You noticed a couple of nights in a row that you saw the same man every time you got off of the elevator and he followed you for a few blocks. On the third night, he followed you again, but this time you abruptly turned around, faced him and screamed, "STOP FOLLOWING ME RIGHT NOW!" He ran away.

Although it is frightening, the good news is that assertive verbal self-defense works very effectively. The combination of being aware of your surroundings and then facing the person may be all that you have to do. It's better to escape without the verbal confrontation and sometimes you need it.

BE SAFE AND SMART!



Take care and STAY SAFE!
Anny Jacoby
A Success Survivor
"Raising female awareness and skills to reduce susceptibility in response to violence."
www.annyjacoby.com
www.realisiticfemaleselfdefense.com



If you are in an abusive relationship, you need a plan.

Moving Out, Moving On; authored by Susan Murphy-Milano will guide you through the necessary steps of ending a relationship safely.

You can purchase your copy
HERE.

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

PERSONAL SAFETY/SELF-DEFENSE IS NOT USED TO FIGHT........IT'S USED TO DEFEND



No two assaults, threatening situations are identical. No two experiences of abuse or assault are the same. That is why it is imperative for personal safety/self-defense courses to include and offer within their program scenario based training. Instructors should role play with the students to incorporate their worse fears of attacks.
Personal Safety/self-defense is NOT used to fight; it's used to defend. An attack is not a ten round boxing fight or a wrestling match; personal safety/self-defense techniques have been developed for the sole purpose of "incapacitating your attacker long enough for you to escape".

THE ELEMENT OF SURPRISE!
Again, remember there are no guarantees. No personal safety/self-defense instructor can or will guarantee 100% that their style will let you escape every dangerous situation. However, you can be guaranteed that there are techniques that work. You can undermine an attacker's intimidation with the element of surprise.

An attack (ambush) usually happens without warning - you have zero seconds to prepare. There is nothing leading up to the attack (ambush) unlike in an abusive relationship (Power and Control, verbal, emotional abuse). Any type of attack makes a victim panic, feel fearful and she will become frozen in fear and hysterical. An assailant expects his victim to response by screaming or flailing about. While screaming works in drawing attention, it won't help if there isn't anyone around to listen. Kicking, punching or scratching without having a target in mind only wastes energy and valuable time.

You must turn the tables on an assailant. The best thing to do if you are attacked is to remain calm by controlling your fear. Instead of letting the panic overwhelm you to the point that you freeze, understand that what is happening is real and that you have no choice but to defend yourself. If you are in fear for your life, you have every right to protect and defend yourself. You can fight back or become another victim of crime. By striking back at an opportune time, you will throw an assailant off-guard because he does not expect you to know how to defend yourself. He does expect you to scream, beg, cry and cower. When you do strike in self-defense, his reaction time immediately slows down significantly.

You make him vulnerable and you buy yourself time to get away. Run like HELL in the opposite direction!



Take care and STAY SAFE!
Anny Jacoby
A Success Survivor
"Raising female awareness and skills to reduce susceptibility in response to violence."

Sunday, July 19, 2009

LOVE IS RESPECT.....A RISE IN EFFORTS TO SPOT ABUSE IN YOUTH DATING




Dating violence is defined by the United States Department of Justice as: “the perpetration or threat of an act of violence by at least one member of an unmarried couple on the other member within the context of dating or courtship.” Dating violence is the physical, emotional and/or verbal abuse of one partner by the other partner in a current or former dating relationship.


Abusive behavior is any act carried out by one partner aimed at hurting or controlling the other. Dating violence happens in male/female relationships as well as in lesbian and gay relationships.


A violent relationship means more than being hit by the person who claims to love or care about you. Violence is about power and control. When someone uses abuse and violence against you, it is always part of a larger pattern to try and control you.
Even though most people think that violence in relationships happens only between married persons, the same kind of violence also happens between people who are dating regardless of their sexual orientation. Even if you are not being hurt physically, verbal and emotional abuse are just as painful and often lead to physical violence.


