Original Essay: The Not Rape Epidemic

*Trigger Warning*

Latoya’s Note: So, as promised, here’s the original version of the essay that appears in Yes Means Yes. If you see this popping up in your reader, I do not recommend you read it at work.

Rape is only four letters, one small syllable, and yet it is one of the hardest words to coax from your lips when you need it most.

Entering our teenage years in the sex saturated ’90s, my friends and I knew tons about rape. We knew to always be aware while walking, to hold your keys out as a possible weapon against an attack. We knew that we shouldn’t walk alone at night, and if we absolutely had to, we were to avoid shortcuts, dark paths, or alleyways. We even learned ways to combat date rape, even though none of us were old enough to have friends that drove, or to be invited to parties with alcohol. We memorized the mantras, chanting them like a yogic sutra, crafting our words into a protective charm with which to ward off potential rapists: do not walk alone at night. Put a napkin over your drink at parties. Don’t get into cars with strange men. If someone tries to abduct you, scream loudly and try to attack them because a rapist tries to pick women who are easy targets.

Yes, we learned a lot about rape.

What we were not prepared for was everything else. Rape was something we could identify, an act with a strict definition and two distinct scenarios. Not rape was something else entirely.

Not rape was all those other little things that we experienced everyday and struggled to learn how to deal with those situations. In those days, my ears were filled with secrets that were not my own, the confessions of not rapes experienced by the girls I knew then and the women I know now.

When I was twelve, my best friend at the time had met a guy and lied to him about her age. She told him she was sixteen and she did have the body to back it up. Some “poor hapless” guy sleeping with her accidentally would make complete sense – except for the fact that guy was twenty-five. He eventually slept with her, taking her virginity, even after he figured out how old we were. After all, it’s kind of a dead giveaway if you’re picking your girlfriend up at a middle school.

Another friend of mine friend shocked me one day after a guy (man really) walked past us and she broke down into a sobbing heap where we stood. She confided in me that when she was eleven she had a child, but her mother had forced her to put the child up for adoption. The baby’s father was the guy who had nonchalantly passed her by on the street. We were thirteen at the time, a few weeks shy of entering high school.

Later, I found out that she was at school when she met her future abuser/baby daddy. He was aware she was about eleven – what other age group is enrolled in Middle School? At the time, this guy was about nineteen. He strung her along in this grand relationship fantasy, helping her to cut school as they drove around and had sex in the back of his car. When she got pregnant with his child, he dropped her. However, living in the same area means she would run into him about once a month, normally leading to an outburst of tears or screaming fits on her end and cool indifference (with the occasional “you were just a slut anyway”) from him.

In high school, I had two Asian friends I was fairly close with. We would often end up hanging out after school at the mall with all the other teenagers our age. Occasionally, we would take the bus to the really nice mall in the upper class neighborhood, so we could be broke in style. It was there – in the affluent neighborhood – that my Asian friends dealt with the worst of their harassment. I can remember that each friend, on different occasions, was approached by older white men in their thirties and forties and quizzed about their ethnic backgrounds, ages, and dating status. These men always seemed to slip cards into their hands, asking them to call them later. My friends smiled demurely, always waiting until the man had gone before throwing their number away.

The years kept passing and the stories kept coming.

My ex-boyfriend had a friend who had been dating the same girl for about seven years. I found out the girl was eighteen at the time of their breakup. Eighteen minus seven equals what? The girl was eleven when they began dating while the man involved was nineteen. When the relationship ended, he was twenty-seven. I expressed disgust, and my ex had told me that while everyone else in their friend circle had felt the same way, the girl’s parents were fine with it, even allowing the guy to spend the night at their home. “Besides,” my ex offered nonchalantly, “she had the body of a grown woman at age eleven.”

Not rape came in other many other forms as well. No one escaped – all my friends had some kind of experience with it during their teen years.

Not rape was being pressured into losing your virginity in a swimming pool pump room to keep your older boyfriend happy.

Not rape was waking up in the middle of the night to find a trusted family friend in bed with you – and having nightmares about something that you can’t remember during the daylight hours.

Not rape was having your mother’s boyfriends ask you for sexual favors.

Not rape was feeling the same group of boys grope you between classes, day after day after day.

Not rape was being twelve years old, having a “boyfriend” who was twenty-four and trading sex for free rides, pocket money, Reeboks, and a place to stay when your mother was tripping.

My friends and I confided in each other, swapping stories, sharing out pain, while keeping it all hidden from the adults in our lives. After all, who could we tell? This wasn’t rape – it didn’t fit the definitions. This was Not rape. We should have known better. We were the ones who would take the blame. We would be punished, and no one wanted that. So, these actions went on, aided by a cloak of silence.

For me, Not rape came in the form of a guy from around the neighborhood. I remember that they called him Puffy because he looked like the rapper Sean “Puffy” Combs. He was friends with a guy I was friends with, T. I was home alone on hot summer day when I heard a knock on the patio door. I peeked through the blinds and recognized Puffy, so I opened the door a few inches. He asked if I had seen T around, and I told him no. The conversation continued, the contents so trivial that they are lost to memory.

So, I have no idea why he chose to pause and look me full in the face before saying:

“I can do whatever I want to you.”

My youthful braggadocio got the best of me, so I spat out, “Oh, what the fuck ever,” moving to pull the door closed.

Quick as a cobra, his hand darted past the screen, catching my wrist as I reached for the latch. A bit of tugging quickly turned sinister as I realized he wasn’t playing around.

He pinned me in the doorway, forcing me down to the floor barely inside my apartment. Holding my arm behind my back with one hand as I struggled against him, he calmly, deliberately allowed his free hand to explore my body. He squeezed my still budding breasts, then slipped his hands down my pants, taking his time while feeling up my behind. When he was finished, he let me up, saying again, “I can do whatever I want.” After he finished his cold display of power, he walked away.

After he left, I closed the balcony door, locked it, and put the security bar in the window, even though it was broad daylight.

I felt disgusting and dirty and used. I remember wanting to take a shower, but instead taking a seat on the couch trying to process what had happened and what I could do next.

Fighting him was out, as he had already proved he was stronger than I was. I considered telling some of my guy friends, but I quickly realized I had nothing to tell them. After all, I wasn’t raped, and it would really come to my word against his. As I was the neighborhood newcomer, I was at a disadvantage on that front. Telling my mom was out as well – I’d only get into trouble for opening the door for boys while she was at work.

I gritted my teeth in frustration. There was nothing I could do to him that wouldn’t come back on me worse. So I got up, took my shower, and stayed silent.

A few weeks later, I ran into T and some other guys from the neighborhood while I was walking to the store with one of my friends. T informed us that they were going to hang out in one of the empty apartments in the neighborhood. This was a popular activity in my old neighborhood – some guys would normally find a way to gain entry into one of the vacant apartments or townhouses and then use the place as a clubhouse for a few days.

My friend was game, but I felt myself hesitate. The memory of my Not rape was still fresh in my mind and T was still friends with Puffy. There was also the possibility that Puffy would be there in the apartment, and that was a confrontation I did not want. I refused, and my friend was angry at me for passing up the chance to hang out with the cutest boys in the neighborhood. Since I had never told this particular friend what happened, I shrugged off her anger and made an excuse to head home.

A few days after that meeting, I was on the school bus headed to morning classes. The local news report was on and the announcement that came across the airwaves stunned the normally rowdy bus into silence. The voice on the radio informed us of a brutal rape that occurred in our neighborhood. Due to the savage nature of the crime, all six of the teenage defendants would be tried as adults. The names were read and a collective gasp rose from the bus – T’s name was on that list! Jay, a guy who knew about the friendly flirtation I had going with T, leaned over and joked “Uh-huh – T’s gonna get you!”

I remained silent as my mind was racing. The strongest, most persistent thought rose to the top of my mind – oh my God, that could have been me.

At the time, I didn’t know how right I was.

A few years later, I was a high school junior on top of the world. For the most part, memories of my Not rape had been buried in the back of my mind somewhere. My third year in high school was consumed by two major responsibilities: student government and mock trial.

When I was sixteen, I knew I was destined to be a lawyer and I took advantage of every opportunity that would push me toward that goal. I signed up for mock trial and as part of our responsibilities our trial team was supposed to watch a criminal proceeding in action.

On the day we arrived at the local courthouse, there were three trials on the docket: a traffic case, a murder case, and a rape case. Nixing the traffic case, we trouped into the first courtroom which held the murder trial, only to find that the trial was on hold, pending pre-trial motions. We turned back and went into the courtroom where the rape trial was being held.

Never did it cross my mind that I would walk through the doors to see to picture of my Not rapist, captured in a Polaroid and displayed on a whiteboard with the other five rapists being tried. The prosecution was speaking, so we were quickly caught up on the specifics of the case.

While the rape had occurred in 1997 and most of the defendants – including T – had been convicted in 1998, this was the trial to determine the fate of the last of the six, a man who claimed he had left the scene before any crime had occurred.

Through word of mouth, I had learned that T had been sentenced and he would not be eligible for parole until he was forty-six years old. (I have since learned that T should be released by the end of this year. His victim should be about 21 years of age.) I had also learned that the crime was a gang rape, but knew no other details.

The prosecutor pulled out a picture of the girl the six boys had brutalized. In the first photo she was bright-eyed and neat looking, her dark hair pulled into a high ponytail which complimented her fair skin. She was dressed in athletic casual wear, as if she was on her way to a track meet.

The prosecutor then pulled out a second picture, taken post assault. Her face was a mass of purple and red bruises. One of her eyes was blood red – the attorney informed us that she had received extensive damage to the blood vessels in her eyes. The other eye was swollen shut. Her lips were also bloodied and bruised. He placed the two photographs side by side. From photo to photo, the girl had been rendered unrecognizable.

Quietly laying out the facts, the prosecutor deftly painted a tale of horror. The girl had met T and another boy (my Not rapist? I still didn’t know his government name) on a bus. The boys had convinced her to come with them and they led her to a vacant apartment. Unknown to the girl, there were four other men also hanging out that day. She was forced to give oral sex to some of the men, and then she was beaten, raped, and sodomized. She was found in the apartment unconscious, surrounded by used condoms, semen, and fecal matter.

My blood ran cold as I tried to process what I was hearing.

T was capable of this? The prosecutor was still speaking, and he made mention that there appeared to be one main ringleader with the other five guys going along for the ride. My teammates sat in rapt attention while I tried to figure out how soon we could leave. On one hand, I realized that my Not rapist and T were behind bars already, instead of roaming the streets to do this to someone else.

And yet, a part of me wondered if I should have spoken up. If I had told someone, anyone, could I have prevented this from happening? I regarded the girl’s picture once again. It is pretty rare to see the expression “beaten to a bloody pulp” illustrated in real life. I should have said something, I thought to myself, I should have tried.

My internal monologue was interrupted by the defense attorney taking the floor. He pointed out his client from the photos lining the wall, and calmly explained how his client was present in the apartment, but left before the attack began. He built his case, explaining that his client was generally a good kid, but outnumbered, and that his client opted to leave the area instead of participate in any wrongdoing. He then turned to the jury and said:

    You will also hear that —– wasn’t such a good girl after all. You will hear that she skipped school. You will hear that she smoked marijuana. You will hear that she willingly skipped school to go smoke marijuana with two boys she had just met.

My mouth fell open out of shock. There wasn’t even a question of consent in this case – the damage to the girl’s face attested to that. And yet, here was this defense attorney trying to assassinate the victim’s character. For what? Why was what she was doing that day even relevant in the context of what she experienced?

The defense attorney finished his opening statement and the judge started dispensing instructions to the jury. I forced myself to swallow the bile in my throat. As the judge dismissed the court for a break, I scooted out of the room and took a deep breath of air. My team went for lunch, and I persuaded them not to go back to watch the next part of the trial.

That day in court was the day I fully understood the concept of being raped twice – first during the act and then later during the court proceedings. That was also the day I realized that telling someone about my Not rape would have netted a similar, if not more dismissive response. I had no evidence of the act, no used condom wrapper, no rape kit, no forced penetration.

If the defense attorney was attempting to sow the seeds of doubt in the face of indisputable evidence, what would have happened if I had chosen to speak up?

This is how the Not Rape epidemic spreads – through fear and silence, which become complicit in perpetuating the behaviors described here. Women of all backgrounds are affected by these kinds of acts, regardless of race, ethnicity, or social class. So many of us carry the scars of the past with us into our daily lives. Most of us have pushed these stories to the back of our minds, trying to have some semblance of a normal life that includes romantic and sexual relationships. However, waiting just behind the tongue is story after story of the horrors other women experience and hide deep within the self behind a protective wall of silence.

As I continue to discuss these issues, I continue to be surprised when revealing my story reveals an outpouring of emotion or confession from other women. When I first began discussing my Not Rape and all of the baggage that comes with it, I expected to be blamed or not to be believed.

I never expected that each woman I told would respond with her own story in kind.

I am twenty-four years old now, ten years removed from my Not rape. I still think of the girl who was assaulted and hope that she was still able to have something of a normal life. As I matured, I came to understand more about the situation. As the years passed, my shame turned to anger, and I began learning the tools I could have used to fight back.

At age fourteen, I lacked the words to speak my experience into reality. Without those words, I was rendered silent and impotent, burdened with the knowledge of what did not happen, but unable to free myself by talking about what did happen.

I cannot change the experiences of the past.

But, I can teach these words, so that they may one day be used by a young girl to save herself.

Not rape comes in many forms – it is often known by other names. What happened to me is called a sexual assault. It is not the same as rape, but it is damaging and painful. My friends experienced statutory rape, molest, and coercion.

What happened in the courtroom is a byproduct of rape culture – when what happens to women in marginalized, when beyond a shadow of a doubt still isn’t enough, when your past, manner of dress, grade point average or intoxication level are used to excuse the despicable acts of sexual violence inflicted upon you by another.

Internalized shame is what I experienced, that heavy feeling that it was my fault for allowing the sexual assault to happen. There was a fear that if I spoke up, people would look at me differently, or worse, wouldn’t believe me at all.

Without these words, those experiences feed off each other, perpetuating a culture of silence and allowing these attacks to continue.

With the proper tools, we equip our girls to speak of their truth and to end the silence that is complicit in rape culture.

Teenaged girls need to know that dating an older man will not make them cooler, and that older man cannot rescue them from their parents. Teenaged boys should be able to help as well, trying to keep their friends away from predators. (My male friends did this for me a few times if they were around, coming to my aid of some guy started acting up. For some reason, the simple presence of another man is enough to make these kind of men leave.) Adult men should be cautioned about the effects of the actions and how most of these girls are not of the age of consent. And parents should be made aware that their children are being targeted by predatory men and that they should stay vigilant.

Adults, particularly older women, should take an active interest in the young girls they know.
My boyfriend has two younger sisters. One of them recently entered her teenage years. Her body started to develop and she has attracted more male attention. I notice small changes in her – how she looks at the floor a lot more than she used to, or how she seems uncomfortable going anywhere without a group of girlfriends. She still looks like an average teenager but she is often hesitant and uncomfortable, unless she is around her peers. However, I knew her before she developed so quickly. And I notice the change that a year (as well as taking the metro to and from school) starts. I’m fairly certain she’s trying to navigate the minefield of male attention she receives.

After all, I’ve walked that same field as well.

Finally, we need to cast a critical eye on how rape culture is perpetuated on an institutional level. From how hospitals distribute rape kits to keeping tags on questionable verdicts, we must take the lead in telling the criminal justice system that rape apologists and enablers will not be tolerated.

But above all, we must give girls the tools they need to defend themselves against sexual predators.

The small things we can do – paying attention, giving the words they need, instilling the confidence in which to handle these situations and providing a non judgmental ear when a student or teen approaches us with a problem – may be the best, an perhaps only, weapons they have to continue the fight against this epidemic.

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Comments

  1. Mike wrote:

    Great post.

  2. Anonymous wrote:

    First of all, thank you for taking the time to write and share this essay in a widely read forum. I often feel like because of the very serious nature of this topic, it often goes untouched or talked about on a superficial level–rarely do people acknowledge the complexities of living in a rape culture which places heavy emphasis on legal meanings of rape rather than the so-called more “subtle” ways of sexual assault and violence which permeates many women’s (and queer males I should add) daily lives.

    Many victims of sexual violence often contest the nature of the attacks upon them. I, myself, recalled researching frantically for some consoling piece of evidence that will specifically list the details of my experience under a legal definition, a name, something to give it legitimacy. I think a lot of victims of sexual violence feel this sort of internal struggle within themselves–the impulse to brush it all off while simultaneously searching for some means of consolation through definition. Especially for women, we’re instructed to deny what comes naturally to us, in terms of what feels good or even what feels like trespass.

    It’s so, SO important that in order for us to revoke this destructive pattern of thinking, we begin from within ourselves. I agree wholeheartedly with your suggestion through mentoring. But I also think that we need to be critical about other aspects of how we unquestioningly go about our routine–from heteronormative behavior to how matters of patriarchy become reproduced in queer relationships.

    I’m not sure if “Not Rape” is a widely used term, but I would disagree with you in that respect. Perhaps you were trying to use it in a subversive manner, but it still reproduces all the connotations of which we perceive sexual violence in a binary. Otherwise, this essay is very necessary, and though it did trigger a lot of unwanted thoughts, these are necessary things to process in order for one to move on, and consider ways of altering a rape culture.

  3. Latoya Peterson wrote:

    @Anonymous –

    Thanks for sharing your thoughts.

    This piece was a narrative piece, speaking solely from my own experience. I would hope that it would lead to a better discussion of terms and ideas, but I am not a rape scholar by trade. (I am also not a feminist scholar.)

    If someone else has used the term “Not Rape” I am not aware of it. I used the term in the piece because of the dynamic the word affords. Even when Jaclyn initially approached me about the project, I thought I had nothing to say.

    What happened to me was not rape so why would I talk about it in an anthology about rape? That’s in essence where the title and the terminology came from – dealing with this thing that had no name, that impacted my friends in various forms, and none of us knew what to call it except for “that thing that will get you in trouble with your mom if you tell her.”

