Being A Girl: A Brief Personal History of Violence

3 Dec

1.

I am six. My babysitter’s son, who is five but a whole head taller than me, likes to show me his penis. He does it when his mother isn’t looking. One time when I tell him not to, he holds me down and puts penis on my arm. I bite his shoulder, hard. He starts crying, pulls up his pants and runs upstairs to tell his mother that I bit him. I’m too embarrassed to tell anyone about the penis part, so they all just think I bit him for no reason.

I get in trouble first at the babysitter’s house, then later at home.

The next time the babysitter’s son tries to show me his penis, I don’t fight back because I don’t want to get in trouble.

One day I tell the babysitter what her son does, she tells me that he’s just a little boy, he doesn’t know any better. I can tell that she’s angry at me, and I don’t know why. Later that day, when my mother comes to pick me up, the babysitter hugs me too hard and says how jealous she is because she only has sons and she wishes she had a daughter as sweet as me.

One day when we’re playing in the backyard he tells me very seriously that he might kill me one day and I believe him.

2.

I am in the second grade and our classroom has a weird open-concept thing going on, and the fourth wall is actually the hallway to the gym. All day long, we surreptitiously watch the other grades file past on the way to and from the gym. We are supposed to ignore most of them. The only class we are not supposed to ignore is Monsieur Pierre’s grade six class.

Every time Monsieur Pierre walks by, we are supposed to chorus “Bonjour, Monsieur Sexiste.” We are instructed to do this by our impossibly beautiful teacher, Madame Lemieux. She tells us that Monsieur Pierre, a dapper man with grey hair and a moustache, is sexist because he won’t let the girls in his class play hockey. She is the first person I have ever heard use the word sexist.

The word sounds very serious when she says it. She looks around the class to make sure everyone is paying attention and her voice gets intense and sort of tight.

“Girls can play hockey. Girls can do anything that boys do,” she tells us.

We don’t really believe her. For one thing, girls don’t play hockey. Everyone in the NHL – including our hero Mario Lemieux, who we sometimes whisper might be our teacher’s brother or cousin or even husband – is a boy. But we accept that maybe sixth grade girls can play hockey in gym class, so we do what she asks.

Mostly what I remember is the smile that spreads across Monsieur Pierre’s face whenever we call him a sexist. It is not the smile of someone who is ashamed; it is the smile of someone who finds us adorable in our outrage.

3.

Later that same year a man walks into Montreal’s École Polytechnique and kills fourteen women. He kills them because he hates feminists. He kills them because they are going to be engineers, because they go to school, because they take up space. He kills them because he thinks they have stolen something that is rightfully his. He kills them because they are women.

Everything about the day is grey: the sky, the rain, the street, the concrete side of the École Polytechnique, the pictures of the fourteen girls that they print in the newspaper. My mother’s face is grey. It’s winter, and the air tastes like water drunk from a tin cup.

Madame Lemieux doesn’t tell us to call Monsieur Pierre a sexist anymore. Maybe he lets the girls play hockey now. Or maybe she is afraid.

Girls can do anything that boys do but it turns out that sometimes they get killed for it.

4.

I am fourteen and my classmate’s mother is killed by her boyfriend. He stabs her to death. In the newspaper they call it a crime of passion. When she comes back to school, she doesn’t talk about it. When she does mention her mother it’s always in the present tense – “my mom says” or “my mom thinks” – as if she is still alive. She transfers schools the next year because her father lives across town in a different school district.

Passion. As if murder is the same thing as spreading rose petals on your bed or eating dinner by candlelight or kissing through the credits of a movie.

5.

Men start to say things to me on the street, sometimes loudly enough that everyone around us can hear, but not always. Sometimes they mutter quietly, so that I’m the only one who knows. So that if I react, I’ll seem like I’m blowing things out of proportion or flat-out making them up. These whispers make me feel complicit in something, although I don’t quite know what.

