My father's condition has worsened, his abuse has been intolerable. His abuse is mental and verbal, he never resorted to physical abuse, although the three are equally terrible, because he knows if he resorts to it, my mother would fight back.
If he said something mean, he knows he hurts her, and when she retorts, he doesn't care what she says, so it's a win-win for him.
My two younger siblings and I keep telling her to leave him, but she gets even more infuriated when we suggest that, as according to her, she is staying with him for the sake of my youngest brother. She says he just entered the phase of adolescence and such shift could ruin him forever. I get where she is coming from, but there are ways to shield him from such trauma.
She doesn't seem to notice how nervous he gets when he hears any loud noise, he immediately inquires whether "mom and dad are fighting" or not.
What is worrying me is that I've never seen her so angry. To release her wrath she started opened and slamming drawers repeatedly. Thankfully, only I was around to witness that heart-wrenching scene.
I gave up on him a long time ago, especially getting him treatment. I wish my mother would stop caring about him. She can stay with him if she wants, but I wish that his words and actions mean nothing to her anymore.
He is so spiteful, he finds twisted ways to torture us, especially her, for no reason at all. I can tell you this, if ever I had a wife who would stand by me and look past my flaws the way my mother did with my father, I would be the happiest guy alive. My mother is an extremely responsible, mature, smart, caring, just, and funny woman; it is a pity to see such potential and merits wasted on such a man.
She is so great I wish she would leave him and find a man who actually appreciates all the traits she has. I know not everyone would be happy with one of their parents leaving the other and finding love elsewhere, but I would be GREATLY happy for my mother if this were to happen.
Sometimes I think she is a character from a book, because the amount of maturity and resourcefulness she has sometimes baffles me. Her ability to analyze a situation and make the morally and logically correct decision is a level of intelligence I aspire to reach.
Alas, if she thinks it is the correct thing to stay with my father, it influences the way I view her.
Also, just to give you an insight, divorce where I am from isn't looked upon favorably. A divorced man or woman might never find a partner again because they ultimately "failed". So another reason as to why she doesn't want a divorce is because of her social standing and because she doesn't want to sadden her parents (my grandparents) as a divorced child is a great pain where I am from. I am sure it is painful everywhere in the World, but in my country, it is like someone committing a crime and going to jail for it, so that even after their release, people would remember them as the "parents of the criminal". "Parents of the divorcee".
I like my culture, there are many aspects I love about it. I am an Arab, an Arab Arab, meaning I am ethnically and culturally Arab. There are political Arabs (those whose mother language is Arabic like Egypt, Morocco and Levant) and Arabs who are Arabs by ethnicity and culture (people from the Arabian Peninsula, or Arabia). Arabian culture was always okay with women being widowed or divorced, divorced women or widowed women would easily marry again if they wanted to. Unfortunately, the view on such a circumstance has gotten backward instead of progressing or staying the same. Divorced women face the possibility of never finding love again. Our culture had such a progressive stance on the issue when the world had a backwards one, when the world's standpoint progressed, ours regressed.
I don't know what to do with my mother as she is deeply unhappy. I can see it in her face, literally; she's gotten paler and thinner over the past two years and I am extremely worried about her. I will sleep over tonight, but I just wish I could make her not care what he does or says if she is adamant on staying with him.