HomeJust Listed!!!Buyers/RentersSHORT SALE/FORCLOSURESHome Search DatabaseSelling Your HomeTestimonialsCommunity OutreachFAQsContact UsReferrals/Realtors

A big Thank You to the families that chose Package Realty in 2011. We raised $1,200 for Reaching Pines and with such success we will continue supporting this worthy cause! 

More information on our Community Involvement for survivors of domestic violence.

bullock.jpg
2011 Donation to Reaching Pines from Bullock Family.
stone.jpg
2011 Donation to Reaching Pines from Stone Family.
Montalti_Family.jpg
2011 Donation to Reaching Pines from Montalti Family.

Thank you to the Nevels, Otten, and Schaur families for their 2011 contributions.

Reaching Pines

A Transitional Supportive Housing Community for Survivors of Domestic Violence

Reaching Pines is more than just an apartment complex. It is a community of survivors supported by one another, as well as a team of professional counselors and advocates.

 

The goal is for Reaching Pines residents to be financially and emotionally independent and break the cycle of domestic violence for themselves and their children.

 

Why does our community need Reaching Pines?

  • More than 800 women and children stay at the MCWC’s shelter every year. After their 60-day maximum stay, the majority of these women do not have the financial resources to take the step to independent living
  • There is a serious shortage of affordable rental property in Montgomery County
  • Outcomes data from our shelter confirms that as many as one in five women returns to her batterer rather than face homelessness for herself and her children

 

What are the criteria for residency at Reaching Pines?

  • Applicants for Reaching Pines residency must have an income, be free of addiction, adhere to a strict code of conduct and must demonstrate a desire to establish themselves financially. 
  • Residents pay rent based on a sliding scale, and are held accountable to program requirements through regular meetings with their case managers. 
  • The maximum stay at Reaching Pines will be two years.

 

What does Reaching Pines offer residents?

  • An affordable community in which to take the step to independent living
  • 24 energy-efficient apartments – designed to be one, two, three or four bedroom units
  • Community Center for meetings, classes and gathering with neighbors
  • Life skills classes, GED completion, a computer room and other tools necessary to further education
  • Counseling and advocacy for residents and their children
  • Proximity to the neighboring C.I.S.D. elementary school 
  • Legal support

 

How can I help?

  • Be a volunteer at Reaching Pines
  • Make a donation to the Reaching Pines Capital Campaign

 

For more information or to make a donation, contact:

 

The Montgomery County Women's Center

281-292-4155 ext. 231

crisis@mcwctx.org 

CASA.jpg
Lindsey Smith participated in the 2010 kids run, CASA for children.


Emotional abuse: It’s a bigger problem than you think

When people think of domestic abuse, they often picture battered women who have been physically assaulted. But not all abusive relationships involve violence. Just because you’re not battered and bruised doesn’t mean you’re not being abused. Many men and women suffer from emotional abuse, which is no less destructive. Unfortunately, emotional abuse is often minimized or overlooked—even by the person being abused.

Understanding emotional abuse

Abusers use a variety of tactics to manipulate you and exert their power

The aim of emotional abuse is to chip away at your feelings of self-worth and independence. If you’re the victim of emotional abuse, you may feel that there is no way out of the relationship or that without your abusive partner you have nothing.

Emotional abuse includes verbal abuse such as yelling, name-calling, blaming, and shaming. Isolation, intimidation, and controlling behavior also fall under emotional abuse. Additionally, abusers who use emotional or psychological abuse often throw in threats of physical violence or other repercussions if you don’t do what they want. 

You may think that physical abuse is far worse than emotional abuse, since physical violence can send you to the hospital and leave you with scars. But, the scars of emotional abuse are very real, and they run deep. In fact, emotional abuse can be just as damaging as physical abuse—sometimes even more so.

Economic or financial abuse: A subtle form of emotional abuse

Remember, an abuser’s goal is to control you, and he or she will frequently use money to do so. 

