crazy love, Exams of Voice

by Leslie Morgan Steiner. About the Author. • A Conversation with Leslie Morgan Steiner. In Her Own Words. • Postscript to Crazy Love. Keep On Reading.

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ST. MARTIN’S GRIFFIN
CRAZY LOVE
by Leslie Morgan Steiner
A
bout the Author
• A Conversation with Leslie Morgan Steiner
I
n Her Own Words
• Postscript to Crazy Love
K
eep On Reading
• Recommended Reading
• Reading Group Questions
Rgg_crazy love:Layout 1 1/19/10 3:50 PM Page 1
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ST. MARTIN’S GRIFFIN

CRAZY LOVE

by Leslie Morgan Steiner

A bout the Author

  • A Conversation with Leslie Morgan Steiner

I n Her Own Words

  • Postscript to Crazy Love

K eep On Reading

  • Recommended Reading
  • Reading Group Questions

A Conversation with Leslie Morgan Steiner

Why did you decide to tell this story? Perhaps because I’m a writer who specializes in memoir, it seemed natural for me to tell this story. My first book, Mommy Wars , was honest about the realities of motherhood—joyful, horrible, frus- trating, exhilarating. Mommy Wars ’s readers encouraged me to tackle my secret of domestic violence, which I had mentioned briefly in the introduction, with the same candor. This gave me the push to finish Crazy Love. It’s important to emphasize that even though I’m now comfortable talking openly about being a domestic violence victim, for at least five years after I ended my abusive relationship, I couldn’t speak to anyone about it—much less write about it. Reliving the experience was too traumatic. But once I’d remarried and become a mother, I felt secure enough to look back. Why had I loved someone with such destructive tendencies? What could I share about staying clear of “crazy love”? Could I help others understand family violence? I worked on Crazy Love , in various forms, off and on for more than ten years. I imagine I could have kept writing for another fifty years. With an expe- rience as complicated as domestic violence, you are always gaining new insights into what made you vulnerable to abuse. How have the writing of this book and the retelling of your story affected your relationship with your family? I’ve been married to my second husband for over fifteen blissful (okay—mostly blissful) years now. We have three wonderful kids together. I’d never

“I am grateful

for what I went

through because

the experience

made me

wiser about

love.”

“I’m also

grateful that,

unlike a lot of

domestic violence

survivors, I’m

free to tell

my story.”

I’m also fortunate I did not have children with my abuser. Often people who batter their partners also abuse their children—it’s the same intimacy- and-violence paradigm. Even if the children aren’t physically hurt, witnesses to violence are irrepara- bly damaged, and many of them grow up to repeat the cycle of family violence. I never want to repeat the experience or the risks that I took. But I am very, very grateful that I found a way to leave my abuser and start my life over. And I’m also grateful that, unlike a lot of domestic violence survivors, I’m free to tell my story. I don’t have ties to my ex-husband or family or cultural pressure to deny what happened. What, in your opinion, makes a woman vulnerable to this sort of manipulation? There is no question I’ve thought about more deeply in the twenty years since I was abused. I had other problems as a young woman—I grew up in a family with alcohol problems, and experi- enced anorexia and my own predilection to abuse alcohol and drugs. You might think these problems suggested a certain insecurity or vulnerability. But I recognized and overcame those problems before I met my abusive husband, so those are not clear markers in my mind. Based on over four decades of observing my strong, smart, empowered female friends, basically, I think anyone is vulnerable. We’ve all got chinks in our self-esteem, right? An insightful, destructive partner can exploit your insecurities to the point where you are being abused, physically or emotionally, without realizing it. So don’t fall in love with an abuser. Sounds

About the Author

simple—but of course we don’t “choose” who we fall for. It’s nearly impossible to tell the difference between Prince Charming and the dark knight at first.

But by minimizing your other vulnerabilities—by making sure you are economically independent, close to your friends and family, and feeling good about yourself—I believe you minimize the chance that you will stay in love with someone driven to take advantage of you. It’s also critical to recognize a destructive relationship and ask for help and support from friends, relatives, and professionals to end it.

What troubles me is how focused our society is on victims of abuse. It is not that difficult to under- stand why anyone—women, children, or men (because family violence does sometimes happen to men)—could become trapped in an intimate manipulative relationship.

But why would anyone hurt the people who love them most in the world? Why don’t therapists, researchers, police officers, judges, and legislators ask more questions about the abusers who perpe- trate the terrible cycle of family violence? Without abusers, we’d have no abuse. I am 100 percent behind efforts to help victims. But I believe long-term change will come only when the hard questions shift to the perpetrators, rather than the victims, of family violence.

What mistakes do you wish you could undo?

It is important to never, ever ignore red flags in a relationship. Potential batterers are surprisingly predictable. They are talent scouts for vulnerable

About the Author

As amazing as it sounds, I didn’t even know that I was being abused. My denial was that powerful. I thought I was helping him resolve the problems of his childhood; he had been beaten by his stepfa- ther from age four to fifteen. For me, our relation- ship was about love, not hate. I thought—no, I KNEW—he was my soul mate. I was going to save him. And in return, I thought he’d never leave me. I’ve since learned this isn’t a terribly healthy approach to an intimate relationship.

So my advice is at the first red flag—the first threat of violence or rage—end the relationship. It is the easiest and also the safest time. Because the longer you wait, the more vulnerable you become. Studies show that the most dangerous time in an abusive relationship is when you leave—because when he feels he’s lost you already, he has little to lose by killing you. So leave at the first threat of abuse—while you still can. I have met dozens of women who were hit once, and left right away. These women are my heroes. If you stay, the situa- tion ALWAYS gets more complicated and danger- ous. I have never heard of a case where a woman was able to help her partner overcome an abusive temperament; a batterer needs qualified profes- sional help and guidance, not romantic love.

