EducationNews

Students Learn How to Spot Dating Violence and Break the Cycle of Abuse

Fayette Cares Victim Advocates Janisha Lax (left) and Mykaila Dye help hundreds of Fayette Ware Comprehensive High School Students learn about unhealthy relationships.

“At this very school, I had a friend in an abusive relationship, and it broke my heart that I didn’t know how to help her,” said Fayette Cares Victim Advocate Janisha Lax.

She and Fayette Cares Victim Advocate Mykaila Dye collaborated with Fayette County Public Schools Project AWARE to help nearly 200, ninth grade Fayette Ware Comprehensive High School students learn about unhealthy relationships during Teen Dating Violence Awareness Month.

Teens and young adults are the most at-risk age groups for dating and domestic violence. According to the U.S. Department of Justice Bureau of Justice Statistic, abusers most often target women ages 16 to 24 and these young women experience the highest rate of intimate partner violence, almost triple the national average.

Young people are particularly vulnerable because they may be new to relationships, more trusting, more impulsive, and may not have learned what healthy boundaries look like. That is why it is important for teens, and their supportive adults, to learn the warning signs of abuse and how to respond to those at risk.

At the presentation, teens swarmed to the Fayette Cares Advocates privately sharing personal stories and asking about behaviors, including aggressive text messages from their partners. Some students came to realize they were experiencing dating abuse or witnessing abuse in their homes, or that their friends were in unhealthy relationships. 

“One young lady and I had a heart to heart because her partner had begun taunting and bulling her,” said Janisha.

After learning that the relationship started healthy then quickly turned dangerous, Janisha helped the student make a safety plan and told her about the services available through Fayette Cares.

“She hugged me, in tears, and was so grateful for the support,” said Janisha. “I remembered feeling powerless to help my friend back when I was in high school. But now we can give young people the tools to help end abuse.”

Contact a Fayette Cares Victim Advocate to learn how you or your group can end dating violence at advocate@fayettecares.org or (901) 465-3802, extension 222.


Learn more about the work of Fayette Cares at FayetteCares.org. The mission of Fayette Cares is to empower those in need with solutions to end homelessness, break the cycle of domestic violence, and create stability and self-sufficiency from crisis. Fayette Cares has served the Mid-South as a community-supported non-profit organization since 1986 and is a United Way member agency.

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