A Rise in Efforts to Spot Abuse in Youth Dating

She was 17 when she met her boyfriend, and 20 when she died at his hands. In between, Heather Norris tried several times to leave the relationship, which was fraught with control and abuse, before she was killed — stabbed, dismembered and discarded in trash bags.

Her death in 2007 in Indianapolis is one of several stemming from abuse in teenage dating relationships that have spurred states and communities to search for new ways to impress on adolescents — and their parents and teachers — the warning signs of dangerous dating behavior and what actions are not acceptable or healthy.

Texas recently adopted a law that requires school districts to define dating violence in school safety codes, after the 2003 stabbing death of Ortralla Mosley, 15, in a hallway of her Austin high school and the shooting death of Jennifer Ann Crecente, 18, two years ago. Rhode Island in 2007 adopted the Lindsay Ann Burke Act — prompted by the murder of a young woman by a former boyfriend — requiring school districts to teach students in grades 7 through 12 about dating abuse.

New York recently expanded its domestic violence law to allow victims, including teenagers in dating relationships, to obtain a restraining order against an abuser in family court rather than having to seek help from the criminal justice system. Legislators were moved to act after a survey by the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene showed that dating violence had risen by more than 40 percent since 1999, when the department began asking students about the problem.

Although there are no definitive national studies on the prevalence of abuse in adolescent relationships, public health research indicates that the rate of such abusive relationships has hovered around 10 percent. Experts say the abuse appears to be increasing as more harassment, name-calling and ridicule takes place among teenagers on the Internet and by cellphone.

“We are identifying teen dating abuse and violence more than ever,” said Dr. Elizabeth Miller, an assistant professor of pediatrics at the School of Medicine at the University of California, Davis, who began doing research on abuse in teenage dating relationships nearly a decade ago.

Dr. Miller cited a survey last year of children ages 11 to 14 by Liz Claiborne Inc., a clothing retailer that finances teenage dating research, in which a quarter of the 1,000 respondents said they had been called names, harassed or ridiculed by their romantic partner by phone call or text message, often between midnight and 5 a.m., when their parents are sleeping.

Such behavior often falls under the radar of parents, teachers and counselors because adolescents are too embarrassed to admit they are being mistreated.

They can seek help from the National Teen Dating Abuse Helpline, where calls and hits to its Web site, loveisrespect.org, doubled in November over the previous month. Awareness of the help line has grown since it was started in early 2007.

Most of the calls come from girls, often in response to relentless texting or efforts by boys to dictate what they do or wear.

While texting that runs to 200 or 300 messages a day can be a prelude to abusive behavior, William S. Pollack, a Harvard University psychologist and the author of “Real Boys” (1998) and “Real Boys’ Voices” (2000) about boys and masculinity, said his research had found that “usually when adolescent boys get involved with girls, they fall into the societal model which we call ‘macho,’ where they need to show they are the ones in control.”

Actions like nonstop texting or phoning often are efforts “to gain control back,” said Dr. Pollack, who is the director of the Center for Men and Young Men at McLean Hospital in Belmont, Mass.

Reacting to the killings of Heather Norris and other girls by their romantic partners, Indianapolis recently started a program to train police officers in public schools to recognize the early signs of abuse in relationships. Last month, a group of Indianapolis organizations won a $1 million grant from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation to help schools tackle the issue, part of $18 million in grants to 10 communities to help break patterns where children exposed to violence at home repeat it in their adult relationships.

The foundation, based in Princeton, N.J., decided to fund preventive efforts based on research, including from the Centers of Disease Control and Prevention. In the C.D.C.’s 2007 survey of 15,000 adolescents, 10 percent reported physical abuse like being hit or slapped by a romantic partner. Nearly 8 percent of teenagers in the survey said they were forced to have sexual intercourse.

Dating abuse victims, the center found, are more likely to engage in binge drinking, suicide attempts, physical fights and sexual activity. And the rates of drug, alcohol and tobacco use are more than twice as high in abused girls as in other girls the same age.

“Few adolescents understand what a healthy relationship looks like,” Dr. Miller said.

Adolescents often mistake the excessive attention of boys as an expression of love, she said.

