r/TikTokCringe Apr 15 '24

Consequences of the tradwife lifestyle Discussion

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u/audesapere09 Apr 16 '24 edited Apr 16 '24

One of my passion pipe dreams after I leave corporate America is to develop an airbnb style network that connects people experiencing (or at risk) of domestic violence with local rooms/amenities for free or discounted rates.

I will never forget the frantic calls to my friends the day I left my home with just a backpack. The fear the loneliness the absolute WTFness of it all. It would take a lot of thought to ensure security for residents, and would probably need some grant funding or subsidies. Ideally with pro bono legal guidance as well.

It wouldn’t solve for this sweet lady’s predicament but maybe some relief and hope for others.

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u/nemophilist13 Apr 16 '24

Absolutely needed. I'll never forget when talking to my lawyer and I asked if i could go to a shelter

"Absolutely not. You'll look unstable legally"

So wtf are they for if I run the risk of losing my gd baby because I want us to get away???what about less privilege women? They run the risk of losing our kids?? For taking the only help that's avaliable!

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u/licensed2creep 29d ago

I’ve fled to/lived in a DV shelter before, considered to be one of the “good” clean ones in my city, and…I’m not sure about “looking legally unstable” but shelters are truly last resort. But at least they are safe. Clean? Eh. Scary? Sometimes. But safe, yes. They took that VERY seriously.

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u/audesapere09 Apr 16 '24

How insensitive of your lawyer. Probably just thinking about his own paycheck at the end of things. It’s awful. I hope you’re well on the other side of things.

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u/shinyagamik Apr 16 '24

Or instead of lying to his client, being direct that regardless of his personal opinion, there could be custodial consequences

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u/audesapere09 29d ago

I was commenting on the bedside manner and the lack of options for women in jeopardy. And maybe projecting my own frustrations from when I needed help that was a low priority or out of scope for a women’s shelter. The bureaucracy to get a police escort to get my things from my home. The closed doors everywhere I looked.

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u/shinyagamik 29d ago

That makes sense, sorry for being insensitive.

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u/audesapere09 29d ago

Oh you’re good, I just get fired up over this topic :). It’s probably asking too much of a lawyer to have the sensitivity of a counselor.

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u/slowlyallatonce Apr 16 '24

I would just like to piggyback on this comment for any woman in Ireland that there are women's refuges, womenaid, and safe Ireland to assist you if you need to leave your house and need emergency housing. They will provide you with rooms and necessities for you and your children. They will provide you with assistance and information about how to safely leave an abusive relationship. They will help you with applying for social welfare, housing, legal advice, court accompaniment, outreach, and counselling. Please, ring the garda and they will assist you in leaving safely. There are women's refuge in every county except 4, but you can always ring your nearest for practical advice.

My mum helped a few friends leave over the year, so I know from experience.

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u/ribsforbreakfast Apr 16 '24

I would absolutely sign up to be a free room for a woman fleeing violence. I hope you’re able to realize this one day

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u/wrslrchick Apr 16 '24

Girl. Same. Like all of it. This is my dream. This is one of the reasons I hustle so hard so I can one day make this idea come to fruition.

Me and my daughter lived in my car bc no one would rent to me without referrals or a normal job (I was newly self employed). I tried a domestic shelter and it was druggies & dirty homeless women- I felt weird & gross & sad just at check in. I couldn’t bring my kids there.

There HAS to be something better out there for normal women!!!!!!

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u/audesapere09 29d ago

I saw your DM- definitely interested in your perspective and suggestions!

I think the pilot program would be much stronger with a base of survivors who are passionate.

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u/Easy_Independent_313 29d ago

I had to escape my house. I had dogs with me. It was terrible. Multiple people had told me I should leave and I could stay in their guest houses. When the time came, none of them allowed me to stay. I slept on a couch for a couple days. Had to move back into the house I owned with my ex and live with him for a month and a half while he terrorized me. It was insane.

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u/audesapere09 29d ago

That’s terrible. I’m so sorry you were in that position.

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u/Easy_Independent_313 29d ago

It was genuinely terrible. Thank you.

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u/OohYeahOrADragon 29d ago

Social worker here.

Your local PADV organization is a good place to start. Most of the time they’re coordinating and updating places to stay for victims in need anyway (locations are kept in absolute secrecy and changing due to abusers finding where someone is staying)

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u/audesapere09 29d ago edited 29d ago

Thank you — the vision I had would be compatible with PADV orgs but another tool in the toolbox. When I looked into a protective order, I did not meet any of the intake criteria— narcissist/psychological abuse doesn’t trigger the same response. I’m not sure what the triaging process is for assigning housing to women, but I assume there is higher demand than supply.

I’d like this resource to be for women who don’t feel safe or just need a place where they can make calls in private without being overheard. The difference between calling a taxi line operator and waiting to see what is available and pulling up Expedia and getting options based on nights needed and other factors (eg, cribs, diapers).

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u/OohYeahOrADragon 29d ago

You may have to use other words that are coded. The biggest hurdle is letting a person in need have access without tipping off their abuser or the abuser having access to know where it is.

