Wednesday, November 29, 2017

Yes, me, too


Though I am not the type to jump on just any bandwagon, this current METOO movement has compelled me to add my voice to the ever louder chorus of women claiming sexual aggression and assault.  What happened to me is clearly not unique, and my account will not bring down any powerful or famous politician, producer, actor or anchor – hell, many of the perpetrators were not even known to me – but perhaps it will contribute in a small way to a general reckoning of all the despicable abusers out there.

Reading and hearing the never-ending reports by fellow victims has dredged up several very disturbing memories, the likes of which I honestly would have preferred to have kept suppressed.  I will not document the disgusting details but let a list of general offenses suffice: the high school classmate who repeatedly exposed himself; the neighborhood peeping tom; gratuitous groping at college mixers; the guys on the bus in India who rubbed up against me; countless instances of ogling, leering, catcalling, and lecherous comments; and what would now be called date rape although back in the day was not identified as such.

First traumatized as an innocent pre-teenager, I somehow blamed my pubescent self for the incident without remotely understanding what the creep was doing or why he had targeted me.  I didn’t tell anybody because / although I was mortified and sickened, scared and confused.  The society around me was giving completely confusing signals, with the liberal mores of the 70s counteracted by the conservatism of the South where everything that had remotely to do with sex was fraught with guilt and ignominy.  The much sought-after Our Bodies, Ourselves was nowhere to be found in that small Bible-Belt town. I had no chance in this environment with such shit happening to become comfortable with or confident in my sexuality.   

The worldwide tidal wave of confessions has washed in a fundamental feeling of relief as the epiphany hit: I had subconsciously taken responsibility for all the offenses against me throughout all those years.  I had figured it was part of the price of being female, our plight to endure, and in some way believed what was so often hissed in my ear by contemptuous men as they forced themselves on me:  You asked for it! 

But I’ve now realized that I WAS NOT TO BLAME.  That sleazy men have been harassing women forever.  That this abhorrent behavior is ubiquitous.  That it is the product of a universal obscenity on the part of arrogant men who feel entitled to grab pussy and worse.  It is devastating to think of the incalculable toll on the self-esteem of so many women.   Why did we stay silent for so long?

All this has me wondering how many decisions, major and minor, I have made in response to such demeaning male attitudes without recognizing this as the motivating factor?  Attending an all-women’s college, dressing modestly, traveling (or not) to certain destinations, choosing to live in a country where the rate of violent crimes against women is relatively low.  How might my life have been different without the underlying blame and shame? 

My next step in this catharsis is to have the convo with my kids.  I pray to god that my daughter does not have any stories of her own to tell, and trust that my sons have always treated women with respect.  If they and succeeding generations know that such vulgarity will not be tolerated, then there is hope of a very necessary social and cultural enlightenment.