Kayla Brown, 18, was among them. At first, her high school boyfriend made a great impression last year when he “called my mother to introduce himself,” said Ms. Brown, a senior at an Indianapolis charter school.

Then he began “calling me every hour to see where I was and what I was doing,” she said. Finally, during an argument he slammed a chair into a cafeteria table and raised his fist.

She confided in her mother, who has suffered domestic violence, and followed her advice to break off the relationship. But it was not easy. For months, she had friends accompany her in the school hallways, even to the bathroom, to make sure she was not alone with him.

Deborah Norris, Heather Norris’s mother, said her daughter’s relationship with Joshua Bean also began innocuously but rapidly became threatening.

“When he would call or text her, she had to answer right away or there was trouble,” Ms. Norris said. “She became quiet and withdrawn around him, and that wasn’t like her.”

“She hadn’t seen him in four months,” she added, “and was getting ready to go to court because she had filed battery charges against him.”

Mr. Bean was convicted in Heather’s killing last September.

Ms. Norris, an accident investigator for the police, said, “What happened to Heather really opened the eyes of police, the people I work with, who used to look at domestic violence differently,” seeing it as a family matter.

What happened to Heather before she was killed is common in abusive relationships, said Stephanie Berry, the manager of community health at Clarian Health, a network of Indiana hospitals, which is leading the program being financed by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.

Many teenagers, Ms. Berry said, “see the jealousy and protectiveness as ‘Oh, he loves me so much.’ Girls make excuses for it and don’t realize it’s not about love, but it’s about controlling you as a possession.”

For Ms. Berry, 43, the issue is personal. Her high school boyfriend “wanted a commitment right away, which was very flattering,” she said. But she soon found herself “walking on eggshells,” she said.

Even after he went to college, she said, the relationship was so “addictive” that she kept returning — until it “turned violent and he beat me up when I was 21.”

A study, published last July in The Archives of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine, suggests that such behavior is not unusual. The study found that more than one-third of the 920 students questioned were victims of emotional and physical abuse by romantic partners before they started college.

The Indianapolis program will train older teenagers as mentors and teachers, coaches and parents as “influencers” who will talk to sixth, seventh and eighth graders about what is acceptable behavior in dating.

In her grief, Ms. Norris created heathersvoice.net to help girls learn when things are amiss in a relationship. “Heather always thought she could change people,” she said, “so I guess I’m trying to follow what she wanted.”


Teen Dating and Abuse Stats:

  • Teens are at higher risk of intimate partner abuse when comparing to adults.
  • Females ages 16-24 are more vulnerable to intimate partner violence than any other age group - at a rate of almost triple the national average.
  • Among female victims of intimate partner violence, a current boyfriend or former boyfriend or girlfriend victimized 94 percent of those between the ages of 16-19.
  • Between 1993 and 1999, 22% of all homicides against females ages 16019 were committed.
  • Half of the reported date rapes occur among teenagers.
  • Intimate partner violence among adolescents is associated with increased risk of substance use, unhealthy weight control behaviors, sexual risk behaviors, pregnancy, and suicide.
  • 50% of teens know someone who has been physically, sexually or verbally abused in a dating relationship.
  • 45% of girls know a friend or peer who has been pressured into either intercourse or oral sex.
  • 1 in 3 teens reports knowing a friend or peer who has been hit, punched, kicked, slapped or physically hurt by their dating partner.
  • One 33% of teens who were in abusive relationship ever told anyone about the abuse.
  • Among 13-18 year old teens who have been in a relationship, 15% said they've had a partner hit, slap or push them. 4% of teens agreed that tit's okay for someone to hit their partner if they really did something wrong or embarrassing. More Hispanic teens (135) reported that hitting a partner was permissible.
  • 30% of 13-18 year old teens reported worrying about their personal physical safety in a relationship.
  • 20% of 13-18 years old teens who have been in a serious relationship have been hit, slapped or pushed by a boyfriend or girlfriend

If you or a friend is involved in an abusive relationship please seek help. Talk with your parents, get the facts; call the crisis hotline to the agency in your county, or call the National Teen Dating Hotline, 1-866-331-9474 or visit their website, loveisrespect.org and speak to a Peer Advocate via online chat.

It's not too late, YOU ARE WORTH IT!

Take care and STAY SAFE!
Anny Jacoby
A Success Survivor
The Realistic Female Self-Defense Company
"Raising female awareness and skills to reduce susceptibility in response to violence."

www.annyjacoby.com
www.realisticfemaleselfdefense.com



If you are in an abusive relationship, you need a plan.

Moving Out, Moving On; authored by Susan Murphy-Milano will guide you through the necessary steps of ending a relationship safely.

You can purchase your copy HERE.

Saturday, July 18, 2009

WHAT DO YOU LOOK LIKE?


Without saying a word, we communicate volumes. Our body language reveals much about what we are thinking and feeling.

I'm not asking for a physical description. What I am asking is how do you carry yourself? What is your posture like? Slump shoulders? When you walk do you look down instead of looking straight ahead and around your area/environment?

Studies have shown that communication between two people consists less of the actual verbal exchange and more of the way what your body communicates. Research indicates that 7% of a conversation is represented by verbal communication; 38% of a conversation is represented by the tone, volume and pitch of one's voice; and 55% of a conversation is represented by facial expressions and body language.

Your body language can portray one of two things for you; helps to avoid becoming an assailant's next target or it can entice him and make you his next victim. You don't go changing a part of your personality but rather how you present yourself is exactly what is used to figure you out. Your body language indicates if you are a quick prey.

This information is not to make you paranoid or nervous; however, your body language is just another tool that can be used to heighten your level of awareness, measure your safety barrier (zone) and it defines outwardly the type of target you can be.

To determine how your body is interpreted ask your friends and family who know you very well as they will give you unbiased input. Make note of what they reveal as our demeanor is typically unconscious and being aware of how we present ourselves helps us to come across in a better way. Now that you have this insight from observation what do you do with it? Even though our body language and appearance may fluctuate with our moods, we do have a standard disposition during most of the time.

Here are a few examples of positive and negative images we may project.

Positive -
  • Confident. Do you have good posture? Do you hold your shoulders back, chest out, stomach in and back straight? Do you walk with a purpose - as if you have a clear destination in mind (even if you don't)? Having a confident attitude speaks volumes.
  • Self-assured. Do you smile regularly and hold your head up high? Do you have a look on your face that reflects that you "know", not one of confusion or doubt?
  • Aware. Are you constantly looking around at your surroundings, noticing where you are and what is happening around you? Assailants do not generally prey on people who are paying attention.
Negative -
  • Afraid. Do you look worried or scared? Do you look as though you are lost and have not idea of how to get from point A to point B?
  • Distracted or inattentive. Do you look as though you are in your own little world, oblivious to your surroundings? Even by bumping into someone accidentally is indicative that your thoughts are distracted.
  • Under the influence. Are you eyes bloodshot and droopy? Is your speech slurred, posture sloppy and generally out of it?
  • Insecure. Are your arms crossed when you walk (like when you are really cold)? Are your eyes focused everywhere except straight ahead?
Try this........make a conscious effort. When you are out and about during your daily routine, practice positive body language. Focus on good posture and being aware of your environment. Ask your friend and family members to tell you if they notice a difference in a few weeks. You need to know this so that you become conscious of your outward appearance in public.


Take care and STAY SAFE!
Anny Jacoby
A Success Survivor
"Raising female awareness and skills to reduce susceptibility in response to violence."
www.annyjacoby.com
www.realisticfemaleselfdefense.com


If you are in an abusive relationship, you need a plan.

Moving Out, Moving On; authored by Susan Murphy-Milano will guide you through the necessary steps of ending a relationship safely.

You can purchase your copy HERE.

Thursday, July 16, 2009

New Policy Permits Asylum for Battered Women - The New York Times

New Policy Permits Asylum for Battered Women

Published: July 15, 2009

http://tinyurl.com/pupnbn

The Obama administration has opened the way for foreign women who are victims of severe domestic beatings and sexual abuse to receive asylum in the United States. The action reverses a Bush administration stance in a protracted and passionate legal battle over the possibilities for battered women to become refugees.

