{"id":1718519,"date":"2026-01-31T13:00:00","date_gmt":"2026-01-31T10:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/analyse.optim.biz\/?p=1718519"},"modified":"2026-01-31T13:00:00","modified_gmt":"2026-01-31T10:00:00","slug":"fatima-bhutto-on-surviving-a-coercive-relationship-i-thought-he-could-fix-what-hurt-me","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/analyse.optim.biz\/?p=1718519","title":{"rendered":"Fatima Bhutto on Surviving a Coercive Relationship: \u201cI Thought He Could Fix What Hurt Me\u201d"},"content":{"rendered":"<article class=\"article main-content story\" lang=\"en-US\">\n<div class=\"AIContentWrapper-gOOlQO cxIHmB\">\n<div class=\"ArticlePageLedeBackground-JMVDp bIwRjk\">\n<header class=\"SplitScreenContentHeaderWrapper-bqcckH dgwopC content-header article__content-header\" data-testid=\"SplitScreenContentHeaderWrapper\">\n<div class=\"GridWrapper-cFSKbf bwWKDe grid grid-items-2 grid-full-bleed grid-no-gap SplitScreenContentHeaderMain-fSAWSb hvqZwq with-divider-desktop inset\" data-journey-hook=\"grid-wrapper\">\n<div class=\"GridItem-beYvyV dORtPa grid--item\">\n<div class=\"SplitScreenContentHeaderTitleBlock-dgZlN efyluZ\">\n<div class=\"content-header-text\">\n<div data-testid=\"ContentHeaderRubric\" class=\"SplitScreenContentHeaderRubricWrapper-nqSty jVvtgm\">\n<div class=\"RubricWrapper-dZIqzO bjIFnB SplitScreenContentHeaderRubric-cwlQXZ gpqlVr\"><span class=\"RubricName-gkORYq fCauaT rubric__name\">Opinion<\/span><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<h1 data-testid=\"ContentHeaderHed\" class=\"BaseWrap-sc-gzmcOU BaseText-eqOrNE SplitScreenContentHeaderHed-kNzeIR deqABF hRonzj ksbTin\">Fatima Bhutto on Surviving a Coercive Relationship: \u201cI Thought He Could Fix What Hurt Me\u201d<\/h1>\n<div class=\"accreditation-info\">\n<div data-testid=\"BylinesWrapper\" class=\"BylinesWrapper-vmGrt cZzmZD bylines SplitScreenContentHeaderByline-kAWXxZ gsrbkL\"><span class=\"BylineWrapper-jRoBEm jaHakw byline bylines__byline\" data-testid=\"BylineWrapper\"><span class=\"BylineNamesWrapper-jrdaOa fXeqQN\"><span data-testid=\"BylineName\" class=\"BylineName-kqTBDS dDLLkB byline__name\"><span class=\"BaseWrap-sc-gzmcOU BaseText-eqOrNE BylinePreamble-itSxDZ deqABF kOfzTl jcgMlx byline__preamble\">By <\/span>Fatima Bhutto<\/span><\/span><\/span><\/div>\n<p><time data-testid=\"ContentHeaderPublishDate\" datetime=\"2026-01-31T08:00:00-05:00\" class=\"SplitScreenContentHeaderPublishDate-bxkRjt kjcptl\">January 31, 2026<\/time><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"GridItem-beYvyV dORtPa grid--item\">\n<div class=\"SplitScreenContentHeaderLeadWrapper-jIJSOL fQVnZP\">\n<div data-testid=\"ContentHeaderLeadAsset\" class=\"SplitScreenContentHeaderLedeBlock-fGKVV gmulNX\"><span class=\"SpanWrapper-zEXFr koTknX responsive-asset SplitScreenContentHeaderLede-bBfGxM eLdpCA\"><source media=\"(max-width: 767px)\" srcset=\"https:\/\/assets.vogue.com\/photos\/697e6d55ac33a37971a4eb7f\/master\/w_120,c_limit\/223382538_hr.jpg 120w, https:\/\/assets.vogue.com\/photos\/697e6d55ac33a37971a4eb7f\/master\/w_240,c_limit\/223382538_hr.jpg 240w, https:\/\/assets.vogue.com\/photos\/697e6d55ac33a37971a4eb7f\/master\/w_320,c_limit\/223382538_hr.jpg 320w, https:\/\/assets.vogue.com\/photos\/697e6d55ac33a37971a4eb7f\/master\/w_640,c_limit\/223382538_hr.jpg 640w, https:\/\/assets.vogue.com\/photos\/697e6d55ac33a37971a4eb7f\/master\/w_960,c_limit\/223382538_hr.jpg 960w\" sizes=\"100vw\" \/><\/span><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"GridWrapper-cFSKbf fubVbh grid grid-margins grid-items-0 SplitScreenContentHeaderGrid-kzWXVM cEYGpi align-end\" data-journey-hook=\"grid-wrapper\">\n<div class=\"GridItem-beYvyV bRelOV grid--item\">\n<div