First, another article I read and need to share. Warning that this is heavy - triggering, for some, and more graphic than most things I've ever posted. It's a discussion of the trivializing use of the word "rape," in this case specifically in video games: http://www.escapistmagazine.com/articles/view/features/9766-The-R-Word
I think I was especially struck by this article because it articulated so many of the arguments that I tried (and sometimes failed) to make in similar discussions, most notably one evening on Facebook last year when I argued about the term "Facebook rape" with some friends of friends who I didn't even know. That night hurt and sent me into a tailspin for a little while. The author of this article describes his own experiences in pretty stark detail, which is disconcerting but probably necessary to drive home his point, especially in the gaming world which is a harsh place where I don't hang out (not just because of things like this in gaming culture - also because I'm not great at video games!).
Some key quotations, for those not keen on clicking on the potentially triggering link:
"Despite all the articles, I
have yet to see one that helps people understand, in detail, why this
is such a personal topic for people who have had rape in their past.
Perhaps it's our fault for not taking you there, for just assuming you'd
care about something that for you is an abstract idea, but for us is a
painful reality." Yes. So much. And it's so hard to hammer home that point to people...but that's exactly what this brave man did.
He voices the troubles faced by people with PTSD, rape survivors in particular, and this bit especially rings true: "My whole life I had felt
worthless. I always tried harder than anyone because I was afraid of
what authority figures, those who had power over me, would do if I
failed. That's not uncommon for rape victims, it turns out. Trauma
like that changes your brain chemistry, makes you feel helpless and
inadequate even in situations you're perfectly capable of handling." My terror of authority is one of the few things that still really hinders me - at work, and in unexpected situations when I become afraid of people I merely perceive to be in positions of authority, such as more experienced drivers or better-dressed people on the street. I still cower in the face of criticism, and it wounds me in a way that is far from constructive. It is cliché to say that being a perfectionist is a weakness at work, but I do think in my case that it is. It means that when something goes wrong, and is noticed, that I dissolve entirely and have difficulty rebuilding, staying in a fearful mental space for far longer than is healthy or normal. Some of this may be due to being emotionally abused by a teacher in elementary school, compounded by years of bullying, but I do often think it was driven home by rape, which instilled in me an even deeper fear of how people in power truly could hurt me. Part of me, even years later, is still ensnared by that fear, which emerges whenever there is a situation that brings up even tangentially related emotions. It's not very productive!
Then the anonymous gamer makes a key point which I've never quite elucidated in my own arguments on this topic: the difference between hurt and offense. It seems obvious, but somehow is something I struggled to make clear to people when I objected to their words and became upset. In this case, again, his words are better than mine: "Often I won't say anything, even when I'm upset, because I don't want to be negative and ruin everyone's fun. Except "ruining fun" is exactly why I dislike it when people use that word. It ruins my fun.
It sucks the fun out of a game like oxygen through a blown airlock.
Being raped was the worst thing that ever happened to me, and I don't
like to be reminded of it when I'm supposed to be enjoying myself.
Imagine if someone captured your flag or dominated you in deathmatch,
then rubbed in your face how your sister was killed by a drunk driver or
your dad abandoned you when you were little. That's how close it cuts.
People keep using the word "offended," in this discussion -- I'm not
offended, I'm hurt. Hearing this word causes me emotional pain."
I'm hurt, not offended. This is what I wish I'd said, what I need to say, in so many similar situations. A little over a month ago, at a staff training retreat at work, several of us at lunch ended up talking about stalkers. I'm not sure how the topic came up - I certainly didn't introduce it. Someone in a more senior position to me mentioned how she'd been "stalked" by someone who gave her cookies and other baked goods, and how she'd not been fond of his behaviour but wanted to keep him around for the baking. She set up this supposed stalker with a friend of hers and they are close now.
I wanted to scream (but didn't; this is my boss we're talking about - and remember my issues with authority here! - it was also at work in a dining hall also crowded with staff whom I quasi-supervise). This isn't stalking we're talking about - this is an annoyance, petty behaviour. Stalking is a crime. Intimidation. Threats. Harassment. Not repeated purchase of cookies that stops when you ask nicely. I was stalked off and on for years by the man who raped me, and on a different occasion followed from my elementary school, threatened, and intimidated by a stranger as a child. Those are experiences I remember with terror - there is no humour in them and they are certainly not experiences I'd bring up as light lunchtime conversation with my colleagues. In my usual pattern, I retreated and proceeded to stew over it. I've been stewing since mid May, and it's now the end of June. It all brought me back to the inaccurate, trivializing, hurtful use of "rape" as a term to describe various virtual interactions that aren't very nice, but also aren't rape. Hurtful. I wasn't just offended by how this person, and other co-workers who mentioned having "stalkers" at various points, lightly told their stories as though talking about their first dates. I was profoundly hurt. She did not intend it, but something that terrified me for years became with this group of people a simple part of dating and courtship instead of the crime that it is. I felt jealous, confused, and angry - but most of all, hurt. And it's taken me a long time to put a finger on it, and to be able to explain to myself why I feel doubly wounded when somebody accuses me of simply being easily offended when I become upset about how people use these words.
I feel like I'm ranting at this point. I probably am. So I'll change gears. Another thing that's been on my mind these past few nights...why now? I've had enough of the "why me?" musings - they aren't productive and there is little I can do but accept that this happened to me. Happened. In the past. So why is it - "it" in this case being my past, issues of rape and bullying, trauma and the fear I always hid - hurting me more this spring than others?