 
 Economic or financial abuse includes:
  • Rigidly controlling your finances.
  • Withholding money or credit cards.
  • Making you account for every penny you spend.
  • Withholding basic necessities (food, clothes, medications, shelter).
  • Restricting you to an allowance.
  • Preventing you from working or choosing your own career.
  • Sabotaging your job (making you miss work, calling constantly)
  • Stealing from you or taking your money.
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Violent and abusive behavior is the abuser’s choice

Despite what many people believe, domestic violence and abuse is not due to the abuser’s loss of control over his or her behavior. In fact, abusive behavior and violence is a deliberate choice made by the abuser in order to control you.

Abusers use a variety of tactics to manipulate you and exert their power:

  • Dominance – Abusive individuals need to feel in charge of the relationship. They will make decisions for you and the family, tell you what to do, and expect you to obey without question. Your abuser may treat you like a servant, child, or even as his or her possession.
  •  Humiliation – An abuser will do everything he or she can to make you feel bad about yourself or defective in some way. After all, if you believe you're worthless and that no one else will want you, you're less likely to leave. Insults, name-calling, shaming, and public put-downs are all weapons of abuse designed to erode your self-esteem and make you feel powerless.
  • Isolation – In order to increase your dependence on him or her, an abusive partner will cut you off from the outside world. He or she may keep you from seeing family or friends, or even prevent you from going to work or school. You may have to ask permission to do anything, go anywhere, or see anyone.
  • Threats – Abusers commonly use threats to keep their partners from leaving or to scare them into dropping charges. Your abuser may threaten to hurt or kill you, your children, other family members, or even pets. He or she may also threaten to commit suicide, file false charges against you, or report you to child services.
  • Intimidation – Your abuser may use a variety of intimidation tactics designed to scare you into submission. Such tactics include making threatening looks or gestures, smashing things in front of you, destroying property, hurting your pets, or putting weapons on display. The clear message is that if you don't obey, there will be violent consequences.
  • Denial and blame – Abusers are very good at making excuses for the inexcusable. They will blame their abusive and violent behavior on a bad childhood, a bad day, and even on the victims of their abuse. Your abusive partner may minimize the abuse or deny that it occurred. He or she will commonly shift the responsibility on to you: Somehow, his or her violent and abusive behavior is your fault.

 

Abusers are able to control their behavior—they do it all the time.

  • Abusers pick and choose whom to abuse. They don’t insult, threaten, or assault everyone in their life who gives them grief. Usually, they save their abuse for the people closest to them, the ones they claim to love.
  • Abusers carefully choose when and where to abuse. They control themselves until no one else is around to see their abusive behavior. They may act like everything is fine in public, but lash out instantly as soon as you’re alone.
  • Abusers are able to stop their abusive behavior when it benefits them. Most abusers are not out of control. In fact, they’re able to immediately stop their abusive behavior when it’s to their advantage to do so (for example, when the police show up or their boss calls).
  • Violent abusers usually direct their blows where they won’t show. Rather than acting out in a mindless rage, many physically violent abusers carefully aim their kicks and punches where the bruises and marks won’t show.

The cycle of violence in domestic abuse

Domestic abuse falls into a common pattern, or cycle of violence:

Cycle of violence

  • Abuse – Your abusive partner lashes out with aggressive, belittling, or violent behavior. The abuse is a power play designed to show you "who is boss."
  • Guilt – After abusing you, your partner feels guilt, but not over what he's done. He’s more worried about the possibility of being caught and facing consequences for his abusive behavior.
  • Excuses – Your abuser rationalizes what he or she has done. The person may come up with a string of excuses or blame you for the abusive behavior—anything to avoid taking responsibility.
  • "Normal" behavior — The abuser does everything he can to regain control and keep the victim in the relationship. He may act as if nothing has happened, or he may turn on the charm. This peaceful honeymoon phase may give the victim hope that the abuser has really changed this time.
  • Fantasy and planning – Your abuser begins to fantasize about abusing you again. He spends a lot of time thinking about what you’ve done wrong and how he'll make you pay. Then he makes a plan for turning the fantasy of abuse into reality.
  • Set-up – Your abuser sets you up and puts his plan in motion, creating a situation where he can justify abusing you.

Your abuser’s apologies and loving gestures in between the episodes of abuse can make it difficult to leave. He may make you believe that you are the only person who can help him, that things will be different this time, and that he truly loves you. However, the dangers of staying are very real.

Article courtesy of helpguide.org Click below for more information.