Thursday, April 7, 2016

The dark we know well


I was just reading an article about a female's ability to de-escalate a situation. I've been doing this my whole life. Most of us females have. We were sexualized before we had the ability to fully understand sexuality. I watched my mother try to de-escalate my father's anger. My brother's anger. Cope with everyday sexism. She taught me to de-escalate. Not consciously. I learned by watching her. When I was thirteen years old, just beginning to develop breasts and having not even had my first sexual experience, a male cousin copped a feel while pretending to pet the kitten I was holding close to my chest. I knew what he was doing. Make no mistake, perverts, we are fully aware of your inappropriate contact. And I had no idea what to do about his uninvited molestation, but sit there and wait until he stopped. I remember thinking this cousin was handsome when I was five, he was a full seven years older than me, and at first I was thrilled he was actually talking to me, having a full conversation with me, interested in me. Until I realized why he was even talking to me. So, he could pretend to touch me innocently while touching me inappropriately. And then I was ashamed, embarrassed and confused. When I was fourteen, I went for an eye exam and the eye doctor started taking my pulse during the exam. He lifted my wrist and pushed it right up next to my breast so the outside of his hand was touching it and he just left it there for what seemed like forever. When I was fifteen, I walked ten blocks in New York to the theater. My first Broadway show on my own. I was all dressed up, wearing a lovely dress and heels. I was catcalled and whistled at for the entire ten blocks. Grown men said the most disgusting things to me. When I was seventeen, I was walking to the bus stop in my Steak n Shake uniform. A man screamed across the street at me, wanting to know how much I would charge for a blow job. I was mortified. When I didn't answer him, he became extremely hostile and abusive. I was terrified he would cross the street. I kept my head down until the bus got there. It took until I was about twenty four for me to tell a strange man to take his hand off me. Before that time, bosses had touched me, strangers had grabbed my ass on public transportation, drunk men in public had threatened me and boyfriends had beaten me up. Violence and sexual situations was such a regular and frequent part of my life that I had grown to accept its existence. I was only beginning to find a voice in it. Once I was waiting for a drink at a crowded bar and a man squeezed in next to me. "Give me your phone number!" he demanded. "I don't even know you. Why would I do that?" I said. "Just give it to me." "No," I said, deciding to just be direct. In the past I would have said I had a boyfriend or I was waiting for someone or whatever socially correct excuses I had cultivated to de-escalate. "Fucking stuck up bitch." I was greeted with. Because I said no. Men like this prefer the dance. They keep you talking, keep you engaged. But basically they push in on you, they touch you, they invade your space. I was trying to shut it down sooner. Engaging in this brutal honestly got me called a lesbian, a stuck up bitch, a whore, a fucking slut. It got my life threatened. A man can go from "hey baby" to "I will fucking kill you" in the time it takes for a woman to say "no, thank you." Please don't bother to tell me all men are not like this. We are aware. Very much aware that all men are not like this. I am married to a man who is not like this. Men who are not like this are not the problem. Once, a man I was dating was very, very drunk in a bar with me and I watched him looking at a girl standing next to him, the spaghetti strap of her dress had fallen down off her shoulder and was hanging mid arm. For some inexplicable reason, he took hold of the strap and raised it up on her shoulder and patted her shoulder. He kept walking. He didn't even realize what he had done and assuredly, he meant no harm by his action. But he did not see the look of pure terror in the girl's eyes when he touched her. He didn't even register this action as something that would cause terror. But it does. Because we can't tell what kind of man you are and we have learned that men can be dangerous. We have often had to try to calm someone down and make them feel better so he will not get more angry, more violent. One of my boyfriends co workers used to sexually harass me every time I walked into the restaurant where he worked. He would make lewd and disgusting comments to me every single time. Telling him to shut up did no good. Standing up to him, ignoring him, avoiding him. None of it worked. And everyone around me tolerated or laughed off his behavior. Get a thicker skin, I was told. He's harmless. I wasn't exactly afraid of this guy but it still bothers me that everyone in that situation decided that his behavior wasn't a problem. Worse even was that he was hired on later at a restaurant where I was the manager and he proceeded to attempt to sexually harass me there as well. Even though I was the boss, several male employees made sexual comments and propositioned me. Instead of feeling that I had the power to fire them, which I did, I feared they would use their sexual harassment against me to find a loophole. I enlisted my co-manager, who was male to discipline and fire them when the time was right. All I could do at the time was de-escalate the situation to protect myself. But they were fired for other reasons. What they did to me went unpunished. The worst part of all of this is that I am so desensitized to it half the time, I don't even register it happening. It takes someone else to be appalled by it a good deal of the time. It's so regular and normal to have to put up with it. To walk around it, to try to deal with it. It makes me sad. It mades me angry. It makes me wish it would change.