I feel like I deserve it. I feel like I am asking for it. I feel dirty and ashamed.

I want to stand up for myself and tell these men off, but I am afraid. I am angry that I’m such a baby about it. I feel like if I were braver, they wouldn’t be able to get away with it. Eventually I screw up enough courage and tell a man to leave me alone; I deliberately keep my voice steady and unemotional, trying to make it sound more like a command than a request. He grabs my wrist and calls me a fucking bitch.

After that I don’t talk back anymore. Instead I just smile weakly; sometimes I duck my head and whisper thank you. I quicken my steps and hurry away until one time a man yells don’t you fucking run away and starts to follow me.

After that I always try to keep my pace even, my breath slow. Like how they tell you that if you ever see a bear you shouldn’t run, you should just slowly back away until he can’t see you.

I think that these men, like dogs, can smell my fear.

6.

On my eighteenth birthday my cousin takes me out clubbing. While we’re dancing, a man comes up behind me and starts fiddling with the straps on my flouncy black dress. But he’s sort of dancing with me and this is my first time ever at a club and I want to play it cool, so I don’t say anything. Then he pulls the straps all the way down and everyone laughs as I scramble to cover my chest.

At a concert a man comes up behind me and slides his hand around me and starts playing with my nipple while he kisses my neck. By the time I’ve got enough wiggle room to turn around, he’s gone.

At my friend’s birthday party a gay man grabs my breasts and tells everyone that he’s allowed to do it because he’s not into girls. I laugh because everyone else laughs because what else are you supposed to do?

Men press up against me on the subway, on the bus, once even in a crowd at a protest. Their hands dangle casually, sometimes brushing up against my crotch or my ass. One time it’s so bad that I complain to the bus driver and he makes the man get off the bus but then he tells me that if I don’t like the attention maybe I shouldn’t wear such short skirts.

7.

I get a job as a patient-sitter, someone who sits with hospital patients who are in danger of pulling out their IVs or hurting themselves or even running away. The shifts are twelve hours and there is no real training, but the pay is good.

Lots of male patients masturbate in front of me. Some of them are obvious, which is actually kind of better because then I can call a nurse. Some of them are less obvious, and then the nurses don’t really care. When that happens, I just bury my head in a book and pretend I don’t know what they’re doing.

One time an elderly man asks me to fix his pillow and when I bend over him to do that he grabs my hand and puts it on his dick.

When I call my supervisor to complain she says that I shouldn’t be upset because he didn’t know what he was doing.

8.

A man walks into an Amish school, tells all the little girls to line up against the chalkboard, and starts shooting.

A man walks into a sorority house and starts shooting.

A man walks into a theatre because the movie was written by a feminist and starts shooting.

A man walks into Planned Parenthood and starts shooting.

A man walks into.

9.

I start writing about feminism on the internet, and within a few months I start getting angry comments from men. Not death threats, exactly, but still scary. Scary because of how huge and real their rage is. Scary because they swear they don’t hate women, they just think women like me need to be put in their place.

I get to a point where the comments – and even the occasional violent threat – become routine. I joke about them. I think of them as a strange badge of honour, like I’m in some kind of club. The club for women who get threats from men.

It’s not really funny.

10.

Someone makes a death threat against my son.

I don’t tell anyone right away because I feel like it is my fault – my fault for being too loud, too outspoken, too obviously a parent.

When I do finally start telling people, most of them are sympathetic. But a few women say stuff like “this is why I don’t share anything about my children online,” or “this is why I don’t post any pictures of my child.”

Even when a man makes a choice to threaten a small child it is still, somehow, a woman’s fault.

11.

I try not to be afraid.

I am still afraid.

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The author, age 7

 

1,238 Responses to “Being A Girl: A Brief Personal History of Violence”

  1. Michele's avatar
    Michele December 9, 2015 at 8:49 pm #

    OMG! I’m so angry and the emotion is extremely welled up in me. F***, women have had to put up with so much shit since the beginning of time. I need to release the anger and feelings of weakness that I am currently feeling. Thank you for expressing the truth.