    I agree that we need to be critical about how we define things like “routines” and “normalcy.” I also hear you about patriarchy and queer relationships, but I am not sure I am supposed to bridge that in what is my own heterosexual narrative.

    From what I have been able to deduce from discussions with my queer friends, a lot of the issues are the same, if not to a more severe degree. For instance, the common thread among my queer friends is that their first sexual relationships normally occurred with someone far older than they were – one friend was in a relationship with a 40 year old at 16. But this – as far as I’ve heard – is considered somewhat common, and while it would fit the definitions of coercion (and perhaps statutory rape) this was not something that was being actively discussed and explored with so many other pressing issues jockeying for favor.

  4. Laya wrote:

    Incredible. I have rarely heard the daily trials of girls expressed so clearly and in such a moving way.

    My best friend and I have had a similar conversation many times – that every woman we know, ourselves included, did not make it to adulthood without *something* happening to her.

  5. Isabel wrote:

    Thank you for this post.

  6. Dirge wrote:

    That was a profoundly disturbing and enlightening essay.
    I think we can even go deeper and see how even from the most “innocent” of flirting/pickups to the very fact that the male is expected to be the initiator of all sexual contact are symptoms of a culture that encourages sexual aggression on the part of men.
    Is not enough just to protect young women and punish offenders. Attitudes about the sexual relationship between men and women must change. Our society seems to wants its cake and eat it too, but we have to be reflexive and consider what are some of the seemingly “normal” and “commons sense” discourses and images permeating our society that may lend legitimacy to this sort of behavior on the part of men.
    I think focusing on the “not rapes” is a good start.

  7. Allison wrote:

    I confess to being deeply stirred into thought after reading this version of your anthologized essay. Having seen the essay that’s in “Yes Means Yes,” I can see the stark differences in content and I can’t thank you enough for the courage it must have taken to post this original form.

    I also don’t think I’ll be the only one who, after finishing this incredibly potent, poignant and deeply personal essay, will walk away with the feeling that the all-powerful silence surrounding acts of sexual violence has been rocked into words. Thank you for being brave and generous in giving of your public space to these thoughts that might otherwise go unvoiced. Thank you, thank you is what I feel needs to be said after reading this essay.

  8. erica wrote:

    I think something that needs to be added is how our sons are raised. Parents need to raise their sons to respect woman! Why do we put the responsibility to not be raped or abused, in any manner, on the girls and woman?

  9. Kandi wrote:

    Latoya, once again, AMAZING.

  10. Restructure! wrote:

    In Canada, there is no crime of “rape”; rape is charged as sexual assault.

    The small things we can do – paying attention, giving the words they need, instilling the confidence in which to handle these situations and providing a non judgmental ear when a student or teen approaches us with a problem – may be the best, an perhaps only, weapons they have to continue the fight against this epidemic.

    How do we give girls the words they need? Words are powerful, and one benefit of being educated is having the ability to articulate injustices.

    I guess these ideas would come from school, books, and even blogs. Blogging isn’t useless after all for effecting social change. Thanks for blogging about this.

  11. joan wrote:

    let’s just remember that rape comes in all forms, across all sexual orientations.
    and just because it wasn’t an older man, or a man at all, doesn’t make it a less legitimate experience.

  12. Spinster wrote:

    Thank you for posting and giving voice to those who don’t have one. This phenomenon is quite common – more common than many want to believe.

    And this:

    “When I was twelve, my best friend at the time had met a guy and lied to him about her age. She told him she was sixteen and she did have the body to back it up. Some “poor hapless” guy sleeping with her accidentally would make complete sense – except for the fact that guy was twenty-five. He eventually slept with her, taking her virginity, even after he figured out how old we were. After all, it’s kind of a dead giveaway if you’re picking your girlfriend up at a middle school.”

    The same thing happened to my best friend at the time. We were 13 and the man was 20. He knew her age, she never lied about it. Yet he had sex with her, she gave him her virginity. I was amazed that she did it. I was quite naive at that age (as I very well should have been).

    Sigh. This brings back memories. What a shame that women/girls have to go through this.

  13. Tammie wrote:

    This post really hit home. I read this blog just about everyday, but this was the first time I was moved to comment.

    I lost my virginity when I was 13. The man in question was 21 at the time, but I was unaware of it. However, he knew exactly how old I was.

    To this day I still carry a lot of shame about the situation. I was coerced into having sex with him, even though my parents told me it was my fault for being so “fast” and wanting to talk to older boys (he lied and told me he was 17).

    I also had a lot of the same experiences that LaToya discussed. I started wearing a bra at 9 and began my period when I was 10. By the time I was 12, I was wearing a 36C and had ass and hips that I had absolutely no idea what to do with. I wanted to stay preoccupied with dolls and bike riding, but I was forced to grow up fast. Just about everyday I was leered at and approached by grown ass men. There was one neighbor, a man about 35, who would openly talk about how nice my ass was as I walked home from school. Another neighbor, he was 17, would leer at me. Being a pre-teen, I really had no idea how to deal with them. The constant exchanges eventually made me very self-conscience about my body, as if it was somehow my fault that these men would be so openly nasty towards me. Instead of these men being called out, I was usually the one to blame (again by my parents) for attracting the attentions of these men, in addition to not knowing how to tell them off. My father and mother never confronted the neighbors about what they did and said.

    I’m 28 now, and it’s only been within the last year that I’ve come to terms with the fact that I was raped. Period. As one of my mentors told me, “I don’t care if you were naked with a sign that said ‘come get this,’ you were raped and it was not your fault!” To this day I’m still uncomfortable with attention from men. Instead of celebrating my body, I’ve come to despise it for the kind of reaction it seems to solicit.

    These types of episodes remind me of the whole R. Kelly situation. I went off on people who said that child “knew what she was doing” and that R. Kelly didn’t rape her because she worked it “like a grown woman.” She was 14! Her so-called “skills” only prove that she had been raped and molested by someone before.

    Sorry for the long post, but again, these stories hit close to home. I hate to hijack the thread, but I think stories like mine, LaToya’s and R.Kelly’s victim’s need a special examination in the Black community. All rape and “not rape” cases deserve attention, but it sickens me to see little Black girls publicly vilified and on such a large scale. I have yet to see victims of other colors be crucified in such a manner. We don’t want to put another Black man in jail or make another Black man look badly in general, so we turn the tables on our girls. It’s sick and it’s got to stop.

  14. kirby wrote:

    Thank you for your thoughtful and commanding post. You have given many women who will read this language to navigate situations that may have happened to them or others they know. You have given a powerful voice to a crime that is most difficult to speak of. Thank you, thank you again.

  15. Rel wrote:

    I would like to applaud you and say thank you for such a heartfelt post. My commenting on posts I find through Stumbleupon rarely, if ever happen, I typically just read and move on. As being a victim of Not Rape and also Rape as well. I appreciate your words as something I wish myself had said/known growning up. I will be passing this link on. Thank you again.

  16. Shawna wrote:

    This is such a valuable post. I’ll keep it in mind for the future.

    I will also post about it on my blog. I think it should be very widely read–not that I have that big of readership, but most of my readers are women.

  17. Anon Y. Mous wrote:

    Thank you. I haven’t the words to express my gratitude for this post as eloquently as it was written. But thank you for giving a voice to so many that stay silent.

    Certainly the most moving part of my day, perhaps week.

  18. Di wrote:

    A well written thought provoking article tackling a hidden subject with honesty and candour.

    This is representative of our collective experience as girls and women.

    We MUST talk to our daughters to give them the strength to tell – and support them if they aren’t listened to.

    Like millions of other girls I never told about my several Not Rape experiences

  19. Renee wrote:

    I must tell you LaToya this moved me beyond words. I thank you for sharing your story with us. When I read that I flashed back to my own teenage years and the incidents of not rape and rape that occurred. The sexual violence that women live with is so often discounted and yet it is damaging in real and concrete ways. It took courage to share the way that you did in a society that has proven over and over again that it does not value women and I thank you for this. It is my hope that many young women will read your account and understand that what is occurring to them is not their fault.

  20. Jesse wrote:

    Unfortunately, I have experienced Not Rape several times myself and each time I’ve come out of it the same way: feeling ashamed, then angry. Thank you for being so open about the subject. Few people want to tackle a “gray” area like this. It’s long overdue.

  21. Rmrlz wrote:

    Bravo for what you have written over here. Every woman on the earth I believe has been “Not Raped” at least once, if not on more occasions.
    The most common ones without a doubt, are the ones where family members or close family friends try to use a child/ child-woman. No one is aware of the rules. No one is aware of strict definitions. And the women tend to ignore that to such an extent out of shame or fear, that they actually start dis-associating themselves from that memory, forgetting if it ever occurred.
    In South East Asia, the incidence rate is much higher, thanks to the so-lovingly-spoken-about joint family systems, and the social weak status of woman, leaving her in no position to blame anyone, even if it is her daughter, who is the victim. After all, her “uncle” may only be hugging her, and how dare she think or speak so evil about the gentleman.
    What women all over the world need to realize is that if they wont speak out loud about it, they will, unintentionally be buying the some future for their own daughters.
    Speak out to stop this.
    Speak out for the sake of right and wrong.

    And once again, thank you, really, for writing on something people dont want to hear or accept. It is high time we put a stop to the terrorists invading our bodies, minds and souls.

  22. ashamed2 wrote:

    Thank you for sharing this.
    I experienced a not rape with a police officer who was on duty. It was the ultimate form of power and control and I was helpless. But it wasn’t rape so I didn’t feel that anyone would understand, or believe me, or even regard it as damaging to me.

    THANK YOU!

  23. anon wrote:

    Trigger warnings rarely are relevant to me. But they are this time.

    In middle school a friend and I were both molested and groped by a boy in our age group. We were too afraid to tell anyone, but we told each other. I called this boy “Blue eyes” and she called him “Tall Man.”

    It took us both weeks to get up the courage to even talk to each other.

    A month later, we both froze as a boy walked past us. We turned to each other, mouth open, and simultaneously identified him as our tormentor. He picked the weak and the outcasts, like us.

    She was victimized first. She was never able to tell anyone.

    I was able. When I realized it wasn’t just me, that he was a serial attacker, I told my father, my teacher, my principal, everyone I could. Trying to save someone like my friend could not.

    They believed me. The boy was expelled. And to this day, just thinking about it makes me sick.

  24. Lyonside wrote:

    My god. Reading this made “Yes Means Yes” go from a “should read” to a “must buy 2 and pass 1 on” for me. A lot of this resonated, made me nod along, made me sad, then mad, and I count myself as one of the “lucky” ones. I have friends who’ve survived a lot worse sexual harassment and threats, simple assault, coercion, not-rape, and attempted rape than I ever came close to experiencing. I know it is likely, statistically regardless of any suspicions, that at least one of my female friends is a survivor of rape and I don’t know it. One of my friends is a male survivor of domestic abuse and what I probably would label spousal rape if it happened to me (I have no idea how he considers it, so I wouldn’t presume to speak for him).

    >that every woman we know, ourselves included, did not make it to adulthood without *something* happening to her.

    Laya, that’s it. That’s the gray murky “shoulda coulda woulda” area that all women and many men live in. I am now calling that “not-rape.” It’s assault, it’s an infringement, it’s the threat of rape, it’s coercion and manipulation, it’s everything Latoya wrote about, and probably more.

    The complicity of the adults in your examples, Latoya, are standing out for me. The adults in our lives as children and teenagers are steeped in the same culture we are, and are sometimes even less equipped to deal than we are. There are so many times when we want to explain or complain or protest and we don’t have the language to describe what’s going on. What scares me personally is the idea of failure, that as I grow older as the parent of a (future) young woman, and as I eventually enter the classroom in a middle or high school, that the person not able to understand and react appropriately, or know how to effect change, could be ME.

  25. ansel wrote:

    Thank you so much for posting this. I’m forwarding it to several people, including a friend (around 20 yrs old) who recently dumped a guy who was lying to her about his age (he was around 40).

    I’m also questioning my own role in maintaining the silence on which older predator men thrive. I always thought it was weird that she was going out with him, but never spoke up about it to her or him, even knowing he had made unwelcome overtures to other young women before. I was worried about appearing intrusive or patriarchal – both individuals identify as feminist anarchists. I thought she might be happy with him, because that’s what it looked like from the outside – and that if she was unhappy, she’d realize what was going on and break it off herself. I’m glad that’s what ended up happening. But I’m her friend and I shouldn’t have left it alone. I probably should have spoken to the guy first – like you said, men often seem the most sensitive to what other guys think about them. And if that didn’t accomplish anything I should have shared my concerns with her and her circle of girlfriends.

    Again, thank you Latoya.

  26. Alonso wrote:

    Thank you, LaToya sharing your experience in such a frank and direct essay. It always makes me angry that you and so many women have had this experience of dealing with men as predators. I remember how my older sister felt as she began to get the dreadedly unwanted attention from older men – strangers and men known to her alike.

    I have spent several years working on a grant to reduce men’s violence against women on college campuses. Most of the men I have worked with are sympathetic and responsive when they hear accounts such as yours; yet we are still not going far enough in changing our attitudes and behaviours towards women. We all too often laugh at the sexism that we witness from our friends, family members and other men in our communities. We are not doing enough to teach boys and younger men alternatives to bonding with other men through objectifying and sexualizing women.

    The women in my life bore an inordinate responsibility for ensuring their own safety and well-being (don’t walk alone at night; cover your drink if you are out; if a guy on the street hollers at you just…) as well as the process of trying to raise the boys/men in their lives to be more respectful and actually treat women not as sexual objects but as people deserving of basic human respect. Hardly any of the men, from families to teachers, were outspoken in calling out and denouncing the sexism that I saw all around me.

    I hear your voice and I will work to spread it to other men so that they may hear as well. Thank you again for your courage.

  27. jaden_loves wrote:

    I am interested in how sitting on the trail of “T” affected your wanting to be a lawyer. I know that the defense’s arguments hurt you, made you and the case seem despensible, made women all over the world seem despensible. You were/are right to feel this way, the justice system is hugely flawed, but I guess everyone deserves a fair trial right? Not.

  28. Lola wrote:

    I think we need to be truthful and stop perpetuating the stereotype that only physically mature or scantily clad girls are approached by grown men. Men old enough to be my father or grandfather have been hitting on me since I was 12. I was short, skinny, and flat chested. I wore modest clothes and my hair in a pony tail. I was often mistaken for a 9 year old. I’m almost 30 and last year someone assumed I was 16. I didn’t receive much attention from older teens, it was the boys my age and the balding beer belly set that chased after me. I have many relatives and friends that were raped or molested by males they knew. Only one person was raped by a stranger, the rest relatives, “friends”, exes. I have experienced many instances of “not rape” myself. I have been groped, cat called, mooned, and seen many obscene gestures. Strange men have tried to offer me rides in their vans. Most of my male peers dismiss me as paranoid but I was raised to keep my guard up and not trust men. I never feel safe.

  29. Latoya Peterson wrote:

    @Everyone –

    Thanks so much for the support and sharing your own stories. Like I said, this was a tough one to get out. But now, I’m glad it’s out there.

    @Allison –

    Yes, the overall mood and tone of the essay is different. It changed from my story to a larger story. But that was probably better in the long run.

    @Dirge –

    Attitudes about the sexual relationship between men and women must change.

    Agreed. For the purposes of this narrative, I only told my friend’s stories. I only briefly touched on the male side of things. Perhaps I’ll revisit that in another piece…

    @Erica –

    I agree that the actions that men take are devastating. As I said above, this one is a personal narrative. Do men need to play a much larger role? Oh yes. But, in my experience, a lot of the actions of predatory men is abetted by the silence that follows. If the people in your life don’t know, they can’t help. And if they don’t know how widespread this is, they don’t automatically think to watch their friends/family for sexual predators.

    Most of Yes Means Yes does focus on dispelling the idea that a woman can “cause herself” to be raped or assaulted. A couple of the essays actually revolve around this topic. On a personal note, though, I hear you. So much emphasis in parenting (and even sex ed, I would argue) is placed on the girl controlling her actions. Children are a ways off for me, but I am already thinking about what I will teach my sons. (If I have any.)

    @Joan –

    Very true. Again, this one is a personal narrative, experiences that I remember that I went through or witnessed my friends going through. Was there predatory behavior from men my own age? Yes. (Puffy and I were roughly the same age.) I can only tell the story I lived through. The majority of my friends growing up did not have homosexual experiences, so I cannot speak to that reality. (But, again, around the time this story takes place, most kids are just starting to figure out their sexual orientation – most of the people I knew didn’t come out of the closet until after high school, closer to college.)

    @Tammie –

    Ah, yes. The fast label. The worst thing is when your friends and fam dismiss what happened to you. A lot of our folks have a “well, that’s just the way things are” kind of outlook. But again, it is hard to navigate that minefield of male attention. I can still remember, in crisp, vivid detail the first time it happened to me. I remember what I was wearing (blue bay tee and wide leg jeans), where I was (walking home), and that quick feeling of fear. Why did this strange man pull up behind me and ask me to get in his car? I was twelve, so all the messages up to that point where “child abduction” not “sexual come-on.” And from then on, it never really ends.

    I agree with you about the R. Kelly thing – so many people were willing to turn the other way. And so many people are willing to assume that the girl was presenting herself as an adult. It’s truly sad.

    @Di – that’s the problem. We don’t tell. Even now, I have to fight the urge to blow it off. I catch myself qualifying “well, it wasn’t that bad. And because of the way things played out, I think I always will act like that.

    @anon – I’m glad that you were able to get some kind of resolution. I think that is important too, how so many of us go through this and are unable to get any kind of closure. I am glad you were able to find your voice.

    @jaden_loves –

    Actually, the trial didn’t deter me from wanting to be a lawyer. Working in law did. Watching that part of the trial sucked, but I had really good experiences talking to the country prosecutor & other attorneys in different areas of law. (Mock Trial was a semester long, and there were a lot of other things we had to do – get a lawyer to show us affidavits, get official counsel, etc.)

