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Rural Women's Support hub is part of the Family Counselling Support Network company

which offers Australians health and wellness support no matter who, where and why.

Welcome to the

Rural Women's

Support Hub

Family Counselling Support Network (FCSN) is a Social Enterprise business which has been developed to help Australians find information more easily, in a more consolidated way, which is highly informative and offers genuine support to help you feel more empowered to make a more informed decision. It's time to make things easier!

The Rural Women's Support Hub, is just one of the many hubs provided for free through FCSN, to Australians. It is a hub dedicated to rural women of Australia. Rural encompasses all areas outside Australia's major cities.

We know that living on the land or remotely often means rural women face additional and different challenges to women living in metropolitan regions. In conjunction with our women's wellness and menopause hub, DV hub and Parent Directory hub, we hope to offer rural women a one stop consolidated place to access the support they deserve, feel better supported, connected and less isolated.

We acknowledge the support of all our inspirational ambassadors who are helping us to support the health, safety and wellness and connection of so many.

MEET OUR RURAL WOMEN AMBASSADORS

Katja Williams

'The Ultimate Farm Wife'

Katja, a New South Wales' farmer equips rural women with the necessary physical, social and emotional skills for life on the land. Her supportive online community 'You've Married a Farmer, Now What" is on social media, YouTube and Podcast. www.theruralum..com.au

Kirsten Diprose

Farmer, former ABC TV and radio reporter, podcaster of "Ducks on the Pond' and communications specialist

Based on a sheep and cropping property near Caramut, Kirsten founded the Rural Podcasting CO, a podcast coaching and agency service, specifically for people in rural areas. Kirsten was awarded a scholarship recently to the Australian Rural Leadership Program (ALRP). Ducks on the Pond, hosted by Kirsten and Jackie Elliott and Jennifer McCutcheon, is a podcast for rural women recognising that living on the land provides challenges and opportunities that are unique to rural,

Rural Women's Support Hub- Finally the Support You Need All In One Place!

Online Support Services

We know that accessing the support services you need can be bloody tough and frustrating.

Rather than spending countless hours trying to search on-line to find the services if and where they are available, Rural Women's Support Hub is dedicated to help connect rural women, to products and services that will help them source the help they need:

PHYSICALLY | MENTALLY | EMOTIONALLY | SOCIALLY | FINANCIALLY | LEGALLY

We do this by providing lists of expert online service providers, resources, webinars and events.

We also provide you access to Australia's largest PARENT HUB DIRECTORY which provides access to a range of online products which can be ordered online and delivered. If you have a product or service you would like to promote, please reach out to us at [email protected]

Emergency support

DO YOU NEED URGENT HELP? We are not able to provide crisis support.

If you need urgent help or in danger please call 000 (police, ambulance help)

Upcoming Events and activities

In order to give greater opportunities for connection and support, our hub aims to help promote rural and regional events and activities as well as our own online events, webinars and activities.

Please reach out to us if you would like us to promote a Rural women's event for FREE (applicable for not for profit organisations). If you are not for profit, please still reach out and we can discuss our small fee to help our administration fees.

Tips for marrying into farming!

  • What to initially expect - moving to the farm and adapting to change

  • What are the biggest challenges - real life hurdles as reported by rural women

  • Navigating the complexities of multi-generational farming

  • Adding value your way to the family farming business and feeling like you belong

  • Balancing farming life with family responsibilities

  • Self care on the farm and setting boundaries

  • Practical financial and business management skills for farming and online training

Sign up to our newsletter to receive all the updates on courses, activities, events, webinars and podcasts.

Online Clubs, Groups & Hobbies

Isolation and access to events can be tricky but it doesn't mean that you have to miss out on getting involved with online clubs and hobbies.

We have a range of fun online clubs launching and would love to open up the opportunity to promote your online clubs and hobbies for FREE through our hub listing. For further details please contact [email protected]


Many of our clients have asked for a fun online book club - we heard you! Sign up now to join our monthly Konnect online Bookclub launching soon https://konnectbookclub.com/


We are proud to promote Motherland's Village Program is innovative online mother's group program which provides a virtual space for rural mothers to improve communication and reduce isolation for mums. https://motherlandaustralia.com.au/motherland-village/


Sign up to our newsletter to receive all the updates on courses, activities, events, webinars and podcasts.