  2. Tracy's avatar
    Tracy December 9, 2015 at 8:52 pm #

    By the time I finished reading this piece I had forgotten to breath.
    I am a fifty year old American woman and have had all but one of these experiences and worse. How much worse women have it that live in countries openly hateful of women.
    Why?
    Do men know we approach them with the same consideration we would a rabid dog? Does this surprise them? empower them?
    When I was fourteen my older sister gave me this advice;
    If your attacked don’t scream help or rape, no one will come. Instead yell fire, everyone will come. She also told me, “walk tall and with purpose, like you have somewhere to be” the next day her husband told me I walk with to much confidence, that it makes men want to knock me down a bit. All this advice came after I was raped at knife point, by a stranger. He snatched me off the street two houses down from my own and yes, I was fully clothed and no, I was not drunk or in an inappropriate situation or acting improper. I was walking to the corner market in bulky winter clothing. Some how I caused his violence to me, right? I must have been walking with too much confidence.

    • DLS's avatar
      DLS April 28, 2016 at 4:26 am #

      Thank you for your story too. No one deserves such violence, and there’s no simple solution. I find men with egos too fragile to handle a confident woman confusing. To me, they scream to the world their own weakness and fragility and lack of self-love with every violent act they commit

  3. Marie Billiel Jou's avatar
    lustyglutton December 9, 2015 at 8:56 pm #

    You are amazing. I couldn’t get past #3 before I started weeping. Thank you for this. Thank you for saying all the things that I am not always strong enough to keep fucking saying. Thank you for being part of the chorus when some of us need to catch our breath. Yes all women.

  4. Ashley Brooks's avatar
    Ashley Brooks December 9, 2015 at 9:03 pm #

    I find your words to be uplifting and somewhat inspiring. Women too often are treated in a manner, as you describe, then treated worse when “complaining” about it. Men and Women need to better understad no matter your sex or race we are all human beings. Thanks so much for having the courage to immortalize this and make it easily visible for all to read.

  5. wendyjdunn's avatar
    wendyjdunn December 9, 2015 at 9:04 pm #

    Reblogged this on Wendy J. Dunn.

  6. LM's avatar
    LM December 9, 2015 at 9:40 pm #

    Fuck all of these men. Fuck being brought up in a society that tells women to be afraid, and to apologize for everything they do. Fuck everything in this society that tells women having any form of sexuality is a request to be raped and demeaned. Fuck men putting us in our place.

    I’m scared too, and that makes me so angry.

  7. Betsy Crum's avatar
    Betsy Crum December 9, 2015 at 9:51 pm #

    Thank you for telling my story, too

  8. JuneSky's avatar
    balletandboxing December 9, 2015 at 10:08 pm #

    Yup. So many of these stories (not the death threats!) ring true, and are variations of stuff I lived through in my sheltered, happy, middle class life.

    There are no words for how much I appreciate this post. I shared it with my friends (including another female friend of mine who maintains sexism isn’t an issue in our society), and on fbk, and will continue sending it and promoting it to EVERY PERSON EVERYWHERE.

    This needs to stop. Our normal is NOT normal.

    also? I am so sorry you (and so many of us) have to live through this shit all the time.

    And I am very sorry about the threats you have to deal with. How insane, and horrible that must be, as a parent.

    Thank you.

  9. Nick's avatar
    Nick December 9, 2015 at 10:14 pm #

    The author need to put in her place…. on a high fucking pedestal because she is clearly one of the bravest and outspoken women I have heard of.

  10. JuneSky's avatar
    balletandboxing December 9, 2015 at 10:15 pm #

    Reblogged this on Discovering ratchet and commented:
    The author is white woman, living in Toronto. I am a white, middle class young woman, living in Montréal. I have lived through variations of all of these stories, except for the death threats (only because I am not a loud, prolific feminist writer. Yet.)

