SEMAH — Connecting You to Help and Hope Language
Subscribe our mailing list

SEMAH’s mission is the promotion of healthier relationships and prevention of domestic violence through education and awareness of options. We are a conduit for resources to help build bridges to safer communities especially those that are not well served. We have a special focus on the Muslim and inter-faith communities.

Preventing & Identifying Abusive Relationships

Abuse is often hidden from public awareness. The following table illustrates a continuum of behaviors that indicate healthy, unhealthy, and abusive relationships.

Healthy Relationships
Good Communication
Relationship Problems
Risk of Abuse
Abusive Relationships
Power Imbalance
Handle conflict well; "fight fairly," respect, negotiate. May have arguments, yelling, disrespect. Physical or emotional threats, coercion, intimidation, insults during arguments. Conflict may occur in a cycle and may cause one partner to be in fear.
No violence. May have an isolated incident of throwing things or destroying property. Any of the following:
- Pattern of physical incidents.
- Single physical incident followed by threats, intimidation, emotional abuse.
Single incident of high lethality behaviors such as choking, threatening with a weapon.
Able to listen actively and hear each other most of the time. Not able to listen actively or hear each other consistently. Fear, threats, or intimidation associated with trying to be heard.
Partners feel loved and understood most of the time. Partners frequently feel angry, unheard, hurt. One person experiences severe physical or verbal consequences for expressing feelings or opinions.
Relationship makes each person feel good about self. Sometimes feels good, sometimes bad about self in this relationship. One person consistently feels bad about self due to insults, put downs, etc. from other person.
Sexual compatibility, satisfaction, respect, pleasure. Open communication about sexual relationship. May be unhappy with sexual relationship; may not feel comfortable discussing feelings. Sexual coercion; verbal, physical, or emotional pressure to have sex; degrading comments about partner's body; disrespect for partner's religious beliefs about sexuality; expectation to perform even if scared or unhappy; no option to discuss feelings.
May experience occasional jealousy, couple is able to work through their feelings. Jealousy is unresolved. Extreme jealousy, frequent phone calls to "check up" on partner, jealousy coupled with threats, insults, attempts to control partner's life.
Make financial decisions together. Unresolved conflict over financial decisions. One person makes all financial decisions or makes decisions that do not benefit the partner; preventing partner from getting or keeping a job, receiving education; making partner ask for money or turn over paychecks; requiring "permission" to spend money on basic family needs.
Accept responsibility for self, admit being wrong, be honest and truthful. Dishonesty, violations of trust, lack of responsibility for self/own actions, pride gets in the way of admitting wrongdoing. Blame the other person for everything including one's own actions/behavior, minimizing or denying one's own hurtful behavior towards the other person.
Support each other's goals, interests, feelings, friends, choices. Shared decisions. Lack of support for other's goals, interests, feelings, friends, choices. Making major family decisions without consulting the other person. Frequent criticism of other's goals, interests, feelings, friends, choices; isolation; control of other's personal, spiritual, or family decisions; control of where partner goes, who partner talks to; intentionally jeopardizing partner's job, education, etc.
Help partner feel safe and comfortable. May have feelings of not being safe. One person feels afraid, intimidated, hopeless, helpless; other uses looks, gestures, and threats to control partner.