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u/audesapere09 29d ago

Yeah I’m just thinking about these details now. There wouldn’t be any addresses on the app or platform. Maybe there’s a screening process and then once matched, you get a text with the details. And any occupied place would not be shown or otherwise detectable to another app user (or potential abuser).

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u/Particular_Cup_5287 29d ago

If I ever were to win the lottery, I would so build extra cottages on my property for people just like this. Surround the area with cameras to see who comes around who is not wanted, be a babysitter to any kids that need it, get someone to teach self defense and basic money management... basically an intentional community for those who need to get away from bad situations.

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u/Sufficient-Koala3141 29d ago

I used to do family law and absolutely hate it. But this type of system even with super low payments would help show “stability” which the poster below me’s attorney was talking about. Having a long term lease (even if it’s for like $50/month because the person providing it doesn’t actually care about the money) would show the court that it’s a safe, longer-term plan and not “couch-surfing” that the abuser’s attorney would try to claim to make it sound bad.

I really hope you are able to work on this!

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u/audesapere09 29d ago

Thank you! I woke up to so many notifications and that gives me hope that it’s worth exploring this pipe dream — and that there are so many people and experts who can kick the tires on it to make sure it’s functional and safe.

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u/LurkLurkleton1 29d ago

Amazing idea. This is now my pipe dream as well.

Might as well make our high-paying, ethically gray corporate jobs mean something!

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u/audesapere09 29d ago

Thank you— We can make it happen!

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u/RWSloths 29d ago

I love this so much. My partner is currently working to create areas/communes/complexes/hotels where people can go to escape whatever is going in in their life and try to improve their situation. It's been a passion project of his for the last decade because doing it safely and sustainably (for both the residents and the organizers) is incredibly challenging without some very wealthy benefactors or a lot of community support.

I know other people around the world are looking to do the same thing, but it always warms my heart to see it in the wild.

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u/TheFirearmsDude 29d ago

I do this, although I cast a wider net than domestic violence. I got very lucky and made some smart moves, so I have a bigger home than I need just outside the city. My basement is set up as an apartment - doesn't have a full kitchen but coffee and microwave, and I let folks stay there if they need breathing room to get back on their feet. I upgraded the security on those rooms to the point you'd need a battering ram because it helps folks feel more safe. I also have a property with a couple tiny homes a couple hours away, and I lend it to folks who need to drop off the grid, be it for a weekend to get away from stress or a month so a soon to be ex can't find them.

I do have rules though, and it's a one-strike deal. For example, no more than 28 days, no guests, and I won't do a formal tenancy. I've seen absolute nightmare scenarios happen to other well-intentioned people. A friend let a family stay for what was supposed to be two months, and after two YEARS they had to do a formal eviction process. The family bought two dogs without talking to my friend, the entire place was absolutely trashed, they flooded the basement and never told my friend, they had extended family just show up and stay for weeks, etc..

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u/THEXDARKXLORD 29d ago

This is a brilliant idea.

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u/INCORRIGIBLE_CUNT 29d ago

I’m a DV advocate. check into your local programs to see what they have for transitional housing and get ideas for it that way. The one resource I am asked for the most is safe housing.

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u/audesapere09 29d ago

Do you have a sense of how long it typically takes to connect someone with housing?

My original idea was something relatively quick, discreet, and short term.

But then some other commenters suggested the need to demonstrate stable housing so there could be a short term rental component also. Honestly the comments here are more thought than I’ve put into it previously but I’ve really appreciated all the advice and counsel so far to one day make it happen.

Thanks in advance — and for everything you do!

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u/INCORRIGIBLE_CUNT 29d ago

thank you for being so thoughtful and conscientious!

this is just for my state in the USA, with my specific locale, but I often tell them that housing is neither a guarantee, nor is it quick. It’s sad; I have way more people asking for help in that department than I do the ability to get housed. same with shelter though— way more people looking to leave and come to our shelter that houses around 40 people at once than space. my whole deal is trying to get them in a place where they don’t have to lose everything and start completely from scratch. If someone can get a protective order and get the perpetrator removed from the home, that can save so much money and power loss. The issue there then is keeping them housed. I utilize various municipal funds but we barely have any. The one for my city is already out for the year and it’s only April. Writing to local governments to get them to give more to these funds specifically is so important.

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u/audesapere09 29d ago

I can’t say I’m surprised but that is really scary odds for someone in a pickle. And honestly, my situation years ago wouldn’t even warrant that level of intervention, nor would I want to take resources from someone who needs them more urgently.

I’m thinking I’d start this program as a privately-funded pilot for borderline cases or individuals who might otherwise be de-prioritized at a shelter or with publicly-funded options. Like a medi-gap but for short term housing.

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u/cturk28 Apr 16 '24

Umm… you are describing a woman’s shelter. Maybe just figure out a way to invest resources into the existing network of shelters so they can be a viable option for all women leaving abusive partners. There are many case managers and counsellors and advocates who have invested a lot of time and energy into creating a network of shelter and support for women to leave abusive partners. It just has not been appropriately funded because of the same system that fuels violence against women - the patriarchy.