Analysis Of Enough

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Enough features the story of a young woman, Slim, who flees from her abusive husband with her child, Gracie. Through her journey to find safety for herself and her daughter, Slim undergoes a trying and difficult experience where she discovers who she is as a woman and a mother. While Slim goes from being a victim to a young woman taking back control of her life, the audience learns more about victims and the challenges victims can face, such as fear of retribution, conflicts with the legal system, trauma an abuse victim faces, and more important ideas.
Enough demonstrates some of the negative consequences of being a victim that society can sometimes turn a blind eye to or actually contribute to. To begin with, when Slim shows her mother-in-law …show more content…

To begin with, Slim has some resources to flee her husband and escape the abuse (Apted, 2002). In reality, many women do not have the means to leave the abuser and escape to other states. Financial dependency is a real and very prevalent factor that forces many abuse victims to stay with their spouses (Domestic Abuse Project, 2015). Victims may be able to get support from others, but many never get to that point because they do not feel that leaving is really an option. Moreover, domestic violence is only represented in this film as physical abuse. Many victims of domestic violence experience combinations of physical, economic, physiological, and sexual abuse (Quinn-Cask, 2015). While physical wounds can heal, physiological, sexual, and other forms of emotional abuse can leave scars that stay with a person forever. It is important to appreciate the gravity of how serious a domestic violence situation can be by taking into account all forms of abuse. Furthermore, Slim’s move with her daughter to another state in an attempt to hide her from her husband can be seen as parental kidnapping. Victims need to obtain a restraining order or have a custody hearing to be able to take a child away from another parent. This is often a problem for victims as they do not want to flee with their child(ren) and be the one seen as committing a …show more content…

Many programs, such as the Family Violence Prevention Program, serve to aid men, women, and children that are victims of family violence. Stemming from the Family Violence Prevention Program, the Family Violence Prevention Services Act (FVPSA) was created. FVPSA is the largest source of emergency services for victims of domestic violence and for the victim’s children (NCADV Public Policy Office, 2009). In Slim’s circumstances, she would have had access to domestic violence shelters and safe-houses, counseling, legal assistance, and other essentials that would have greatly impacted her situation. Furthermore, the Family and Youth Services Bureau provides programs, coordinated by the FVPSA, that serve to increase resources for victims, increase services for children who are exposed to domestic violence, gather and analyze data related to domestic and family violence, and various other services (U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, 2014). This can have a large influence on victims who may otherwise not receive the help that they need. Services are especially important for children who, as young as just months old, will be severely impacted by the violence that they are witnessing or experiencing for themselves. They are likely to face problems such as poor school performance, drug and alcohol abuse, have relationship problems themselves, and others (Quinn-Cask, 2015). The Family

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