    It makes me so enraged that I view this as normal. Worse, I am grateful that this is BETTER than the States, where being female gets you shot (Planned Parenthood, anyone?). That in our two countries, together, supposed bastions of democracy and equality, this is totally normal. Acceptable.

    One of my friends, another white middleclass girl, has told me with a straight face, that there aren’t prevalent gender issues in our society. She wasn’t being naive. She had honestly NEVER experienced anything like what I or Anne in her post below have experienced.

    I was stunned at my friend’s naivety. Then I was kind of envious. Imagine a world where this shit isn’t the norm? I can’t.

    • CPK's avatar
      CPK December 10, 2015 at 1:36 am #

      While I cannot speak for Canada, I am unaware of any region or subculture of the United States in which shooting someone for being female is considered “totally normal”.

  11. Person's avatar
    Person December 9, 2015 at 10:15 pm #

    This is soo refreshing power to women 🙂

  12. Lisa schlauch's avatar
    Lisa schlauch December 9, 2015 at 10:17 pm #

    Gosh, I didn’t know whether to cry, get angry or both. What a great written article, straight from the heart, that so many of us women have been through. So, many of us have just put those memories in the back of our minds to never to be replayed again. Yet, when we are our most vulnerable they can cripple us without a warning, and effect our daily life. We are women, and we are strong. G-d bless you for what you have experienced, and may your life with your family be blessed.

  13. Nicole Boertien's avatar
    Nicole Boertien December 9, 2015 at 10:18 pm #

    I don’t understand why men like to think its still the past where women can’t do things boys can. Plenty of us girls have shown time and time again that women can do things guys can and sometimes even better than men themselves. Men need to grow up and accept women are their equal and not someone lower than them, that they can boss around and abuse mentally, emotionally, and verbally.

  14. Shailagh's avatar
    Shailagh December 9, 2015 at 10:24 pm #

    Thank you for this honest, from-the-heart appeal to a world that simultaneously excuses gendered violence and denies that it exists. Your account is poignant and clear; the world needs to change. Thank you for speaking out! It takes courage and it serves as a reminder that others can reclaim their dignity by writing about it, too. Much love & rage ❤

  15. Teresa B's avatar
    Teresa B December 9, 2015 at 10:25 pm #

    I think this speaks to every woman. It certainly spoke to me. I saw myself in many of the situations. Thank you for speaking out!

  16. Sharlene Thornton's avatar
    Sharlene Thornton December 9, 2015 at 10:32 pm #

    Thank you for sharing this. I can relate to most of this. (I don’t have any children. I can only imagine how horrible it must feel to have someone threaten your child.) Wishing you and yours safety, health, and happiness.

  17. Sharon Kasserman's avatar
    Sharon Kasserman December 9, 2015 at 10:35 pm #

    I am so very sorry these horrible things happened to you when you a child. You can raise your son to respect women.

  18. Norberto Ruiz's avatar
    Norberto Ruiz December 9, 2015 at 10:41 pm #

    “Even when a man makes a choice to threaten a small child it is still, somehow, a woman’s fault.”

    No, this is not true, despite your intent to make it appear as such. Getting “I told you so” comments from other women is not them condoning the behavior of the aggressors and the societal state we inhabit. It is saying “you really didn’t expect something like this to happen?” to your naivete regarding human nature. Lacking in empathy? Perhaps. Blaming women? No.

    Given these numerous run-ins that you’ve had throughout life, have you ever considered having self-defense weapons? It does wonders to convey a message beyond “I’m scared and people should really, really protect me all the time from creeps and somehow have a pre-crime detecting mechanism to stop them.”

  19. Sharon Kasserman's avatar
    Sharon Kasserman December 9, 2015 at 10:47 pm #

    I did leave another message but it was so generic. I finished reading the end of your blog. You must know you are now powerful and can help facilitate change. Claim your power! And as a mother please NEVER allow anyone to threaten your child. Have you reported the horrible person who threatened your son? Step out of the victim hood into power and say something for Godsake! You may have been unable to protect yourself as a child but you are grown and are now a mother…protect your child!