    I also continued doing teen court for a long time after that. I decided against going into criminal law, and was playing around with other options when I went to work at a firm that ceased operations and was dealing with a very complex government litigation.

    That’s what turned me off – law is about 90% paperwork. Discovery is a bitch. Other lawyers (aka opposing counsel) are a pain in the ass. My boss treated me well, but I saw a lot of what a legal career (in DC anyway) actually means. Lots of shifting of paper, hour long court appearances to move the date or debate something dumb, losing your life in pursuit of billable hours, all that shit. Decided I could create change in a different way.

  30. Tegan wrote:

    From the ages of 12 to 17 I experienced not rape from every boy I had dated. My bisexuality was also abused many times during that time period- either being religiously battered or put into uncomfortable situations. During that time I tried to kill myself twice. And nobody helped to intervene my dating.

    I couldn’t do anything until I finally put my foot down and started to fight back and help others. I worked in my community Gay Straight Lesbian Education Network and told the youth of my area about abuse. It doesn’t just happen heterosexually and young people will sometimes take advantage of a confused individual and abuse their trust.

    I am still contacted by students I talked to during that time even though I only talked to local schools for about a year.

    I am now 21. I have developed an eating disorder, poor body image and will probably be on anxiety medication the rest of my life. Even though I live now with a loving boyfriend, I still have nightmares about what happened during that time frame.

    I wanted to thank you for this essay. It has helped me put a name to it and to know that other people are reaching out to women.

    Thank You.

  31. Myles wrote:

    This post is so awesome, and well written.

    It also reminds me of all of the Not Rape that I and some of my friends have experienced. I always feel weird as a guy talking about being sexually harassed and assaulted around women. Even if I’m talking to another guy and the conversation can be summed up with:

    “OMG, you lost your virginity to your baby sitter when you were 12, in a situation you consider to be unpleasant but you play it off like it wasn’t too bad or emotionally damaging? I totally put up with a girl molesting me when I was 9 because she told me that my families livelihood was dependent on keeping her happy!”

    I always feel like the people that can overhear are annoyed because it was Not Rape. Since we are guys we should welcome every bit of female attention that is directed at us. It was Not Rape because a girl can’t rape a guy. It was Not Rape because we “loved every second of it,” didn’t we.

    When I’m with my female friend, who has had a pretty similar life, I notice that if people overhear our conversations they treat her like she’s a victim. I, on the other hand, am just some annoying dude who wants attention. If we are in a larger group of people, it seems like people are a little more understanding when she says she flinches when people touch her because she had a bad childhood.

    I say the same thing and I’m treated like a condescending ass. Or I’m mocking all of the women who have really been put through things.

  32. Kendall wrote:

    When I was fourteen I was “not rape” -ed by the adult supervisor of a school funded extra curricular activity. He was 24 at the time, married, with a small child and a baby on the way. This is the first time I’ve ever mentioned it. It’s something I try not to think about. I’ve always blamed myself for it… never wanting to say anything to anyone thinking it was my fault. I knew it wasn’t rape, so who could I tell? I think every middle school age girl should be required to read this in the sex ed classes. This is something everyone should know. Thank you.

  33. Anonymous wrote:

    Latoya,

    You and I have never met and I have never posted here before, but you have been critical of my work in the past and something about you keeps you in my thoughts ever since. Eventually when I have the courage and the time I want to try to talk with you about it. For now, I came across this post on a recommendation from someone and it moved me also. It is really breathtaking how many of us go through these experiences and honestly, when I read other women’s experiences, it awakens a lot of pain all over again. It is heart stopping, emotional, and really deep. And most importantly, it needs to be shared. Thanks for posting and I hope to reach out again one day soon.

  34. AnonymousForNow wrote:

    Wow. This has shaken me more than anything I’ve read in the recent past. I’m a regular commenter here, but I realize I’m not comfortable posting under my usual handle—there’s too much I’m still scared to work out in public.

    I always considered myself lucky as far as the whole dating/sex thing went. I was never forcibly raped or assaulted and I kept my virginity until I married a wonderful man at 23. And yet…reading your essay, I realized that I was “not raped”. Multiple times by multiple people. And just as you described, I thought it was my own fault and that it wasn’t really a crime. Men who coerced me into touching them where I didn’t want to, then claiming they had the right to touch me, that I had to “pay them back” for “letting me explore.” Men who urged me to do things that made me feel dirty and used, and feeling powerless to say no.

    This piece has really helped me understand shades of violence and how we can’t simply focus on the extremes and claim we’re innocent because “we don’t do THAT”. I see strong parallels between not rape and the covert racism and microaggressions that are so easily dismissed by people who think everything’s fine as long as you’re not in the KKK. Just because I was never raped doesn’t mean I was never violated. And just because someone doesn’t call me a racial epithet doesn’t mean they can’t really, really hurt me. We need to get rid of it all, and the first step is giving a name to that which doesn’t really have one.

  35. Alexandra wrote:

    I’ve been lurking lately but this essay really touched a nerve for me. It was very powerful and reminded me of some of my own not rape experiences. I completely agree that not rape is an epidemic. My grandmother experienced it, my mother and aunts experienced and my sisters and I have dealt with it. And yet I keep hearing the same old advice cross the street, don’t dress trashy, always be alert, and victim blaming she was fast, she looked grown, what are guys going to ask for ids now. And then everyone acts surprised when it happens. Anyway thank you for this wonderful essay.

  36. JenniferRuth wrote:

    I think the problem is, that sometimes telling doesn’t even help.

    Between the ages of 9 and 11 there were 2 teenagers in my neighbourhood that made me do many things I didn’t want to. I didn’t really ever say no or yes, because there wasn’t much choice and I was too young to really understand that I could have a choice. I didn’t tell because they told me not to – but more than that, I felt that I was the guilty party.

    At 11 I entered senior school. These boys, I was now at school with them and all their friends. They called me a slut and made school generally pretty difficult for me. And I decided that I was going to tell. I told my teachers and they told my parents. Everyone seemed pretty upset about it, but not one of them really talked to me – they talked to one another. The conclusion was that no real harm had been done, kids experiment and boys will be boys. Brush it under the carpet. The white, middle-class way of dealing with things.

    What is the point in telling?

    I don’t know one woman who has made it to adulthood without experiencing some form of sexual assault. And we are trained to treat it as normal.

    I think we all deal with it differently – I have forgiven those boys. I don’t think I could ever have moved on if I had not. It took many years though. We shouldn’t have to work out how to deal with the trauma ourselves, but we do. I don’t know why that is. I don’t know why we still act as though boys/men can’t control themselves and that it is natural for them to act that way.

    I know why we keep these incidents secret – but I don’t understand why we are made to feel that we should.

  37. Laura wrote:

    My earliest experience of not-rape occured several years ago. I honestly can’t remember my exact age–I would guess thirteen. I don’t think the man who did it even fully remembers, mainly because he was going through a stage of psychological meltdown at the time. He’s my cousin. He grew up with me like my brother.

    When my breasts started getting on the large side, he became quite interested. He was older than me, a fresh college dropout. He really should have known better, but he kept harassing me to show him my breasts. I did once, only in hopes that it would make him stop–but he didn’t. He urged me to do it again, and when I refused, he looked on me with disdain, told me what an uptight prude I was being.

    That hurt more deeply than anything else I have ever experienced. I looked up to this guy. What he said was nearly equal to the word of God for me, because he was the only stable figure in my life. I had no clue who my father or mother were. My grandparents who I lived with, well…my grandfather was rarely there and something of an imposing figure to me for reasons I’ve never understood, and my grandmother was a paranoid woman who rarely let me leave the house except for school.

    When I look back on it, I know that it sounds horrible to say it, but he was experiencing a slow, painful mental breakdown due to how he was raised–we were raised together by a woman who had no business with either of us, had no idea how to foster healthy emotional development in a child and had ruined several children before us. It doesn’t excuse him, but in a way, it’s helped me forgive him. I still want to confront him about it eventually, when I’m of a stronger mind.

    It’s led to a severe lack of confidence in my sexuality with men. With women, I’m incredibly comfortable–losing my virginity to a woman was the most comfortable and easy thing in the world. I wouldn’t take it back for the world. But sex with men has always felt forced in some way–like I was being coerced, and often I was, because I simply clammed up when the subject came up. So I had to be pried open, made to believe I wanted something that honestly frightened me. I’m lucky to be with a man now who understands, who is patient with me and is slowly helping me to open up.

  38. Laura wrote:

    But I rambled in that comment.

    Thank you for this article. It brought up something I really had been trying to avoid thinking about, but ultimately need to face if I’m going to help myself or anyone else in these sorts of situations.

  39. anonymous girl wrote:

    When I was 12, one month till I was 13, I was on a road trip with a close friend of mine from church. She was 19, we were with her boyfriend who was 21, and we were going see his friends and family in a northern part of the state. While we were there one of his best friends who was 22 at the time came spend the night where we were.

    Since we were staying in a camper and there were only 2 beds her and her boyfriend slept on one bed and I had to sleep in the bed as his friend. That night when I was going to sleep he kissed me (it was my first kiss since I was only 12 at the time) and manipulated me into losing my virginity. I felt really bad afterward and I went in the kitchen area of the camper until morning. I knew there was something wrong with it, but since I technically agreed with it I knew it wasn’t rape.

    I’m 15 now and have flashbacks, and I find myself wishing I would have been smarter and pushed him away, or thought further ahead and tried to work out a different sleeping arrangement so that wouldn’t have happened. I was nearly raped a few months later when I was 13 at a state fair by a man that was 23, but I reacted immediately and the man got arrested.

    Now I’m in a serious relationship with a guy my age though, he’s a virgin and is really uncomfortable with me not being a virgin but he loves me and knows me well (we were best friends for over a year before we got together) so he accepts it anyway, but he doesn’t know exactly how it happened since he gets uncomfortable on the subject I never got to explain to him. It taunts me because I want him to know that my “first time” wasn’t really what he’s thinking it was.

    I had never heard the term coercion before and when I read the wikipedia definition of it it seemed exactly what my situation was. Would what happened with me be considered that? Or am I just guilty as a 12 year old who broke under pressure? It really taunts me and I’d like to put a name to it and put it to rest…

  40. Jonathan wrote:

    Latoya, thankyou for a very well written essay. Possibly the best personal acount I have ever read of this type of situation.

    Personally what I think is really needed here is education and the explanation to everyone what the difrence between rape, assault, sexual assault, and abuse is.

    Its only in the past 80 years that rape has become a serious issue, within this period the whole world has changed, and what was acceptable 100 years ago no longer is. Not just in the sexual context but in a much broader scope, and its due to this rapid change that I beleive is one reason of many as to why people have not yet changed correctly.

    For example – even just 50 years ago it was aceptable to call blacks “F-in Niggers” (please excuse the language) but if you did that today it would be considered one of the worst insulting things you could say to someone, and although most people today would not utter these words some still would – its a process thats hard to change, our grandparents could say it, our parents could when they where young, but we are banned. Its a hard change.

    Why do I bring that up? Becouse it helps illustrate the drastic changes that have happened in the last 100 years sexualy and how people are still trying to change while some resist.

    100 years ago it might have been looked down upon a bit in higher class neighbourhood, but in most areas slapping a womens bottom was acceptable.

    50 years ago cat whistles and comments about girls figures as they walked past was aceptable.

    But that was the past, and just as some people find it hard not to call blacks “nigers” alot more men find it hard not to imitate the sexual ways of our fathers – after all men are still told throught all media outlets that we are meant to act sexual.

    Slightly off topic – but it is actually an interesting fact that male porno magazines actually discuss issues like this and give advice to men on how to act proper around women. Most women do not realise this, but porno mags actually do have good messages in them that are directed to the adult population.

    What is really needed (and is sadly lacking) is the correct education for people. Kids NEED to be told that underage consensual sex is not rape, however it is also not good. If they want t do it we shouldnt stop them, but they should also not be told that it is aceptable – in my oppinion kids magazines aimed at very young girls (8-12) actually encourage them to have sex and dress to atract older men – read through Dolly sometime and compare to a Cosmo mag and the likness is uncanny.

    As a man I actually have found it harder and harder NOT to look at young women – not becouse I find them sexualy atractive etc (the idea of having sex with someone under 18 actually disgusts me a little) – bt the fact that I can walk into any shop these days and see 12 year old dressed in mini skirts, push up bras, makeup and acting like 20 year olds does make it hard to work out how old they really are until you have looked them over properly.

    Education is a must, and not just for the kids, but for the parents. As Latoya pointed out, her friends parents where ok with her having sex and allowed the adult to sleep over etc – this type of atitude needs to stop. If she did get raped who would the parents blame? Would they accept they where partly at fault?

    At the same time there are underage kids who are in love (or at least believe they are) and should be allowed to have consensual sex. Its not our right to take theirs away.

    Doing it for the right reasons, becouse you love the person are ok, but doing it to fit in, to do what others are doing is not – and sadly this is what alot of people are doing these days.

    I really do feel sorry for all people who have been raped and assaulted – and disgusted that the goverments of this world take such BS actions about it. Instead of education they promot fear. Instead of laws that help people, they make ones that can make anyone and everyone be considered a sexual predator.

    As the old comment goes – when everything is urgent nothing is. And its the same here. When everyone who does anything sexual is considered a sexual predator, then those who actually are get ignored.

    And the worst thing about all of this is this: We are really only talking about the smallest percentage of sexual assault in the world. The western world really is “safe” compared to the rest. Think about that. All of us would probably know at least 1 person who has been sexualy assaulted and as disgusting as some of the goverments way of dealing with these things is, at least some are being dealt with. But in other countries these actions are still normal and everyday, and its not just knowing someone who has had these experiences, it is that everyone has.

    As disgusting as the western world is, the fact this goes on worse overseas should saden us even more :(

  41. Eva wrote:

    This is a great essay. I think people really need to talk about sex in this culture, and what is and is not appropriate behavior.

    100 years ago, a 13 year old was considered an adult, that isn’t true today. I also think people need to understand what a child is. It doesn’t matter how a girl is dressed, or where she, or he is at what time of night, they are still CHILDREN.

    Sure grown men are going to look at young girls, that will never stop, but there’s a huge difference between looking and acting, and it’s the acting that has to stop.

    People have to learn about boundaries at an early age, that it’s okay to have them and it is VERY important that they are respected.

  42. Eva wrote:

    Over twenty years ago I sat on the Grand Jury. There was a case of a woman who had been Not Raped, she’d been pushed against the wall in a building hallway and felt up. I remember the ADA was charging the guy with assault in the third degree or something. One of the women on the jury said that it sounded like attempted rape to her. The ADA looked at his penal code book and concluded that yes, the guy could be charged with attempted rape. A shame the ADA didn’t think so until a juror spoke up.

  43. maia wrote:

    @anonymous girl,

    yes, that was coercion. i am so sorry you were coerced. it is really normal to run through in your mind all of the things that you ‘could’ have done to have created a different outcome. to have stopped him from coercing you into sex. it was not your fault. even if you had been able to think of something different to avoid sleeping with him, there are no guarantees that he would not have found a way to manipulate the situation in order to coerce you. it is not your fault that that guy was an asshole.
    i am so glad to hear that you are in a healthy relationship now. and i hope that you are able to talk with your boyfriend about being coerced into sex. sooner or later in your relationship being able to talk openly about your past experiences keeps the relationship healthy and can help you build trust.
    i hope you are happy and well. i hope that you are able to find someone to talk to about being coerced. maybe finding someone to talk to (who is not your boyfriend) and work out your own feelings would be good before you talked to him.
    you are amazingly strong. you managed to stop that guy at the state fair and i am so proud of you.

  44. Ric Caric wrote:

    Very moving.

    With two daughters having hit puberty, I also found it sickening that they are going to have to face up to this stuff. Back in 1987, Catherine MacKinnon portrayed sexual violence as terrorism against women. Reading Latoya’s article, I thought about the extent to which that was still the case today.

    Or worse.

  45. Monie wrote:

    I had two “not rape” experiences before I was ten years old. What I find difficult to overcome is my general lack of trust that I think comes from those experiences. Both of the young men that not raped me were trusted by me and my family, one was a trusted person in church as well.

    I still have a very difficult time trusting and especially trusting men. It’s amazing how these types of incidents can have such long term effects.

    I have never told anyone about what happened. To make it worse I had to grow-up around my two not rapists. Also when I return home for visits I often see them. I can’t explain how that makes me feel.

    Thanks Latoya.

  46. Sarah wrote:

    I am a survivor advocate, and I wanted to say that this is a wonderful, illuminating piece. Thank you.

  47. Chris wrote:

    @erica:

    “I think something that needs to be added is how our sons are raised. Parents need to raise their sons to respect woman! Why do we put the responsibility to not be raped or abused, in any manner, on the girls and woman?”

    A big problem in our society is that sexual behavior towards women is directly tied to masculinity. The more women you bed, the more of a man you are.

    This effect is also seen when talking about gay males, too. Being a gay male means you do not have sex with women. Therefore, being gay is normally associated with being less masculine.

    These attitudes are reinforced everywhere, from music to movies to ads on tv and in print (remember those Canadian whiskey ads?) I feel this is central to the big problem of promoting a rape culture where boys are encouraged to be sexually aggressive.

    I also feel that chastising women for being too forward sexually is part of the problem as well. Girls who lose their virginity at a young age or who have sex casually are labelled sluts, while boys who do so get a pat on the back and an “atta boy!”

    This just serves to silence women, while letting men off the hook for their actions because it’s what’s expected of them.

  48. Kavita wrote:

    Very important piece, thank you for writing it. Like almost all women who read it, it brought up many memories of my own “not rapes.” Which, by the way, I though to be a very apt, creative, slightly ironic, provocative term.
    My strongest reaction, after being terrified for my daughter and newly committed to being viligant and proactive in defending her, was to be appalled at the way our communities produce young men who are sexual predators. And beyond men who are overtly violent, I know a lot of men, who are otherwise thoughtful and respectful, who, when it comes to sex, are extremely aggressive. I’ve heard many male friends advise each other that in certain situations, you just can’t be a “nice guy” if you are to get what you want. Its one thing to make the first move, it another to keep pushing until a woman is coerced into doing what you want. But I honestly think many men fail to see the difference. And as women, yes, we need to raise our voices–but I think conscious men out there need to do a lot more to speak to their brothers, sons, and friends. All too often men encourage each other in this kind of behavior, and not speaking out against it equals tacit approval.