In addition to meeting other strict conditions for asylum, abused women will need to show that they are treated by their abuser as subordinates and little better than property, according to an immigration court filing by the administration, and that domestic abuse is widely tolerated in their country. They must show that they could not find protection from institutions at home or by moving to another place within their own country.

The administration laid out its position in an immigration appeals court filing in the case of a woman from Mexico who requested asylum, saying she feared she would be murdered by her common-law husband there. According to court documents filed in San Francisco, the man repeatedly raped her at gunpoint, held her captive, stole from her and at one point tried to burn her alive when he learned she was pregnant.

The government submitted its legal brief in April, but the woman only recently gave her consent for the confidential case documents to be disclosed to The New York Times. The government has marked a clear, although narrow, pathway for battered women seeking asylum, lawyers said, after 13 years of tangled court arguments, including resistance from the Bush administration to recognize any of those claims.

Moving cautiously, the Department of Homeland Security did not immediately recommend asylum for the Mexican woman, who is identified in the court papers only by her initials as L.R. But the department, in the unusual submission written by senior government lawyers, concluded in plain terms that “it is possible” that the Mexican woman “and other applicants who have experienced domestic violence could qualify for asylum.”

As recently as last year, Bush administration lawyers had argued in the same case that in spite of her husband’s brutality, L.R. and other battered women could not meet the standards of American asylum law.

“This really opens the door to the protection of women who have suffered these kinds of violations,” said Karen Musalo, a professor who is director of the Center for Gender and Refugee Studies at the University of California Hastings College of the Law in San Francisco. Professor Musalo has represented other abused women seeking asylum and recently took up the case of L.R.

The Obama administration’s position caps a legal odyssey for foreign women seeking protection in the United States from domestic abuse that began in 1996 when a Guatemalan woman named Rody Alvarado was granted asylum by an immigration court, based on her account of repeated beatings by her husband. Three years later, an immigration appeals court overturned Ms. Alvarado’s asylum, saying she was not part of any persecuted group under American law.

Since then Ms. Alvarado’s case has stalled as successive administrations debated the issue, with immigration officials reluctant to open a floodgate of asylum petitions from battered women across the globe. During the Clinton administration, Attorney General Janet Reno proposed regulations to clarify the matter, but they have never gone into effect. In a briefing paper in 2004, lawyers for the Department of Homeland Security raised the possibility of asylum for victims of domestic violence, but the Bush administration never put that into practice in immigration court, Professor Musalo said.

Now Homeland Security officials say they are returning to views the department put forward in 2004, refining them to draw conditions sufficiently narrow that battered women would prevail in only a limited number cases.

“Although each case is highly fact-dependent and requires scrutiny of the specific threat an applicant faces,” said Matt Chandler, a spokesman for the Department of Homeland Security, “the department continues to view domestic violence as a possible basis for asylum in the United States.” He said officials hoped to complete regulations governing the complex cases.

The new policy does not involve women fleeing genital mutilation.

Any applicant for asylum or refugee status in the United States must demonstrate a “well-founded fear of persecution” because of race, religion, nationality, political opinion or “membership in a particular social group.” The extended legal argument has been whether abused women could be part of any social group that would be eligible under those terms. Last year, 22,930 people won asylum in this country fleeing all types of persecution; the number has been decreasing in recent years.

Because asylum cases are confidential, there is no way of knowing how many applications by battered women have been denied or held up over the last decade. The issue is further complicated by the peculiarities of the United States immigration system, in which asylum cases are heard in courts that are not part of the federal judiciary, but are run by an agency of the Justice Department, with Homeland Security officials representing the government.

The government has not disputed the painful history that L.R., now 42, recounts in a court declaration. The man who became her tormentor first assaulted her when she was a teenager and he was a physical education coach, 14 years her senior, at a high school in the Mexican state of Guanajuato. He and his family were regarded as wealthy and influential because they owned a restaurant in town, L.R. said.

