Yesterday we learned that pop star Rihanna would be appearing on Good Morning America today and tomorrow and on 20/20 tomorrow night in order to talk publicly about the physical assault that she suffered at the hands of her ex-boyfriend Chris Brown back in February. In part I of her interview this morning, Rihanna talks a bit about the physical violence she endured and expresses embarrassment for enduring it for as long as she did. Here are a few screencaps from her interview on GMA with Diane Sawyer and some deets about this part of their interview:

Pop sensation Rihanna is speaking out about the night her then-boyfriend Chris Brown beat her, saying it was “humiliating” and “traumatizing” to admit the assault took place and that it was “wrong” that she went back to Brown afterwards. “It was a wake-up call. It was a wake-up call for me. Big time,” Rihanna told “Good Morning America’s” Diane Sawyer in her first television interview discussing the assault. “I will say that to any young girl who is going through domestic violence, don’t react off of love. F love. Come out of the situation and look at it in the third person and for what it really is.” The pop star said it was “embarrassing” that Brown was the type of person she fell in love with. “So far in love. So unconditional that I went back. It’s humiliating to say this happened. To accept that? It’s a traumatizing experience,” she said. Her decision to go back to Brown, she said, was a mistake. “I stayed. I even went back after he beat me, which was wrong,” she said. “But again … I’m a human being and people put me on a very unrealistic pedestal. And all these expectations, I’m not perfect.” The 21-year-old star acknowledged that Brown held her in a headlock twice that night and bit her on the ear and fingers. After months of silence since the February beating, Rihanna decided to speak publicly about the ordeal so she can be a voice to help others who may be in danger of returning to abuse. “It’s completely normal to go back. It’s not right. I learned the hard way, but again, this is what I want people to know,” she said. “When I realized that my selfish decision for love could result in some young girl getting killed, I could not be easy with that part. I couldn’t be held responsible for going back. “Even if Chris never hit me again, who is to say that their boyfriend won’t? Who’s to say that they won’t kill these girls?” she said. “These are young girls and I just didn’t realize how much of an impact I had on these girls’ lives until that happened.” After a nine-month hiatus, Rihanna is back on the music scene with a new hit album, “Rated R,” signaling a return from a time of intense loneliness following the assault. “One of the most lonely times I’ve been was in the past few months because nobody understands what it’s like,” she said. “There are a lot of women who’ve experienced what I did, but not in the public. So it made it really difficult. I just felt like, ‘Oh my God, here it goes, my little bit of privacy.’” In August, Brown was sentenced to five years of probation, six months of community service and one year of domestic violence counseling for assaulting the 21-year-old pop singer the night before the Grammy Awards. Portions of ABC News’ exclusive interview with Rihanna will air on “Good Morning America” at 7 a.m. E.T. Thursday, Nov. 5. Her full interview will air on “20/20″ at 10 p.m. E.T. Friday, Nov. 6.
So many people are so divided on Rihanna‘s decision to speak out … hell, people are so divided on the issue of domestic abuse. I personally feel that any time, no matter the circumstance, a person decides to open up publicly to talk about the abuse they endured at the hands of another person is the right time to do so. It is not anyone’s place to put time limits on when someone should open up, it’s not anyone’s place to question the reasoning or to immediately assume there is an ulterior motive … I can’t even begin to fully understand the emotional impact an abused person feels when they are finally ready to talk about their abuse. I fully expect the detractors will have more negative things to say about this new interview but if Rihanna‘s message is heard by just one person who learns from that message and saves themselves from an abusive situation then all of this is very much worth it. After the jump, watch video of Rihanna‘s interview on Good Morning America and hear her message from her own lips …
Part II of this interview will air tomorrow morning on GMA and then the full interview will air on 20/20 tomorrow night. I sincerely hope that in all these airings, Rihanna‘s message will make it thru all the negativity and criticism and find its home in the hearts and minds of those who need to hear it.
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A couple thoughts… I’ll admit, I was skeptical that she’d talk about this right when her album will drop. But I thought there must be more than that, this is a very serious issue and life-changing experience she went through. She’s a musical artist who expresses anger, emotions, everything through their art. Making music is therapy for some and I realized this is probably what she did to cope the past nine months. Psychologically speaking, when she’s ready, she will drop her album. I wouldn’t imagine someone forcing her to do that after what she went through.When she’s ready to release her music, it’s a way of her saying she’s ready to talk. They go hand in hand, and yes, it does work out publicity-wise, but it benefits HER as being ready as an individual and victim to talk about what happened. She’s human. Embarassment and shame is a natural reaction for a victim to feel (though they shouldn’t) and would be hesitant to talk in the first place. So imagine it being 100x worse as a celebrity with those emotions. Shame on me for being skeptical in the first place. Think about it outside the box and in her place. Recall any time you’ve felt ashamed when you shouldn’t have been. Have compassion, world.
And on a last note, watching her interactions talking about this is important. Words do only so much with interviews like these. It’s not polished. It’s not rehearsed. She is slowly finding a way to carefully discuss this private, emotional experience, knowing it’s going to be aired. It cannot be easy.
Her message in this interview is MUCH better than in the Glamour mag interview that I commented about a few days ago. I was only concerned at that time with the fact that now, that she was speaking out in Glamour, that her messege to young girls in the Glamour mag wasn’t a very strong one. And I said as much. I thought she could be saying/doing more–especially for her first interview about it. This new interview messege however is to the point, that abuse is wrong and she is giving solid advice about it for girls to follow and is admitting her own mistakes that didn’t help her situation. And that’s great. That’s the type of interview and messege I wanted to see/hear from her the other day, and feel would do people the most good. That bad Glamour interview could very well have been because it was done weeks ago or that the interviewer was bad—Diane Sawyer is doing a better job of asking the right questions–but then again Glamour mag is not the first place to go for hard hitting reporting. But it is a mag that many women read which is another reason why that interview could have helped more and been better. And that’s why it was disappointing to read the other day. Either way this new interview is great. And it shows she has been seriously dealing with what happened and recognizes how she can really help so many people, by opening up about it. And that’s the right way to go. Talking about it is also healing. And maybe that was her plan all along but it just wasn’t coming out clearly at all in the Glamour mag interview. And to Krissy who I debated my points with the other day, this new more positive helpful message was all I wanted from her as someone in the public who young girls admire—who could be helpful to them and do some good. She’s using this to be a positive role model. I think with all the other comments coming at you the other day from people upset about the timing or her album, it may have been hard to see my points. I could see that you were a caring person and I don’t want you to think that your points weren’t being heard. Again, I think it comes down to that bad Glamour interview and what they chose to ask and not ask. And anyone commenting can only go by the info she was giving at the time. Again as her first interview about it—it wasn’t a good one. And this interview is much much better.
What in gods name is she wearing???? UGLY and don’t get me started on the hair…