4 comments:

BowlingTrophyWife said...

Like you, I tolerated this behavior for years as well. I seem to both gravitate toward and attract abusive men. Our father was not abusive but our mother was brutal and brilliant, teaching me to loathe both men and women equally; women, because "they'll always go after your man" and in her opinion, women lied, cheated, stole and would do everything they could to compete. Mom viewed other women, always, as hostile entities. Men, on the other hand, according to the Book of Mom, "All they want to do is screw and dump you."

When I began dating at sixteen, I was blessed with a two really decent guys. Ironically, the 'good' ones brought out Mom's inner "Mrs. Robinson"; she'd make an unexpected entrance in the family room, clad in lacy slips and negligee's, in full makeup because "Oh, I seem to have forgotten a book in here" or "Have either of you seen my cigarettes?" Marty, my first 'real' boyfriend, looked at me in stupefaction after Mom's first Jezebel act. In reality I had no idea how to begin to explain her in 'seduction' mode. Her relationships with men were frenzied, complicated and fraught with angst as she tried to juggle 'her boys' while Dad was out of town. I was mortified and developed some pretty depressing beliefs about men. "All he wants is sex, he doesn't love you and if you get pregnant that's the end of it and don't bother coming to me for help!" The irony of all of this is that from the ages of twelve to sixteen, I was repeatedly sexually abused by the men she brought home - with her blessing. She eventually managed to break up my relationship with Marty, after accusing him of stealing from her purse and behaving lewdly(!) The real reason? He was not in the least interested in having a 'go'. She did this with two other guys I dated in school and in a panic, I fled home for college, where I was suddenly throw into a world where my dorm-mates routinely went out to bars on the weekend and picked some guy up - or got picked up. To my horror I walked into the bathroom one morning to find Kathleen, a girl down the hall from me, showing off her "rug burn" and it was horrible - the skin was gone in huge, weeping circles on both her knees and bruises on her thighs and she was PROUD of this! She screwed anything that moved with an aplomb and nonchalance that floored me. She was forever getting flowers or showing off her latest piece of jewelry. it got to the point that on Friday nights, knocks at our door would end up with me pointing the florist delivery guy down to room 303. I never said anything bad to her or about her but she must have sensed my disapproval. She was friends with my roommate and they began making fun of "McReynolds' Very Own Saint Frigid". Room-mate #1 routinely locked me out of our dorm room so she could 'entertain' (this was at a time when if you had a guy to your dorm room, during 'approved guest hours' you had to leave your door open. She ignored signs and regulations, so I spent many a night on an old brown couch in the common room that emanated an aroma of pizza and flatulence. I didn't 'get' it - I looked askance at my fellow dorm mates and envied their seeming ease and nonchalance with guys, though none were as blatantly sex obsessed as Kathleen.

(the excitement continues below...)

BowlingTrophyWife said...