This spring has been tumultuous for my family. My sister has been very ill, and our life has been turned upside-down. Things wrench inside of me because of the fear of losing her, almost every night. Simultaneously, a good friend is also struggling with mental illness that scares me - again, a feeling of loss with each night in the hospital, being overwhelmed and confused, terrified, and feeling helpless. All of this is a huge understatement. It will probably be a long time before I'll be able to really explain how this is all making me feel. One would think my mind would be wholly occupied with the daemons of its present, but instead in the long nights once I think things have subsided and I am finally about to sleep, the past awakens. I haven't had flashbacks again, thankfully, or hurt myself, but the anger and the fear from years ago has been flooding back. Why now? I've been puzzled by this. The best I can come up with is that there is some sort of a connection created by emotions in my brain.
I've been thinking about times and experiences as though they are islands, linked by bridges of emotion in my mind. Currently there is fear, anger, loss, hopelessness relating to my current situation and the fear of losing people whom I love. In the past, there was fear, anger, hopelessness, and so forth while being raped, and dealing with the aftermath of it, but those feelings were so intense I couldn't name them or recognize them at the time. The best I can surmise is that right now there is a bridge of sorts between those feelings, and that something inside of me is crossing over.
It's not fun. Hell no. But I am not as overpowered by my own feelings as I have been in the past. Somehow I know what they are now. Perhaps it's writing about them; perhaps it's time. In my Memories Series poem (which I posted last night while somewhat working through this post in my head), one line reads "Memories are fluid, and engulf me when it’s right \ To look at all the shattered glass that’s gathered in my
knees. \ I pull out every shard of glass, and I keep up my fight: \ A fight that’s set on fire by my memories." Lately I've been wondering whether this is simply the time that my subconscious has chosen for pulling out at least some of the splinters that have been hurting me for years, which have become so engrained that I've become accustomed to them. Perhaps when I've been hurting so intensely because of other things in my life, I have the fuel to work through elements of my past that I usually keep buried so that I don't let those feelings free.
At work I jotted down today some things, just fragments, metaphorically linking this again to pulling out splinters: "healing is like pulling out deeply embedded splinters. Bleeding is inevitable even if the nerve endings have long since been severed. It's like unplugging something. It hurts unimaginably and acutely but is cleaner and less toxic than leaving a fragment to keep stabbing for eternity, fermenting, turning gangrenous inside of me."As a child I was always petrified of getting small slivers in my feet from running barefoot on the back deck, and I remember keenly the fear of my mother attempting to root out some stubborn splinters of wood, reluctantly and as gently as she could, with a sterilized needle. Now I know that slivers have to come out. Perhaps now is a time to release the splinters of wood, the slivers of the past, which have been catalyzed by my present fear. I can only hope that this won't be too dramatic or pull me down for too long.
Monday, June 25, 2012
Sunday, June 24, 2012
Memories, and thoughts for something I'm working on
I've been working lately on a piece of some sort about a comment somebody made at work a few weeks ago about stalking...a comment that is still eating at my mind with the unfairness of it all, and how people can live so close to one another, and yet in different words dictated by memory. As a historian, memory is a powerful thing to me. As a survivor, even more so.
On that note, even though I haven't figured out the post I've been meaning to post since the middle of May, here's a poem series. It hurts but it's hopeful; it shows how far I've come in the long lifespan of this blog.
2004: I will always have these
memories
Sometimes I try to hide from my
memories,
Stuff them in a box in the closet
And crawl down under my bed.
Running a race where I'm going
nowhere,
Running away from the thoughts in
my head.
Chorus:
Memories come calling to find me
every night
Buzzing through my brain like a
horde of angry bees.
I try to cover up my heart but
they still rip off a bite.
I will always always always have
these memories.
Killing me so quietly, drowning me
in my own thoughts.
I pack all of my fears away but
still they hurt me lots and lots.
Always running, never sleeping,
never knowing what to do.
Always doubting, always crying,
wondering if my thoughts are true.
(Repeat Chorus)
Simple silence is inviting;
conversations scare me more
When I just wish with all my heart
to be just like I was before.
You claim that thinking cannot
kill; I don't believe a bit of it.
Apologies are powerless; I really
couldn't give a shit.
(Repeat Chorus)
And still you say you understand
the nightmares that have captured me.
I could describe the horror but I
know that still you wouldn't see.
My brain is in a whirlwind with
the bottom flying to the top.
There's nothing I wouldn't give
just for this awful hell to stop.
(Repeat Chorus)
But the memories follow everywhere
as I climb this ladder high.
I stop on every rung, and I always
ask the question, "why?"
Thinking feels so poisonous, the
snake that bit could never know
All the pain that it can bring to
ignore when I say "no."
(Repeat Chorus)
Memories come chasing me, so
vivid, so hard to ignore.
Why oh why can't my life be as
simple as it was before?
I try to just convince myself, it
didn't happen, not to me.
A little part inside myself is
crying out, this couldn't be.
(Repeat Chorus)
I'll chase myself in circles 'til
I just come to accept this pain.
I wonder: can the flowers grow
with little sun and only rain?
I toss and turn and overthink and
never do I really sleep
But there's so many questions with
the answers buried far to deep.
(Repeat Chorus)
In and out and round about and
just to hide what I am hiding.
No safety bar to catch me on the
Ferris wheel that I am riding.
It's time to climb a wall that
stands all cold and stone and foreboding.
I dance in circles on the ground
and always my head is exploding.
(Repeat Chorus)
Sometimes I try to hide from my
memories,
Stuff them in a box in the closet
And crawl down under my bed.
Running a race where I'm going
nowhere.
Running away from the thoughts in
my head.
***
2005: Forget regret, or suffocate in memories
Last year I tried to dig up my memories
From the dark depths of my closet
And far down under my bed.
In a whole year
I’ve finally gone somewhere
And managed to catch
The thoughts in my head.
Memories came calling to find me every night
Buzzing through my brain like a horde of angry bees.
I tried to cover up my heart but memories aren’t
water-tight.
Forget regret, or suffocate in memories.
