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Sharing About My Experience of Domestic Violence

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    <Sharing About My Experience
    of Domestic Violence>
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    (Questioner) Good evening, Sunim.
    By chance, I came across your Dhama Q&A
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    on YouTube and it brought
    a sense of relief to my heart.
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    I realized that the worries
    I had been carrying were
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    not as significant as I once thought.
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    Now, as a mother of three,
    I feel a bit of more at peace.
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    About 10 years ago,
    I fled to the United States to escape
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    domestic violence from my ex husband.
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    I chose to marry him because
    having no surviving parents or siblings.
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    I longed to create a big family
    of my own through marriage.
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    However, due to the domestic violence,
    I ultimately had to end the relationship.
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    And now, I live in the United States.
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    Although I don't wish to maintain
    contact with my children's father,
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    given that I have no family of my own.
    I actively encourage my children
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    to stay connected
    with their father's family
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    as they are the only blood relatives
    my children have.
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    Recently, I explained to my eldest child
    why we had to leave
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    for the United States
    without their father.
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    After hearing this, my child was
    deeply disappointed in him
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    and struggled to understand how
    he could act as if nothing had happened,
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    especially, when we visited
    Korea two years ago,
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    he offered no apology.
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    It seems my child is upset
    by this awareness.
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    I'm wondering for the sake of my children,
    whether I should continue to shield them
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    from the full truth or
    if being open and honest with my children
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    is the right decision.
    I would appreciate your guidance.
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    (Sunim) Every child wants
    their parents to be good people.
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    If you think that
    your father is a bad person,
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    then that affects your self esteem.
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    And if somebody else or a stranger,
    criticized your dad,
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    you still have some excuse.
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    You can say
    "You don't really know my dad."
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    But if my mother criticized my father,
    then you can't escape
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    because my mother
    would not tell me a lie.
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    In that sense, it becomes really clear
    that my dad is not a good person.
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    On the other hand,
    imagine if the child thinks
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    that their mother is lying,
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    then the mother becomes a liar
    in her own child's eyes,
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    and that makes her the bad person.
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    It can causes a psychological issue
    and confusion among in the child,
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    if the mother and father
    criticize each other.
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    Whether it is the husband and wife,
    no one here is a bad person.
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    You each had your own issues.
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    There is no problem for you splitting up
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    because you chose him as your husband,
    then you gave up on him as your husband.
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    I think it is better for you to explain
    that you divorced him or you left him
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    not because he was a bad person,
    it was because you could not deal
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    with the situation.
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    (Questioner) But he is a bad person.
    (Audiance/Sumim Laughter)
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    (Sunim) If you think that
    it's not a good effect on your children.
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    Then your child can't escape from the fact
    that their dad is a bad person.
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    I mean they can accept the fact
    that you guys separated as a couple
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    because you ere incompatible.
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    That is different
    from being a bad person.
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    The first questioner as well.
    You can get divorced,
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    but at the same time,
    you can maintain that respect
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    as co-parents of the same children.
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    Because your problem is
    a problem between two adults.
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    It's not a problem for the children.
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    So, that responsibility should remain
    with the adults.
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    It should not be handed down
    to your children.
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    Perhaps you feel a sense of possessiveness
    or ownership over your children
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    because they are your children.
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    May be you have
    this subconscious perspective
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    that you think their father is bad,
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    therefore, your children
    should also think their father is bad.
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    That means you are not recognizing
    your children as independent agents.
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    But your children are
    independent agencies.
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    As a parent,
    you want to help them grow up right.
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    The children do not exist for me.
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    I exist for the children.
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    If the children are better off with me,
    no matter what challenges I face,
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    I should keep the children with me.
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    If the children are better off
    with a father or somebody else,
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    then no matter how pained you are,
    how much you may miss your children,
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    you should let them go.
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    In other words, your children are
    not your pet or your possessions.
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    They are independent agencies,
    and you're there in your role as a parent
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    is to help them grow
    into independent adults.
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    So, when you discuss custody and
    other issues related to divorce,
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    you are not putting the children
    in the centre.
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    You are negotiating
    the rights of parents among each other.
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    I don't think that helps
    with the children.
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    (Questioner) Actually, my question was,
    should I be open with my kids
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    what happened in the past in Korea.
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    When I shared with my son,
    he was struggling to know the truth.
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    So, my question was, should I be open
    and honest with my children
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    or, just like you said,
    be a good parent and covering things up.
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    (Sunim) You insist that
    what you said about the past is true
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    that you left him in that situation is
    the truth of the situation.
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    But even that is
    just merely your perspective.
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    Because if you approach that story
    from the perspective that
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    he is a bad person,
    you are already making a value judgment
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    and you are relaying that story
    from a self-centred perspective.
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    That is actually worse
    than not saying anything at all.