class=\"CaptionWrapper-jYrTxZ jNLyNY caption SplitScreenContentHeaderCaption-jdBsAm gFMjJo\" data-testid=\"caption-wrapper\"><span class=\"BaseWrap-sc-gzmcOU BaseText-eqOrNE CaptionCredit-eowWKH deqABF mdLVF gxwcqg caption__credit\">Photo: Pankaj Mishra<\/span><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/header>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div data-attribute-verso-pattern=\"article-body\" class=\"ArticlePageContentBackGround-dcEtzE dRBcvG article-body__content\">\n<div class=\"ArticlePageChunksContent-enJWmu ilcJfn\">\n<div data-testid=\"ArticlePageChunks\" class=\"ArticlePageChunks-fwcPjP cAlDKu\">\n<div class=\"GridWrapper-cFSKbf cxzKYj grid grid-margins grid-items-2 ArticlePageChunksGrid-hkPQhP lnoYVP grid-layout--adrail narrow wide-adrail\" data-journey-hook=\"grid-wrapper\">\n<div class=\"GridItem-beYvyV kCPYUp grid--item grid-layout__content\">\n<div class=\"BodyWrapper-kzyFNv nCpFP body body__container article__body\" data-journey-hook=\"client-content\" data-testid=\"BodyWrapper\">\n<div class=\"body__inner-container\">\n<p>When I was 28 years old, I met a man who gave me a dark gift. I had just published a book about my father\u2019s life and murder. I was 14 when my father, a politician whom I adored more than anyone on earth, was assassinated outside our home in Pakistan. My brother and I were inside and heard everything. I knew I would not get justice in my country, perhaps ever, but I believed that memory was a form of fighting power and its relentless violence, so more than a decade after my father\u2019s assassination, I went from country to country with my book to tell the story of how my heart had been broken.<\/p>\n<p>Every day standing at a podium, I relived the worst moments of my life. I could calmly recount the tragedy of losing my beloved father day after day. I would, however, collapse and weep if I couldn\u2019t find my phone charger in the hotel later. My body often shut down and I was overcome with anxiety and depression, unable to eat or sleep, hiding away in a dark room for days until the pain lifted. I suffered panic attacks for a long time and was unable to shift the grief that overwhelmed me.<\/p>\n<p>And then, I met a mesmerizing older man. My sorrow was etched all over my face, he told me. He had been watching me and wondered how I hadn\u2019t seen that I could free myself and be forever liberated from pain. He could show me, he said; he could take my grief away\u2014this was the gift he gave me. All I had to do was believe him\u2014that was the darkness. I was hypnotized by the man\u2019s promise. He spoke to me gently then, and he wasn\u2019t impressed by my \u201cact\u201d\u2014as he called it\u2014of being smart and tough. The man did help me. He taught me new ways of observing my thoughts and of transforming my worries and cut the cyclical loop of my anxiety and heartache. I was spellbound.<\/p>\n<p>The man wasn\u2019t intimidated by me. He didn\u2019t think what I was doing was very impressive at all. I wasn\u2019t that smart, he let me know, and surely, I didn\u2019t really believe all those things people said about me being brave, did I? When he saw my bookshelves, grown over a lifetime of faithful reading, he told me that I should give the books away. They were just props in my ruse to fool people into thinking I was intelligent. I looked ridiculous with make-up on, he said\u2014who was I trying to impress? You need to be free of these attachments, he expounded. He had none of the delusions I did, he was attached to nothing and no one, not even me, because he understood the truth of the world in a way I did not. Attachment breeds suffering. I thought he was very wise and clever.