Simple silence is inviting; some things scare me very much.
I wish it didn’t hurt but still I’ll run from just a
friendly touch.
But finally I’m sleeping, having dreams that might make
sense to you
But when you ask me what I want I really haven’t got a clue.
The big bad wolf’s stopped chasing me and now I can release
this pain.
It’s winter but the sun’s come out to shine a rainbow
through the rain.
But sometimes still I wonder how my life has changed because
of it:
I try but can’t remember back before the pain had truly hit.
I’m just another paper doll, a carbon copy in a line
And I just wish that moment didn’t have the power to define
The pain that’s in the craters that follow everywhere I go
The craters that he tore and dug when he ignored when I
said, “no.”
There’s skin now on my shoulders and I go to school without
the fear
That I’ll forget and hurt myself when past and present
smudge and smear.
My clock is going clockwise and I know I see the exit sign.
When I look at the past two years, it’s tangled, but it’s
still a line.
***
2007: I built my fight from shattered memories
Memories are fluid, and engulf me when it’s right
To look at all the shattered glass that’s gathered in my
knees.
I pull out every shard of glass, and I keep up my fight:
A fight that’s set on fire by my memories.
I build a fort of crystal shards
That puncture everyone I tell
I do not want to hurt them
But my silence always screams of hell.
The world is getting closer
And I’m finally back to live in it
But all these touches hover
‘til the memory hides me under it.
I don’t know where the hurt seeps in
But still I want to patch that hole
A hurt as hard and chilling
As a tongue stuck to a frozen pole
My freckles all are separate now
But still there are too much to count
But even so the memories
Outnumber them by sheer amount.
I keep the fight, take back the night
To puncture all my memories
But shards of glass are silent
And they can’t reveal what no-one sees.
I try and try and try again
To reclaim April every year
But taking back the day is hard
When no-one understands the thing I fear.
Memories are fluid and engulf me when it’s right
To pull out all the shattered glass that’s gathered in my
knees.
The world is not a crystal ball
But that cannot stop my fight:
A fight with a sharp sword that’s made of memories.
***
2008: Memories might travel
Memories come calling: a sharp and savage bite
Acute and unexpected fear that brings me to my knees
I fight it, overcome it, but still on every flight
I go further but I can’t erase these memories.
You tell me snippets of your life
I’m certain we are not alone
But still, I had forgotten
Things can hurt me even far from home
I’ll try not to be frightened
But a part of me is terrified
That I will never sleep
In every hostel, every train I ride…
***
2011: I can turn around my sordid memories
The memories now are rarer, like a clatter in the night
A mirror reflecting fragments of the terror that it sees
What’s hardest now is that I know, though I have won this
fight
For others, fear is realer than my memories.
Sometimes life is strange and silent;
Sometimes memories follow here.
Sometimes everything I see
Morphs into everything I fear.
Memories that snag into
The tapestry I’m knitting up
Come and paralyze my throat
Like pebbles in a sippy cup.
Monsters underneath the bed
Disperse when they see morning light
But monsters dwelling in my head
Are unreliable in their fright.
Day to day I’ll never know
When memories will swallow me.
A captive in a sunless cell
Will never know when she’ll be free
But always still I’ll live my life.
With dreams so big, I’ll voyage through
The gorge that jumps into my path
To strangle everything I do.
The fingers tightening ‘round my neck
Don’t know that they are powerless:
Now I can turn each touch I fear
Into a loving, safe caress.
The memories now are rarer, like a clatter in the night,
And now they quickly disappear like an evasive breeze.
I may never understand them, but I know the future’s bright:
I can win any war armed with my memories.
Friday, June 1, 2012
Mouthfuls
The hardest thing sometimes about being a twin is when the bond feels like it's been broken.
She keeps trying to end her life. I cannot let her. She doesn't want to speak to me, because I stopped her.
She wrote a note to say goodbye, and never mentioned me. Everyone else thinks this is a cruel oversight, on her part. But I think it's because she knows she didn't need to say anything at all.
She keeps trying to end her life. I cannot let her. She doesn't want to speak to me, because I stopped her.
She wrote a note to say goodbye, and never mentioned me. Everyone else thinks this is a cruel oversight, on her part. But I think it's because she knows she didn't need to say anything at all.
Monday, May 21, 2012
Twas brillig
and the slithy toves
Did gyre and gimble in the wabe
All mimsy were the borogroves
And the momeraths outgrabe.
Something terrible has happened
and every part of me is exploding with fear and grief.
Beware my thoughts, her absent eyes, the beeping, and the tears.
Every pill I'd pull from her
and take myself instead.
and the slithy toves
Did gyre and gimble in the wabe
All mimsy were the borogroves
And the momeraths outgrabe.
Something terrible has happened
and every part of me is exploding with fear and grief.
Beware my thoughts, her absent eyes, the beeping, and the tears.
Every pill I'd pull from her
and take myself instead.
Wednesday, May 2, 2012
This is so close to what I could have written. I don't like regret as a sentiment; it's too final. But the muddled-ness and confusion, the guilt, the attempts to forget...this woman has hit the nail on the head.
http://thegloss.com/sex-and-dating/i-regret-not-pressing-charges-against-my-rapist-212/comment-page-1/#comment-404047
http://thegloss.com/sex-and-dating/i-regret-not-pressing-charges-against-my-rapist-212/comment-page-1/#comment-404047
Tuesday, May 1, 2012
What did homophobia have to do with being raped?
This is more pre-work to our TEACH storytelling workshop, which I wrote 5 days prior to the workshop itself. For the record, I still haven't managed to tell aloud any reworkings of my story for the group - more about that later.
Offside - this is my 50th public post!
Bear with me here - this is personal stuff, tough stuff. I don't usually think about connections between my own experiences or try to detangle things, so I would love comments/constructive criticism if anybody does read this.
