I wasn’t allowed on the bed. Every night, I’d try to sneak onto it, hoping for a moment of comfort, but she’d always shove me off. I made it as comfortable as I could, with a cushion and a blanket, but it still felt like I was being treated like an animal. Lying there, I couldn’t shake the feeling of being less than human, undeserving of even a basic place to sleep.
UNSEEN ECHOES - Objects of Domestic Abuse | Photography Project & Exhibition

Sleep on floor

At first, it was a joke.

“You take up too much space.”
“You fidget too much.”
“You snore.”

Little comments, said with a smirk, a teasing nudge. I laughed along. It was normal, wasn’t it? Everyone had their little annoyances with their partner.

But then one night, she told me not to get in the bed at all. Just like that. No fight, no lead-up, just a casual statement.

“You can sleep on the floor.”

I thought she was joking.

She wasn’t.

I remember standing there for a second, waiting for her to change her mind. Waiting for her to roll her eyes, sigh dramatically, and say, “Fine, but stay on your side.”

She didn’t.

I tried sleeping in the armchair, but that wasn’t allowed either. “You’re not sleeping out here,” she said, barely glancing at me. “Go in the bedroom.”

It was a control thing. That much was obvious. I wasn’t allowed to be comfortable. I wasn’t allowed to choose.

So I made do.

I folded a blanket over a cushion and lay down on the floor beside the bed, staring at the ceiling.

Every night, I’d try to sneak onto the mattress, just for a little while. Just long enough to feel like I was still a person, like I still had some right to be there.

But she always woke up. Always shoved me off without a word.

I don’t know what was worse—being pushed away, or the fact that she didn’t even seem angry about it. Just irritated, like I was a dog that wouldn’t stay off the furniture.

Lying there, on the hard floor, I realised something.

It wasn’t about the bed.

It was about making sure I knew exactly where I belonged.

share this story:

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
WhatsApp
Email

More stories

UNSEEN ECHOES - Objects of Domestic Abuse | Photography Project & Exhibition

He’d go days without speaking to me, always with the radio blaring. Whenever I tried to talk to him, he’d just crank up the volume, drowning out my voice.

He never said why, just completely ignored me like I didn’t even exist.

Read More
UNSEEN ECHOES - Objects of Domestic Abuse | Photography Project & Exhibition

He boiled a pan of water on the hob. He kept telling me that I had to stop upsetting him. He said it over and over again, but wouldn’t say what I was doing.

Then he called the dog over and held it near the water. He kept telling me to stop upsetting him.

I couldn’t. I didn’t even know what I had done wrong.

Read More
UNSEEN ECHOES - Objects of Domestic Abuse | Photography Project & Exhibition

He knew when I got paid on Fridays. The money would go straight into my bank account, but he’d make me go to the cashpoint to withdraw it.

I worked my butt off all week for that cash, but I never got to keep any of it. It felt like all my hard work was for nothing, like he was just using me so he could go to the pub.

Read More
UNSEEN ECHOES - Objects of Domestic Abuse | Photography Project & Exhibition

We would go places, and she’d tell me I wasn’t there, that I imagined it. One time, we went to the beach, and I had a photo of the sunset.

She said she took it to show her friend because I wasn’t there. But I knew I was. Did I really make it up? It made me doubt my own memories, like I didn’t know what was real.

Read More
UNSEEN ECHOES - Objects of Domestic Abuse | Photography Project & Exhibition

I began receiving cards in the mail from my friends, filled with well wishes for a speedy recovery. I was so confused, I wondered why they thought I was sick. Turns out he had told all my friends that I was sick and couldn’t see them.

It was like he was isolating me from the people who cared about me, manipulating them into believing his lies.

Read More
UNSEEN ECHOES - Objects of Domestic Abuse | Photography Project & Exhibition

He always come with me to shops, never help, just follow me. He make sure I don’t stop to talk to anyone.

After shop, he watch me struggle with bags, tell me hurry up for TV.

It feel like I can’t do anything without him watching.

Read More
Receive the latest news

Subscribe To Our Newsletter

Exhibitions. Project Updates. Stories. Plus More.