<\/p>\n<p>The man spoke with expert authority about everything, and it didn\u2019t hurt that he was handsome and dashing. There was nothing he hadn\u2019t done\u2014skydiving? Yes, several times. Marathons? Sure. Flying a plane? It was like driving a car, just easier. Cooking? He knew more than a Cordon Bleu chef. Genius? Well, many people had said as much about him, he confessed nonchalantly before looking off into the horizon.<\/p>\n<p>The man had never married. He had never settled down because no one had understood him, no one until me\u2014he would have married me immediately, he told me quite early on, but he knew we wouldn\u2019t work out. It ached to hear him say this and I vowed to prove him wrong. I was his soulmate, he admitted, and I had come into his life at exactly the right time. That was fate, and who on earth can stand against fate? This, I would later learn, is called love-bombing (his version was special because it was undercut with reliable lashings of meanness). But I was too swept away to notice any of the enormous red flags the man unfurled before my eyes.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"GridWrapper-cFSKbf cxzKYj grid grid-margins grid-items-2 ArticlePageChunksGrid-hkPQhP lnoYVP grid-layout--adrail narrow wide-adrail\" data-journey-hook=\"grid-wrapper\">\n<div class=\"GridItem-beYvyV kCPYUp grid--item grid-layout__content\">\n<div class=\"BodyWrapper-kzyFNv nCpFP body body__container article__body\" data-journey-hook=\"client-content\" data-testid=\"BodyWrapper\">\n<div class=\"body__inner-container\">\n<p>Ours was a secret relationship and our universes were very much separate. The man didn\u2019t want to join lives\u2014he had his life and I had mine. In this private, secure space, he explained, there was us. Guard it jealously, he instructed me, it was a special thing we had. That was what was important, not whether I met his friends or whether mine even knew about him. When I tried to broach the topic\u2014I loved my friends and felt horrid saying nothing\u2014the man got angry, so I learned to let it go. But he got angry often. If I were out and didn\u2019t reply to his text messages immediately, if he rang and I didn\u2019t pick up the call because I was at a dinner (if I did pick up, he would chat away, suggesting that I leave the dinner to speak to him), if I told him something he didn\u2019t like (it was hard to know what he would and wouldn\u2019t like), if I planned a trip away with friends, if I disagreed with him. In the early days, he would call me on the phone and go silent, testing me, saying nothing, waiting to see how long I would wait. I never put down the phone. He often stormed out of restaurants, threw tantrums and left me alone in strange cities and gave me the silent treatment for days.<\/p>\n<p>Once he surprised me by turning up in town unexpectedly. I was working on a script with Michael Radford, the Oscar-nominated director and screenwriter, a great friend. We were adapting one of my novels and it took me 17 minutes to apologize to Michael and leave. I know how long it was because when I called the man and said I had managed to get out, he screamed at me for making him wait so long, slammed the phone on my face and didn\u2019t see me or talk to me for the rest of the day. More than once, getting out of a taxi with the man, cabbies turned to me and said, \u201cWhat are you doing, love? He doesn\u2019t treat you right.\u201d But they didn\u2019t know him like I did. He was in a bad mood. He was stressed. I made many excuses for the man. He had to shout, he would explain sadly, because I didn\u2019t listen otherwise.