
Furthermore, in general physical injuries will heal with
little effort from us. Bruises disappear
whether or not you do anything about them.
Emotional wounds, however, are not so effortless. A victim who is made
to feel stupid does not automatically grow out of that; low self-esteem does
not heal itself. A wife who is told by her husband that he never found her
attractive anyway is not likely to slowly regain feelings of attractiveness in
the same way that wound slowly fades.
Another important distinction between the physical and
emotional abuse is that physical abuse usually leaves marks you can see. Even if a victim cannot – or does not wish to
– show them to others, at least s/he can point to something and know that they’re
real. By contrast, an abuser who is not physically violent tries to undermine
the victim’s own confidence; victims are often left wondering what happened, if
they’re crazy, if it’s all their fault – it’s much harder to recognize for what
it is, and that itself makes the situation that much more unbearable.
The pain of emotional abuse runs much deeper. Feeling bad about who you are is much more
painful than a broken arm. As one victim
put it, “The physical abuse makes me hate him; the emotional abuse makes me
hate myself.” Victims time and again
testify that they would rather suffer the beatings than the verbal attacks.
I was reminded of this question and decided to write a post
about during my morning seder. In Erchin
15a the Mishnah discusses a motz shem ra, one who falsely accuses his
wife of not being a virgin on their wedding night. Should it be discovered that he is lying, the
fine is 100 selas. However, notes Rashi,
if a man rapes a woman, he owes only 50 selas. We see,
explains the Mishnah, that ha’omer b’piv chamur min ha’oseh maaseh – one
who injures with his words does more damage than one who does an actual act*. Indeed, Chazal are in agreement that verbal
abuse is worse than physical abuse.
*I
have used verbal and emotional abuse fairly interchangeably here, although
strictly speaking there are differences despite the overlap. For example, abusers can emotionally abuse
their spouse by cheating on them, giving condescending looks, etc., without
saying a thing.
**Obviously,
the damage caused by rape is primarily emotional, not physical. For reasons beyond the scope of this post,
Chazal’s approach to rape is different from our modern one (and not because
Chazal didn’t care about women). Nonetheless, the point still stands that
Chazal are asserting that “the pen is mightier than the sword.”