  20. ectofunky's avatar
    ectofunky December 9, 2015 at 10:51 pm #

    “Even when a man makes a choice to threaten a small child it is still, somehow, a woman’s fault.”

    That seems like a very twisted interpretation of what other women are saying to you. Lacking in empathy? Perhaps. Siding with societal violence? Hardly. Their “what did you expect to happen?” comments are regarding your naivete about human nature.

    You can stop adding numbers to your list by having self-defense weapons on your person. It will do more good than hoping for society to change at its snails pace to whatever you deem as reasonable standards.

    • DLS's avatar
      DLS April 28, 2016 at 4:33 am #

      What “all women” deem as reasonable standards is to not have these crimes perpetrated against them because they are women and are easy targets for depraved men. this was just an open share of her experiences at the hands of men. And clearly from numerous posts by other women, it is clear her story is very relatable and something that many women do not share because they know it will not be taken seriously. We need to have these conversations to hasten the change that needs to happen…for Christ sake, we are in year 2016 with artificial intelligence soon to surpass human intellect, and we are still grappling with our caveman brains?

  21. Thoughts from Candiland's avatar
    Thoughts from Candiland December 9, 2015 at 10:57 pm #

    Hi, thank you for sharing that was very powerful, and reminds me of my childhood to adulthood…Men do not treat me like that anymore…I am not ashamed or afraid to tell them how I feel…I think you are there also…xoxoxo

  22. Trinity's avatar
    Trinity December 9, 2015 at 11:05 pm #

    I am so sorry this has happened to you. No one should have ever done those things to you growing up and no one should ever have threatened your child. I hope you continue to write and speak out and I hope you remain safe.

  23. Nancy/BLissed-Out Grandma's avatar
    Nancy/BLissed-Out Grandma December 9, 2015 at 11:14 pm #

    This is so…powerful, honest, astonishing. Universal, probably, or at least true for me. I’ve never been hit, or raped, or stabbed, or even seriously threatened, but violence has loomed in so many situations, and it still does.

  24. När Annie fotograferar i Kalifornien's avatar
    När Annie fotograferar i Kalifornien December 10, 2015 at 12:08 am #

    Best thing I’ve read on a long, long time. The world is an awful place for a women. I can’t count all the “compliments” I have got during my short life, the times someone has forced themselves onto me. I was raped once. Took me years to tell anyone, because my best friend told me it was my fault for dating him, when I tried to tell her. My mom is still friend with my x, who abused me. She says she feels sorry for him being raised in a loveless home. As a child I was bullied for two years, because I had good grades. All my five abusers where guys. The school told me they felt sorry for them, having parents that didn’t cared. I tried to killed myself but failed. I switched school.

    I had parents that cared. That helped, supported. They helped me escape and move to another town. To an art school, mostly attended by gay and people like me. Thinking people who did not fit in. I did find more happiness then I could ever imagine.

    My parents told me I could do anything. So now I am in California studying Photography, living with a feminist who is also my best friend and the finest man on earth. I am so aware of how it is to be a women and a girl. And I want to change it. I won’t be quiet, I will take my place as an equal human being. ❤

  25. JustAGirl's avatar
    JustAGirl December 10, 2015 at 12:37 am #

    I applaud your honesty and bravery. This was a powerful and truthful piece of writing, that really makes you think about what it is like to live in this world as a female. Awareness is the gateway to change.

  26. CPK's avatar
    CPK December 10, 2015 at 12:46 am #

    Despite the title, many of the incidents described in this post are unrelated to “being a girl” per se, or are not drawn from the author’s personal experience, or are not examples of violence, or some combination of these.