TW for non-graphic discussion of rape
In my first year of high school, fitting in was paramount. Boys were a sudden new feature of my perplexing new social landscape. I knew that admitting that I was interested in them only as friends, and that I instead harboured a crush on the girl who sat next to me in science class, would be social suicide. It would mean a return to the bullying that had followed me from school to school for five years and which I hoped desperately to escape.
So when my sister told of a guy who she and a friend had a crush on, I thought it best to play along. I flirted back, awkwardly, and kept mum through fear when he first began to touch me in the halls. Saying no would, I thought, out me right away. And telling a teacher? After years of bullying from students and teachers alike, I was reluctant to trust them. Besides, he was acting the way I believed older high school boys were meant to behave. My response was to act like a typical teen girl; that is, to giggle and play along. I hoped that would let me maintain for my classmates the illusion of being straight. To me, it was a performance. For him, it was real. I didn't know how dangerous that could be.
The situation escalated. He pursued other girls as well, but they stood up for themselves. I was too scared to, and didn't fight him off when he casually but inappropriately touched me at my locker, my heart pounding and my insides shriveling up with shame. I'd sacrifice the private parts of my body to keep my real crushes private and protect my fledgling friendships. At the same time, I felt like a traitor to myself, and to my feminist values. I started to separate my body from my mind.
In early April of that year, I made plans to come out. A good friend was scheduled to visit from out of town over the Easter long weekend, and I planned to come out to her to test the waters. The idea was that if that went well, I'd tell my whole family at our upcoming Passover Seder. None of that ever happened.
The Wednesday before that weekend, the boy I'd feared and flirted with raped me after school.
My friend never visited that weekend; fears or a flu epidemic kept her home. I couldn't come out to her as practice. Besides, I felt guilty and tainted, fearing that I'd let this happen; that I was a phoney lesbian; that other women would shun me. I came to believe that, perhaps, I had deserved it.
After that, I couldn't tell my family. Besides, my mind was reeling and my body was so detached that I would touch my own hands numbly, doubting that they were mine. As the months passed, I began to wonder if I was even real. I hurt myself, to test if I existed and to see if I could feel more pain. Mostly I felt nothing but numbness. When I did feel anything, I felt grief for what I had lost: the sanctity of my body and the queer community which, by flirting with the boy who raped me, I thought I had betrayed.
On the second anniversary of the rape, I wrote a speech about feminism which a friend of mine read for my grade eleven English class. I told of how rape had reinforced my feminist views, and outed myself as a rape survivor. Yet I emphatically denied that I was a lesbian, telling my classmates that it was something I had thought about but that it didn't really describe me. I don't know what they made of that but it was, to an extent, true. At that point, I identified as asexual, thinking any hope I had of sexuality had been destroyed by rape, and denying the attractions that I felt towards women on the grounds that I didn't deserve those feelings. Now, I feel that asexuality wasn't the word or concept that I needed, but at the time it was a way for me to acknowledge for myself that I was certainly not straight. It also justified my own decision to trample my own same-sex attractions.
Overcome by pangs of jealousy when a friend came out as a lesbian, I called a queer youth helpline. They listened to me. They assured me that my past could not dictate my identity. The young woman at the end of the line never doubted me or denied my pain. She just said, "that's rough" and let me talk all I wanted. The guilt and uncertainty that had paralyzed me for two years began to melt away. I could almost feel my body thaw. It was not easy. Over the past few years I have felt and lived through the pain that I had denied by living separately from my own body. Dissociation, I have since learned, compounds physical pain and saves it for later, like a systemic burning regurgitation of an unwanted meal. That's not to say that I don't still sometimes dissociate - but it's a coping strategy I use when it's the safest thing to do at the time, rather than by default. I no longer hurt myself.
Days after calling the helpline, I came out to my immediate family, and in the weeks that followed, to some close friends. I was lucky to be surrounded by accepting and loving people. My fears of rejection and further abuse were unfounded. I only wish that I'd squarely faced homophobia and my fears of its potential impact before it blinded me to the positive forces that were with me, and within me, all along.
Offside - this is my 50th public post!
Bear with me here - this is personal stuff, tough stuff. I don't usually think about connections between my own experiences or try to detangle things, so I would love comments/constructive criticism if anybody does read this.
TW for non-graphic discussion of rape
What did homophobia have to do with being raped?
When it happened, I didn't see any connections. Just pain, shame, fear, and confusion. Now the links are more obvious. Homophobia was a catalyst, not a cause - in my case, rape was not a specifically homophobic crime - and it was one of the biggest hurdles that kept me silent.In my first year of high school, fitting in was paramount. Boys were a sudden new feature of my perplexing new social landscape. I knew that admitting that I was interested in them only as friends, and that I instead harboured a crush on the girl who sat next to me in science class, would be social suicide. It would mean a return to the bullying that had followed me from school to school for five years and which I hoped desperately to escape.
So when my sister told of a guy who she and a friend had a crush on, I thought it best to play along. I flirted back, awkwardly, and kept mum through fear when he first began to touch me in the halls. Saying no would, I thought, out me right away. And telling a teacher? After years of bullying from students and teachers alike, I was reluctant to trust them. Besides, he was acting the way I believed older high school boys were meant to behave. My response was to act like a typical teen girl; that is, to giggle and play along. I hoped that would let me maintain for my classmates the illusion of being straight. To me, it was a performance. For him, it was real. I didn't know how dangerous that could be.
The situation escalated. He pursued other girls as well, but they stood up for themselves. I was too scared to, and didn't fight him off when he casually but inappropriately touched me at my locker, my heart pounding and my insides shriveling up with shame. I'd sacrifice the private parts of my body to keep my real crushes private and protect my fledgling friendships. At the same time, I felt like a traitor to myself, and to my feminist values. I started to separate my body from my mind.