  49. Carinda wrote:

    Thank you.

  50. CVT wrote:

    To Latoya and all the commenters sharing their stories – thank you.

    I am a male, so I have not experienced any of this, personally, but pretty much every female friend I have known well enough for them to tell me has had similar experiences.

    These days, this article hits me even harder as it describes the current lives of the children I teach (middle school). So often, I find myself having conversations with the girls I teach about how old their “boyfriends” are and how they ought to be dating closer to their age. So far, the right words seem to be missing for me. Sometimes I can get them with just saying how any older guy trying to date middle school women is not only a creep, but also a complete loser for going for such young girls. Other times, I go a different angle and talk about how dangerous it is . . . With the guys, I talk about how being a real man is being able to treat women with respect. To give them the complete safety that their mothers or sisters would deserve. And that WAITING to have sex is more mature and masculine than jumping into (or forcing somebody else into).

    But I don’t know. Because there is also the peer pressure around these girls about how it’s “cool” to be with older guys that can drive, or who have more freedom to take them to parties, etc. and with the guys about how they should be having sex, treating girls like objects – and that, obviously, is something I have less power to combat. So I ask – what can I do to be more effective in this area (being a male middle-school teacher)? What can I say to the girls and boys I work with to really have an impact and help them make the right choices?

    Because I know these kids’ backgrounds – and most of the girls AND boys have sexual assaults (usually by family members or family “friends”) in their backgrounds. So what can we do to stop the cycle at (sadly) “just” one?

  51. mari wrote:

    So often I cannot express the sentiment I am feeling when feminist leaders (and a countless number of other figures) talk about rape as the primary issue in violence and sexism against women. It’s a feeling that there is something more than that. That I should not have to permit acts of a sexual and inappropriate nature just because they are not rape. But yet, I feel as though I have to. I really appreciated your post, as it verbalized and legitimized the wrongs that are “not rape.”

  52. CMyers wrote:

    “For some reason, the simple presence of another man is enough to make these kind of men leave.”

    The reason is that these men feed on vulnerability. They cannot build functional relationships in their normal day-to-day lives so they force their sexual and/or violent fantasies onto others. It is sad, but indicative of our culture’s inability to prepare boys to become emotionally sensitive men who know how to earn respect and attention rather than force it.

  53. thaidyed wrote:

    This is an amazing post. I will be sharing it widely.

    @mayles: my first boyfriend told me something like your experience had happened to him. I was 17 and had no skills to even comfort him w/o risking the chance of emasculating him (that’s what I feared most at the time).
    it’s only now, 10+ years later, reading your comment that I realized he needed someone to talk to and to understand (just as *I* do about *my* Not Rape). Just wanted to say, keep speaking up and making your point… no one’s free til everyone’s free and that includes men too.

  54. leels wrote:

    Thank you, from another ‘not rape’ victim.

  55. chocomiel wrote:

    Wow all these familiar stories…reading this brought back a lot of my memories…..uncles, friends of uncles and so on…..

    I”m working on piecing my past together piece by piece. I just turn 30 and am better equip to go back to the mindfield of my memories. Thanks for writting this….as I was reading everyone’s story I just pictured the “Not Rape” narratives as a play a la Vagina Monologue ..”N0t Rape” monologue to be acted and played to every middle school and high school around.

    How many students could get the words they need to articulate what they are experiencing right now….by seeing these “Monologue”.

  56. Lisa J wrote:

    Yet again, thank you Latoya for a well written thoughtful essay. You are truly speaking truth to power. And thank you to everyone who shared their stories and I hope that you have all mended or are on the road to mending and not blaming yourself for what happened to you. Anonymousgirl, I wanted to give you a special shout-out because you are so young. What happened to you was not your fault, you were taken advantage of by your friend’s boyfriend’s friend; I would go so far as to say you were raped and not just in the statuatory sense because you were underage at the time. Also, if your friend had really been a good friend, she would not have put you in that situation. I hope things work out for you and your current boyfriend and that you take the advice given here earlier and talk to someone if you need to, whether it is a friend, your mom, an adult family friend, your school guidance counselor, someone. It often really helps to just talk to someone and get it out. It might be hard at first and you may have to do it several times, but one day it won’t feel so bad and talking helps. I’m sending you a virtual hug. Hang in their girlfriend. To all of you, hang on girls.

  57. Dirge wrote:

    Myles:
    Part of the problem is rooted in differences in how males and females are sexualized.
    Females are, from a young age, constructed as sexual “objects” to be had while males are constructed as sexual “agents” who must go and get.
    I saw two examples of this in the media recently. On the Chappelle show they were doing a reverse “What women want” skit where a woman could “hear” what men were thinking. On the elevator of course all the men are thinking debased sexual thoughts about her. Finally a little black boy gets on the elevator and even he is thinking about what he’d do with “that”. He couldn’t be no more than 10. Of course it was a joke but the discourse remains, unchallenged.
    The other was a rock video which included a scene where another little boy(white, 10-11) is sitting on a couch and two, bikini-clad women, in there 20’s or late teens, are fawning over him while he smirks in glee.
    Both reinforce the notion that a males disposition is to always be “on” ready and willing, desiring at all times sex. Self-control or sexual discipline for men is demeaned in our society and the male virgin or not-so sexually experienced man is hailed as a failure and impotent. The male heirarchy is is part founded on levels of sexual experience.
    That notion has to be challenged just as much as much as the “sought after”, hunted, passive, “must be taken”, “available for you”, female.

  58. gatamala wrote:

    myles~I know someone who went through what you went through from a female cousin. There was definitely no bragging about it.

  59. Ali wrote:

    50 years ago cat whistles and comments about girls figures as they walked past was aceptable.

    Jonathan, that shit is still acceptable today.
    It happened to me 2 weeks ago walking to the park. It happens when I go to a bar by myself. It happens when I’m walking alone. It happens when I’m walking with friends. It happens when I’m shopping. It happens when I’m driving. It happens to women every goddamn day.

  60. Ali wrote:

    I should add, in the interests of this post, it happens to girls every day too. I was reminded reading this that the only time I’ve ever been hit on by men in their 40’s I was barely a teenager.

    This essay is amazing and heart-wrenching Latoya, thanks.

  61. Darah wrote:

    Thank you.

  62. Marcus Kwame wrote:

    Wow. Latoya, thank you for this. In recent years I was shocked to learn just how many of my female friends and acquaintances have been the victim of sexual assault. It’s staggering. Even more so when you take into account the treacherous gray area that is “Not rape.” It truly is an epidemic.

    I have a 4 month old daughter, who I love with all my heart. The thought that she will one day be navigating these types of dangers is the most frightening thing in the world to me. We’re going to raise her to have sense, and to use the love and respect I have for her mom as a standard in her dating life. Even with all that, there is still danger at every turn, and I can’t always be right there with her to protect her. I can’t even begin to comprehend how fucked up, soulless and sub-human so many men are. I’m sorry you had to experience what you did, your friends, my friends, my friends who haven’t told their stories yet…

    I promise to do my part, like you said. We all have to. No one can afford to just stand by.

  63. octogalore wrote:

    Latoya — I caught this on an email version of YMY someone sent me, and again just now. It’s extremely poignant and compelling, of course, amazingly written.

    I disagree with Anon that the term Not Rape sets up a binary. I like the term and think your use of it fits the context well. You’re not setting up a binary; it’s a spectrum. At one end is consensual sex; at one end is rape, and in the middle is Not Rape, but not consensual either, and within that category as well there are many shades.

    Somehow I missed the point about your being destined to be a lawyer on first reading of this. Is that still something you are thinking about?

  64. Marge Twain wrote:

    Dirge-I’m glad you brought up Chapelle’s show. I’ve been made to feel like a feminazi bonerkiller for flipping past it, but there’s some overt women hating on that show, always played for laughs. I remember another sketch, from “Great Moments in Hook-up History” where a bartender offers up the car keys of an extremely drunk woman to whomever wants to drive her home “safely” and Dave and another dude fight over the chance to rape this woman in her own home. After several gags about what a drunk slut she is, Dave triumphs. I was in a group of laughing men when I saw this. Maybe one of them is a rapist. Maybe Dave Chappelle is. I didn’t say anything because I thought they would just laugh at me or get angry but I wish I’d done it anyway. Rape and Sexual Assault are pandemic and men always think it’s someone else doing it.

  65. Marge Twain wrote:

    Ali:”I should add, in the interests of this post, it happens to girls every day too. I was reminded reading this that the only time I’ve ever been hit on by men in their 40’s I was barely a teenager.”

    I’ve been raped and not-raped, like many, many women. From the time I hit puberty on, I got hit on, propositioned, grabbed, and cat-called by men on the street anytime I walked around town without a guy next to me. Adult men asked me what year of college I was in and told me how beautiful I was, sometimes following me for blocks. If I told them how old I was they said I looked much older but they didn’t stop. At the time I had major acne, caterpillar eyebrows, and goth makeup with clothes that usually covered me up. The fat that would become my breasts and hips was around my middle. Basically I looked like a young girl and couldn’t be mistaken for anything but. All that unwanted attention made me think I was hot stuff, though. I didn’t realize those guys were all perverts feigning ignorance to flatter me, until I got to be 18 or so. That’s when my pimples cleared up, I became thin with a small waist and a big chest, started wearing skirts and tank tops, and put down the black lipstick. They still yell nasty things from their cars and on the corner, but there’s less of them and they don’t get in my space like they used to. And all of those men, who grabbed my arm and told me I looked 18 when I was 11 have gone away, probably trying to prey on the next young girl.

  66. Moun wrote:

    Hello,

    I am not an usual reader here, and I only came through a stumbleupon click. I read your post, and I also read some of the posts (there were too much of them). And I must say I was deeply moved, and also shocked. Not that I wasn’t aware, but more that it was beyond what I would expect.

    I knew a lot of statistics say that women are often subject to any form of “harassment” at least once in their life. But not since that young.

    I’m a guy, and as such, I would say I didn’t really face your issues. But still, I cannot believe some people are able to go and see girls as young as middle school girls and even imagine a situation of sex with them. Isn’t that just called pedophilia ?

    I would also like to react to the general idea here that adults apparently do not listen enough to children. I think it is very true in your cases (yours, and the testimony of the people here). But have you heard of the Outreau case here in France ? Beside all the malfunctioning of the legal system, there was also the “misuse” of the words of the children. They were so trusted, it lead to a terrible mistake which was a death an innocent person.

    Which makes me think that it is not all to listen to children. It is important that they feel they are heard, but it is also the role of the listeners to try to understand what really happened, and see what’s true from what’s wrong, as it is never easy for a child to fully understand what’s going on.

    As you rightly explained, our society has not heard the voices of all the victims of all form of sexual harassment or more, except maybe for the rape, and even then… This forced them to be under the rule of silence. Now it’s trying to balance it. But the side effect could be that children/victims would be heard without questions. Hopefully, we’ll find something !

    It is also generally very shameful that guys are no more able to see the interest of the seduction and the charming process with all its codes, directly going into a sort of bestial behavior. Our society has to work this out.

    I hope your text will help to get further in this “fight” against this injustice.

    Good luck.

  67. Fatemeh wrote:

    Latoya, this essay reminds me how proud I am to know you. You’re smart and brave and one hell of a role model. Thank you for having the courage and the will to share this online and in print form.

  68. NancyP wrote:

    Latoya, thanks, it takes guts to write such a personal story.

    I never had much happen to me, but I went out of my way to hide my figure in baggy boys’ clothes and assume an attitude of “don’t even think about it” (defending a large personal space). As a young teen, I was so driven to achieve that I was anxious to put off sex and relationships that sidetracked others into teen pregnancy or to going to college to get their Mrs.. That strategy worked, in a generally middle class setting, some 40 years ago, though it did nothing to prevent getting followed by cars, etc. It wouldn’t work now. And it wouldn’t work at all for girls who want to attract a particular boy’s attention. There’s no such thing as being a heterosexual girl and not being fearful, by experience or by observation of a friend’s experience – what a bind.

  69. Pheagan wrote:

    The first time I didn’t get raped, I a guy held my arms down and I knew what he was going to do and I wasn’t strong enough to get out from under him. So I kissed him and told him I had to go get a condom from a friend and managed to get out of the room.
    The second time I didn’t get raped, I was walking home from my boyfriend’s hotel room after a fight. I saw a man talking on the phone. He came up to me and tried to hit on me. After I rebuffed him, he grabbed my arm and told me not to be afraid. I smiled, asked him if he wanted to smoke some weed, and walked back to my boyfriend’s hotel. When I walked in I told the security guard the man was following me and walked up to my boyfriend’s room.
    The third time I didn’t get raped, I was sleeping on a train in Europe and woke up to find a man sitting across from me. I went back to sleep and woke up when he tried to rip my coat off me. I started screaming and kicked him, accidentally in the face, and broke his nose. He left; I found the conductor and explained the situation. He told me to keep the light on.
    The fourth time I didn’t get raped, I biked home. Just as I was locking up my bike when I saw a man walking up the street. He came up to me, trying to hit on me, and got in between me and the door. By now I had my system down. Be nice. Act like he’s only trying to hit on you even though he’s an inch away and preparing to grab at you. I even put my hand on his arm in a friendly way as I smiled and skirted around him towards the door. I got my key in the lock, opened the door, and got in. Then he grabbed me between the legs and tried to pull me out. I slammed the door on his hand, closed it, and locked it.
    The next day when I asked a male friend to walk me home he laughed and told me I was paranoid. He knew I’d been attacked the night before.
    The fifth time I didn’t get raped was two weeks later. I knew not to walk home in the dark, so I called a taxi to meet me down the street. It never came. I had my keys out, I had my cell phone on, dialed to 911. Halfway home, I heard someone running behind me. I turned around and got a fist in my face. The phone was knocked out of my hands. I screamed like a wild animal, I struggled. He kept saying “Be quiet, be quiet”. I never stopped struggling, and after maybe fifteen minutes, he ran away. No one helped, but no one ever had. This time I really felt it, though. The 911 operator told me to stay where I was, but I told her to tell the police to drive south on Somerville Ave so I could meet them. They never had me write a statement, and although I called the police department every other day for three weeks no one ever got back to me.
    The sixth time I didn’t get raped I was teaching in Korea. I was walking home at eight. Eight. A guy in a car slowed down and asked if I was Russian, which means prostitute in Korea. Sex slave, really, I found out later. I said no and started to walk away. He followed me. I ran; he drove faster, and tried to cut me off. I ran over the hood of his car and managed to cut across a one-way street. I got away; I’m good at this. I even take a certain pride in this. It’s not just luck that’s helping me, although I acknowledge it has a role. It’s me.
    The seventh, eighth, and ninth time I didn’t get raped was in Cambodia. The first time, I was biking home from work at Angkor University, and a man was waiting for me on the steps of my home. As soon as I biked up he pulled his pants down and said “Wanna fuck?” I shouted for my roommate and pushed my way inside. I closed the door. He stole my bike. It was 9:30.
    The next time, I was biking home from Angkor University again, when a man pulled up next to me on his moto and asked what I was doing biking all alone. I ignored him, but he kept asking me. I told him he shouldn’t talk to girls at night. He started to ask my name, where I came from, if I would go out with him. I didn’t answer. He tried to drive me off the road. I braked and started biking in the middle of the street. He tried to push his front tire into my back one. There was a guest house, so I biked as hard as I could for it and ran in yelling for help. The English owner acted like I was crazy; the other biker went away. I insisted on staying for an hour to make sure the biker had gone away, and then pedalled like mad for my house.
    The third time was a really fantastic experience. I was walking down the street when a drunken Korean tourist struck up a conversation, which I tried to ignore. Then he grabbed my arm and wouldn’t let go. I started called for help and went into the street so the motos would have to stop. I was soon surrounded my motos staring at me as the man tried to rip off my shirt. He was still holding my arm. I bit him hard enough to draw blood. I kept getting on a motorcycle, wresting my arm from his, and shouting “Tao! Tao!” But the motorcycle guys wouldn’t go. He would get my arm again; I would bite and fight. Finally I realized I would have to bribe someone to help me. The next motorcycle I got on, I shouted “Dap dollar! Dap dollar!” He went, but only after the tourist get my arm twice more. I said thank you thank you thank you. I gave him ten dollars for driving me a block to my house. Then he hugged me and tried to kiss me. I pushed him away and started to run up the stairs to me room. He followed me and got my bag away from me. I guess he thought I wouldn’t leave if he had it. I went into my room and locked the door instead. He ended up stealing my wallet, so I had to wire money into a friend’s account to finish up work on the NGO we started.
    But I got away. Never got raped. Lucky. At this point, there is an anger in me that I’m not sure I can get rid of. I can’t trust guys. Even the “nice” ones. They will never be able to understand that they have a freedom I will never have. I live with a de facto curfew; a police state patrolled by men. And it’s not even a reasonable hour, like two o’clock. I’ve been attacked at eight o’clock, nine o’clock. I carry a switchblade even though it’s illegal.
    I really do, I really want to kill someone. I haven’t, but I fantasize about it. When I walk home and it’s dark, I fantasize about running into someone who will try to attack me, and I will stick my knife into his stomach and drag it across, and then go for his neck to make sure. I almost hope it will happen again, because now I have my knife.
    I don’t know anyone else who’s had it happen this much to them, and I asked my friend why this was. And she said, “It’s because you’re on your own.” And it’s true. Because I’m independent, because I travel, because I’m adventurous, I’m punished. Boyfriends are bodyguards. I dumped one guy because he was acting protective when some crazy guy came up to us and started to hit on me. Didn’t he know no one ever helped me? Didn’t he know I’ve proven I can take care of myself? Didn’t he know this guy wouldn’t hurt anyone– by that point I could tell the difference. By that point I had better instincts than him. Who the fuck was he to act like I needed him?
    And yeah, this is my problem with men. As friends, they can be people, but when it comes to sex, I feel like they’re animals. Like they could just lose control one night. Like I can’t sleep next to them because I don’t want them to see me when I’m sleeping, when I’m vulnerable. They never know how strong I am. I’ll always be just a girl, just a woman, someone to be protected. A girl that if not for them would end up in the back of someone’s trunk. They never get it.
    I’m just not that girl.

