I want him to be the kind, thoughtful, gentle guy I’ve been dating. Forgive me, this post is a little disjointed.
Sweetie, that’s how we all ended up black and blue with broken or cracked bones. We kept looking for that kind thoughtful gentle guy we dated. As soon as we were married, he changed into something else. We stayed with him because we WANTED him to be the guy we THOUGHT he was. You can’t marry a guy’s potential, or your fantasy of what you want him to be. You marry the guy who is right in front of you.
Consider that this may be the first violent episode his sisters have heard of. Maybe before then no one knew about his “outrage responses.” Great word there.

I love it.
My ex would outrage response me and then claim I “drove him to it.” And he told me he had to leave me before I made him beat me to a pulp. He told everyone he had to flee for HIS life.
Don’t listen to his mother. My exh’s mother didn’t believe anything bad about her son. Till 15 years later and he was threatening her. NOW she believes me. Before that she admits she “didn’t want to believe he could do that.” Ignore his mother. She also wants to believe the fantasy. No mother wants to admit she raised a wife beater.
You are wise to take a month off. Yes, he’ll cry and look responsible. And he’ll lament the crashing and burning of his image. (Is his grief over the loss of his self respect? Kind of selfish there. He should be sad that he hit his children’s mother.) As others have reminded you, he’s already justified he has “reasons he’d hit a woman.” Whether she is objectively mistreating them, or whether he just THINKS she’s mistreating them, he acted on it.
Just one episode?
Yeah. I played that game with myself. There is always a first time. Do you want to cast your lot with him forever and find out it’s not the last time? And yes, in the beginning mine would feel horrible and buy me flowers. It will never happen again, said he. Eventually the flowers stopped. But the abusiveness continues to this day in a thousand ways.
And I’ll echo what NoxSineStella said. These guys misrepresent what’s going on. It’s never their fault.
You have a right to know if he has any restrictions put on remarrying in his annulment decree. While spousal abuse is not grounds for an annulment, it’s an indication of underlying psychological incapacities or other issues that could impact his ability to really be a good husband.
Do you want to be tearfully sitting over a stack of papers 8 years from now sobbing as you fill out the petition for nullity from your marriage to him and come across the question: “Describe any instances during your dating/engagement period that would reflect on the outcome of the marriage.”
Do you want to be reading that and thinking about this and writing “I was warned, but I wanted to believe he was a kind, gentle loving man.”
Work as hard on wanting to believe there are other kind, gentle, loving men out there. And one of them can love you and give you the life you deserve.
And this one will date again. But he won’t be so stupid and warn the new girlfriend that he believes in hitting women. She’ll have to find that out the hard way.
It was a one-time thing? He snapped? Well, you’ve seen a good indication of how he behaves when he snaps. There will be many opportunities for him to snap in the future. When he is angry at you spending money, or his job isn’t doing so well, or he is stressed by finances, or the kids are being loud and demanding stuff.
If he hauls off and slaps you, at least you won’t be completely surprised.
You aren’t being told what really happened in his marriage. No, don’t settle for “she was nuts and I got out of it. She was the problem.” That’s what they all say.
I’ll leave you with a quote from Solzhenitsyn.
“Let us not forget that violence does not and cannot flourish by itself. It is inevitably intertwined with lying. Between them there is the closest, the most profound and natural bond. Nothing screens violence except lies. And the only ways lies can hold out is by violence.”
Some of those lies are the ones we tell ourselves; like “He’s really kind and gentle. She just made him do it. He would never do that to me.” The lies we tell ourselves are the most dangerous ones.