10 steps from men recovering from domestic abuse and violence

🛠️ THE 10 STEPS FOR MEN RECOVERING FROM DOMESTIC ABUSE

Not a replacement for therapy or legal advice — but a grounded framework to rebuild your life.


1. Acknowledge what happened. No sugarcoating.

“She hit me.”
“She used my papers against me.”
“She made me question my sanity.”

Call it what it is: abuse. Not a mistake. Not a bad day. Abuse.


2. Break the isolation.

Abusers isolate you. You rebuild by connecting — even quietly at first.

  • Join online survivor forums (yes, for men)

  • Talk to one person you trust

  • Follow real accounts sharing this truth


3. Secure your safety.

Physical, legal, emotional. Whatever that means for you.

  • Separate housing

  • Lock down finances

  • Secure documents

  • Get a legal consult (especially for VAWA or custody)


4. Document everything.

Start tracking what happened and when. Create your paper trail.

  • Texts, emails, voicemails

  • Timeline of events

  • Police reports (if available)

Documentation is power, especially in legal systems that ignore men.


5. Confront the shame — and drop it.

You’re not weak for staying.
You’re not broken for being hurt.
You were groomed to protect her — now protect yourself.


6. Learn how abuse works.

Knowledge is armor. Learn:

  • Gaslighting

  • Coercive control

  • Financial abuse

  • Trauma bonding

The more you understand, the faster you detach emotionally.


7. Grieve the fantasy.

You weren’t just losing a partner — you were losing the illusion of love.

Let yourself grieve what you thought it could be. That’s real.


8. Rebuild identity.

She tore you down. Now you define who you are:

  • Get back into things she discouraged

  • Find your voice again

  • Take small risks to take back confidence


9. Set masculine boundaries.

Not walls — boundaries. Real, grounded, respectful.

  • “I won’t tolerate being lied to.”

  • “If someone threatens me legally, they’re out of my life.”

  • “I decide who has access to me.”


10. Use your pain for purpose.

Surviving is powerful.
Speaking is revolutionary.
Helping other men? That’s legacy.

Whether through support, education, activism, or just living well — make it count.