  70. jillofalltrades wrote:

    @ anonymous girl, what you describe isn’t not rape; it is just rape. This is statutory rape. You were 12. Last I checked no states would put the age of consent at 12. The reason why statutory rape is a CRIME is because people who are of a certain age (i.e. 12 years old) may lack the ability and discernment to say no to an adult who is pressuring them for sex. What your friend’s boyfriend did to you was criminal, not just figuratively, but literally. He can be charged with a crime; he can go to jail for this.

    I know that you may be hesitant to pursue legal and criminal options against this person because he may still be close to your family and clearly you know him through religious connections, but you should acknowledge that you have been raped. It was not your fault and you should seek counseling help.

  71. Sarah wrote:

    Thank you for posting this. I have known far too many women, girls in fact, who have dealt with this.

  72. Persephone wrote:

    @ Pheagan — Jesus. No one should have to be that tough. :(

    @Latoya — Thank you. Amazing essay. I kind of want to show it to everyone I know.

  73. beri wrote:

    I am another one of those avid readers who never post. But, I am posting tonight. LaToya, thank you so much for putting words to this feeling so many women have felt and could never validate. And to Pheagan! Damn, girl! I am so sorry you have had to go through so much. It has literally changed who you are, I can tell. That is something I don’t think men get; a part of you has been stolen. Women, we have a right to be whole, free people. We have a right to go out with our friends and get as drunk as men do and return home safely, or crash on a friends’ couch, safely. We have a right to not just be someone’s “opportunity”. What stress it is having to live every day afraid of men you know suddenly turning on you? The friend or family member just deciding that today is the day I’m going to use your trust to violate your body and change your life forever? Pheagan the part in your post where you say “They will never be able to understand that they have a freedom I will never have. I live with a de facto curfew; a police state patrolled by men” just hit me like a fist. It is totally true.

  74. Myles wrote:

    @ 69 Pheagan

    I know what you mean about feeling proud. It’s that sick sense of knowing that you are just a piece of meat that those stupid beasts have happened across. Your just a weak little pleasure toy to them.

    But then you have all of those little tricks up your sleeve. You know what they want an how they are going to get it. You’re oh so smarter than they are. You just go into survival mode and you take care of yourself the only way you know how.

    But you still feel so sick and disgusting for attracting people like that. Like there is just something about you that brings people like that into your life.

    Granted, I was dealing with girls, so I often had to let them lay on top of me and put up with the frottage at least until I was old enough to figure out a way around that not hitting girls thing. I was Not Raped after a girl tried to tackle me and I grabbed her by the shoulders and held her at arm’s length. She just stood there and leaned all of her weight on my hands. I told her that I was going to push her away and that she had to stand up or she’d fall over.

    She told me that if she hit the floor it was my fault and that I would get in trouble for it. Like it was my fault for not letting her tackle me.

    So I shoved her away, and walked out of the room, and heard her body hit the floor.

    She, of course, came after me. She started to snarl something into my ear, but I shot her a look over my shoulder that made her back off.

    And I felt so powerful. Like I was finally was able to protect myself. Like I was a freaking badass, with cat-like reflexes, and a quick wit, and adequate upper body strength.

    But in reality, I was just some overly nice, seemingly innocent 13 year old boy, dealing with the girl that put the least amount of effort into assaulting me. I mean, a lot of girls are happy pinning a guy to the floor and getting some frottage in, some girls want to fondle you, others just want to hear you in pain because the a squashing you “down there.” She probably just wanted to pin me to establish her dominance in the situation.

  75. Cecily wrote:

    This essay is the best explanation of what ‘rape culture’ means that I’ve ever seen. Next time some guy gets huffy at the sound of the term, I’ll point him here.

    I am a little surprised that some commenters are talking about using the term ‘not-rape’ in the future, because I was very moved by the part of your essay where you talked about the words you didn’t know as a girl and how knowing them can help other young people. Naming things gives you power.

  76. Lisa wrote:

    Latoya,
    There isn’t much I can say that hasn’t been said. This piece is beyond important, and disarming.

    As an advocate and educator in the field of sexual assault, I cannot stress the importance of this essay and how your experiences will educate and deepen the conscience of countless readers.

  77. Lisa J wrote:

    @Pheagan I’m so sorry you’ve had it so hard and had so many travails. Even though I don’t know you I’m proud of your toughness and fortitude. But, I really caution you to be careful with your switchblade; it could be taken from you and used as a weapon against you and none of the scumbags who might hurt you are worth going to jail for. Since you’ve seen how unsympathetic the police have been with your attacks and would be more so if you accidently killed someone. It isn’t fair but it isn’t the answer. I know you are in pain but that would make it worse. Another virtual hug especially for you.

  78. Ali wrote:

    @ Marge Twain,
    I know just what you mean. When those older guys would make lewd comments at my obviously preteen self I was like “Ew gross, those guys are so old!! but… they think I’m pretty and I thought I was pretty ugly…”
    It was actually lucky for me that guys in their 20s didn’t hit on me until I was at least 16. Still far from the ideal situation but I was at least more confident and better able to handle myself then…. and scared shitless of my parents so not willing to go anywhere in private with any guy :)

  79. Ali wrote:

    I was lucky (ha! my experience should be the normal one for every child) in my childhood. I wasn’t not raped until I graduated from high school. And then I was not raped over and over again.

  80. Sarah wrote:

    Powerful post.

    *Be Blessed*

  81. Lexy wrote:

    The first time that I was not-raped happened when I was only twelve years old. I was a candy-striper in a local hospital with dreams of going to medical school, and every day that I volunteered to help worried families or carted things around for busy nurses, I felt so damn proud of myself by the time I got home.

    Then I got assigned to a medical ward. My first day on the job, I had my ass felt up by no less than three smiling sexagenarians. They wouldn’t do it to the nurses, who were grown-ass women capable of defending themselves, and who held power over meals and medication. Just me.

    I was encouraged to grin and bear it, because gosh, those fellows were merely “old-fashioned”, and they deserved a little cheeky joy in their lives. Over the course of the next ten months I learned a lot about dodging quick hands.

    I never did go to medical school, but now that I’m a lawyer, I consider that couple of years I spent working at the hospital to have been some of the best career training I ever got. It taught me all about dealing with assholes.

  82. Adam wrote:

    This was a really moving piece of work. even though I can’t relate from a personal point, that doesn’t make your words have less of an impact

  83. Pheagan wrote:

    @ Lisa J. I know. I mean, how I wrote about it probably doesn’t convey how much I fight with my anger, how much I try to fight against it making me hate the guys I date, etc.

    Re: The knife thing. I actually have a bracelet’s worth of chain with a padlock on it that I don when I feel unsafe, that I connect to a length worth of chain that I soldered onto a hole on the knife. Which makes me sound so crazy at this point, but I know the knife could be gotten away from me. I remember my phone being knocked out of my hand really well. It’s also why I don’t believe in guns as protection, since they can be used against you.

    As for killing someone– I mean, I know it’s problematic that I’ve developed the urge at all, and clearly I need a shrink. But if a situation arises and it’s me or someone else, it’s me. That’s it. I’ll just have to deal with whatever comes of that situation. I’ve read of cases where girls have knifed someone after being assaulted and gone to jail. Or what about that 13 year old girl who was assaulted by plainclothes policemen and was arrested for fighting back? This is the main thing that makes me so angry. Women in particular live lives fraught with such danger, and we get 1) no acknowledgement– we’re just being paranoid! 2) all our beauty values make us easy targets: littleness, high heels, long hair, jewelry 3) when we protect ourselves or don’t act like victims, we’re punished. It is a sociaety contrived to make a woman go insane.

    Myles– The use of 69 before my name and frottage makes me question your reply, like, a lot.

    But don’t put shame on me. There is none in my post and I feel none. I feel no shame about what others do and I won’t have it put on me. I feel no shame about protecting myself. I do not feel I attract these men because of some hidden quality; I feel these situations arise because I am small, and often on my own, and our society has a lot more fucked up men than it likes to acknowledge. It’s not my fault and I didn’t “attract” these guys. Shit, walking through the bad part of town in your underwear at three in the morning doesn’t force anyone to do anything. It’s the man that does it. That’s what the whole point of Latoya’s essay is. These guys acted of their own volition because they have been raised to feel entitlement to sex, a need to assert their dominance, and whatever other fucked up components go into making a would-be rapist.

  84. Marge Twain wrote:

    @Pheagan-I really like what you said about women being under curfew, living in a police state patrolled by men. It’s not mandatory that we be accompanied by a male escort in most of the world, but it’s not much of a choice when we quickly learn that we’ll be treated like unclaimed property if we don’t.

    I’ve had experiences similar to yours, but less, because I’m less independent. I’ve seen the marked difference when I walk down a street alone versus when I’m with my presumed “owner” (who doesn’t believe me when I try to explain what goes on when he’s not there) and I’ve often chosen safety over adventure(a.k.a. having as much freedom as men). Like you, I pride myself on my quick thinking and ability to assess real danger and act fast.

    It’s so shitty that we have to live with this kind of terrorism, that men think it’s a joke, a compliment, or overblown. It’s shitty that a sizable minority of men see walking meat socks and that the majority of them do and say nothing about it.

  85. anotheranon wrote:

    Another regular lurker here chiming in to say how powerful this post is. And I admit at first I wondered how you could forget such a horrible experience, and then my own “not rape” came thundering back to me. Never told anyone. It occurred in middle school, and we ended up in the same private high school a few years later. Whenever I saw him I cringed, wondering if he was still a person who could do that kind of thing, and maybe more.

  86. Marge Twain wrote:

    @Ali- Ha! Yeah, you describe that feeling of being flattered/uncomfortable well. I think now that my looking like an insecure ugly kid made me seem like an easy mark for predators. I definitely wasn’t getting much attention from boys my age.

  87. Lisa J wrote:

    @Phaegan, you do what you need to do to protect yourself just be careful
    @MargeTwain, have you ever considered asking your boyfriend/husband/friend whatever category he falls in, to walk a few feet behind you and pretend he doesn’t know you a few times? Then he might see what you go through. I suggest that b/c a friend of mine had a nearly 7 foot tall bf and she said sometimes she liked to walk behind him just to see the reactions that people had once he had passed. So although it is for totally different and serious reasons, this might make your guy start to get it.

  88. Just a Girl wrote:

    I am 43, and still coming to terms with the Not Rape I had when I was 12. Several older men (in their 30s) knew I was not the 16 I pretended to be (even though my body was most definitely that of an older woman), but still took advantage of it and repeatedly had sex with me. I blamed myself for this for years, until a wise therapist told me that it was sexual abuse – at the age of 12 I wasn’t capable of making those decisions particularly with men of that age.

    Thank you for publishing this, talking about it, keeping it out of the shadows.

  89. jim wrote:

    I’m male, and jesus, I had no idea (or maybe never noticed/realised) that this sort of thing went on, or was so “normal” for females.

    This essay has opened my eyes.

  90. Myles wrote:

    @ 83 Pheagan

    The 69 referred to your comment number, I used it to indicate which post I was referring to. Wasn’t meant to be an insult.

    I’m not sure if what followed after that was directed at me, but I was not attempting to put any shame on you, or in any way imply that you had brought anything on yourself.

    Sorry if I upset you in anyway.

  91. Myles wrote:

    @ thaidyed

    Thank you. I’ve been in your then boyfriend’s shoes and I’ve always kind of wondered what it was like for the girl I was telling. Particularly if they had been through things themselves.

    I always tried to keep in mind that I was dealing with a pretty cool girl, who most likely had never been in that situation of a boy talking about things like this.

    @ gatamala

    Yeah, it’s really common, but boys aren’t really supposed to talk about things like that. It’s awesome that he felt comfortable enough with you to talk about it.

  92. iteach wrote:

    This is an awesome essay. I would like to share it with my (middle school) students. Too often our (teachers’) hands are tied and we can do little or nothing because of the taboo of talking about sexual things in school… too often parents think that their children have not been exposed to that type of behavior or are not influenced or effected by it! Sometimes I want to scream: “Are you STUPID?” to those people who bury their heads in the sand, ignoring all the desensitization that goes on in the media while their middle school children are being “Not Raped”.

  93. Marge Twain wrote:

    Come on, Myles. What you wrote to Pheagan was very creepy, putting on her the kind of stuff that the men we’re talking about want us to feel. You didn’t get it from her; it came from you.

    I’m sorry you had some uncomfortable experiences at 13, but it sounds like sort of a non sequitur in the context of this conversation. I don’t even think you thought you were fending off sexual assault, especially since it reads like a Penthouse letter. Men have more social and physical power than women and reap the benefits of rape culture. Latoya’s story is about how women and girls navigate that reality.

  94. Erin wrote:

    I think you are wonderful for sharing this.

  95. Kate wrote:

    When I was molested by a family member at age 14 I told my mother. I blacked out during the actual attack–but the next morning I went to her. I couldn’t look at her as I told her. And she didn’t want it to be true–but she believed me. She took me to a crisis counselor. She had been molested by a priest in her own livingroom and when she told her mother–my grandmother said she must be confused. My grandmother sent her back into the living room to entertain the creepy old priest.

    My mother told me to speak up if anyone ever touched me in anyway that was not OK. I did. It was horrible to have to talk about it. But it never happened again.

  96. Myles wrote:

    My closest female friend was raped for the first time when she was 4 years old. Almost every man in her life has tried to rape or take advantage of her. The main reason that we are so close is because we have had similar, gender-flipped, lives and we can talk to each other about what we have gone through and we know that the other person understands.

    We can get into extremely detail conversations about rape, sexual assault, child abuse, sexual harassment because we have both been through a lot of the same things, with the genders flipped.
    It’s likely that being friends with her has spoiled me. I’m overly accustomed to being able to share what I have been through with someone without them feeling like I’m trying to devalue their life. I’m not trying to devalue anyone’s life, but attempting to establish common ground. When I used “you” in the comment above, it was in terms of a shared experience. I thought I was talking to someone else who knew what it was like to be seen as being so weak and having to develop a different kind of strength to take care of oneself.

    Yes, I understand that since I am a guy it seems uncommon and difficult to fathom that I could have experienced unwanted attention from girls, but I did. And it was mainly during a 5 year period between the ages of 9-14. One of my straight guy friends jokingly said that I got to experience every straight guy’s “best nightmare,” or something to the effect.

    Yes, boys are told to chase after girls, and boys who attempt to attain the standards of hegemonic masculinity do. Sure, it makes sense that boy would feel annoyed that they can’t be the hegemonic supermen that their society tells them to be, and it makes sense they would wish for a magical world where almost all of the women around them are constantly throwing themselves at them (him).

    But it isn’t fun. It’s not anymore enjoyable to have a woman who is 10-20 years older than you make sexual comments about you if you are a 12y/o boy, than the gender-flipped version is. It’s not fun to have girls you don’t like tell you that they have a right to touch you and that you can’t do anything about it. It was as much of a hellish and scarring experience for me to go through that as it was my female friend to experience that with men.

    I was just trying to establish common ground, and I sincerely apologize if I upset anyone.

  97. Pheagan wrote:

    Myles– sorry, dude. I didn’t realize that 69 was the comment number. I was a bit confused as I read your comment, just because at first I wondered if the pride was supposed to apply to attention and then there was that shame thing which seemed to be your shame but also like you were applying it to me, and because honestly I’ve never felt it (I know that some women do go through these feelings). And the 69 and the terminology and the language made me wonder if it was some kind of fetish thing. But I was also like, haven’t I seen your name here before? I erased my reply to you twice but decided to go with it in case it was what I thought. So if you meant no harm, no foul.

  98. EH wrote:

    Thanks for posting this and thanks to all the commentors. Honestly this isn’t a subject I’ve ever really thought about. The harassment and abuse that most women will have to deal with their whole lives. As a male it’s something I’ve never HAD to think about. And after reading this I think about all the women I know and can’t help but wonder what they’ve had to deal with. How much of it have they experienced that they just don’t think anyone cares or can empathize? Or are just too ashamed to say anything?

    I really do think society does put too much emphasis on males needing to spread their seed to the extent that rape/harrasment/assault instead of being taken seriously is just considered “boys being boys”. I hear it’s especially bad in the military. This subject really does need to be brought out to light in a more public format. There are too many people who are either afraid, don’t realize what’s going on, encourage that type of behavior, ignore that type of behavior, or take part in it.

    It makes me take a closer look at a lot of my males in my life also. I don’t think any of them have done anything of that sort but then again how would I know?? I mean some of the persistence that my friends show for getting laid and hooking up to me sometimes seems like it borders on obsessive compulsive.

    I hate to say it but the way things are going in society, the media, with communication, technological advances I really think the problem is going to get worse before it gets better. But again thank you for posting this. I think it’s a comfort for some and an eye opener for others (in my case).

  99. Doug wrote:

    Good essay. However this issue really goes both ways. Coming from a guy, I am constantly having to worry about various things being construed as rape or sexual abuse. A female could be completely willing, and then in some vinidicative move decide to claim rape after the fact and what do I have to defend myself besides my own word? Unless I make the girl sign a document before hand claiming consent, it is dangerous territory. Same thing goes for sexual assault of a child. I don’t even consider dating girls that are literally a year or two younger than me simply because of all the potential legal issues that could be thrown against me by the girl or her parents.

    I’m all for good rape laws and not blaming the victim, but you still have to have sound evidence backing up claims otherwise you give all women, good and bad, a very dangerous power that neither gender should have.

  100. nadia wrote:

    dear latoya, thank you for having the courage to share your story. all of the things you say are so true and regular for younger girls. you are speaking to my story too. this essay will change people’s lives.

