Getting Ready to Leave

  1. Keep any evidence of physical abuse, such as pictures, etc., in a safe place that is accessible for you.
  2. Know where you can go to get help; tell someone you trust what is happening to you.
  3. If you are injured, go to a doctor or an emergency room and report what happened to you. Ask that they document your visit.
  4. Plan with your children and identify a safe place for them (for example, a room within your home that has a lock or a friend’s house where they can go for help). Reassure them that their job is to stay safe, not to protect you.
  5. Contact your local domestic violence program and find out about laws and other resources available to you before you have to use them during a crisis.
  6. Keep a journal of all violent incidences involving your abuser, those aimed at yourself and those aimed at others.
  7. Acquire job skills as you can, such as learning computer skills or taking courses at a community college.

General Guidelines for Leaving an Abusive Relationship

  1. You may request a police stand-by or escort while you leave.
  2. If you need to sneak away, be prepared:
    • Make a plan for how and where you will escape, and include a plan for a quick escape;
    • Put aside emergency money as you can;
    • Hide an extra set of car keys; and
    • Pack an extra set of clothes for yourself and your children and store them at a trusted friend or neighbor’s house. Try to avoid using next-door neighbors, close family members and mutual friends, if at all possible.
  3. Take with you a list of important phone numbers of friends, relatives, doctors, schools, etc., as well as other important items, including:
    • Driver’s license
    • Regularly needed medication
    • Checkbooks and information about bank accounts and other assets
    • List of credit cards held by self or jointly, or the credit cards themselves if you have access to them; and
    • Pay-stubs.
  4. If time is available, also take (or pack copies in a suitcase):
    • Copy of marriage license, birth certificates, will and other legal documents
    • Verification of social security numbers
    • Citizenship documents (passport, green card, etc.)
    • Titles, deeds and other property information
    • Welfare identification
    • Medical records
    • Children’s school records and immunization records
    • Insurance information
    • Valued pictures, jewelry, or personal possessions.
  5. Create a false trail. Call motels, real estate agencies, schools in a town at least six hours away from where you actually are located. Ask questions that require a call back to your current house in order to leave numbers on record with your abuser.

After Leaving the Abusive Relationship

  1. If you are getting a restraining order and your abuser is leaving:
    • Change residence locks and phone number as soon as possible (local domestic violence programs can sometimes help with the cost of these)
    • Change your work hours and the route you take to work;
    • Change the route you use to take your children to school;
    • Keep your copy of the restraining order in a safe place;
    • Inform friends, neighbors and employers that you have a restraining order in effect; and always call the police to enforce the order even for the slightest violation.
  2. If you leave:
    • Consider renting a post office box for your mail or using the address of a friend; many states also provide anonymous mailing addresses for victims – talk to your local domestic violence program about this.
    • Be aware that addresses are on restraining orders and police reports and can be accessed by your abuser;
    • Be careful to whom you give your new address and phone number;
    • Change your work hours if possible.
    • Alert school authorities of the situation, and the fact that a restraining order is in place.
    • Consider changing your children’s schools.
    • After you leave, reschedule any appointments that your abuser was aware of before you left.
    • Shop at different stores and frequent different social spots than you previously frequented so your abuser will be less likely to find you.
    • Alert neighbors of your situation, and request that they call the police if they feel you may be in danger.
    • Talk to trusted people about the violence.
    • Replace doors with solid-core wood, steel or metal doors. Install security system, if possible.
    • Install a motion-sensitive lighting system outside your home.
    • Tell your co-workers about the situation; ask their assistance in screening all calls you receive during office hours.
    • Explicitly inform your children’s caretakers about who is allowed to pick up the children and that your partner is not allowed to do so.
    • Call your telephone company about blocking caller id on your landline, so that if you make a phone call, your partner nor anyone else will be able to get your new, unlisted phone number. You can also block your id on cell phones by dialing *67 before making a phone call.