  27. lilemsie's avatar
    lilemsie December 10, 2015 at 12:56 am #

    That was incredible. For so many reasons. The most scary of those is how much I relate to. And if I do, then surely every other woman out there does too. I hope my daughter never does.

  28. Gimme Abreak's avatar
    Gimme Abreak December 10, 2015 at 1:00 am #

    If this was written by this 7 year old boy my @ss is a jelly bean. What 7 year old:
    -Knows what a sexist is?
    -Call his teacher “impossibly beautiful”
    -…”it is the smile of someone who finds us adorable in our outrage”??

    Give me a break.

    Who is the man-hating broad who wrote this drivel?

  29. Mark Wells Jr.'s avatar
    Mark Wells Jr. December 10, 2015 at 1:02 am #

    I’m so sorry that men ever treated you that way. There are no excuses for that kind of behavior. ever.

  30. amandagulla's avatar
    amandagulla December 10, 2015 at 1:17 am #

    Thank you. Just thank you. Every word of this is true for pretty much every woman.

  31. oregonheathen's avatar
    oregonheathen December 10, 2015 at 1:24 am #

    I’m sorry. Not for being a man, not because I share a sex with the ass hats, murderers and creeps, or because I was not exposed to this. I’m sorry that you experienced this, I’m sorry that aspects of western culture embraced those behaviors, I’m sorry for the excuses made on behalf of those that harmed you, I’m sorry for the confusion caused by our cultures mixed messages on women. I can’t fix the past, no one can, but I will work towards a better tomorrow beside, and with, women like you.

    Together change is not only possible, but unavoidable.

  32. CPK's avatar
    CPK December 10, 2015 at 1:27 am #

    Story #2: Based on what we’re told here, the female teacher was engaged in egregious workplace bullying and “mobbing”. Not only did she verbally abuse the male teacher, she conscripted her students to do so as a group. This was harassment, grotesquely unprofessional, and an abuse of her position of trust working with young children.

    She should count herself lucky that he smiled and shrugged it off (are we meant to count this as an act of “violence”?) rather than filing some kind of complaint. He seems clearly to be the victim in this story, even if he was a jerk about girls playing hockey.

    Perhaps the lesson is that if you’re female, and use the magic word “sexism”, normal rules don’t apply, and it’s OK to bully, abuse, harass and defame people who hold opinions with which you disagree. This may be true, as a practical matter, but I don’t think it’s what the anecdote was meant to convey.

  33. iennivens's avatar
    iennivens December 10, 2015 at 1:43 am #

    Thank you.

  34. rsizereadwrite's avatar
    rsizereadwrite December 10, 2015 at 1:55 am #

    This was riveting. Thank you.

  35. sonya's avatar
    sonya December 10, 2015 at 2:12 am #

    Brave. Powerful. Respect.

  36. Joni's avatar
    Joni December 10, 2015 at 2:25 am #

    I live this honesty. You are brave. Death to trolls and misogyny!

  37. Letters and Miles's avatar
    Letters and Miles December 10, 2015 at 2:52 am #

    Reblogged this on and commented:
    wow…

  38. laine's avatar
    laine December 10, 2015 at 3:21 am #

    Powerful. For me it wasn’t the babysitter’s son, it was her husband. And the beginning of my personal history of violence.

  39. Lucy's avatar
    Lucy December 10, 2015 at 3:24 am #

    Thank you for writing this, I was recently molested on a bus and I felt disgusting, ashamed, like I deserved it. (I’m 17)
    The man wouldn’t stop touching my boobs, cuddling up to my shoulder, groping my thigh. It was hellish.
    But I didn’t move, I didn’t fight back, I assumed that if I did I would be hurt or possibly killed. So I sat still and tried not to cry. I got home and sobbed for an hour.
    I still have nightmares regularly and have trouble going to public places.

  40. Alex's avatar
    Alex December 10, 2015 at 3:46 am #

    Quite insightful, and as clear to read as the stars in the sky to see tonight, beautiful, poetic, and moved the soul.