Konnect - the online bookclub

  • Monthly Books

  • Online book store

  • Fun Support group

  • Great host - Vanessa Barrington, The Book Doula!

  • Free giveaways

Support Courses & Webinars

We have a range of courses and webinars about to launch which have proven to be popular requests including:

  • Financial empowerment course

  • Succession planning

  • Re-connect with you course

  • Dealing with Anger and big emotions

  • Separation/Divorce course

  • Resilience building and stress management

  • It ain't all woo woo

  • Domestic Violence, financial and coercive control

  • Setting boundaries, dealing with triggers

  • Small business tips start up

Sign up to our newsletter to receive all the updates on courses, activities, events, webinars and podcasts.

We openly invite other organisations to promote their online courses with our hub.

Please email us with details at [email protected]

All advertising if free for registered not-for-profit organisations.

Rural Parenting Support

Expectant and new parents in rural and remote areas of Australia often face some unique parenting challenges - from lack of family support, lack of child care and specialist support services, concern regarding lack of confidentiality or genuine support, and/or struggle to find culturally sensitive support options.

This includes peri and post natal support, post birth challenges, parenting challenges, schooling needs, empty nest, neurodivergent support, co-parenting support.

We will provide great resources and supports from experts in these areas as well as a directory to support services.

Podcasts and Resources

Our free Podcasts are launching soon with "Keeping it all Real with Susan and Friends"

where we have a great line up of rural, regional and city, guys and girls and experts chatting on a great array of engaging topics - some serious, some education and some just plain nonsense/fun!

We also would love you to join Ducks on the Pond - a fabulous podcast with one of our wonderful rural ambassadors, Kirsten Diprose, a farmer and former ABC journalist, Jackie Elliot a professional in the agricultural industry and Jennifer McCutcheon, a journalist in Dubbo, who provide podcasts dedicated to rural women by rural women. Each tackling issues crucial to the lives of rural women including mental health, succession planning balancing motherhood with rural life and launching personal businesses.

Katja, a New South Wales' farmer equips rural women with the necessary physical, social and emotional skills for life on the land. Her supportive online community 'You've Married a Farmer, Now What" is on social media, YouTube and Podcast. www.theruralmum.com.au

Sign up to our newsletter to receive all the updates.

Rural Support Hub Directory

Rural Support Blogs

ARE THEY GASLIGHTING ME?

Are they gaslighting me?

October 03, 20245 min read

ARE THEY GASLIGHTING, LOVE BOMBING OR HOOVERING?

“That never happened. Have you taken your meds?”

“You’re crazy. That’s not what happened.”

“I only told you that you were fat because you I would hate you to let yourself go.”

“I never told you that.”

“You’re too sensitive. I was only joking.”

Are you often thinking your mind is playing tricks on you? Are you starting to question your own sanity or losing your memory? If any of the above statements sound familiar, you are likely the victim of gaslighting. It’s an emotional abuse tactic that can leave you unsure about yourself, others, and life in general. If you don’t address it, you can have long-lasting effects, emotionally and physically. Counselling can help you understand what you are experiencing, help you set boundaries and reach a decision about the relationship which feels right for you.

What is gaslighting?

Gaslighting is an actual, intentional, and serious form of emotional, psychological abuse. It is a psychological manipulation tactic someone uses to control and manipulate a victim by making them doubt their memories, perception of reality and judgments.

It can occur in romantic, platonic and family relationships – or even at work.

Often victims of gaslighting are not even aware that this is happening to them because it has been happening for so long, in a slow, covert fashion.

How Does It Begin?

A relationship with a gas lighter may seem to start out quite well. They may praise you, the victim, on a first date and very quickly confide in you. This is where the manipulation begins since, disclosure, before any real intimacy has been established, results in trust being quickly established. This tactic is known as ‘love bombing’. Once you become fully engaged with the gas lighter, you become vulnerable and then the next phase of manipulation often begins.