Over the years, he made her live with him, and forced her to have sex with him by putting a gun or a machete to her head, by breaking her nose and by threatening to kill the small children of her sister. Once when she became pregnant, she said, she barely escaped alive after he had poured kerosene on the bed where she was sleeping and ignited it. He stole the salary she earned as a teacher and later sold her teacher’s license.

Local police dismissed her reports of violence as “a private matter,” the court documents said, and a judge she turned to for help tried to seduce her.

“In Mexico, men believe they have a right to abuse their women because they are like a possession,” she said. With three children born from her involuntary sex with the man, who never married her, she fled to California in 2004.

An immigration judge denied her asylum claim in 2006. In its new filing, the government urged that L.R.’s case be sent back to the immigration court for further review, suggesting she might still succeed. But the government also injected a caveat, insisting that “this does not mean that every victim of domestic violence would be eligible for asylum.”

Wednesday, July 15, 2009

North Carolina Coalition Against Sexual Assault........HB 1342 PASSES!


North Carolina Coalition Against Sexual Assault

HB 1342 PASSES!
Free Medical Exam-Victims of Rape/Sex Offenses

http://tinyurl.com/kjm6t9

We did it!

We are pleased to announce that House Bill 1342 passed and is on its way to the Governor for her signature! This bill would not have passed without your support - thank you very much for your calls, letters and emails!

HB 1342 repeals G.S. 143B-480.2 and amends GS 143B-480.1 as follows:
Assistance Program for Victims of Rape and Sex Offenses
• Clarifies that the RVAP pays for the cost of a forensic medical examination for victims of sexual assault or attempted sexual assault.
• Prohibits the medical facility or medical professional from (1) billing victims, their insurance, Medicaid, Medicare, or any other collateral source for the examination and (2) seeking reimbursement from the program after one year from the date of the exam.
• Eliminates the requirement that a victim report to law enforcement.
• Removes the condition that a victim report to a hospital or medical facility within 72 hours.
• Modifies the RVAP payment schedule to permit payment to a physician or SANE nurse of $350, payment of a hospital or facility fee of $250, and payment of other expenses deemed eligible (was an ambulance fee) of $200.

Please take a moment to thank your legislator if he/she voted in support of the bill.
Congratulations and thank you again for your help in getting this bill passed!




Take care and STAY SAFE!
Anny Jacoby
A Success Survivor
"Raising female awareness and skills to reduce susceptibility in response to violence."
www.annyjacoby.com
www.realisticfemaleselfdefense.com




If you are in an abusive relationship, you need a plan.

Moving Out, Moving On; authored by Susan Murphy-Milano will guide you through the necessary steps of ending a relationship safely.

You can purchase your copy HERE.







National Coalition Against Domestic Violence
National Coalition Against Sexual Assault

Tuesday, July 14, 2009

A Woman's Self-Worth......FIGHT FOR IT, DAMN IT!




Self-Worth; this is a word that is so much easier to say and spell then it is to feel!



Why do so many women feel that they have no self-worth? How did they lose it? Is it because of the way the world has portrayed the perfect woman today? Is it because someone took it from them? Is that the void some fill by over eating? Did their partner breach a trust? Does their partner demean them with insults about how they look? Did their partner admire other women? Did they grow up being ridiculed by a family member? Have they been suffering from a controlling illness? Were they bullied and criticized through their school years? Were they sexually abused as a child? Were they laughed at in a moment of vulnerability? Were they ever raped or abused?

All of these experiences play a part of pouring a woman's self-worth right down the toilet. The people causing these kind of negative actions are totally responsible for destroying and tearing down a woman's worth. To destroy or tear down a woman's self-worth
is one of the cruelest ways to treat a human being. It is a no win situation for that woman. They cannot fight back. They are being attacked blindfolded. Humiliation has succeeded - the battle is won. Anyone can win against innocence. When the battle turns around is when the true win begins. A true win is when the person who has lost her self-worth stands up and takes the control back.

For those that have been through a battle and are struggling or may have struggled to just get up on an elbow, feel empty inside and so alone that you wonder why you even get up in the morning.................YOU CAN AND WILL BEAT THIS!