<\/p>\n<p>Why did I stay? Honestly, I don\u2019t know. I loved him. I felt alone in the world and the man had helped my grief. I thought he had magic in him and could fix what hurt me, even as he wounded me himself. I wanted to build a life and settle down. But most of all, I wanted to be a mother. Obviously, the man wanted children too\u2014why was I painting him to be a monster? It just wasn\u2019t the right time. It was too soon to settle down, he wasn\u2019t ready, his life was demanding, why was I nagging him? If you\u2019re not happy, just leave.<\/p>\n<p>I turned 30 and then 32 and then 35 and then 37 and through all those years, the right time never appeared. For a while this disjointed relationship, where I maintained my independence and the man essentially remained a bachelor, was fine. I wrote my books, I traveled around the world giving talks, and we would meet every few months. It was exciting and spontaneous, but it was not the life I wanted. I wanted a family. I wanted to have children and raise them. As the years passed, I shrunk into a tiny version of myself. I lost weight, I hid too many secrets from my friends to be close to them in any meaningful way, and felt more and more isolated. I was a stranger in my own life, unrecognizable to myself and unable to ask for help because I didn\u2019t understand that this sort of thing could happen to a woman like me. I was strong-minded and independent and took no prisoners in any other part of my life, so how could I be in a coercive relationship?<\/p>\n<div class=\"ExternalLinkEmbedWrapper-hyhwEF hOdKUX\" data-testid=\"external-link-embed--inline\">\n<div class=\"ExternalLinkEmbedText-gqUJZT bQrYnp\">\n<div class=\"BaseWrap-sc-gzmcOU BaseText-eqOrNE ExternalLinkEmbedRubric-hJfSsX bLcSov cwxsDt\">Read More<\/div>\n<p><span class=\"BaseWrap-sc-gzmcOU BaseText-eqOrNE ExternalLinkEmbedHed-dDmZdb deqABF kkRbxX jMVqeX\">What Is Coercive Control, and How Do You Spot the Signs in Your Relationship?<\/span><\/p>\n<div data-testid=\"BylinesWrapper\" class=\"BylinesWrapper-vmGrt fAEfmP bylines ExternalLinkEmbedBylines-fVaOrU dkOMXt\"><span class=\"BylineWrapper-jRoBEm ccLpBl byline bylines__byline\" data-testid=\"BylineWrapper\"><span class=\"BylineNamesWrapper-jrdaOa fXeqQN\"><span data-testid=\"BylineName\" class=\"BylineName-kqTBDS dDLLkB byline__name\"><span class=\"BaseWrap-sc-gzmcOU BaseText-eqOrNE BylinePreamble-itSxDZ deqABF kOfzTl jcgMlx byline__preamble\">By <\/span>Kimberley Dadds<\/span><\/span><\/span><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\" alt=\"article image\" loading=\"lazy\" class=\"ResponsiveImageContainer-eNxvmU cfBbTk responsive-image__image\" src=\"https:\/\/assets.vogue.com\/photos\/64b57920c1aeb0fdef208056\/master\/w_775%2Cc_limit\/GettyImages-553956423.jpg\"><\/div>\n<p>If you want children so badly and don\u2019t want to run out of time, go find someone else. Do you even know if you can have children? Why don\u2019t you check? You have plenty of time to have babies, you\u2019re only 39. Maybe next year we can talk about it. \u201cMaybe\u201d doesn\u2019t mean \u201cyes.\u201d Why don\u2019t you freeze your eggs if you\u2019re so worried? Plenty of women have babies in their 40s.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"GridWrapper-cFSKbf cxzKYj grid grid-margins grid-items-2 ArticlePageChunksGrid-hkPQhP lnoYVP grid-layout--adrail narrow wide-adrail\" data-journey-hook=\"grid-wrapper\">\n<div class=\"GridItem-beYvyV kCPYUp grid--item grid-layout__content\">\n<div class=\"BodyWrapper-kzyFNv nCpFP body body__container article__body\" data-journey-hook=\"client-content\" data-testid=\"BodyWrapper\">\n<div class=\"body__inner-container\">\n<p>The man was inexhaustible. He gaslit me constantly, put me down whenever he could\u2014every slight a purposeful chip at my sense of self and strength\u2014all the while assuring me that he did want children\u2026 Just not yet. Every month I would get my period and sob, a reminder that I would never have the one thing I wanted with all my heart, I would never be a mother.