  101. John wrote:

    Doug, don’t take this the wrong way, but shut the hell up. “worry[ing] about various things being construed as rape or sexual abuse” is NOT EVEN REMOTELY THE SAME as having to worry about being raped. To even make the comparison is to admit that you haven’t got a clue.

  102. Susan wrote:

    Doug, if you’re paying attention you’re not “constantly having to worry about various things being construed as rape or sexual abuse.”

    Men who live life thoughtfully will find wonderful women paying attention.

    There is an enormous difference between the everyday reality women face of rape and “not rape” and the concern men have with being misunderstood. Sexual intimidation and sexual assault is a daily occurrence in the lives of young women and girls.

    It is far easier for a man to live in a way that could not easily be misconstrued than for a woman to go about her business hoping there will be no unexpected discomfort or jolt to her day. You really have to live in a woman’s shoes to understand that the attitude of “not rape” is so pervasive we see it in entertainment and marketing as well as on the streets and everywhere women have a right to be — and to be safe.

    I’m sure you want women to feel safe with you. Maybe there is a “cool factor” influencing your remarks (think media) that will look a little less cool in light of this essay and the experience of so many women posting here, and walking through your life today.

    Peace.

  103. Ali wrote:

    Fuck off Doug.

    Yes there are false rape claims, but they happen at about the same rate as false claims of any other crime meaning that (more than) 9 times out of 10, when you hear about something like this, it’s the truth. And when it’s not? That’s why we have courts and a legal system.

    You’re worried about saying or doing something that could be construed as rape or harrasment? Then don’t fucking do something that can be construed in that way. It’s not that hard, it’s called not being an asshole and treating women as, wait for it, the human beings they are.

    And if you seriously think that having something you say or do be misconstrued is equivalent to living in constant fear of rape, not rape, and/or sexual harrasment, then maybe you should refrain from sharing your opinions on such matters until you educate yourself.

  104. Tonya wrote:

    As a person that has worked with survivors of sexual assault in any form for 5 years, I felt this piece. I was sitting in the internet cafe with tears coming to my eyes….

  105. Brianne wrote:

    Excellent, excellent essay. Thank you so much for sharing your experience, Latoya. I was already a feminist, but now I feel especially enlightened.

  106. Pheagan wrote:

    Doug: In London: “Currently less than six percent of all reported rapes result in a conviction, and while one in 20 women say they have experienced rape, just 15 percent have reported incidents to police.”

    Although “The United States has the highest rape rate among countries which report such statistics,” conviction rates are less than 50 %.

    Wow, I guess these vindictive women really are a problem. Apparently more than fifty percent of the rapes in the U.S. and 96 percent of the rapes in London are fabrications by girls getting revenge.

    But seriously, the mentality in your post, the immediate questioning of whether these women are lying about it and whether the male is really the victim, that is the reason behind these appalling rates. And you think the courts need a better system for proving rapes? Didn’t you read the rape trial part of Latoya’s essay, where even in the face of overwhelming evidence the law was trying to make this girl into a liar? You may not be a rapist, but idiots like you keep rapists on the street.

  107. Will Darryll wrote:

    Wow.

    That brought some pretty vivid imagery to the table. As someone who lives in our modern society, I hear about rape all the time, but this really connected a lot of dots.

    See, my girlfriend has admitted to me once, and only once, that she was overpowered and felt up by an older boy when she was barely out of elementary school. She didn’t describe the details. She didn’t tell me what she thought of it. And now I think I understand a little better why.

    Thank you so much for posting this… I think I’ll have to talk with her again and see if I can help with getting over something like that… Until then though… I think I will have to become more aware of my surroundings, just in case something like that happens while I’m near.

  108. Liz wrote:

    Latoya,
    THANKS!! To most of you who commented here, thanks. Every girl should read this essay. Every boy should be trained to grow up to be a real man. This essay brought me healing.

  109. Shroedinger wrote:

    A large part of the problem is that sexuality is considered a “women’s issue”.

    Discussions about sexuality is predominantly a “women’s issue”. The only time male sexuality becomes an issue is when homosexuality is involved. Heterosexual men have no sexuality “issues”. Young men, boys, have no sexuality “issues”. They’re just boys being boys, discovering their masculinity.

    Rape is not a male “issue”.

    Sexual assault is not a male “issue”.

    Unwanted pregnancies are not a male “issue”.

    Abortion is not a male “issue”.

    Decades of publicly-funded sex education in our schools has not changed that, nor is it about to. Heterosexual males in any given age group are terrified of discussing sexuality “issues”. That too, is not about to change any time soon.

    Men who support women’s rights in these matters are simply that, supporters and bystanders in the fight to “help” women. That too, is part of the problem.

    Rape is a male “issue”.

    Sexual assault is a male “issue”.

    Unwanted pregnancies are a male “issue”.

    Abortion is a male “issue”.

    Many will see this as male bashing but it’s not. At least, it shouldn’t be. Sexual violence and its consequences are human issues. To find solutions, discussions and ongoing education must actively involve both genders. But we as a society, through our pop culture, and our attitudes, perpetually ghettoize sexuality as either a “women’s issue”, or a “homosexual issue”. This is only male bashing if the deep-seated unspoken belief that these “issues” are inherently the fault of women … still holds true.

    In the last election, abortion was a national issue. Rape was not. Sexual assault was not. Unwanted pregnancies were not. Yet surely, the best “choice” for any woman, for her general well-being and her physical health, is to never need an abortion.

    But the national “issue” was not to battle those things that lead to abortions, but to have the right to expunge both the cause and the consequences. Nothing else is as important as our need to rewind the tape.

    Don’t ask. Don’t tell. Just wipe the slate clean. Yet even in having the right to “choose”, it’s still the woman that suffers. It’s still the woman that’s again “violated”.

    In effect, so long as society strives to “protect” women by providing them the right to have abortions, “protecting” them from the need for abortions is irrelevant.

    This isn’t about turning this into a pro-life/pro-abortion debate. The issue is the priorities that have been set for women, for men, and us as a society. Why battle to solve a problem that we’re not battling even half as hard to prevent in the first place? Why battle to solve the problem when everything in our sexually obsessed society tells us, and especially our teens, that living by your gonads is not only downright compulsive, it’s awesomely cool and astronomically celebrity-rich?

    The right to have abortions is important for women to have, but should never be as important as never having to need that right.

    Nothing in our society favors the sexual safety of teenage “women”. Everything favors the rush of the perpetually teenage male sex drive.

    Rape is a male “issue”.

    Sexual assault is a male “issue”.

    Unwanted pregnancies are a male “issue”.

    Abortion is a male “issue”.

    Until we all understand that, until we understand that these are not only “women’s issues”, the game of Not Rape will never end, not for teenage “women”, not for any woman.

  110. Shroedinger wrote:

    “But above all, we must give girls the tools they need to defend themselves against sexual predators.”

    Not instead of but with this…

    Even better might be giving the boys the tools they need to never feel the need to become sexual predators. Men need to talk to men about their sexuality and encourage and reinforce positive attitudes towards women. Men need to talk to boys about the same.

    And we all need to talk to each other, young and old, about porn and the attitudes it teaches both men and women. It’s out there. It’s accessible. It’s online. And it’s teaching our youth all they’ll ever need to know about sex … except respect.

    Hollywood isn’t much better either. The roles for women are as pathetic as ever.

  111. brownietoes wrote:

    Awesome post. I was able to recall some past episodes of my own that I never previously considered.

    As an extension, has any research been done on what — outside of the media — is leading men to develop these abnormal desires? I really believe that in the black/AfAm community there is a LOT of molestation of young boys going on, mainly due to the “brush it under the rug” aspect that we tend to put on things like mental illness, that “crazy uncle” that people have in their families, mothers bringing home multiple boyfriends and expecting them to play a father figure to their children. The media often explores this in more mainstream cultures in the form of the priest who molests little boys. Is this widespread outside the church in other cultures?

    I’m rambling, but this whole topic fascinates me. From an evolutionary standpoint, it seems like what we would consider “deviant sexual tendencies” actually gets selected for. Historically, and still in some cultures, men marry younger women (sometimes multiple), many of them under 15 years old. Now that we have put a legal age limit on adulthood, people’s behaviors are expected to change, but how much of this caveman behavior is hardwired?

  112. Jackie wrote:

    Doug,
    If you are scared about something you’re doing being construed as rape, then you STILL DON’T GET IT.

  113. yelsha wrote:

    Shroedinger,

    I think you make some good points about the responsibilities of men and boys. Rape and not rape are men’s issues, too. But, I don’t think rape victims comprise the majority (or even close to the majority) of women who seek abortions. I think many women seeking abortions have had their birth control fail them, are adults who have children already and can’t afford another baby, etc.

    Abortion isn’t strictly the issue of “loose” teenage girls and rape victims. I think many assume it is because that’s the way the issue has been framed by some abstinence- only/anti-choice people (especially Republican politicians). They like to champion abortion rights for rape victims because they think it makes their extreme views look more “moderate” or
    “compassionate.” Ending rape culture and violence against women, while extremely important, won’t end the need for abortions. Women will still need that right to choose, because no pill or contraceptive is 100% effective.

  114. trishy wrote:

    So it has a name,”NOT RAPE” .WOW ! As Women need to empower our daughters and sons with this info. One of the best essays I’ve read,what a fucked up world we live in .

  115. yet another anon wrote:

    This was an amazing essay. I will definitely share it with my friends, who still think I exaggerate about the whole “rape thing” and rape culture.

    This reminded me of when I was young and my mom told me about her childhood. It wasn’t rape or even real molestation, as far as I could tell, but it was *very* clear that her father and mother did not have her best interests in mind. (She didn’t allow her parents to see me and my little sisters again after an incident when I was about 5 or 6, that I still don’t know about. This was why she started explaining a bit.) I was told that her mother sat there silently once while a medical technician moved my mom’s shirt down to look at her developing chest while doing an unrelated procedure. And my grandfather… I wasn’t told exactly what he did but I felt very keenly that somehow he had violated my mother, and through her and across time he had violated me. I was probably 7 or 8.

    This was also around the time that I started having very graphic night terrors and panic attacks. The main fear I had was of a house fire, of the flames coming to eat me while I slept… I fantasized about going to my grandparent’s house and burning it down because it was the most horrible death I could imagine. I imagined standing there with gasoline and watching my grandfather die and telling him how much I hated him as he burned.

    In the second grade a boy in my class followed me under a table and touched me through my clothes, and I thought “this isn’t much” but I told the teacher anyway and she confirmed my suspicion that this was minor and unimportant because she didn’t say anything to him. She didn’t talk to me about it later, while I hovered around the classroom during recess, and she didn’t tell my parents. I didn’t tell anyone else either, because I could barely bring myself to say the word “bum” aloud, and I didn’t want to upset my mom with nothing and she’d had it worse so I shouldn’t bother her.

    I have never told my mom any of this, and she somehow has reconciled with her parents. Maybe it wasn’t even all as bad as I understood it to be as a child, but just hearing these things about what happened to her terrified me. I can understand wanting to knife someone who’s attacking you, because I wanted to murder my grandfather, who had never even touched me. I haven’t been raped but I almost feel resigned to it happening someday, like it’s inevitable, like the actual experience needs to happen to catch up to how I felt when I was little. Like, “aw, you’ve been raped. You’re a woman now!”

  116. Eddy wrote:

    I was recently a juror on a trial involving a girl who was raped. It was gutwrenching to go through it.

    The guy convinced himself and stated to the inspector ‘rape is like forcing the girl down..’ what had happened in this case was the girl drank way too much and woke up with him on top of her.

    The Canadian laws give pretty clear rules on what makes up consent, and a couple of key ones are thankfully available to our country:
    - consent can be taken away at any time.
    - consent cannot be given if the victim is impaired by alcohol (or whatever drug)

    IANAL: I’d think this law weighs very heavily towards a victim – is it ever abused does anyone know?

  117. Jess wrote:

    brownietoes –

    A lot of the behavior you see isn’t “hardwired” in the sense you are probably thinking of.

    In many cultures — particularly those that developed agriculture (which means everyone these days) — the practice of marrying younger women makes sense. After all, in the old days the odds of your child surviving weren’t good and you needed the labor (this is why school is out in the summer, even in the US, and people in temperate zones where summer coincides with June people love to have weddings in spring and early summer.

    Another factor is kids mature (physically) earlier when they are better fed. This is one reason why the average age of first menses has fallen drastically in the last 100 years. In 1900, an average girl would probably have her first menses at around 14-15. Now it’s 12-13. That doesn’t sound like much, but when you realize that this stuff is around a bell curve you see how drastic that is. A big reason is that we all eat better. Breasts and reproductive organs are energy-intensive to maintain. (There is a reason women who are starving lose their periods before almost anything else happens).

    A similar thing happens to boys too, but since the (physical) sexual development of boys is more spread out it’s less noticeable. But I bet it’s no accident that the traditional “apprentice” stage of life started as a child (around 5 or 6 in some cases) and didn’t end until you were 15 years old or older.

    All this is to say we haven’t processed the effects of earlier sexual maturities in a cultural sense. Culture is pretty flexible, and humans are too, but that doesn’t mean certain “habits” don’t die hard. It takes a whole generation or two for birth rates to reflect movement to urban areas, for instance.

    Among those changes is that women aren’t expected to have kids at 16, nor anywhere near as many. And the biggest change is that holding a woman as property doesn’t make sense anymore. We have a patriarchal society that was built over thousands of years. The speed at which our culture has changed is really astounding compared to what went before. A 14th century person would sort of be able to recognize the treatment of women as late as 1850 or so. But tack on another 150 years and it becomes so alien it might as well be another planet.

    The social controls that existed (and they weren’t good for a woman most of the time) on sexual behavior still exist in our heads way in the back where we hardly think about them, but they are all out of whack with the way we actually live these days. I know intellectually that I have to respect women, for instance, but there’s that old part of the brain — reinforced by cultural norms — that says I shouldn’t.

    Now layer on the effect of a culture that sexualizes young women — more so than before, I think (I’m only 40 and I have noticed a definite skew towards a younger, more androgynous look over the last 20 years , cf. Britney Spears), the mainstreaming of porn, all that stuff, combined with a refusal to talk abotu sex in a frank way, a strong evangelical/puritan bent, and you have a combination that just is not healthy for any normal person.

    That’s the thing. Culture is a pampliset — it’s layers and layers of stuff that may not make any consistent sense. In fact, they often don’t.

    Which gets us to “not rape” (and I cosign that it is a great term). There is a whole stack of cultural problems with men going after very young girls. Just because something is physically present (an attraction to a younger person becuase of secondary sexual characteristics) doesn’t mean it’s hard-wired and can’t be redirected.

    My hard-wired primate brain tells me that I should be in a community of relatives and face all comers (especially other humans) by trading with them or killing them. But I don’t do that — humans are flexible that way. We have cultures that allow us to survive in a really wide array of environments. We have even altered our own sexual behavior pretty far out of the primate norm — we have a few polyandrous societies.

    That means that none of the behaviors of older men is inevitable. Using evolutionary psychology (which is a science that is misunderstood, misused and abused all the time) to justify this behavior is wrong headed at best. I know you probably weren’t justifying it yourself.

    These are capacities we all have. A capacity to kill doesn’t mean you do it. A capacity for rape doesn’t mean you do it. We (as men) make decisions. Nobody puts a gun to some 20-year-old’s head and makes them ask out a 13-year-old.

  118. KL Vreeland wrote:

    Thank you for this post. As a survivor of the teenage trials and tribulations, and as an elementary educator I loved this blog. I wish we could use this in sex education for youngsters. It amazes me that in today’s society such brutality and ignorance prevail. What I am also amazed at is the compassion and abilities of the best of our best. Together we can make this a better place, one blog, one story and one life at a time. PLHX2 (peace, prosperity, love, leisure, health and happiness always

    KLV

  119. FG wrote:

    Thank you so much for posting this piece Latoya! It’s incredible the number of stories I’ve heard over the years regarding “Not Rape” experienced by young girls and women. This is a very insightful and important essay that illustrates the small ways in which women and girls are violated everyday.

  120. sweet_baby_t wrote:

    I had no idea what I was getting into when I began reading this article. I thought that I had come to terms with my own Not Rapes at the hands of my brother and his friends, but I know somewhere in the back of my mind that what happened to me warped my sense of self, robbed me of my self-esteem and forever shaped the way I would view “love”. I try not to dwell on those memories, but today, after reading this article, I can’t look away. Into that dark place we go.

    When I was 5, my mom moved my brother Steven (2 1/2 years older) and I to Virginia from Florida because she couldn’t make it on her own after breaking up with our father. My older half-brother, Mike, was 18 at the time and living with Grandma.

    Steve and I had a contentious relationship at the best of times. He was jealous of me from the day I was born, trying to kill me multiple times as an infant and toddler (no lie!).. he ripped apart my crib when I was a week old, put me in the clothes dryer a few months later, then hung me in a pillowcase on the clothes line and even tried to cut my head off with hedge clippers when we moved to VA. As adults (I’m now 33), we talk when we have to, but not much at all since Mom died in 2005. I wonder why she never had him institutionalized.

    Anyway…. the winter we first moved up to VA, my grandma put us all in one bedroom of her 4-BR house until we could find a place of our own. My mom had an old twin bed by the window, while my brother and I shared a queen. We lived like this for a few months, until my brother’s bedwetting got to be too much for me (I remember waking up one night, soaked all over one side and yelling “Get your pissy butt out of the bed!” ).

    Eventually my mom managed to buy a new set of twin beds, and set one up for my brother on the closed-in upper deck my grandpa had built on top of the back porch. I can’t remember if anything happened with him before or after the “Winter Event” as I call it, but I remember that one incident very clearly. I found myself one winter’s night, in my brother’s bed with my little nightie pulled up over my hips, no panties and him on top of me with no pajama pants on.

    Mom wasn’t home yet, obviously; she was an LPN who worked the 3-11 shift at the local hospital. It was nighttime, Grandma was in bed and we were supposed to be asleep, too. The overhead light was on… it was glaring against the white ceiling, so bright it was like a small sun. I was cold… the were small vents on the floor that were open to the chilly outside air to encourage circulation (the deck was built in the 1950s before Air Conditioning was standard).

