He never imagined love could turn into pain, yet here he stands—wounded not just physically, but emotionally shattered by the person he once trusted most. The girl who once showered him with sweetness has revealed a darker side, one marked by anger and violence, leaving him questioning the very foundation of their relationship.
Torn between his heart and his reality, he grapples with the confusing mix of attachment and alarm. As her words twist the truth and shift blame, he wonders if what he’s facing is more than just conflict—if it’s a reflection of something deeper, something dangerously toxic that he must find the strength to break free from.

My girlfriend hit me and acted like the victim when I told my Mother about it






Dr. Lenore Walker, a clinical psychologist known for her work on the Cycle of Abuse, highlights that in abusive relationships, the victim often minimizes the violence while the abuser focuses on the victim’s reaction to the abuse itself rather than taking responsibility for the act. This dynamic aligns closely with the girlfriend’s immediate reaction: instead of addressing the punch to the nose, she focused on the boundary violation of telling the mother first.
The girlfriend’s response—’you told your Mother that I hit you without telling me about it first? How do you think that makes me feel?’—is a textbook example of DARVO (Deny, Attack, and Reverse Victim and Offender). This pattern shifts the focus away from the physical assault (the core issue) onto the partner’s communication choice (a secondary issue), effectively gaslighting the victim into feeling guilty for reporting the abuse. The original poster’s suspicion of being ‘blind’ due to attachment is common; this attachment often solidifies when abuse is interspersed with positive affection, creating a trauma bond.
The action of striking a partner, especially with a closed fist to the face, is physical abuse and crosses a critical, non-negotiable boundary. The appropriate course of action is to cease contact to ensure personal safety. Future handling of such situations should involve immediate clear communication that physical contact is grounds for termination, followed by seeking support from trusted sources (like the mother, in this case) to maintain accountability and perspective, rather than minimizing the violence.
THE COMMENTS SECTION WENT WILD – REDDIT HAD *A LOT* TO SAY ABOUT THIS ONE.













The individual is conflicted, struggling between their developing feelings for their girlfriend and the physical harm they have experienced in the relationship. The central tension lies in prioritizing their own safety and seeking external validation against the girlfriend’s focus on her own feelings regarding the disclosure of the physical aggression.
Given the history of physical violence and the immediate deflection of responsibility upon confrontation, is the priority a concern for safety and boundaries, or does the attachment compel the individual to overlook repeated abusive actions? Should the relationship continue, or is separation necessary for the individual’s well-being?







