Anxiety Domestic Violence

What things you can and cannot do to help a friend who’s a victim of domestic violence?
My friend is married and have kids with her husband. She got out of the house, got a restraining order, full custody of the kids and started the divorce papers, and her family helped her pay an apartment. Last week she returned to the house with him.
She doesn’t have family members or friends where she lives. She is also clinically depressed and have an anxiety disorder. What can I do, as a friend, to help her? I don’t live near her state.
I know you cannot help someone who doesn’t want help, but what can I do when she reached out to me? I want to do the right thing as a friend.
What kind of help does California offers to victims of domestic violence? Websites and phone numbers will be highly appreciated.
its ironic.. ACTUALLY my fiance’ had the same scenario. Kids and an abusive husband in california. Then I came into the picture and we fell for each other. She found an out and is filling divorce papers as we speak.
Check this site out:
http://www.legalhandle.com/pro-bono-attorneys-California.html
I hope the best to her, as i know how rough it is having someone you care about be abused. Trust me, if I see the guy who did it to her at the divorce trial, Im going to put his face through a table and show him what its like to be dominated. SEMPER FI!
starting anxiety and panic attacks 1st vid
|
|
Beyond the Tears: A True Survivor’s Story $7.99 Beyond the Tears: A True Survivor’s Story is a memoir that begins with the suicide attempt of an abused and addicted twenty-five-year-old woman. In the aftermath, she commits to counseling to recover from anxiety and depression associated with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). The author engages the reader in her private therapy sessions. The young woman reveals dysfunctional family relations… |
|
|
Parent-Child Interaction Therapy (Issues in Clinical Child Psychology) $37.24 Over the past two decades, Parent-Child Interaction Therapy (PCIT) emerged as a leading-edge method for helping parents improve their children’s disruptive and oppositional behavior. Today, PCIT has a robust evidence base; is used across the country in settings as diverse as hospitals, mental health centers, schools, and mobile clinics; and is rapidly gaining popularity in other parts of the world… |
|
|
I Love a Cop: What Police Families Need to Know $6.80 Will police work change the person you love? Are police marriages destined to fail? What are the chances of your loved one being killed in the line of duty? Separating fact from myth, Dr. Ellen Kirschman answers these and other critical questions in the first comprehensive self-help book created specifically for today’s police families. In information-filled chapters, readers will go behind the sc… |











Leave your response!