  41. Lori Duby's avatar
    Lori Duby December 10, 2015 at 4:50 am #

    That embodied at least one thing that every girl, teenager and women have had to deal with at one point or another. Life is strange and stranger, I think, for females.

  42. Panda's avatar
    Panda December 10, 2015 at 5:12 am #

    This is intense. Men need to get put in their place. Women need to learn to defend themselves

  43. rimzzi's avatar
    rimzzi December 10, 2015 at 5:25 am #

    Reblogged this on mystory1210.

  44. Anjali's avatar
    Anjali December 10, 2015 at 5:35 am #

    Stay strong. We are with you!

  45. Lindsey Bebensee's avatar
    Lindsey Bebensee December 10, 2015 at 5:42 am #

    Every. Single. Word.
    I’ve not read something so accurate, so powerful, so much like she ripped the words and thoughts from my head, from my LIFE.
    I’m gonna add one, but I could add so so many more. This is my life. From boys putting their hands up my shirt at cheer practice and being told they are just “being boys” to the explicit one I am going to share. Thank you for writing this.

    12: I am 19. I go on a date. The date takes me to a prayer chapel. When he prays, he places his hands on my body, groping my chest, fingers in my crotch. He prays that god help my heart to hear while he is massaging my breast. I cry. Silent tears because he is so much bigger than I and he’s praying. Maybe I’m wrong. Maybe this is how it’s supposed to be? When if fingers enter me, I wrestle away and run the entire way home in tears. When I get to my dorms I tell the RA. She’s an adult. She is supposed to take care of me. When I tell her she says he was probably just over board on the praying and if I didn’t want the attention I shouldn’t dress like a whore. I shop at the army/navy surplus. This comment consumes and confuses me. How is this whore attire? God wanted him to touch me like that? This was my fault?

  46. Ryan's avatar
    Ryan December 10, 2015 at 5:59 am #

    The five year old said he would kill you? Seriously?

    • Shae's avatar
      Shae December 31, 2015 at 7:09 am #

      Some imagination she has. Actually jealous and old bag like her can remember that far back. Or maybe it’s just made up? When something sounds unbelievable it normally is. Give her NO credibility AT ALL.

      • DLS's avatar
        DLS April 28, 2016 at 4:40 am #

        it sounds unbelievable to you perhaps because you never had these experiences or known personally anyone with these experiences but her account resonates with many. Events like these don’t melt away into the night like other memories…these are traumatic and at formative times of her life. Your comment is very ignorant

  47. Lindsey Bebensee's avatar
    Lindsey Bebensee December 10, 2015 at 6:13 am #

    Shared @authordelaneywilliams

  48. yaviana's avatar
    yaviana December 10, 2015 at 6:17 am #

    Thank you. For sharing this, for documenting so clearly how society creates victims of women for being women. I would love to see you write the counter article where it suggests courses of action that could have been taken at each stage. I was labelled a b*tch early on. Not only did I tell on the boy at school that showed us his penis everyday, I stomped his crotch on the playground when he came to close to me with it out. It was secong grade the first time I heard the word rape from a boy at my school, when he grabbed my friend I hit him with the baseball bat from PE Class, when asked why I said because he grabbed her and was pulling her away and she was pleading to be let go, then he said he would rape her. I didn’t get in trouble for hitting him. The same week one if the older boys came for me at recess, he didn’t know I ran track with my brothers so he chased me until the bell rang. I told my big brother and he started teaching me how to defend myself by causing the other person as much pain as possible. He said any man that has to take something is not a man but a wild animal and should be treated as such. That a woman’s body was hers to give of her own free will anything else wasn’t human. My other brother said that since girls become women and women become mothers they deserve nothing but love and respect. That wounded moms made wounded children that became dangerous adults. Because of my brothers I stayed mostly safe, boys around me knew I would hurt them and men around me called me scary. I knew to poke the eyes, slap the ears, punch the throat and if it was to late, grab the penis and use my nails to scrape it up or down. Grabbing testicles, pull and twist, was a xment my brother made when bad things started happening to women in movies. I paid attention. I do reverse catcalls sometimes. Usually to other women I will compliment them. I have noticed that when women are confident, animal men don’t mess with them, they like the scared ones. So when I see a man looking to hard I enteract with her until we get somewhere then I go on my way. If you walk alone at least carry a pencil for defense purposes. Anything can be a weapon if used properly. We need to teach other women not to be afraid and how to defend themselves. I am in my proper place, minding my own business, it is men who interfere with me that are out of place. Sadly because of all of this I have lost great respect for men in general, the ones who are animals and the ones who are cowards and let the animals be wild.