<\/p>\n<p>And then one day, I got my youngest brother a dog. I had promised him a little companion and he, 10 years old at the time, had named the imaginary dog and decided it should be a girl and that it would sleep at the foot of his bed. He waited patiently for me to fulfil my oath. But the problem was, in the time that it took me to fly Coco, a three-month-old Jack Russell terrier with pointy ears, to Pakistan, I had fallen in love with her. It was only two days, but it was love. Pure, life-affirming love. Coco was a little firecracker. She was a barker\u2014yapping tirelessly at other dogs, people, and children, whom she especially hated. She hid bones under my pillow. She whined and whimpered when faced with stairs but tried to fight mastiffs, and she slept nuzzling my face and neck, sighing contentedly as she drifted to sleep.<\/p>\n<p>It was Coco who brought me back to joy and tenderness. She was not a baby, but that didn\u2019t stop me from treating her like one. I took her everywhere, I ate my meals and worked with her curled up on my lap, I spoke to her all day long and recorded every bark and trick on my phone. Coco gave me the roots I so desperately wanted. I could no longer drop everything at a moment\u2019s notice to travel for a talk, nor could I base my schedule around the man and his whims. Together, we made our own little family.<\/p>\n<p>Animals return us to a state of wonder and remind us of innocence. For all her massive personality and snarling charm, Coco relied on me for everything: food, assurance, company, love. Caring for Coco gave me respite from the near-constant cruelty of the man. Because she was vulnerable, she reminded me that we choose how to deal with someone who needs us\u2014we can be kind and loving or we can be merciless and cold. We can resent love or we can adore it.<\/p>\n<p>One afternoon, after a fight with the man, sitting on the floor and wiping away tears, I chanced upon a video of Maya Angelou speaking. \u201cThere\u2019s a place in you that you must keep inviolate. You must keep it pristine, clean, so that nobody has the right to curse you or treat you badly,\u201d she intoned in that beautiful, warm voice of hers. \u201cBecause that may be the place you go to when you meet God\u2026 And when the person comes with rude language to you or invasive language to you, you have to be able to say, \u2018Back up, not me you don\u2019t. Don\u2019t you know I\u2019m a child of God?\u2019\u201d It shamed me to acknowledge that I had forgotten this about myself. Certain types of men take an independent woman as a challenge. I think the man was testing a theory to both himself and me: you think you\u2019re strong? I can break that idea. I can defeat you. I believe his sense of self depended on it.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"GridWrapper-cFSKbf cxzKYj grid grid-margins grid-items-2 ArticlePageChunksGrid-hkPQhP lnoYVP grid-layout--adrail narrow wide-adrail\" data-journey-hook=\"grid-wrapper\">\n<div class=\"GridItem-beYvyV kCPYUp grid--item grid-layout__content\">\n<div class=\"BodyWrapper-kzyFNv nCpFP body body__container article__body\" data-journey-hook=\"client-content\" data-testid=\"BodyWrapper\">\n<div class=\"body__inner-container\">\n<p>I spent my 30s showing him that he couldn\u2019t. He ran out of excuses eventually. We ended things and I was happy. I stopped having debilitating stomach aches, no longer cried; I was liberated and ecstatic. The man couldn\u2019t have that. He came back with more promises and swore he was different. But I didn\u2019t respect him and he knew that and soon the dark glitter behind his mask was not just apparent, but pulsating and bright. People change! He swore to me, believe me! But though he swore marriage and children and kindness, he couldn\u2019t even play the role. His cruelty was magnified, petulant and constant. I left and never spoke to him or saw him again.