YWCA Evansville Is Here For You
We’re Glad You’re Here
Learn More About How We Can Help You
In Crisis?
Call our 24/7 Crisis Hotline
(812) 422-1191
TOLL FREE: (866) 367-9922
Identify Abuse ↘
This is the first step. Ask yourself if any of these signs point to your relationship health.
Red Flags
Unhealthy Relationship Checkpoints ⏺
Does your partner…
Get jealous easily or accuse you of having an affair?
Have abuse in family history?
Throw objects at you or destroy your property?
Make you account for every moment you are away?
Restrain you?
Ridicule you?
Threaten to hurt you, your children, or your pets?
Manipulate you with lies or promises?
Threaten to or force you to have sex?
Make you feel you don’t have the right to say “no” or disagree?
Isolate you from family, friends, work?
Make all the decisions in the home for you?
Have previous contact with the justice system?
Control all of the money?
Have weapons?
Green Flags
Healthy Relationship Checkpoints ⏺
Does your partner…
View you as an equal?
Respect you and treat you fairly?
Make you feel safe (emotionally and physically)?
Discuss disagreements peacefully?
Allow the relationship to go at your pace?
Act as a positive role model for your children?
Value your opinions?
Communicate openly and honestly?
Support your goals in life?
Make family and money decisions together with you?
Compromise?
Have a positive image of family?
Make your friends and family feel comfortable?
Contact our 24/7 crisis hotline:
(866) FOR-YWCA or (866) 367-9922
YWCA Evansville provides services to survivors of domestic violence and their families. Our confidential services are available 24-hours a day, 365 days a year.
Services Include:
Complete Confidentiality
Safe and Secure Location
Child and Court Advocacy
Mental Health and Addiction Services On-Site
Economic Empowerment
Employment Assistance
Support and Educational Groups
Case Management
Safety Planning
These services are offered to survivors living within our facility as well as through outreach to survivors living outside the YWCA.
How To Get Help ↘
“I am in need of services…”
Emergency Help
If you are in need of emergency shelter due to a domestic violence situation, contact the YWCA Domestic Crisis Hot Line (866) 367-9922 or call 911 for local law enforcement who will in turn contact the YWCA.
Referrals
If you are an emergency shelter or outside agency making a referral for housing, please call (812) 422-1191.
Outreach
If you are need of court advocacy or case management, no matter whether you are a resident of our facility or an outreach survivor, contact the YWCA Evansville at (812) 422-1191.
Indiana VINE
Indiana Victim Information and Notification Everyday (VINE) System
The Indiana VINE system is a service through which victims of crime can use the telephone or Internet to search for information regarding the custody status of their offender and to register to receive telephone and e-mail notification when the offender’s custody status changes. The VINE toll-free number for the Indiana VINE system is (866) 959-8463. This service is provided to assist victims of crime who have a right to know about their offender’s custody status.
Click here to register for notification from the Indiana VINE system. This is a FREE service enhancement.
FAQs
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Domestic violence is abuse that happens in a personal relationship. It can happen between past or current partners, spouses, or boyfriends and girlfriends.
Domestic violence affects men and women of any ethnic group, race, or religion; gay or straight; rich or poor; teen, adult, or elderly. But most of its victims are women. In fact, 1 out of 4 women will be a victim at some point.
The abuser may use fear, bullying, and threats to gain power and control over the other person. He or she may act jealous, controlling, or possessive. These early signs of abuse may happen soon after the start of the relationship and might be hard to notice at first.
After the relationship becomes more serious, the abuse may get worse.
The abuser may begin making threats, calling the other person names, and slamming doors or breaking dishes. This is a form of emotional abuse that is sometimes used to make the person feel bad or weak.
Physical abuse that starts with a slap might lead to kicking, shoving, and choking over time.
As a way to control the person, the abuser may make violent threats against the person’s children, other family members, or pets.
Abusers may also control or withhold money to make the person feel weak and dependent. This is called financial abuse.
Domestic violence also includes sexual abuse, such as forcing a person to have sex against her will. Money troubles and problems with drugs or alcohol can make it more likely that abuse will happen.
Abuse is also common in teens who are dating. It often happens through controlling behaviors and jealousy.
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We Can Help.
The YWCA is the largest provider of domestic violence services in the country. Locally, the YWCA building is a home where we provide shelter for victims of domestic violence and their children. We staff a 24-hour domestic violence hotline. Our confidential services are available 24-hours a day, 365 days a year.
You have a right to be safe! If you need us, we’re here.
24-Hour Domestic Violence Hotline 866-367-9922 or 812-422-1191
Emergency Police/Fire 911 Indiana Coalition Against Domestic Violence Hotline TTY 800-332-7385
National Teen Dating Abuse Hotline 866-331-9474
National Domestic Violence Hotline 800-799-SAFE (7233)
Here are some other things you can do:
Make sure that you know phone numbers you can call and places you can go in an emergency.
Teach your children not to get in the middle of a fight.
If you think you may leave, make a plan to help keep you safe. This will help when you are getting ready to leave.
Your plan might include:
Putting together and hiding a suitcase of clothing; copies of your car and house keys; money or credit cards; and important papers, such as Social Security cards and birth certificates for you and your children.
Opening a savings account or getting a credit card, if you can do so in secret.
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Here are some things you can do to help:
Be a good listener and a caring friend.
Remind the person that no one deserves to be treated this way.
Let the person know that the abuse is against the law and that help is available.
Help the person make a plan to stay safe.
You can also suggest that the person call the YWCA for assistance or to join a domestic violence support group.
Keep in mind that the person may not want to leave. He or she often knows the abuser best and knows what options are safest. But it is important for victims of abuse to know where they can get help.
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People who are not abused might find it hard to understand why anyone would stay in a violent relationship. Some people think that if a person stays in an abusive relationship, she or he must be weak or needy. This is not true. There is more to this issue than simply leaving or staying. A woman may fear that the abuser will hurt her and her children or take her children away. She may have limited financial options. She may blame herself. She may stay for religious reasons or because she does not want to break up the family. Also, she may still love her abuser and hope that things will get better. A man who is being abused may have a similar experience.
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Domestic violence hurts victims as well as their families. Don’t ignore it.
People who suffer from abuse can be badly hurt. They are also likely to have long-lasting (chronic) health problems, such as depression, headaches, and post-traumatic stress disorder. This is because of the repeated injuries and stress from living with abuse.
Abuse can happen more often and get worse when women are pregnant. It is dangerous for both the mother and the baby. It can raise the baby’s risk of low birth weight, premature birth, and death. The pregnant woman is at higher risk of other problems, such as infections and bleeding.
And abuse has a big effect on children. Children who live in a home where abuse happens see violence as a normal way of life. It also raises their chance of being in a violent relationship as adults, either as abusers or as victims. Teens are at a greater risk for depression, drug and alcohol use, and bad behavior.