  49. Ryan's avatar
    Ryan December 10, 2015 at 6:23 am #

    Seriously with this? Where is the violence? I’m missing it. Men are animals we all know that. You have real traumatic events mixed in with non traumatic events. I don’t know how a girl in your class whose mother is murdered affects you in a violent. Same with all the violent shootings you describe? No man should ever put his hands on a woman uninvited. I have a sister and a mother who have done things like kick these men in the crotch, threaten to kill them and even one time pull out a pair of scissors. I feel as if you prefer to play the victim. How is a 5 year old boy showing you his penis a violent act? I think and I could be wrong but I think you weren’t taught to stand up for yourself and that is a shame. There are women who experience real violence from men. Women who are in physically and emotionally abusive relationships. Women who are raped. Women who are killed. Yet here you are complaining at so much less. He put your hand on his dick. That sucks. Know what guys do that to other guys and it sucks.

    • Robert Sarson's avatar
      Robert Sarson December 31, 2015 at 6:48 am #

      JFC it’s the constance,the unending miasma of dread,the deadening of delight from existential gloom.The question is what societal changes must we make so it stops.How is it possible to feel it is acceptable for signifigant portions of our society to live in a less than the whole world.Obviously everybody’s life is degraded when we accept anybody’ life being devalued.We are never in it alone.

      • Shae's avatar
        Shae December 31, 2015 at 7:03 am #

        Pretty sure the Author of the article here just has the shits on the world, have you seen a picture of her? I have and I too would be pissed of with the world if I looked like that.

    • DLS's avatar
      DLS April 28, 2016 at 4:54 am #

      Ryan, it’s so incredibly dismissive of you to pass judgement on her experiences simply because in your mind, they are not to the degree of severity that deserves attention (i.e. rape). With regards to the 5 year old boy showing her his penis…maybe it wasn’t a violent act…maybe the 5 year old doesn’t know what he was doing. Maybe he does know and recall the story where he was force showing his penis on her. By itself, it is perhaps not noteworthy, but maybe this particular story stood out to her because the mother of the boy’s method of dealing with this was to manipulate the girl into thinking that it is not a problem, instead of teaching her boy not that it is unacceptable. Perhaps that is where it starts…the willful ignorance when educational opportunities presents themselves in the formative years of a kid’s life. I recommend you looking at these stories not just separately but the overall narrative that it is portraying. She had many experiences as a child when she was powerless, defenseless and no adult was truly there for her. Perhaps she didn’t have a strong figure. She was a child and she was a victim to this, and this sort of of trauma stays with the person.

      The fact that her story – written so openly and courageously – resonates with so many women should be telling enough of the numerous accounts of aggression perpetrated by men that are deemed “unworthy” of mentioning by our society and people like you, and thus dismissed. Ever thought about what such dismissal leads to? Perhaps to more entitled behaviour that culminates into serious acts of violence by the same men that noticed their less noteworthy aggressions being accepted by society.

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  1. Violence against Women: Personal Stories | Ms. Sophia SF - December 10, 2015

    […] you haven’t had the chance yet, you should read Being A Girl: A Brief Personal History of Violence on The Belle […]

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