If you had a chance to say one thing about abusive relationships to anyone of any age, what would you say?

First, I’d tell them to read Crazy Love! I’ll never be able to explain in a few words what it is like to be drawn into an abusive relationship, and then after years, to decide to leave.... It took an entire book to capture how confusing and complicated the experience was.

Love is ALWAYS about respect, joy, and kindness. Violence and abuse NEVER play a role in an inti- mate relationship—with a lover, a parent, a child, or a supposed friend. You are not showing your love by letting someone take out their anger on you. Over time, rage always trumps love. So no matter how much you love someone troubled, get out now. You can start over, no matter how long or how much you have suffered.

“Love is

ALWAYS about

respect, joy, and

kindness.”

Too risky. Too intense. Too personal. At the very least, one said, use a pseudonym! Another practi- cally shouted into the phone, “Thank God you’ve come to your senses!”

I agreed their counsel was wise. I went to bed that night at peace. I would call my editor in the morn- ing to break the news.

Instead I woke up determined, deep in my center of gravity, to tell this crazy love story. I could not articulate to anyone, even myself, why. I swallowed my trepidation and told everyone I was going for- ward. My husband gamely responded that we’d face together whatever reactions came.

Then the book went on sale. A positive review in People magazine, interviews on National Public Radio, and a spot on the New York Times best- seller list—serendipitous achievements I’d not anticipated—meant that people across the country knew I’d been a battered wife. Within days I start- ed receiving e-mails from uniquely gifted speed readers. Most got through all 300-plus pages in one sitting. It was exhilarating (and amusing) to hear that in fewer than twenty-four hours, readers had devoured the book that took me ten hard years to write.

During all that time worrying about the impact on family, friends, and myself, I never considered the impact unknown readers might have on me. Although I’d accumulated forty years of books too treasured to give away, I never dreamed of being able to communicate personally with writers who had shaken my psyche, such as Marion Zimmer Bradley, Eudora Welty, Margaret Drabble, Tom Wolfe, and hundreds of others. For most of my life, writing to an author was akin to contacting the Tooth Fairy: you sent a letter care of the pub-

“I never

considered the

impact unknown

readers might

have on me .”

lisher and then prayed the note would make it through the postal service to an overburdened office mail room, to the right editor, and even- tually to the author. A reply was inconceivable.

By contrast, following Crazy Love ’s publication my in-box brimmed with poignant correspondence from strangers reaching out across the blank air space of the Internet. Hundreds of headlines cry- ing out “You Told My Story” or “I Left Too” or “No Longer Ashamed” popped up again and again. Some were like books themselves—candid, wrenching mini-memoirs from people I might never meet.

The diversity astonished me, although I know first- hand that domestic violence follows no stereo- types. I heard from teenagers—and grandmothers. Fathers worried about daughters. Police officers. Therapists. Doctors. Gay men and straight men who had been battered by lovers. Husbands strug- gling to understand wives who had been abused long ago. Ivy League graduates and people who could not spell—but could tell their stories beauti- fully.

These e-mails made me cry. During the decade I wrote and edited Crazy Love , I’d often worried that my words weren’t good enough, strong enough, powerful enough. That I wasn’t a talented enough writer to tell my story effectively. Any lin- gering shame I might have felt about being abused, or doubt about the importance of sharing my story, was scrubbed clean by strangers’ confi- dence and kindness. This opportunity to connect with readers is the joy of being a writer today.

Now, every time I square my shoulders in front of a podium, a radio mic, or TV camera, I relive the day I decided not to publish Crazy Love. As I

In Her Own Words

Keep On Reading

I believe the best memoirs are all survival stories, one way or another. Although the books listed below don’t all deal with abuse—and some of them are fiction that read like memoir—as I was tackling Crazy Love I found them meaningful and inspirational in their own unique ways.

Lucky Alice Sebold

Driving with Dead People Monica Holloway

Miracle in the Andes Nando Parrado

Ellen Foster Kaye Gibbons

The Secret Life of Bees Sue Monk Kidd

The Bitch in the House Cathi Hanauer

Sarah’s Key Tatiana de Rosnay

Losing Mum and Pup Christopher Buckley

The Year of Magical Thinking Joan Didion

Recommended Reading

Reading Group Questions

  1. Leslie Morgan Steiner opens her book by explaining that as a well-educated, successful woman from a good family, she doesn’t “look the part” of a domestic abuse victim. Before reading Crazy Love , did you have any precon- ceptions of what a victim of family violence would look and act like? Did Leslie’s memoir change your understanding of these women? And if so, how?
  2. Leslie’s love for Conor could be considered crazy given how he treated her. And, crazy as it seems, Conor treated her the way he did because he loved her. Not to use the term too carelessly, but aren’t we all a bit “crazy” when it comes to love? Why, in the face of logic and reason, do you think women (and men) love at all costs?
  3. Take a moment to talk about key scenes involv- ing Conor and Leslie’s relationship. Which ones were the most powerful to read? Sad? Scary? Discuss the elements of foreshadowing employed in the narrative as well.
  4. For those who’ve never experienced abuse it can be hard to understand why such a seemingly self-confident woman could have stayed with a person who treated her so badly for so long. How would you explain it? In what ways was this book an eye-opener for you?
  5. Discuss your thoughts about Conor. Do you despise him for his behavior? Feel sorry for him (as Leslie did) given his own history of domes- tic abuse? Is he a criminal? Or psychologically impaired?