In early April of that year, I made plans to come out. A good friend was scheduled to visit from out of town over the Easter long weekend, and I planned to come out to her to test the waters. The idea was that if that went well, I'd tell my whole family at our upcoming Passover Seder. None of that ever happened.
The Wednesday before that weekend, the boy I'd feared and flirted with raped me after school.
My friend never visited that weekend; fears or a flu epidemic kept her home. I couldn't come out to her as practice. Besides, I felt guilty and tainted, fearing that I'd let this happen; that I was a phoney lesbian; that other women would shun me. I came to believe that, perhaps, I had deserved it.
After that, I couldn't tell my family. Besides, my mind was reeling and my body was so detached that I would touch my own hands numbly, doubting that they were mine. As the months passed, I began to wonder if I was even real. I hurt myself, to test if I existed and to see if I could feel more pain. Mostly I felt nothing but numbness. When I did feel anything, I felt grief for what I had lost: the sanctity of my body and the queer community which, by flirting with the boy who raped me, I thought I had betrayed.
On the second anniversary of the rape, I wrote a speech about feminism which a friend of mine read for my grade eleven English class. I told of how rape had reinforced my feminist views, and outed myself as a rape survivor. Yet I emphatically denied that I was a lesbian, telling my classmates that it was something I had thought about but that it didn't really describe me. I don't know what they made of that but it was, to an extent, true. At that point, I identified as asexual, thinking any hope I had of sexuality had been destroyed by rape, and denying the attractions that I felt towards women on the grounds that I didn't deserve those feelings. Now, I feel that asexuality wasn't the word or concept that I needed, but at the time it was a way for me to acknowledge for myself that I was certainly not straight. It also justified my own decision to trample my own same-sex attractions.
Overcome by pangs of jealousy when a friend came out as a lesbian, I called a queer youth helpline. They listened to me. They assured me that my past could not dictate my identity. The young woman at the end of the line never doubted me or denied my pain. She just said, "that's rough" and let me talk all I wanted. The guilt and uncertainty that had paralyzed me for two years began to melt away. I could almost feel my body thaw. It was not easy. Over the past few years I have felt and lived through the pain that I had denied by living separately from my own body. Dissociation, I have since learned, compounds physical pain and saves it for later, like a systemic burning regurgitation of an unwanted meal. That's not to say that I don't still sometimes dissociate - but it's a coping strategy I use when it's the safest thing to do at the time, rather than by default. I no longer hurt myself.
Days after calling the helpline, I came out to my immediate family, and in the weeks that followed, to some close friends. I was lucky to be surrounded by accepting and loving people. My fears of rejection and further abuse were unfounded. I only wish that I'd squarely faced homophobia and my fears of its potential impact before it blinded me to the positive forces that were with me, and within me, all along.
Thoughts before storytelling workshop
A few days ago we had a storytelling workshop at TEACH. Here's a piece I wrote a couple of weeks beforehand.
***
We have a storytelling workshop booked for later this month. I've been telling the same story, with just a handful of adjustments, for six years now. It's become engrained. I talk about positives: a loving family; finding community as a young adult; the freedom of finally finishing high school.
I hardly mention bullying, much less homophobic bullying. The kids excluded me, and I excluded myself, to varying degrees, for as long as I can remember. It's part of being an imaginative, intellectual kid. And the more excluded you are, the more awkward you become. And the circle continues.
I remember a kid calling my t-shirt "gay" when I was nine, at day camp. I told him that people could be gay, but shirts couldn't - was he stupid? - but that just made the other (bigger, cooler, sportier, more confident, prettier, smarter?) kids laugh. It hurt most when girls laughed at me, when I just wanted to impress them and join them.
So when the kids at my new school that fall called my outdated children's clothing "gay," I didn't speak up. I changed my clothes to something tighter and less childish, hated myself for giving in, and compromised that I'd wear only purple for the rest of the school year, just to keep some control.
The kids still teased me.
It was almost two years before someone next called me "gay." I was eleven years old, at camp - an all-girls overnight camp, this time - and one of my richer, prettier, more confident, and better-dressed cabin-mates called me a lesbian. I forget how it came up, other than that it was somehow part of the card game we were playing and "lesbian" basically was intended to be synonymous with "loser." I said that lesbians were cool and that I didn't want to play anymore. And that was it for any hope of friendship, or even peaceful cohabitation, with my cabin-mates. They didn't know what "lesbian" was other than an insult, when to me it was a word that I knew described some of my childhood role models. Unfortunately, I didn't know how to fight back.
That was really just the tip of the bullying iceberg...
***
We have a storytelling workshop booked for later this month. I've been telling the same story, with just a handful of adjustments, for six years now. It's become engrained. I talk about positives: a loving family; finding community as a young adult; the freedom of finally finishing high school.
I hardly mention bullying, much less homophobic bullying. The kids excluded me, and I excluded myself, to varying degrees, for as long as I can remember. It's part of being an imaginative, intellectual kid. And the more excluded you are, the more awkward you become. And the circle continues.
I remember a kid calling my t-shirt "gay" when I was nine, at day camp. I told him that people could be gay, but shirts couldn't - was he stupid? - but that just made the other (bigger, cooler, sportier, more confident, prettier, smarter?) kids laugh. It hurt most when girls laughed at me, when I just wanted to impress them and join them.
So when the kids at my new school that fall called my outdated children's clothing "gay," I didn't speak up. I changed my clothes to something tighter and less childish, hated myself for giving in, and compromised that I'd wear only purple for the rest of the school year, just to keep some control.
The kids still teased me.
