Trigger Warning: This post contains mentions or discussions of rape,
violence, and crude language.
Advisory: The following is an
account of my personal experiences and should only be taken and accepted as my
personal experience. I do believe individual experiences contribute to the
identification of a problem and solution.
The
first time I ever experienced sexual harassment, I was nine-years-old. A man
exposed himself to me and played it off as an accident. I remained silent
despite my discomfort. I knew he knew I was there. He took my silence as
permission and decided to test the waters further. I found myself alone with
him, so he took the liberty of smacking my nine-year-old butt and squeezing it
so hard that he pinched it with his whole hand as I ran off. I went outside
where my parents stood chatting with people from the neighborhood and I clung
to my mother’s leg. I clung just as tightly to my silence.
My
mother was a hardened woman with high standards and a lot on her plate, while
my father was a soft and gentle man lost in his own world. The world had told
me women didn’t fight and soft men cower at confrontation, but when I looked at
my parents and thought about their reactions if I told them, I could only
picture them in handcuffs. Both of my parents walked a thin line of gendered
roles. Both tried to fill the mold society asked of them. My mother took care
of her children and a big home, cooking meals every night, cleaning, gardening,
and tending to her husband. She worked, too, as an RN for psychiatric,
salaried. My father considered himself a romantic, sending flowers to my mother’s
work on random days with cards signed “just ‘cause.” He hated his own father for
the abuses and pressures he had to endure and typically related to women more
than men. He buckled in confrontations with my mother, but studied weaponry
such as guns and bows. He liked hunting and cleaning his weapons in front of
any boy I brought home. My parents were complex people in my eyes, often
confused about who they were and what they stood for, but I was confident in
how they felt about their children. If I told them, there would have been
violence.
Like
a majority of film and TV, the depiction of parents stopping at nothing to
protect their kids is painted in nobility and intense love. It’s difficult to
argue that point, but this notion prevented me from speaking out sooner and
that man continued to live amongst my family. I chose between silencing myself
and protecting everyone else’s feelings. It’s an inherently selfish decision as
that man continued (and still continues) to walk freely, potentially hurting
other young women and girls. It isn’t anyone’s fault. I was a child with only an
inkling of the realities of the world. I actively kept my parents and siblings in
the dark, so they could do nothing about it. I learned to make myself okay,
day-by-day.
When
I was thirteen, it happened again. This time the perpetrators were two boys,
both my age. One was my best friend. He was the first boy I had ever had a
crush on and I met him in elementary school. He was the first boy to reject my
bold expression of affection, but we became friends shortly after. The other
was my new crush. I had only known him for a few months through a mutual
friend, but he was smart and funny. I had dropped quite a bit of my baby
weight, often a subject of boy-one’s jabbing insults, and I felt giddy to
finally meet a standard and rid myself of boy-one’s ridicule, even just for a
moment. I walked over to his house, where both boys were waiting. We had plans
to leave when our fourth group member showed up, but she kept us waiting for a
bit. I had brought my video camera with me, attempting to follow in my brother’s
footsteps as a filmmaker. They took it. I didn’t know what they had planned,
but they turned it on and pointed it at me.
Next, they took my
hands and cuffed them. I was under the impression they were fake until I
struggled to get out of them. Then, they tied a rag around my head to cover my
mouth and placed a rubber mask on me. I don’t know what their intentions were
and I don’t think they knew either. They fumbled for what to do with me next
with the camera focused on me. Boy-two picked up the hockey stick next to him
and began poking me with it. They poked my breasts, between my legs. They
continued to poke at me, lifting my shirt with the end of the stick, all the while
filming it. The arrival of our fourth friend startled them. I ripped my hands
from the cuffs, removed the mask and gag, took my camera and left. I tossed the
tape into the canal and screamed. Then I walked home, gulped it all down, and
clung to my silence again. Keeping my family together still meant more to me.
Over
the next few years, I would give in to the reasoning of ‘playing around’ and ‘earning
my stripes’ in the group. I continued to hang out with them after some time.
They convinced me I had overreacted and lacked trust in them. They made me
tougher, I’ll give them that. But they also took my sense of self, and
in reaction I fell in to the obsession of masculinity. It became a safe-haven
for me. If I acted like a man, I’d be perceived as a man and therefore
not-to-be-messed-with or found unattractive enough to be left alone.
It was like covering myself in cow manure to blend in with dung beetles.
It wasn’t until my twenties when I
was living alone, hours from any family, that it all caught up to me. To say
these were the only instances of sexual harassment would be a blessing, but it
never mattered what my age was, how my hair looked, what I wore, or how I acted
– I became a target to someone, somewhere.
The
telling of this has mostly served as catharsis, but it’s truly a demonstration
of the interweaving of issues we may only see as “men’s issues” or “women’s
issues”. This is only one aspect of my life that masculinity has affected. The
issue’s I have with my father, the struggles I observe my brothers endure, and
what I’ve witnessed my mother overcome barely touches the surface of it.
Shedding light on personal experiences, though, brings about a self-awareness
that I’ve found healing and that others have found informative. It will always be
most difficult to face ourselves, but the basis of change lies within being
mindful.
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