This article aims to reveal some results obtained from the research conducted on social psychology, Political Socialization, and Psychosocial Dynamics. The objective is to recognize the ideological support and legitimacy for intimate partner violence, according to some women reports. The idea is also to analyze the way some women consider the phenomenon of intimate partner violence as something that has been naturalized and taken for granted “normal” as part of privacy at home. The research was developed taking into account the qualitative approach, interviews with fi ve women were conducted, using the strategy of open coding, axial and selective fundament Theory. Three new categories were analyzed, the fi rst one related to gender roles, both male and female, and the possible positions that are assumed when plying those roles, which are socially and culturally endorsed. The second section analyzes the situations of violence and the status of “victim” which threatens the welfare and dignity of those women, placing them in a “lower” position related to their partners. Regarding the third category, it was established that the interviewed women, even though they have social elements that allow them to legitimize violence against them, have individual reasons for deciding to continue or not with the relation, or in order to accept and naturalize the gender differences and their situation in general.