COMMON GASLIGHTING TECHNIQUES

Do you recognise any of the following most common gaslighting techniques?

  • They blatantly lie to you with a straight face. The abuser blatantly and habitually lies to change your reality. Even when you know they are lying, they can convince you otherwise, which in turn makes you start second-guessing yourself. If you call them a liar they turn around and call you a liar or insist they lied for a good reason for example to protect your feelings or theirs.

  • They attack things important to you. They might criticize your job, make snide comments about you, your family or friends. These remarks are meant to make you feel insecure and inadequate.

  • They deny their bad behaviour – their lying, hurting your feelings, or doing anything wrong. They insist that you misunderstood them, that you’re remembering things incorrectly, or that you’re making things up to hurt them.

  • Their actions don’t match their words. They may insist they support you, but always criticise your choices.

  • They will target your insecurities to make you feel weak about yourself.

  • They spread rumours and speak poorly about you online or in face to face conversations. They will often portray themselves as the victims to others.

  • They can’t stand criticism themselves and will take it as a personal attack, no matter how respectfully you complain about their behaviour.

  • They project on you – for example the abuser is cheating. Instead of admitting to the affair, they’ll accuse you of being unfaithful. You end up having to defend yourself rather than seeing what they’ve been doing to you.

  • They manipulate your relationships, whether through isolation or through groupthink type behaviours. They will tell you that your family members don’t really love you and claim that they are liars. They may even try to convince everyone around you that you seem emotionally unstable or “crazy.”

  • They can confuse you with sudden kindness to distract you from their bad behaviour. One minute, they may cut you down and the next, they praise you.

  • They wear you down until you just give up – you stop arguing or defending yourself since you feel so defeated.

SIGNS YOU ARE A VICTIM OF GASLIGHTING

-        You constantly second guess yourself.

-        You wonder if you are just overly sensitive or too hormonal.

-        You create excuses for the gas lighters behaviour and their actions.

-        You stop trusting your own judgement and recollection of events, beliefs, and perspectives.

-        You start to wonder if you are losing your memory, regularly confused, or going ‘crazy.’

WHAT IS ”HOOVERING”?

When you try to leave the gas lighting relationship, they may use the ‘hoovering’ tactic which involves excessive praise, expressions of love, showers of compliments and fervent promises of the ways in which they will make positive changes in the relationship. Unfortunately, it does not take long for old habits and behavioural patterns to resurface, once you commit to staying. Their goal is to always keep you locked in to their control.

WHAT CAN YOU DO TO STOP BEING A VICTIM?

If you identify with any of the signs, here are some tips to take back control of your life and your reality:

·     You need to stand firm and not let their denials cloud your thinking and actions.

·     Remember you are not responsible for someone else’s behaviour. It is not your fault.

·     Trust your own judgment and believe in yourself.

·     Acknowledge the feelings you are having are real.

·     Remind yourself that you deserve to be respected and supported by the people in your life.

·     If someone displays a pattern of behaviour, trust the pattern over anything that person says.

·     Don’t back down if you believe your criticism is fair, even if the gas lighter won’t change.

·     Set clear boundaries to protect yourself and expect them to be respected,

·     Document what is occurring so you can help track the reality.

·     Ask someone independent, with whom you are close and who you trust, if they think you are being manipulated by the abuser.

·     Realise you will never win an argument with this person or get any apology.

·     Limit contact with the gas lighter. Consider ending or pulling back from the relationship if you want to, especially if the gas lighter refuses to change their behaviour.

If, despite attempts to move towards a healthier relationship, you still feel blocked in implementing these strategies, then please reach out to our trained team of psychologists and counsellors who can help you plan and strategise to move forward positively. Furthermore, if you feel unsafe because of someone’s controlling behaviour, seek assistance from the police or call 000 if it is an emergency.

 

gaslightinggaslighting supportcounselling supportFamily law supportAbuse
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