<\/p>\n<p>Looking back, it feels as though I spent a decade with a stranger, a ghost. I feel angry that I let anyone trespass against me so crudely and ashamed at how long I accepted the man\u2019s appalling behavior. Worst of all, he had robbed me of my time. I was 41. How would I have the children I had dreamt of all my life? I promised myself that I would not let those years be for naught. I would learn from every single one of my mistakes and I would sit in the discomfort of my choices until I fully understood them. The man would not defeat me.<\/p>\n<figure class=\"AssetEmbedWrapper-fkZDUs kHRAYC asset-embed\">\n<div class=\"AssetEmbedAssetContainer-eEeytc eRSvCP asset-embed__asset-container\"><span class=\"SpanWrapper-zEXFr koTknX responsive-asset AssetEmbedResponsiveAsset-cIfZLr fHIkTW asset-embed__responsive-asset\"><img decoding=\"async\" alt=\"Image may contain Fatima Bhutto People Person Face Head Photography Portrait Adult Plant Potted Plant and Couch\" loading=\"lazy\" class=\"ResponsiveImageContainer-eNxvmU cfBbTk responsive-image__image\" src=\"https:\/\/assets.vogue.com\/photos\/697ce23990cc16f0de52d438\/master\/w_1600%2Cc_limit\/FB-WEB.jpg\"><\/span><\/div>\n<div class=\"CaptionWrapper-jYrTxZ jNLyNY caption AssetEmbedCaption-fyuOdR iTyhpv asset-embed__caption\" data-testid=\"caption-wrapper\"><span class=\"BaseWrap-sc-gzmcOU BaseText-eqOrNE CaptionText-brNLzD deqABF bhzovp fGraOh caption__text\"><\/p>\n<p>Fatima with her son and one of her dogs.<\/p>\n<p><\/span><span class=\"BaseWrap-sc-gzmcOU BaseText-eqOrNE CaptionCredit-eowWKH deqABF mdLVF gxwcqg caption__credit\">Photo: Courtesy of Fatima Bhutto<\/span><\/div>\n<\/figure>\n<p>Four months later, I went out for dinner with my best friend and was telling her about my plans to adopt a fourth dog (Coco had puppies, long story). Please don\u2019t, she begged me. How will you ever meet anyone who wants to live with four dogs? I had three already, she reminded me, and they were insane. Behind us, a traveling American sat down. Graham swears he didn\u2019t hear our conversation. When we got married, four months later, as part of his vows he promised me we could adopt a fourth dog. We haven\u2019t had time yet though. We have two babies, two sons. Mir is almost two years old and Caspian is teething. It is a dream. Her tail wagging, Coco kissed Caspian yesterday, delighting me with her excitement to lick his little hands\u2014until I realized he had food on them.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"GridWrapper-cFSKbf cxzKYj grid grid-margins grid-items-2 ArticlePageChunksGrid-hkPQhP lnoYVP grid-layout--adrail narrow wide-adrail\" data-journey-hook=\"grid-wrapper\">\n<div class=\"GridItem-beYvyV kCPYUp grid--item grid-layout__content\">\n<div class=\"BodyWrapper-kzyFNv nCpFP body body__container article__body\" data-journey-hook=\"client-content\" data-testid=\"BodyWrapper\">\n<div class=\"body__inner-container\">\n<p>I know that I would not have the life I prayed for were it not for the lessons learned along the way. I learned so much about the humiliation that allows secrets to thrive, about the type of man who needs someone else\u2019s pain to feel alive, about narcissists, whichever kind the man is (malignant, for sure).<\/p>\n<p>I learned how shockingly common this is, how many women are subjected to emotional abuse. I wish we spoke about it more. We might save each other. And if not save, heal each other\u2019s hurt softly, with grace, through sharing our stories without shame.