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    But if you can remove that emotion
    or that value judgment from that story,
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    then I think you can be transparent
    with your children about why you left.
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    I think your son was in shock
    and had a hard time dealing with this
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    because the lesson he learned
    from that story was
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    that his dad was a bad person.
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    If you feel like your ex-husband is
    a bad person, no better than an animal,
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    then your child becomes
    the son of a beast.
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    (Questioner) I'm sorry,
    I don't understand and I don't agree.
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    (Sunim) Basically if you say
    your ex is a bad person,
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    your children become
    children of a bad person.
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    (Questioner) They are different.
    My son is not my ex-husband.
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    I mean Sunim said if I describe
    my ex-husband as a bad person,
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    that means my son is
    the blood of my ex-husband, right?
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    But I don't agree,
    because my children will blame me
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    for leaving their father behind in Korea
    and I brought them without him.
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    (Sunim) If you have no choice
    but to tell your children
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    that their father was a bad person.
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    I think it is better not to say that.
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    And say, "You are my children."
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    "I don't know who the dad is."
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    "I will tell you about your dad
    when you grow up"
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    It is your choice.
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    (Questioner) My son got hurt,
    two years ago, when we visited Korea
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    and my ex-husband acted like
    nothing had happened.
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    He didn't even apologize
    and that's why my son got really hurt.
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    I'm a survivor of domestic violence.
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    If I were still in Korea,
    I would be died by him.
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    (Sunim) The fact that
    your husband hits you,
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    it means that he is a criminal,
    he is a violent criminal.
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    He should be reported
    and be forced to face justice.
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    But, nevertheless, even if he's in prison,
    you should go see him
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    because he is still your husband.
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    (Questioner) I already did,
    15 years ago in Korea.
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    But the police said it was a family matter,
    so they didn't help me.
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    That's why I had to escape from there.
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    (Sunim) Whether it is your husband,
    whether it is your parents,
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    whether it is even your own children,
    if they lash out in violence,
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    that is a crime.
    So, they become criminals.
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    They may be criminals
    but they are still your husband,
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    your parents or your children.
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    But if they are my relatives, we tend
    to want to cover up even their crimes.
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    And by doing so,
    we harm the cause of social justice
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    and make a bad situation even worse.
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    So, no matter who it is,
    if they have gone against the law,
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    they should face justice.
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    But whatever crimes they committed,
    they are still your husband,
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    your parents or your children.
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    My friend might have committed a crime,
    he is a criminal now,
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    but he is still my friend.
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    That is a way for them,
    after paying for their crimes,
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    to come back, rebuild their lives,
    and be with their families again.
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    According to your perspective,
    a person who has committed a crime once
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    should be shut out
    from the society forever.
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    If your ex-husband hit you, raped you
    or committed other violence upon you,
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    then he should be facing the justice.
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    But just because he committed a crime
    does not necessarily mean
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    you have to hate him.
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    That Is why we can't solve this problem
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    because hatred is really self suffering.
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    That is why, even now,
    you are still not free from that person.
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    You can truly only liberate yourself
    from that person once you stop hating.
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    You might think
    that your hatred is justified.
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    It is a wise reaction to have to
    what you suffered,
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    but it is an action that actually brings
    upon your own suffering.
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    (Questioner) Thank you.
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    (Sunim) Then you have no choice
    but to continue to suffer.
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    Please, do you want to share
    your experience?
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    (Audiance1) I heard that
    she needs to think about the kids.
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    Because I had the same situation
    when I got divorced.
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    My children were
    2 and 8 years old at that time.
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    I constantly talked with my friends
    telling them how bad my ex-husband was,
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    but I didn't realize that
    my kids hear everything
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    and they suffered too much.
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    But they didn't look like
    they were suffering.
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    They were excellent kids,
    they went to college and have degrees.
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    But when my older son started his family,
    everything went down.
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    And now, my both kids are
    with psychiatrics
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    because they were with drugs and alcohol
    at the adult age.
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    All because they were suffered
    by the words they heard from me.
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    And I hope she realized
    that this is important.
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    She need to stop saying something bad
    about their parents
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    because the kids lost their self esteem
    and destroy their lives.
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    (Sunim) I think you need some more time,
    maybe to be more self reflective
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    about your actions.
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    If you discover later on that
    you've actually passed your own suffering
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    down to your children
    and allowed it to amplify itself,
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    you will be left with deep regrets
    at that time.
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    Just because you suffer
    doesn't mean your children has to.
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    No matter what kind of suffering
    you face,
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    you should handle it at your level
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    and prevent it
    from being passed down to your children.
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    But because we are all foolish,
    we tend to inherit our parents' suffering
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    and then pass that down
    to our own children.
Title:
Sharing About My Experience of Domestic Violence
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Duration:
19:27

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