    I still have no idea how I had gotten into his bed, but it must have been by choice. He always managed to sucker me into things, even though I had an innate distrust of him. At 5 yrs old, I didn’t understand at all what he was doing to me, but I must have known that something wasn’t quite right. It wasn’t violent; he didn’t hurt me or make me cry like he would later in life, so why is this what sticks with me instead of the more joyous memories that I should have of my first snowy winter ?

    I remember the feeling of his little member pushing into me, him asking me “Does it feel good?” and me not answering because I had no answer. I don’t recall how long it went on, whether he orgasmed or how I got back to my bed. I never told my mom or Grandma because he wasn’t picking on me like usual so it didn’t seem like a big deal at the time and I didn’t even think of it until the next spring.

    That spring day, Steve was playing outside with two of his male friends, Curtis and Tootie, and I for some inexplicable reason was out there as well. Out of the blue, he suggested to his friend Curtis that he have a look at my girlie parts. Grandma had azalea bushes in front of the house that were just big enough for a little kid to hide behind, so Curtis and I went behind the bush (see what I mean about my gullability?) and I sat on his basketball. I don’t remember how my panties and shorts got off, but the next thing I know Curtis is all up between my legs looking at me while I was bent backwards over the ball supporting my upper body on my hands. Steve and Tootie looked on from above us on the front porch. It didn’t last long because they were afraid of getting caught and after a few moments, I pulled my shorts up and dusted the dirt off myself. Again, I didn’t understand… again, I didn’t tell anyone. It seems like I was destined to be a victim my whole life.

    A couple of years later we had rented our own house catacorner to Grandma (I couldn’t have been more then 8), dinner was fast approaching and Steve wasn’t home from playing with his friends (as usual) so mom sent me out to find him (not usual). I went straight to my first suspect, another of his friends named Choo who lived right in front of Grandma, across the street. 3 houses away from where I live…

    I had never been in their house before, so I admit my curiousity played a role in my downfall. I knocked on the door and Choo answered…Steve wasn’t there, but did I want to come in and look around? I knew my mother was expecting a quick return, but I went in. It was dark, with very little furniture and terribly messy… It looked like hobos lived there, not a family of 5. I looked around quickly, and was on my way out to continue the search for my brother when Choo grabbed me and held me down on the stinky sofa in the front room.

    I remember I was wearing purple pedalpushers (called Capri pants today) and while he didn’t take my clothes off, he still forced himself between my legs and ground his hips against mine. I can still to this day remember how my little body hurt. I cried, and screamed for his brother Pervis to help me, but he was just 3 or 4 at the time and obviously didn’t understand; he just stood there with his big brown eyes wide open crying because I was crying, watching his brother steal the last bit of childhood I ever had.

    After a short time, maybe 30 seconds, I managed to push him away and ran out of the door and down the steps. I slowed down as I passed Grandma’s house, wiping my flaming face on my shirt, feeling shame and anger burn in my chest and nausea work its magic on my stomach. I knew I had been violated, but I sort of felt like it was my fault for being stupid enough to go in the house in the first place. My legs ached and my crotch throbbed. I felt like I had invited it, so I sucked it up. Each hurt adds up though.

    I don’t remember most of my childhood and adolescence. I think I spent a great deal of it scared and depressed which led to a lot of loneliness. There were no other girls in my neighborhood to play with (there was Myosha, but mom said her family was trashy as proved by my brother and her losing their virginity together on our living room sofa when he was 12), so I buried my nose in books and endured my brother’s many other tortures (he stole my pocket money, called me terrible names, hit me at random and told lies on me too many times to count). Mom kept taking him to counselors and he kept acting out and I kept getting ignored.

    When I was 19, I tried to bring closure to these hurts by confronting my brother about his horrible behavior toward me. I wrote a short story, a fictional biography and let him read it. It had been on my mind for a while as he had been accused two years earlier of molesting a 5-year-old girl that my mother was babysitting (he pleaded Not Guilty and got 5 years house arrest). He swore he didn’t remember molesting me and therefore couldn’t offer me any apology. WTF??? I was even more hurt and depressed after that, all hopes dashed to the floor. That semester at college I earned 1 B-,1 D+, and 4 Fs, and spent the following summer in therapy. I’ve been through therapy 4 times since for varying reasons, but I only told the counselor about the abuse that first time; Paxil, Prozac, Wellbutrin, and Zoloft have become familiar names to me..

    As for Steve, he got married to his high school sweetheart who for some strange reason stuck with him through all that; they now have 3 children, 2 boys and 1 girl. Every two years he has to report to the courthouse to have his photo updated on the sex offender record. Is it possible for a tiger to change its stripes? Can the wicked truly repent and go on to lead a virtuous life? I admit that I am afraid for my niece.

    Oh, and I still never told my mom. She died in 2005 still believing that he was innocent, but I have doubts that will never leave me.

  121. JWest wrote:

    Thank you for this piece. It’s an important story that so many women go through but so little are willing to talk about. Until we start getting these stories out there and convincing others that this behavior is wrong, it will continue.

    You also really brought home the perceived roles of male and female behavior in this society. I do think that until we teach boys to treat women with respect, these types of predatory behaviors will continue. You’ve certainly made me think about what I will talk to any future children I may (male and female) have about sex and responsibility.

  122. kim wrote:

    wow. its so weird that no one has ever talked about this subject. i have personally experienced many of these things that you are writing about, i never knew what to call it … all i knew was that it made me feel like a dirty slut for the last nine years of my life… and now i somehow feel a bit better and less alone.

  123. britt wrote:

    moving essay…your point about an institutionalized rape culture is a very serious, and very real issue.

  124. yashka wrote:

    Wow. Thank you so much for the essay, LaToya. I read it, and all the comments, and realized that even in middle age, there’s not a day that goes by when I don’t remember my own not-rape. Being able to only partially remember is its own type of torture. Voices inside my head tell me, “It really wasn’t that bad,” or “Maybe you’re making it up.” The only confirmation that I’m not is a childhood friend who remembers me telling her about it. But when I get really crazy, I start thinking that maybe I made it all up then, as a kid.

    My not-rapist was a family member; his wife is pregnant. He is four years older than me. I can’t figure out whether his not-rapes were a sign he’s a pedophile or a woman-harasser; I guess there’s the chance he grew out of his behavior.

    My family would never believe that anything happened to me. What can I do to protect his future child? Do I have to become his friend in order to spend time with him and his family and watch out for signs of abuse? Should I threaten him?

  125. Marlene wrote:

    thank you so much for writing this article. Since I was 11, I have been afraid to speak up about what happened to me. My parents heard part of the story and said, “They just don’t know how to express their feelings…they probably like you.” I’ve had nightmares to this day about the harrassment that in the dreams turns into a rape, but have always felt like it was my fault. I didn’t make a fuss or cry….I didn’t tell anyone till years later and am just now being able to talk about it without breaking down in tears or starting to shake. Thank you for opening eyes to this “not rape” epidemic that IS just as harmful to children, men, and women everywhere as rape is.

  126. sharon wrote:

    This post is SO true. I can remember an older man showing interest in me when I was about 14. He told me he was almost sure he was “in love” with me but would only know if we “went all the way”. I became a teen in the 60’s and was rather naive but I knew what going all the way meant and knew I was never going to do it until I got married (thank you, Catholic nuns).

    That said, there are many girls who think that it’s cool to have an older man interested. My granddaughter is one of them and she is only 13. She doesn’t go anywhere without a parent or grandparent except to slumber parties which is where she met this guy. So far she hasn’t snuck out to see him or gone anywhere alone with him. I’m sending her this website so she can be more informed. NOTHING is more informational than this and nothing has hit home more – about the ways of older men when trying for a younger girlfriend.

  127. Becky wrote:

    I’ve experienced a not rape myself. I was not even a teenager but old enough to feel completely freaked out.

    This article was very moving and thought-provoking.

  128. BK wrote:

    Reading this was quite interesting, intense and not surprising (to me at least).

    At the age of 9 I was in vacation care at my school, with a friend on the playground and man came over to us and began chatting. Being 9 we didn’t think a bad thing about the situation. He then proceeded to show us his penis, and told us not to be scared. We jumped down from the playground and told our teachers who were actually quite far away. Police were called, and they searched the area, then asked us some questions. one of them being, was he wearing a condom? we were 9. I had no idea what he was talking about. I didn’t even know that what this man did was implying sex, or what sex even was.
    For about 5 years after that I was afraid of older men. and eventually the fear sort of dissipated but then I got into high school. I remember an occasion where boys in my class were purposefully throwing pens onto the floor so they could then bend down and look up my school skirt. I didn’t say anything to them, because well, if i did, they would tease me and not be my “friends” anymore. the teacher in the class that day then asked me to come and speak to him for a second, what he proceeded to say to me was something along the lines of “maybe you should not let the boys do that, its not good for girls to let boys do that etc etc”. i went back to my seat feeling…embarrassed.

    I remembered that occasion after reading this essay and I suddenly realized/thought, “hey, why didn’t he ever speak to the boys and tell them to stop, and make them be embarrassed for what they were doing?” It has never occurred to me before, but now it has made me quite angry, and upset.

    Also, I think that the key thing to stopping things like this from happening is, open, non judgmental conversation about sex between children and parents. I really think it is. I think I did a lot more stupid things in early high school simply because nobody was willing to talk to me about what was going on and to tell me what to watch out for and what was actually a negative situation. And then having nobody to be able to ask, other than friends who knew just as little, about these situations.

  129. Anonymous wrote:

    Thank you.

  130. Jha wrote:

    @ Phaegan: I’ve only had one not-rape experience, but even then, I also have the same desire to kill someone else if they ever attempt something on me. Sometimes I fantasize about cracking body parts. It makes me feel like a freak to know I harbour such thoughts, but I feel so much less alone now knowing that there is someone else out there who reacts with the same sort of anger that I do towards the constant threat of sexual violence.

    I wish there was some other alternative but sometimes it feels that violent people only understand their wrongs when responded to with violence.

  131. Tyra D. wrote:

    I and my two closest friends spent one night while we were in college sharing our stories of “non rape.” When I was about 4, I had been sexually assaulted by the son (about 18-21) of a woman who babysat me while my parents worked. in my memory, I see everything happening on the same day. I would be fondled a few more times after that by various male cousins until I was about 12. I spent my formative years, literally, afraid to walk down the street. One friend was molested by a relative and the other had been taken advantage of by an older camp counselor (she had convinced her young self that she was confident and sexy at 15; he was 18 or 19)

    This article should be required reading in every middle/high school curriculum for boys and girls.

  132. K.I.M. wrote:

    This was powerful. Rape seems to rarely be the most extreme case as detailed in this essay. It’s the small instances…the woman who is raped by her boyfriend. Nobody would believe that – that would never hold up in court.

    Not enough women share their experience and acknowledge what happened. We carry the fault, the blame; however, it is NOT our weight to carry.

    I’m sorry this happens. I’m sorry this happened. to me.

  133. Scott wrote:

    It really is abhorrent how pervasive this contemptible behavior is. When I was still dating, I think I only got to know one woman who did NOT have a story ranging from coersion to outright rape. Who are all these jerks who can look themselves in the mirror knowing they are repugnant grubs who have to resort to force for sex or find joy in abusing someone else? I always thought of rapists as rare deviants. To read posts like this, it makes me wonder if I’M the exception for not being the rapist type. Well, I’m glad at least that J found out the hard way he could NOT do “whatever he wanted” and got to see the inside of a jail cell for what he did.

  134. mizmalcolm wrote:

    When I was ten I fell in love with a girl who already had the kind of looks that caused men driving by to have accidents. I never had much shape by comparison and over the years I was both jealous and relieved that I didn’t have to contend with all the baggage that came with that body. We each had our own ‘not rape’ experiences that tainted our sexual development – this was back in the 60’s and 70’s – and knew better than to tell our own fathers, much less any higher authority. Thank you for putting this out there. Things are changing. Consider yourself an agent of that change.

  135. lunanoire wrote:

    Latoya and others, thanks for being willing to share your experiences.

    Though I am tall and grown, I still wear sneakers as much as possible in order to be able to run away if needed. I was followed on two separate occasions by different people in one night, and it has affected my presentation choices ever since (makeup, glasses vs. contacts, pants vs. skirts). When in public I often look for an exit strategy in case things get uncomfortable or dangerous.

  136. Dinah wrote:

    You’ve done a great service by telling your story. If you’d like to spread it and allow more girls and young women to read your brave words and hopefully be warned by them, we’d love to republish on The Dinah Project

  137. Sarah wrote:

    Thank you for this excellent post/essay. It made me cry. A story that I think every young person should read.

  138. mike wrote:

    This story sounds fabricated. First it is difficult to believe the author actually knows personally so many victms. Next it is impossible to believe these men could really be so stupid in some cases. For example a 19 year old who has impregnated an 11 year old has to live in fear of being prosecuted for statory rape so not only would he try to avoid his victim he certainly wouldn’t antagonize her by calling her a slut when they did run into each other. Just to over the top to be believable by most.

    Mod Note
    – Have you been ignoring the responses of the women reading this post? Have you talked to the women in your life? Yes, I knew each and every person behind all the stories you see here. The rape case was covered by the local news – it is available in the Washington Post archives. And where I grew up, 19 year olds impregnating 11 year olds only had to live in fear if he fucked with the girl whose parents had money and a lawyer, neither of which my friend had. – LDP

  139. Kimmie wrote:

    Thank you so much for writing this moving essay. I’m nearly tearing up because I’m also remembering my Not Rape experience and knowing how rape and not rape happens ever so frequently. I’m sorry if this is a long post, but I’ve never put these words down.

    He was one of my oldest brother’s friend. He was funny and I developed a crush on him. I was 13 when I met him, and he just turned 17. I didn’t really see him again until a year later. I found out he was my friend’s cousin, and started flirting with him online. We ended up having an innocent teen flirtation and I got bored of him.

    Fast forward to when I was 16, I started talking with him again and he became a good friend. But it got a bit weird. Sometimes when he was over hanging out with my brother, and my brother ended up doing his own thing. He would sneak into my bed when I was asleep, and I’d wake up with him next to me. I thought it was a bit weird and awkward, but he wouldn’t get out of my bed and I didn’t want to scream or let anyone know. I knew him, and I trusted him and figured nothing would happen. He only wanted to talk…This happened for quite a bit off and on. Then my brother actually walked in on him talking to me in bed, but apparantly my brother trusted him too and figured we were just flirting or something and hopped in bed with us too. I thought I was helping my friend since he was going through a break up, and then rejection.

    Then one night I woke up (I was 18 and still had not had a boyfriend or anything at all) and there he was. But this time it was much different. He wanted me to kiss him and I didn’t want to. I never ever kissed anyone and wanted to save it for some guy I liked. He wouldn’t stop asking, and I was so sleepy. He pulled a fast one on me and kissed me. I got so mad and he left. A few days later he came back and asked for a kiss. I didn’t want to still, and he kept on conjoling me with how I’ve already lost my first kiss so it didn’t matter. I was so sleepy I gave in and kissed him.

    It got to the point where he actually asked me to kiss him down there. Again I didn’t want to, but he kept on insisting and said it was just a peck. Once again, I was so sleepy and I did it. Needless to say, he kept coming back and demanded more. I was dumb and sleepy and gave him more. I ended up giving him oral sex.

    Yes, I felt ashamed of myself and guilt. But then somehow I manipulated myself to not feel the shame by making myself like him again. I figured that I had already done the deed, and why would it matter if I did it again? Plus, I rationed that he was right. He said that this was beneficial to me in that when I found someone, I would know how to kiss and give oral. That summer he got the best blow jobs. It wasn’t until I met a guy I actually liked that I broke it off. He was mildly surprised and didn’t put up a fight.

    I blamed myself for letting it get out of hand. That it was my own fault for being stupid and not strong enough to flat out refuse him. After all, I didn’t stop him, did I? And I made myself believe that I wanted it too, so I excused him for his behavior and we stayed friends. I only asked him to not tell anyone ever.

    I never told a single friend what happened until one year later. I couldn’t tell my brothers what happened-it wasn’t like they were going to believe me. I definitely couldn’t tell my parents, because they’d blame me and condemn me. I couldn’t tell anyone because I was afraid, and the fact that I did it multiple times didn’t help. I can honestly say that even though being 18 means that I was an adult and should have known better, that I didn’t feel like I was an adult. My parents treated me like I was a 12 year old, so I had the mentality of a kid.

  140. Lynn wrote:

    Ugh!! I’m so amazed, really, that men find it hard to believe this is such a common experience for women. It scares me, because it forces me to believe that most men don’t see the harm in “not rape” or even actual rape.

    Here is a link from an (admittedly) old study that says just that. A lot of men would rape if they thought they could get away with it:
    http://www.dianarussell.com/menrape.html

    About 2 1/2 years ago, I worked a workers’ rights campaign with several other organizers. One of them had been acquaintance-raped by a supervisor. We sat in a room, seven women, doing our best to comfort her and eventually every single woman in that room told her story of how she’d been raped or fought off an attacker. I wept along with them for two reasons. First, the gut punch I felt at realizing that in this tiny group EVERY single woman had been violated in such a horrible way. Second, because that day was the first day I ever come to view a couple of my earliest sexual experiences as… I didn’t know what to call it. I wasn’t raped, but it sure as hell felt like it. For now, I’m coming to terms with the many not rapes I’ve experienced.

    Latoya, you are an amazing writer and an amazing woman. Thank you for this essay. I will be sure to get the book.

  141. Deb wrote:

    As with almost every woman who is honest with herself, we’ve all had some sort of contact that was inappropriate. When I was 4 my male babysitter tried his best, but I hid, yelled every time a light went past the driveway, etc. His fear and guilt kept me safe. Two years later I told my grandmother and she told me that things like that didn’t happen to good girls and that I should keep the “story” to myself.