It was almost two years before someone next called me "gay." I was eleven years old, at camp - an all-girls overnight camp, this time - and one of my richer, prettier, more confident, and better-dressed cabin-mates called me a lesbian. I forget how it came up, other than that it was somehow part of the card game we were playing and "lesbian" basically was intended to be synonymous with "loser." I said that lesbians were cool and that I didn't want to play anymore. And that was it for any hope of friendship, or even peaceful cohabitation, with my cabin-mates. They didn't know what "lesbian" was other than an insult, when to me it was a word that I knew described some of my childhood role models. Unfortunately, I didn't know how to fight back.
That was really just the tip of the bullying iceberg...
Saturday, April 28, 2012
What's this? Another post in less than a month?
I think I've revived all my old posts, minus a few that I felt were inappropriate to keep now that I've made my blog visible. Just as an aside, anything that appears on this blog has the potential to be upsetting, minus the few-month period where I made some posts public on the illusion that this was a travel blog.
At any rate, I recently finished reading Alice Sebold's memoir, Lucky, and one quotation really resonated with me and reminded me of a poem I wrote years and years ago that I never posted here (I wrote a lot more poetry than is in the archives of this blog - most of it wasn't worth posting, even based on the somewhat grandiose self-serving criteria of the teenager that I was).
She wrote, "I live in a world where the two truths coexist; where hell and hope lie in the palm of my hand" (p. 243). I think that's the answer I was looking for in 2004.
At any rate, I recently finished reading Alice Sebold's memoir, Lucky, and one quotation really resonated with me and reminded me of a poem I wrote years and years ago that I never posted here (I wrote a lot more poetry than is in the archives of this blog - most of it wasn't worth posting, even based on the somewhat grandiose self-serving criteria of the teenager that I was).
She wrote, "I live in a world where the two truths coexist; where hell and hope lie in the palm of my hand" (p. 243). I think that's the answer I was looking for in 2004.
Fractured Truths
April 7th, 2004
I have two strong hands,
And they’re stronger than you think.
Strong enough to take the truth
And pull it into two pieces,
One to hold in each hand.
It’s still the truth,
And nothing but the truth.
The whole truth? Perhaps not,
But it’s not as if anybody
Really knows the difference.
I’m not a liar. There’s no wrong
In splitting my past into two parcels
And sharing it around how I like.
And if I use my mouth
And take a bite to keep,
Is there anything wrong with that?
I have two hands, one mouth, and one truth.
Why can’t I split it?
Sunday, April 15, 2012
Some timetravelling tonight...
I haven't updated here in over three years.Welcome back.
I wrote this essay/speech seven years ago. Seventeen-year-old me is in a sense worlds different from how I am today, but simultaneously exactly the same. Then, I wrote it as a response to a class debate on feminism, not realizing the reaction it would cause from my classmates, teacher, principal, and even the school superintendent. Now, I am less concerned about a reaction than about having a place, years on, to share once again. Several years later, I might phrase things somewhat differently, and it would likely be more academic in tone. The sentiment, however, is exactly the same.
To share with whom? I frankly have no idea. Perhaps the blogosphere, but likely not. If anybody is out there, reading, then say hello.
Here goes...
**trigger warning for discussion of sexual assault**
I wrote this essay/speech seven years ago. Seventeen-year-old me is in a sense worlds different from how I am today, but simultaneously exactly the same. Then, I wrote it as a response to a class debate on feminism, not realizing the reaction it would cause from my classmates, teacher, principal, and even the school superintendent. Now, I am less concerned about a reaction than about having a place, years on, to share once again. Several years later, I might phrase things somewhat differently, and it would likely be more academic in tone. The sentiment, however, is exactly the same.
To share with whom? I frankly have no idea. Perhaps the blogosphere, but likely not. If anybody is out there, reading, then say hello.
Here goes...
**trigger warning for discussion of sexual assault**
Let Each Girl Grow To Become
a Phenomenal Woman: Why I Am A Feminist
April 16th, 2005
“I should never be able…to hand
you after an hour’s discours a nugget of pure truth to wrap up between the
pages of your notebooks and keep on the mantle-piece forever” ~ Virginia Woolf.
I will, however, try very hard to
convince you of my plight as a feminist, as Virginia Woolf did for me in A
Room of One’s Own.
***
I am a feminist. I was raised and
educated as a feminist, but that is certainly not the sole basis for my
feminism. I consider becoming a feminist to be a personal decision; it can be
influenced by outside factors, but the final piece of the puzzle rests in a
person’s heart. I know what I want, and I am working toward it. My feminism is
not based on my feminist education, my female role models, or even my
realization that I am not entirely safe in the world. It is the convergence of
all of my social values, my present reality, the story of my past, and my views
of the world that make me a feminist. I am proud to be a feminist.
Some people like to point out
that I was raised without a male role model, but that is neither true, nor
would it mean that I hate men. I absolutely do not hate men. I did grow up
without a father, but there were still enough men in my life for me not to
develop the idea that men were violent. I was never suspicious of men; on the
contrary, I frequently wondered what would happen if a man I met was my father,
and I usually decided that while it would be quite agreeable, I liked my life
enough as it was. My male role models were gentle and kind to me and to other
girls and women. Men can be feminists too. A feminist can be any person of any
race, sex, or sexual orientation.
I have often heard remarks that I
do not “dress like a feminist”. What, might I ask, does a feminist dress like?
Is a feminist supposed to fade into the woodwork and hide her whole body under
clothing so that men cannot mistake her as a sex object? Or is she supposed to
dress in clothes that are as revealing as possible to prove that she is proud
of her sexuality? Or should she dress as eclectically as possible, so she can
let the world know that she is not afraid of being different? I think a
feminist can fit any combination of these descriptions; she should dress
however she likes, and not try to
live up to standards that she does not support. My clothes match if I can be
bothered to match them, and are as modest or immodest as I wish, depending on
how self-conscious I feel on a particular day. I disagree with any idea that
only women who wear certain types of clothing are “real” feminists.
