I’d like to introduce you to the ‘power and control’ wheel I created after researching and interviewing women who had been psychologically abused and controlled by their male partners.
You may recognise the Duluth ‘power and control’ wheel (on the left below) … it has been hanging around noticeboards at women’s centres, doctor’s rooms, and various other crisis places where women seek answers and shelter from violence perpetrated by their partners and spouses. The wheel is a summation of violence based on women’s experiences and is a visual tool to help practitioners understand family violence, and to help effect constructive change for both men and women.
Because not all women who experience psychological abuse and control by their male partner are physically hit by him I wanted to create an additional wheel (on the right below) that captured some more of the non-physical tactics of control and highlighted the reinforcing role society plays in this problem.
Many women experience both physical violence and psychological control. But these women report that ongoing psychological abuse is experienced as more mind-twisting, more painful and damaging than physical violence. I have never met a woman, yet, who says otherwise.
A determined long-term campaign of psychological abuse is about dominance, not about conflict of interest. It is not the same as occasional outbursts of anger. It may include threats of violence, but not always.
The creation of the Duluth Power and Control wheel has positively transformed our understanding of the dynamics of domestic violence.
The centre of the wheel is labelled ‘power and control’ which is the goal, or effect, of all the abusive tactics. Patterns of tactics are depicted in each spoke of the wheel and the rim, representing physical and sexual abuse, is what gives it strength and holds it together.
The idea that physical violence and sex abuse reinforces psychological abuse suggests that physical, sexual and psychological abuse operate together to establish domination and control. It also suggests that psychological abuse is effective because of prior physical violence, or the threat of it; that psychological abuse is only a transitory, temporary stage leading to physical violence as the end result.
BUT … psychological abuse and control underpin the fabric of many men’s abuse against female partners – physically violent or not. It’s the missing equation.
One day I was chatting to an older woman in the changing room at the local swimming pool and, as she was drying her wrinkled skin, she asked what I do for a living. When I told her that family violence counselling was my specialty, she beamed joyfully, telling me how free and happy she feels because her husband had just died, freeing her from 40 years of being held hostage by his tactics of power and control. It was a lifetime of hell. Though he never physically harmed her she lived submerged in a toxic soup of his incessant, haranguing abuse and psychological imprisonment.
It’s a secret world of mind games – where physical violence is not necessary to gain control – but people are coerced, wretched and wrecked nevertheless.
After conducting my own research and reading other research papers and books about thousands of women’s crazy-making experiences of being psychologically controlled, I saw a need to expand upon the Duluth wheel.
The wheel I created captures the notion that our wider culture breeds, reinforces and supports the male imperative; the notion that men have rights over women. The testosterone effect is distorted and groomed within peer groups, on sports fields, school playgrounds, corporate boardrooms, and political institutions. The clamouring media, Hollywood and television reinforce so many of the negatives in mythical playouts that distort how it is to be a man and how to be a woman. The expectations and pressures on relationships and families are so enormous that simple love and caring run the risk of being compromised from the start.
In life, many men and women simply crave to set up a life-long caring partnership, to build a home together and to live securely, happily ever after.
Our gender myths influence men to be “real men”; to not be a wuss, but to stand up and “be a man”, to never cry, but to fight for independence; to never be shy, but to conquer women sexually and then to show off to their mates. Not all men care about, or pursue, such expectations of masculinity. But some do.
Those men who are heavily invested in climbing to the top of the ladder of masculinity have to prove they’re tough and in control. They have to avoid weakness and vulnerability at all costs. Psychological theories have argued for years that covering up, and denying painful, dark feelings leads to horrible behaviours such as addictions, violence and abuse. Social myths about how to be a man are full of messages that men must suppress most of their feelings, never talk about them, never show them – even if they want to.
It’s a cloak of bravado that leads many men to wear a mask behind which is a real human full of fears, desires to love, care and be tender. Men who control the women they love are wearing such a mask – they’re playing a role. One of the titles for this role is that of a family violence perpetrator.