<\/p>\n<div class=\"UnifiedProductCardBody-hIYvDT jcBoTR product-embed\" data-item='{\"ctaHref\":\"https:\/\/cna.st\/p\/5FWLmKLt5KNfWgenG2gLE4Chr523cy5xisb9UyMVr4yBVMFzY28TptjLpLkqqkGh77C5zcRLEy7wwGBFpBmxHfJeqx8VT2X2jFW3NQW2xpQuN9rAZkfgtQGqNgUtYTcq9yqaDMMfB9wPqhxY51PZREudsjAdqrZNfdR7KnPtcBc8RJCnzy13cVvh8GAx8cFGTX9Nkn78UQizG7T6pWSpCxWWnYoMhe49saRJG5CnLuWQfAucwMJuLB7ppMHxXoXiTLbxRPpRjv4GJnKJLJyDmYeYQfg2afZMw9CUsQdZjwByHYEMSyT8GVjkePPob4HTNL5eufXfkKyo2bDrXcbqwTdtDcac6kaYSwo4j1BP8DjR1Y6ZvsXkTHA1pXdWJN3p1RVGHQNQMnjF9r5mZdVPGVwVc9KK8xpMJphHRkeBSGzaKnucMxKNPkstYVG8veZmpkVzvZeT4A2G31pFKCy22vphc7tguXJ3nDkvwpu8ghguSVukVUQAgsBQu67WfebJn8jPmobpm9rDXGkWV4owXaVDmnzV4yivB8uD8va1cpfHM2sJFQvjwFWTfCBTKZNsQ1FUwmXiRiz4sSBX9yM8wCedWH7twgs7JpZQj8vrhyri4L46focgNJEsYBvGdJ\",\"dangerousDek\":\"\",\"productBrand\":\"\",\"dangerousHed\":\"The Hour of the Wolf: A 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BaseText-eqOrNE UnifiedProductCardNameWrapper-fsdgKv deqABF hFuUBX cwhVui\">\n<p id=\"upc_697e6b77b79593a28a7c940e\" class=\"BaseWrap-sc-gzmcOU BaseText-eqOrNE UnifiedProductCardName-jDmuEE deqABF bhzovp VKIOo\">The Hour of the Wolf: A Memoir<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"UnifiedProductCardOfferContainer-dSdPtc bhGeQJ\">\n<div class=\"UnifiedProductCardOfferWrapper-ggbazM jNCOfv\">\n<div class=\"ProductOfferWrapper-djKiCI dJbwGe product-offer\" data-testid=\"product-offer-wrapper\">\n<div class=\"ProductOfferCtaBlock-bsQjAM fMnlIt product-offer__cta-block\" id=\"button_label_$24BOOKSHOP\"><span class=\"ButtonLabel-cyWivE fAjXMh button__label\"><span>$24<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"price-above-seller-name\">BOOKSHOP<\/p>\n<p><\/span><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p><em>The Hour of the Wolf: A Memoir<\/em> is out now from Scribner.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/article>\n<p> Source URL: http:\/\/vogue.com\/article\/fatima-bhutto-on-surviving-a-coercive-relationship-i-thought-he-could-fix-what-hurt-me<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Opinion Fatima Bhutto on Surviving a Coercive Relationship: \u201cI Thought He Could Fix What Hurt Me\u201d By Fatima Bhutto January 31, 2026 Photo: Pankaj Mishra When I was 28 years old, I met a man who gave me a dark gift. I had just published a book about my father\u2019s life and murder. I was [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[2],"tags":[226,50],"class_list":["post-1718519","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-politics","tag-crawlmanager","tag-vogue-com"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/analyse.optim.biz\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1718519","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/analyse.optim.biz\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/analyse.optim.biz\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/analyse.optim.biz\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/analyse.optim.biz\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=1718519"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/analyse.optim.biz\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1718519\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/analyse.optim.biz\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=1718519"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/analyse.optim.biz\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=1718519"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/analyse.optim.biz\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=1718519"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}