I also do not fit the stereotype
of the butch woman who plays hockey. I have never, ever, simultaneously worn
skates and held a hockey stick, and I have no intention to. I do not see any
reason to play traditionally male sports just to prove that I am as tough as a
man. I also do not see any reason to fight, to push people around, or to
attempt to claw my way to the top of any sort of a chain. I can be a successful
woman and be good at what I do without living on the top of the world and
hurting other people to get there. A strong woman should not need to hurt other
people to get where she needs; she can get there without sacrificing the
dignity of other people. A feminist does not necessarily have to be richer or
louder than a man; she just needs to know what she wants and know how to get
there, wherever it may be.
I have read the newspaper ever
since I could read. Every so often, I would see an article that talked about
how a woman was raped or injured by a man. It upset me. I did not want to be a
part of the so-called weaker sex, but I wanted to be a woman. At school I
learned about the media, and how much it degraded society. I hated the
stereotypes presented in the magazines that my classmates read. I hated hearing
about women in the sex trade who had to sell their bodies to survive, and were
killed because there was no safe place for them. I hated the music that talked
about sex, because it was usually shallow and it all sounded the same. I was
sick of hearing stories about a beautiful woman lured into bed, told through
toneless music designed to appeal to a man’s sexual desires rather than his
musical ear. That is not what music is supposed to be about. Most of all, I
hated the music, movies, and magazines that glorified violence, especially
sexual violence. I did not think it was fair that the music and pop culture
industry supported the hell that some people had to live through, every day of
their lives.
One story in particular bothered
me. A girl who was introduced to my grade seven class as Sally was assaulted
because she had supposedly “implied consent” by wearing a low-cut top to a job
interview. The court ruled against her, saying that it was her own fault, and
that she had chosen for the assault to happen by dressing the way she had. As
far as I had learned, assault is an involuntary action, and a survivor could
not have simply “implied consent” with her choice of dress. It disgusted me
that a woman could be hurt in the way that Sally had, and that the law would
not even support her by punishing her assaulter. I have since learned that it
is nearly impossible to convict a rapist; the survivor’s “character” is
shredded by the defense, the people she is allowed to use as witnesses are
screened, and the case is usually dropped due to lack of evidence. Ninety
percent of rape trials end without a guilty verdict for the rapist. This does
not mean that ninety percent of alleged rapes did not really occur; instead, it
shows the gross faults in the justice system’s ability to deal with sex crimes.
My campaign to crush violence
against women began two years before this violence became a suffocating part of
my own life. I started writing articles for a school zine, On Target. I
wrote empowering poetry and drew cartoons. I doubt that my work ever had any
impact on my community, but it felt fulfilling and gave me a sense of the
reality I would experience when sexual violence shattered my life on April 16th,
2003. I do not like to delve into details, but I will admit that I no longer
feel safe at school, where the attack occurred. I think that is where my
feminist ideas took hold of my life more and more. I deserve to feel safe at
school. As I slowly recovered and accepted that the memories I have from that
terrible afternoon will always be a part of my life, I realized more and more
how little my peers realized that events like this actually happen. Many people
think that rape is something that happens in the movies, to people who they do
not know. That is undeniably false. It had never occurred to me that these
things could happen to me until I experienced them first-hand.
One person who I commend for her
courage in bringing the issue of sexual violence to light is a young woman
named Hanne, who posted the following empowering story on her online journal,
provoking a large group of women in an online community to acknowledge that
they deserve better, and creating a huge response:
After a dear friend of mine was raped a
few weeks ago, I've been thinking a lot about sexual violence and how you're
not supposed to talk about it.
This friend of mine who was raped recently isn't the
only person I know who has endured being raped and lived through the aftermath,
just the most recent. She isn't the only person I know who has had to try to
figure out how to glue the broken bowl of her life back together after having
it shattered by sexual violence, praying that it'll still hold water when she's
done.
As I have altogether too many times in
the past when other friends have become victims of rape or other sex crimes, I
have wondered what I can possibly do to make it better. But I also know I can't
take it back or prevent it or even really make it easier. The best thing I can
do is come out and let her know that she's not alone, that there are others of
us out here, that she can make it through, because I'm a rape survivor, and we
do make it through.
I was thinking in the shower this
morning about how many people I know -- women, men, transfolks, others -- have
some sort of sexual violence somewhere in their pasts, wondering how many more
people I know have some sort of sexual violence lurking in their future.
I wondered for a moment what it would
look like if just for one day, everyone who had survived sexual violence were
visible as a survivor, if we could actually see the extent of it, if we could
all know just how very not-alone we are. I wondered how angry and sad it would
make me to know. I wondered how much power there might be in the truth.
I'm not sure what to do with this, yet. But I do feel
like outing myself, and encouraging other people to out themselves if they feel
okay about doing so. This isn't about telling the story of what happened --
just for the record, I don't generally like to talk about it much and I get
uncomfortable with other people's voyeuristic curiosity about what happened to
me, although other people feel differently about telling their stories or being
asked questions, and I think people should be free to place their own limits on
how and with whom they want to talk about details.
This is about being public in regard to
something that is normally kept a very big, very dark secret, thus ensuring
that we can [not] all pretend that This Sort Of Thing Doesn't Happen To People
Like You And Me.
It does happen to people like you and
me. Trust me, I know.
I'm Hanne. I'm a survivor of sexual
violence.
No Pity. No
Shame. No Silence.
Like Hanne, I want to raise
awareness and bring the issue to light without highlighting my own story, which
I still find very painful to tell. However, I am stepping up and giving my
point of view after realizing how many of my female classmates think that women
have had equal rights to men since the 1970s. These girls are far too wrong;
women still pay more money for the same services, such as the identical
dry-cleaning job or haircut, than a man would pay. At last, some government
officials want to fix this problem, but they are scorned by other officials who
feel that the government has better things to do than protect women’s rights.