You are not responsible for falling or losing the battle. But YOU ARE TOTALLY responsible for getting back up. It is you that has to pull it together. You need to go back as far as you can in your mind that puts a smile on your face. If you can't then think of someone that you know that is hurtin
g more deeply than yourself and use that as your motivation. Go there in your mind. Use these thoughts to give you reason to get up, dust yourself off and pull yourself together.
YOUR SELF-WORTH IS WORTH FIGHTING FOR.
You are as strong as your greatest strength. You will always be stronger than your greatest weaknesses. Those weaknesses will never win again your strengths..........never!

Yes, you have been hurt, disappointed, and raped of one of your most sacred emotions, SELF-WORTH. NOW YOU WANT IT BACK, SO TAKE IT BACK DAMN IT! It is right inside of you. You just have to bury it under all of your dirty laundry. You can continue to feel empty, use drugs, alcohol or even food to fill that void inside of you. You can miss out on life because you are forgetting to fight and it is so much easier to have a pity party. You can worry about if you try to gain back your self-worth that you will fail and feel even more lonely. You may fail the first try, second or third. You feel that it's all hopeless. If you give into that feeling, then you are truly letting yourself down as well others that love and care for you. YOU have now become responsible for losing your chance at regaining your self-worth. You are allowing whatever it was that tore you apart in the first place to take control of all of you and your soul. You are allowing a memory to defeat you. There is no person there, just a thought. A memory that you are allowing to ruin what little time you have on this earth. Why are you doing this? You know that you can stop it. You know how! Pick yourself up, dust yourself off; you must move onto HABITS - positive habits of thinking. You must reconstruct your thought patterns to think WIN, not to LOSE. IMMEDIATELY REMOVE THE WORDS, "GIVE UP" FROM YOUR VOCABULARY and replace them with "NEVER GIVE UP!". You must make a new commitment to yourself, the only one that you can reach out and touch!

The strength of negative thinking is overwhelming and controlling in itself. I have felt it's power many, many times. Honestly, to the point that I could hardly feel myself breath. That was when I knew that I, and only I could stop it and take back the control of my destiny. You must look inside of yourself and dig for the real you. Don't dig for the you that has been scarred, wounded or hurt but the you that can smile and laugh and
appreciate all of the good things in life. If you will just open your positive side and allow the great things to reach you the feeling will be truly uplifting. The more positive thoughts that you fill yourself with, the less negative thoughts can't survive. You must also be honest with your bad habits, what they are and where they are taking you. Identify them and how they are bringing you down, instead of up. The bad habits that you have allowed to run your life. Now, as you have invited them in, you will un-invite them. And, say no to abusing drugs, alcohol and yes FOOD!

To strengthen the mental you, you must strengthen the physical you. I am not referring to becoming a body builder or a full bore athlete. I simply mean a healthier you, A YOU THAT YOU WANT TO BE!

Please remember, whatever it was that brought you down in yourself is in the past.
If you continue to allow
the pain to live inside of you, you will suffer.
The past is over and there is no suffering on your part that will erase it.
Get on with life.
Reach deep inside of yourself and bring back the who you are. Bring back the person you can smile in the mirror.
Bring back the person you talk to all of the time.
Bring back the person that you were meant to be.
Bring back you, and then..............YOU WILL HAVE YOUR SELF-WORTH BACK!



Please join me with Susan Murphy-Milano as we discuss:

A Woman's Self Worth......Fight For It, Damn It!
Live On The Susan Murphy Milano Show


The Susan Murphy Milano Show

Date : Wednesday, 7/15/2009



Time: 4:00 PM EST 3:00 PM CST 1:00 PM PST

Call-in Number: (347) 326-9337

Take care and STAY SAFE!
Anny Jacoby
A Success Survivor
The Realistic Female Self-Defense Company
"Raising female awareness and skills to reduce susceptibility in response to violence."
www.annyjacoby.com
www.realisticfemaleselfdefense.com




If you are in an abusive relationship, you need a plan.


Moving Out, Moving On; authored by Susan Murphy-Milano will guide you through the necessary steps of ending a relationship safely.

You can purchase your copy HERE.







National Coalition Against Domestic Violence
National Coalition Against Sexual Assault