In the late 70's, bars were the place to hook up. I'd never been to one or cared to go into one. Socially awkward and shy, I'd never been a flirt, never learned how and lost count of the number of times I was the one to try to get back to the dorm without a ride. Guys would come up to me in bars or at events and I'd become absolutely tongue-tied with fear. A guy reaching over to gently move a lock of hair out of my eyes would trigger terror. At Broadway Nights, some guy attempted to literally drag me out onto the dance floor, sweeping me up in his arms and carrying me into the crowd, and when I finally pushed him away, getting out of range of the beer-soaked miasma around him - he called me a "Fucking tease! Condescending Cunt! "Just being dressed up seemed to be an invitation for any man, any where to say or to try to do anything to get me into bed. Understand, I was no prude. In addition to my 'initiations" with Mom's men Du Jour, I'd read The Story of O at twelve and in my freshman year of high school, Mom gave me an expensively bound copy of the "Amorous Drawings of the Marquis Von Bayros" (yeah, look it up and tell me what the hell kind of gift that is to give a kid?!) I'd gathered with friends in purloined boas and cheap finery and paraded myself around as "Magenta" at showings of the Rocky Horror Show. Marty and I made out innumerable times in the limestone mine caves in Pacific, Missouri, Forest Park and our favorite - the old spot near Lambert Field where we could park, sit on the hood and enjoy amazing adrenaline rushes each time a 747 swooped overhead.


continued? but of course....

BowlingTrophyWife said...

A few months prior to going off to college, I met Schuyler. After two weeks, I knew he was 'the one' - He was handsome, a history junkie and in his Sophomore year at Mizzou. He never once attempted to pressure or goad me into having sex. He was courtly and kind and it bowled me over completely. Within six weeks of my arriving at Mizzou for my Freshman year - I begged him to marry me - and he said yes.

I know. I know.

Seven years later the mystery was solved when the fact of his being a deeply closeted gay man was revealed. Yes, I see the irony. No, it wasn't funny. Three years after that our divorce was finalized and I headed into two extremely short relationships that turned into abridged versions of "Nine and a Half Weeks" - let's call it "Three and a Half Weeks" - a brief reprieve from dating was followed up by an eighteen year relationship with a man who was brilliant, witty, well-educated, erudite, came from an academic family (his father was a noted Chopin scholar and professor at a major university) and loved many of the things I did: classical music, art, history, museums, theatre and old films from the 20's and 30's. He was also an extremely high functioning alcoholic, who went from zero to asshole in five minutes after his third drink. Once intoxicated, every ounce of appreciation he'd expressed for me went out the window - I was pathetically ignorant, embarrassing, incompetent, my interests were laughable, my desire to return to college dismissed as nothing more than a pipe dream, my employment (a 911 dispatcher) derided and my tastes in the arts and music suburban at best. There was ONE thing that still met with his approval and that was ....you guessed it...my body. Every night he got drunk turned into a brutal, out and out war leaving me bruised and sobbing the next day - which was dismissed as my 'imagining things' - even when confronted with the bruises and scrapes, he'd try to explain it away - of course with the classic, "Well, I was drunk and don't remember".

BowlingTrophyWife said...

one last bit....

My last two relationships fared no better. I've not been on a date in 6 years and don't intend to attempt another. My female friends here shake their heads, unable to believe that I'm actually happy and content, refusing to understand that my value as a women/human being does not necessarily derive from being joined at the hip to another man. My poor decisions led me to where I am today but most of those decisions and my early upbringing had one goal - marriage. I used to be a brilliant woman - my teachers and advisors told my parents repeatedly that I was far above average in intelligence but it fell on deaf ears. According to Mom, I had to eventually marry - but she hated men. Dad was a traditionalist - I should be married, barefoot and while I was unable to have children - that would give me even more time to tend to my future loving hubby. I wanted a lifelong relationship but was so badly prepared and programmed, so confusingly pulled mentally and emotionally in so many directions that I felt like one of those tin-chicken targets in the old Carnival Midway Shows - pinging and ponging this way and that with absolutely no sense of who I was. I like to think the world is changing, that women are gaining ground and relationships between the sexes are starting to be rooted in mutual trust, respect and appreciation but most days the best I can achieve is a grim cynicism.