Women living in Toronto are very
fortunate; we get much easier access to abortion, health care, and other social
services than women in rural areas, let alone those in less progressive parts
of the world. It scares me. I do not feel safe at my own high school, and yet I
am considered fortunate compared to many of the world’s women. I am appalled by
the political situation in the United States. I dread the day when abortions
are again made illegal. Many countries are embarking on a path that will
eventually take away the rights that feminists have strived for over many
generations. I fear that one day, women will have no rights at all. Margaret
Atwood’s A Handmaid’s Tale presents a terrifying depiction of a woman’s
life in a future republic in what is now the United States of America. This
woman’s life as a handmaid, having no rights, sexually degraded, and forbidden
from anything that gives her real pleasure, is eerily close to the future that
I fear the world may be approaching.
To me, a feminist has many
essential roles. She must protect women’s rights from descending into a dark
hole, until they are eventually forgotten and women are dismissed as no longer
legally being “persons”. She must advocate for women’s rights in countries
where women are still not legally recognized as citizens, and where they do not
have the freedom to choose their own path in life. She must demand justice for
women who are hurt in sex crimes, and have no fair justice system to turn to. Being
a feminist is not about standing up and saying “I am woman, hear me roar!” It
is about proving to the world through actions that women can do more than roar.
We can also make change.
I am a feminist because I believe
that I deserve more rights and freedoms than I currently have. One in four
women experience sexual violence that is inflicted by men in their lifetimes,
but hardly any men experience the same violence from women. I am one of those
one in four women, and I want to change this statistic, as well as many others.
I will not stop fighting for my cause until that statistic is evened out, or
until violence is removed from our society altogether. I will not stop until
women feel safe, and do not have to endure degrading whistles as they walk down
the street. I will not stop until women and men are financially equal. I have
no wish for women to be better than men, only equal. I am a feminist not to
fulfill somebody else’s dream for me, not to get revenge for my past, or to
make men feel as degraded and unvalued as many women have felt. I am a feminist
to build a better future myself and for the girls and women who I care about.
Resources
Print
Sources:
Angelou,
Maya. Phenomenal Woman.
Atwood,
Margaret. The Handmaid’s Tale.
Toronto: McClelland and Steward-Bantam Limited, 1985.
Woolf,
Virginia. A Room of One’s Own.
Frogmore: Triad/Panther Books, 1977.
Canadian
Women Studies Journal/ The Linden School. On
Target: Taking Aim At Violence.
Online
Sources:
Australian
Women’s Intra Network. International Women’s
Day: A World to Win. 16 Apr. 2005.
B, Hanne. No Pity. No Shame. No Silence. 8 Mar.
2004. 16 Apr. 2005.
Tiana. Rape: It’s not your fault. 11 Oct. 2001.
16 Apr. 2005.
Friday, August 15, 2008
Self-injury, and TEACH
*TW for mentions of self-injury and sexual assault - but nothing graphic*
Why is self-injury such a closed topic at TEACH? I know full well that many of us do it, or have done it - yet there are people who are too self-conscious to wear short sleeves at meetings. Even people who tell most of their friends, who don't give a damn when rude strangers stare at their scars, and who are upfront about other parts of their lives.
Most of us have been through a lot. But yet, we don't share the aftermaths of our experiences. A few other volunteers know that I was raped in high school, but only some of those know that I struggled with PTSD and depression for years afterwards. Even fewer know that now, much later, I still have my bad days, my sleepless nights.
In our stories, we bravely bare the truth about our parents' reactions, bullying, and the violence that we experienced; sex; masturbation; first kisses; broken hearts. TEACH volunteers have stood in front of countless high school classes to discuss issues of race, sexism, media, politics, and sex changes - including some rather graphic details. But I have yet to hear someone discuss mental illness, although it is prevalent in the queer community. We vaguely touch on suicide and the social circumstances leading up to it, but usually leave out that this internal emotional turmoil has a name: depression, anxiety, personality disorders, PTSD, eating disorders...and the list goes on.
We have discussed occasionally how queer people are stigmatized by psychiatry, as diseased due to our sexuality. It is time for those of us who have experienced mental illness to name it. I would describe my experiences of mental illness and my sexual orientation as two people running from a zombie: they are separate, but sometimes they trip each other up while trying to save me from themselves.
Why is self-injury such a closed topic at TEACH? I know full well that many of us do it, or have done it - yet there are people who are too self-conscious to wear short sleeves at meetings. Even people who tell most of their friends, who don't give a damn when rude strangers stare at their scars, and who are upfront about other parts of their lives.
Most of us have been through a lot. But yet, we don't share the aftermaths of our experiences. A few other volunteers know that I was raped in high school, but only some of those know that I struggled with PTSD and depression for years afterwards. Even fewer know that now, much later, I still have my bad days, my sleepless nights.
In our stories, we bravely bare the truth about our parents' reactions, bullying, and the violence that we experienced; sex; masturbation; first kisses; broken hearts. TEACH volunteers have stood in front of countless high school classes to discuss issues of race, sexism, media, politics, and sex changes - including some rather graphic details. But I have yet to hear someone discuss mental illness, although it is prevalent in the queer community. We vaguely touch on suicide and the social circumstances leading up to it, but usually leave out that this internal emotional turmoil has a name: depression, anxiety, personality disorders, PTSD, eating disorders...and the list goes on.
We have discussed occasionally how queer people are stigmatized by psychiatry, as diseased due to our sexuality. It is time for those of us who have experienced mental illness to name it. I would describe my experiences of mental illness and my sexual orientation as two people running from a zombie: they are separate, but sometimes they trip each other up while trying to save me from themselves.
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