For centuries the male thrust of society has been peopled from all walks of life directing men, showing them how to act out the “man” role. The main directive states that to stand up and “be a man” they must control “their” woman. Ownership!
The requirements of the role include acting like the king of the castle; being the boss, a man of superiority, who is invincible and who will not back down – no matter how much he truly wants a close caring relationship underneath. He must ‘wear the pants’. If she says or does anything that threatens his role, he must discipline her.
I’ll guide you through a series of blogs where I’ll discuss the way men carry out this role – that is by using some or many of the 16 patterns of tactics labelled in the wheel I created. These discussions will stem from international research and interviews I have conducted over the last ten years with women (as victims) and men (as perpetrators).
Watch out for blogs on the following control tactics:
One-sided power games
Mind games
Inappropriate restrictions
Isolation
Over-protection and ‘caring’
Emotional unkindness & violation of trust
Degradation & suppression of potential
Separation abuse
Using social institutions & social prejudices
Denial, minimising, blaming
Using the children
Economic abuse
Sexual abuse
Symbolic aggression
Domestic slavery
Physical violence

{ 4 comments… read them below or add one }
I would like to add that women can be just as capable at psychological abuse, power and control. My husband’s ex-wife is in a lesbian relationship and she uses these tactics on my husband, their children, her partner (who uses them on her, as well as violent physical abuse) and tries to even control ME with these tactics. That is NOT to say that just because she’s a lesbian that I think all gay/lesbian couples have this dynamic, but she CERTAINLY does. We deal with this issue on a daily basis and it needs to be addressed as well, is there a wheel for that dynamic where the woman is the psychological abuser and the man is the victim?
Hi Nichaleen – I know that women’s abuse against others is a problem – I’ve experienced it first hand – starting with my mother and my grandmother and female bosses. There’s research on women’s physical violence against men and against other women, but my focus is on psychological abuse and control. I’ve been gathering research articles on the topic and have yet to delve deeply into what has been explored – my intention is to write something about it at a later stage. I’m not aware of any power and control wheel that outlines the dynamics of women’s psychological abuse against men. There are wheels that outline gay and lesbian power and control – but again I don’t yet have the depth of knowledge to write about this. My work is about exploring DEEPLY into these issues, therefore I prefer not to write any sweeping superficial statements – as I require in-depth research and detailed stories from the perspectives of perpetrators and victims.
Hi Nichaleen, Women are indeed capable of psychological abuse. My mother was extremely abusive to me throughout life, which is why I have ended the relationship with her and have not had contact with her for about 7 years now. I slipped once at the urging of perhaps other abusive family members to contact her per her request with respect to the death of her third husband. What happened? She hung up on me when she realized she was not going to control the situation or my life ever again.
The author of this site has expressly stated that she will be incorporating material where the abuser is a woman. I would like to point out, however, that I have run across sites that have incorporated material that you are currently and are seemingly in search of.
I am extremely happy to have found this site as it relates to my immediate needs. I have felt as if I were going insane. If it helps you, you can also reverse the roles of victim and abuser.
So pleased to have found you, I have been physically abused in my marriage and after the marriage ended psychological abuse to change my sexual choice as a heteosexual female to lesbian and bi-sexual. To find words to express this has been such a struggle! My physical abuse was a language of men outside my marriage and was interpreted after my divorce in social settings in non-verbal language. I cannot express the terror this evoked in me. Family members and my ex-husband collaborated with a psychologist to cause me harm. Obviously they then zoned in on my children and usurped my authority as their mother and used them as they desired.
How excruciating! I am busy reading Restorative Justice and Violence against Women by James Ptacek and the extent of the structures built to give the perpetrators carte blanche to treat women abusively. From the president of my country, to policing structures and legal institutions where ‘games’ are played to further intimidate and break down resolve to protect my children are exhausting. The magnitude thereof confirmed by the book I am reading. Especially so, the harm perpetrated by psychological abuse, as it seems so unbelievable! Thanks for exposing this topic! It gives me strength to continue my battle for justice and exposure of the perpetrators.