not my words but very true
“If  we teach women that there are only certain ways they may acceptably  behave, we should not be surprised when they behave in those ways.
And we should not be surprised when they behave these ways during attempted or completed rapes.
  Women who are taught not to speak up too loudly or too forcefully or  too adamantly or too demandingly are not going to shout “NO” at the top  of their goddamn lungs just because some guy is getting uncomfortably  close.
Women who are taught not to keep arguing are not going to keep saying “NO.”
Women who are taught that their needs and desires are not to be  trusted, are fickle and wrong and are not to be interpreted by the woman  herself, are not going to know how to argue with “but you liked  kissing, I just thought…”
Women who are taught that physical  confrontations make them look crazy will not start hitting, kicking, and  screaming until it’s too late, if they do at all.
Women who  are taught that a display of their emotional state will have them  labeled hysterical and crazy (which is how their perception of events  will be discounted) will not be willing to run from a room disheveled  and screaming and crying.
Women who are taught that certain  established boundaries are frowned upon as too rigid and unnecessary are  going to find themselves in situations that move further faster before  they realize that their first impression was right, and they are in a  dangerous room with a dangerous person.
Women who are taught  that refusing to flirt back results in an immediately hostile  environment will continue to unwillingly and unhappily flirt with  somebody who is invading their space and giving them creep alerts.
People wonder why women don’t “fight back,” but they don’t wonder about  it when women back down in arguments, are interrupted, purposefully  lower and modulate their voices to express less emotion, make obvious  signals that they are uninterested in conversation or being in closer  physical proximity and are ignored. They don’t wonder about all those  daily social interactions in which women are quieter, ignored, or  invisible, because those social interactions seem normal. They seem  normal to women, and they seem normal to men, because we were all raised  in the same cultural pond, drinking the same Kool-Aid.
And  then, all of a sudden, when women are raped, all these natural and  invisible social interactions become evidence that the woman wasn’t  truly raped. Because she didn’t fight back, or yell loudly, or run, or  kick, or punch. She let him into her room when it was obvious what he  wanted. She flirted with him, she kissed him. She stopped saying no,  after a while.” 
 
 
 
          
      
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment