Content warning: The following deals with domestic violence and abuse.
The abuse crept up on Angelina*. What started with her boyfriend making snide comments about the way she dressed, loomed larger when he put his fist through a wall after she got a second ear piercing.
She was a teenager at the time, a soon-to-be school leaver approaching her final exams.
"I was the class clown, and loved school, loved my friends. I was outgoing and sporty, and I got along with lots of people," she said.
"When he changed, he wanted to change all of that about me."
Over the course of their six-year relationship, those single events coalesced into a campaign of violence and coercive control that, at its worst, threatened her life.
By then, she was a shadow of that confident, clownish teenager. She'd stopped playing sport, she withdrew from friends and family, she barely spoke in his presence.
"I was a completely different person," she said. "It took me a long time after to get back to half of what I was, because everything was crushed; the self-esteem, the confidence. He'd made me feel like I couldn't do anything without him. He made me feel powerless."
Watch: Women and violence, the hidden numbers.