    I hadn’t been in the Army 6 months before I was raped. I reported it to my first sergeant and he told me that since it was known that I had had sex with someone else nothing could be done. Boy, was my rapist surprised three months later when the MPs arrested and he was convicted for drugs. Ten years at Leavenworth for him suited me just fine and I’ve been able to laugh about it for over 30 years. He may not have suffered for what he did to me, but he certainly suffered for something else that I knew that he did.

    It was many years before I heard the term “revenge is a dish best served cold.” At no time have I ever felt guilty about being raped (and I shouldn’t have to) , just as I don’t feel guilty about making sure he paid some kind of price for using my body like a piece of equipment solely designed for his enjoyment.

    Latoya, this was a great post about a great subject. Thank you for writing it and I will be making sure that the girls that I know who are of that age to be defenseless victims will be able to read your post. ASAP.

  142. Pratik Bubna wrote:

    Uh…i m left speechless after reading this…a powerful essay …

  143. Pip wrote:

    We need to educate MEN and BOYS not to do these things, rather than always putting the onus on women and girls to ‘defend’ themselves.

  144. ACT wrote:

    I remember when I was not raped in the 7th grade. I didn’t know what had happened but told my mom becasue I just knew something was wrong with what a boy in my grade did to me. Since it wasn’t rape my parents went to the school and not the cops.

    The female dean told my parents that this is what boys at this age do.

    I pushed the assault into the back of my mind and every now and then it creeps back in to my thoughts. I was never blamed for what happened or felt that I did something wrong in the first place. But I never forgot what that woman told me and my parents: that this is what boys at this age do.

    It isn’t just about teaching girls how to be safe, protect themselves and to come forward when raped or not raped, it’s just as important to teach the boys how they should and shouldn’t behave.

  145. anonymous wrote:

    1. Thank you for this piece. I am one of the lucky ones, and honestly cannot recall ever feeling the tumult of feelings and emotions that you and all of the fellow posters have felt caused by a rape or not rape. I needed this, I think, to open my eyes to the reality most women face.

    2. I am going to address Doug’s post for a second. I agree, the laws should always favor the victims. They have to. Unfortunately, a victim would rarely ever succeed in a he-said/she-said legal battle otherwise. However, because of that, it is true that it is easy for someone to cry-wolf that results in the punishment of not only potential imprisonment but also the shame of being labeled (and even named and pictured on a website) for the rest of his life. I have a dear sweet, kind, gentle friend that this happened to. I know fully that he was wrongly accused, but now not only does he live with this label but so does his daughter and the rest of his family, because it follows him.

    I’m not saying Doug wasn’t a little callous in his remark; I’m just saying it does happen. I wish there were a way that it didn’t. But, I’d rather have people wrongly accused of that than have victims’ never be able to come forward. I just wish there were a way to reconcile the two. And all I can say Doug is that there are plenty of kind, honest, decent women out there who won’t be “vindictive” or turn on you or even have the personality to want to do the things you mention. Maybe you should place your focus more on finding a woman like that, than on worrying about how some crazy one that you have have chosen is going to turn on you.

  146. anonymous wrote:

    Just to clarify –

    Doug, you make choices in who you choose to be with. And it sounds like you are making the wrong choices. If you were with normal, decent women, like the ones I know, and doing nothing wrong, you should have nothing to worry about. (That is, clearly, in stark contrast to a woman who is doing absolutely nothing wrong, choosing to be in normal society, not even in a sexual situation and still has to worry about being not raped or worse. Really? Did you think your comment wouldn’t draw a huge backlash?)

  147. sybann wrote:

    To every man who think we’re fabricating this stuff – we couldn’t possibly make this up. It’s now statistically three out of every four women you know that will be subjected to some form of assault or sexual abuse sometime in her life. My mother, my sister, my friends, myself: all have experienced rape, date rape, and very frequently “not rape” because it’s so easy to get away with.

    Latoya, thanks so much for your thoughtful piece.

    And thanks to all the thoughtful men who will help raise the next generation of respectful sons who will learn how to communicate better.

    To the rest: Fuck off and die, painfully and alone.

  148. GainSight wrote:

    We need to educate the children, male and female. The problem is not just young men being eager. The problem is also young women feeling being sexually promiscious is a way to be in control. This attitude is often times created by their ‘mature’ female role models. The tough answer is to provide a factual detailed education to male and female alike on the consequences of their actions, leaving all religious and moral leanings out of the education.
    Girls need to see pictures of “This is you as a cute 12 year old. This is you as a tired 12 year old with a child.” Boys need to see “This is you as the never made it to college kid who had to drop out to support your error in judgement.”
    There is guilt/blame on both sides of the sex line (More so to the males.) The answer is explicit education about the action and the consequences of sex.
    In the end, the best recourse is to scare and embolden the children with knowledge of the great pleasures and greater consequences of their actions.
    And when it comes to the predatory adults who prey on the naive young youth, it is too late to educate them. When caught, they should publically suffer the harshest puishments.

  149. j potter wrote:

    Thank you so much for such a well written and powerful piece. I definitely have a Not Rape story or two to add, as well as the fact that I am a female bartender and have told I “need to get f@#ked – it’ll help your sense of humor” or that I MUST be a lesbian if I turn down the advances of a slimy, drunk, idiotic old man.
    Bravo to you – I’ll send this link to my female friends to read and send to their friends!

  150. Mym wrote:

    I’m going to share this with my 18 year old daughter, and all her friends.

    All this and more happened to me, and I kept my secret for years. I’m sure writing this was hard, but I applaud you for your eloquence.

    Keep moving forward and good luck!

  151. Alice wrote:

    Thank you for writing this. It put words to something I’ve felt for a while. I have no clear memories Not Rapes, though they may have happened and I am simply not looking back far enough.

    Stories like the heartbreaking ones posted here make me very, very glad I went to a small, liberal private school where I was so unpopular no one would want to sully themselves by touching me. I spent my kindergarten through junior high years unpopular and inside, with books. There just was an opportunity for me to be assaulted.

    In high school, my tomboy tendencies and loud, immensely geeky conversations with male friends kept assailants and suitors alike away, and I was happy with that.

    Question- is it true that shaving your head cuts down on catcalls?

  152. lee wrote:

    You would figure that with the majority of urban/crowded-suburban young men being predominately raised in female single parent households, that their collective respect for women should have markedly increased since the rise of feminism. It seems to have steadily and gradually declined from the 60’s onward.
    Young womens respect for themselves, from the same demographic, seems to have declined as well.
    Tie in? Lack of father in household ?
    Is this a topic worthy of discussion?

    I know it’s difficult…………..

    The freedom to choose for your child is a mighty task.
    The guy with all the hip , cool, funny stuff to say. he knows just what to say cuz he uses those lines on lots of girls.
    the nice smart guy you can count on is eeeeaaaaassssyyyyy to find.
    Choose carefully.
    I am not a christian. total pagan.
    We pagans have a tradition of the importance of respecting both genders .

  153. R wrote:

    Thank you so much for this essay. I have already started to talk with my friends about what you say about watching out for young girls. That is such an obvious thing that I don’t know why I hadn’t thought of it before.

    I was raped when I was 15, in the early 70s. I was chased by a man with a knife who put it to my throat and dragged me into a construction site. The police made me repeat every detail in front of my parents. They made me sit between them in their squad car to drive back to the scene of the crime. They treated me as if I was lying. From something he said I had an idea where my rapist worked, but I don’t think the police ever bothered to follow up on the info. I only dealt with male officers. I hadn’t voluntarily reported the crime, and the police investigation was even more traumatic than the rape.

    My parents seemed to be ashamed of me. After the police investigation ended they never mentioned it again – and haven’t ever mentioned it, in the 35 years since it happened. Nobody ever suggested counselling. None of my friends were sympathetic; I was treated like a freak at school. My best friend told me she’d read in a magazine that every woman who is raped “wants it” at some level.

    I repressed what happened so thoroughly that I simply didn’t think of it for years and years. When I was 21 I was at a women’s meeting and the speaker asked women in the audience who had been raped to put up their hand. When I found my hand was raised, I was so profoundly shocked that I started shaking. I spent a year writing and thinking about it until I came to terms with what happened, and I feel completely past it now. But it shaped my whole life, and is part of why I never had kids and why I’m single.

    I don’t know if it’s related, but I always loathed being gawked at by guys. I always dressed in ways to minimize it, but there was no getting away from guys who openly leered (and I was never a beauty). I have been groped several times as well. I think “not rape” is a good term for that. It’s a horrible demeaning experience, and yet to watch TV and ads you’d think it was what women want.

  154. DeborahBrent wrote:

    Thank you. My husband doesn’t understand why I spent the years when women try to look their best I chose to be overweight to obese. I’m now ready to shed the weight.

    I was 14 and felt up by an older man from church and a relative. I finally told my mother about a year ago. I’m now 54.

    I don’t know of a woman of my generation or younger who have not had to deal with the NOT RAPE.

  155. Jayme wrote:

    Wow… Never has a story touched me so deeply and been such a mirror image of my own life. Not only are we seemingly almost exactly the same age, but out teen years are so similar its scary. I experienced more than a few of these “Not rapes” and was taught to believe that boys will be boys and not to let it bother you. From losing virginity at 13, to a guy who was 18 and thought it was okay to give me alcohol and convincing words turn my very strong no into a weak and scared yes. To a very close friend “not raping” me and proving his strength to me much like Puffy did you. Everything in your story is something familiar to me, and I so hope we can teach our children that none of that is okay, and not be scared to tell us when someone makes them feel unsafe. Seems we were almost the same child in a different part of the country. I’m sorry you experienced it, but proud that you can talk about it. It really DOES give me some peace to know I wasn’t alone.

  156. Adam wrote:

    I found this through a friend on lj. I’m copying and saving it for when my neice -age 8- (and newborn daughter) are old enough to read it. Thank you for having the courage to talk aobut this.

  157. alex wrote:

    i need to add one more story to this list – just as an example of what men *can* do. when i was in ninth grade, i volunteered to work backstage on a school play. an older boy i worked with joked about “slicing my nipples off”. i laughed nervously, not knowing what else to do, aware of an audience of teenage boys older than myself listening to the conversation. another boy who had listened to the “joke” told me it wasn’t okay, and told me that he would report it to the (male) teacher in charge. the next day, the teacher came to me, distinctly uncomfortable, unable to look me in the eye… but he told me that the older boy had been disciplined and that i should let him know if anything else happened. i didn’t even say reply. i didn’t know what to say, either to this male authority or the boy who stepped up. but i was so relieved, and so grateful to that boy for speaking up.

  158. Andrea wrote:

    OMG – God bless you and all the other young ladies… I’m Mum to 3 young ladies – one 19 in a wonderful relationship to a young man whom I’m sure she’ll marry when she finishes University – the other two on the cusp of their teen years. I am ever vigilant in discussing things of this nature with them – in a manner which is age-appropriate.. so far so good.
    My heart breaks for any young lady who has been mis-used – manipulated by a sex-craved testosterone laden monster… after all – why else sould God give men such large strong hands? They should use them on themselves.
    Excellent post – stay strong – and good for you hun –
    Sending much love,
    Mum.

  159. Anon Guy wrote:

    Great read – i applaud the guts it takes to post something like this, and express nothing but love, sympathy and support for those that have endured such attrocities as are discussed in this article.

    That being said, I know I am not the first to state this (I know joan #11 hit on this quite well), but feel that it needs reiteration:

    This is not something that affects only those of female gender identity and is not always initiated by men.

    I was not raped as a 3 year old by a much older babysitters daughter, and have had several not rape experiences later as a young boy.

    I am actually quite fine now, (although I admit that my ability form healthy relationships with women is still tenuous and I think this may relate) but it took years of healing to come to grips with much of it.

  160. Tamara T wrote:

    First of all, thank you.

    It has been something in my head for years, but never was able to put it into words as you did.

    I have a teen daughter. She has been pregnant twice. And each time I raise the issue about male pressure to have sex, she even says that she is the one to blame. What to do here? How come even she believes she has all the fault? That she should have know better? She is hardly 15! I can´t believe how society puts so much on our shoulders.

    I just want to say thank you again.

    And just want to add that each time a man asks me why women have “their day” and why men don’t… Well, here is another huge reason why. We still have to deal with them and their way of flashing their POWER over us, in our faces.

  161. emelon wrote:

    After reading every post on this message board, it’s hard to pick just one person’s story to relate to. Upon leaving high school, I remember learning the statistic that 1 out of every 4 American women reports having experienced a sexual assault. My source stressed the word “reports,” which meant next to nothing to me at the time.
    I attended an all-female college, and was horrified to learn that nearly every other 18-year-old girl I spoke to my freshman year, had experienced some sort of sexual crime against them: some were molested by their mother’s boyfriends, some were date-raped by a boy they had a crush on, others were exploited because even though they didn’t physically look like a girl and chose to dress like a boy, they “deserved” to have sex forced upon them by a man like a girl should, a la “Boys Don’t Cry.” Not a single person in my vast social circle had escaped such a fate. Not even one. This simple fact made me reconsider my own experiences. The very first, when I was no more than 9 years old, and can still not bring myself to tell anyone, not even anonymously, didn’t bother me so much. After all, it seemed innocent enough. Boys exploring their parts, girls learning about their own. It didn’t seem especially traumatic at the time. But with everyone else I knew terrified to tell their own, very similar stories, I began to realize that what happened to me was not right, in any sense of the word.
    The real “not rape” came my junior year of college. I’d willingly slept with a boy a few years older than me, mostly because my sisters (one younger and one younger) encouraged me to experience sex with more than just the one guy I’d dated through high school and with whom I’d recently ended a relationship. The sex was pathetic, by my present-day standards. There had been no condom, but luckily, for my sake, very little penetration either. My (younger) sister was appalled when I told her the next day what had happened, and still asks me to this day if I’ve used protection after every new guy I tell her about.
    A few weeks later, at the age of 20, I attended my first house party and drank alcohol for the first time with people I didn’t know (and therefore did not trust). It was here, that a friend of the man I had just spent the night with, took advantage of me while I was intoxicated, passed out on a sofa. He told me about how he was afraid to go home because his girlfriend beat him and convinced me to move to an empty bed upstairs. He proceeded to hold my wrists down behind my head as I begged him to let me please fall asleep. Eventually he did, after another girl opened up a door from an adjoining room asking if I was okay and needed any help. I told her that everything was fine, even though it clearly wasn’t. I fell asleep while my attacker used the bathroom, but I woke up some time later, unaware of how much time had elapsed, with my jeans around my ankles and him on top of me. “Why did you fuck my friend and not me,” he demanded. “Was I not good enough?” After a few minutes, he ran home to his girlfriend, and I am still not sure exactly what happened while I was unconcious.
    In the morning, I tried to tell my sister about the situation, but she took his defense, assuming that I had probably led him on. First thing, she took me to the local clinic, where I received emergency contraception, but no testing for STDs. I cried for hours afterward, and when my little brother asked what was wrong, I made sure to let him know that this behavior was never, never acceptable for a man.
    I found out several months later the guy I had originally, willingly slept with, along with another man, violently raped a close friend of mine, claiming her virginity. I never told her about my decision to have sex with him, for fear that I have betrayed her and enabled him, the rapist, in some way. After all, if I had not consented, would he have done the same thing to me?
    I reiterate the fact, that I made sure to tell both of my brothers, in graphic detail what happened to me and why, exactly, it was not okay. We, as women–the lovers, mothers, sisters, teachers of men–have a responsibility to make sure that our boyfriends, brothers, husbands, friends, roommates know the effects their actions have on us. We have the right to make them treat us well, without fear of them betraying the fragility of our trust.

  162. DivergentDana wrote:

    “It seems to have steadily and gradually declined from the 60’s onward.
    Young womens respect for themselves, from the same demographic, seems to have declined as well.”

    Um, proof, pls. And so this all becomes womens’ fault because they passed up nice smart guys for cool men with interesting things to say — as if these two categories were mutually exclusive (and if it wasn’t way easier for a smart boring man to make himself interesting than for an interesting dumb guy to make himself smart)? Dude, there HAS to be somewhere else you can take that “Ha ha, bishes, you reap what you sow” bull. Not to mention that rapists, harassers, child molesters and the like come in ALL guises and walks of life.. they’re not just stereotypical big, mean, brutish men with dysfunctional childhoods from broken homes.

  163. Taylor wrote:

    It took me three full years to tell the boy who raped me of my virginity that he had raped me. He had no idea. No idea that my “no” had been a real no, as if there is some other category of “no” i haven’t discovered yet. my friends encouraged me to continue a relationship with him, and it only ended when i was Not raped by an older man. I continued on to be in a relationship with this man, at first lying about my age (i was 17, he was 23, i told him i was 18). i felt for years that i deserved it when he humiliated me, degraded me, and finally raped me because i had willingly stayed with him and even asked for sex just prior to him raping me. but i didn’t realize that i had the right to change my mind, to say “no” and have it heard, to get up and leave and NOT be thrown back on the bed and forcefully entered.
    each of my rapists and Non rapists were wealthy and educated, and maybe even still to this day don’t view what they did to me as rape, or even Not rape.
    this article speaks to me on so many levels, and maybe will help me verbalize for the first time what happened to me so long ago but will be seared into my mind as long as i live.

  164. divia wrote:

    Thanks for sticking up for all women. You may not have been old enough, at 14, to do it then but you making up for it now.

    Still I remember the first time I was offered money for sex. Of course I was just a child and he..well, was not. The numerous times thereafter it stung slightly less, but it hurt every time. Somehow we are just suppose to put up with it. Just take it. Is that crazy or what? Still I can hear my friend a few years older than I say…”Just keep walking you’ll get used to it”

  165. Michelle wrote:

    What a heartfelt and well written article. As a rape/sexual assault counselor, I hear stories like this everyday and I know how brave you are for sharing your story. Breaking the silence will give many survivors their power back. Thank you for sharing!!!!

  166. Gem wrote:

    Thank you for this.

  167. Connie wrote:

    Thank you for writing this! It was a very interesting read, and quite informative as well. Although the chances of being raped by a total stranger are overwhemingly slim compared to the chances of being raped/assualted by a known male, it is ALWAYS BEST TO BE AWARE of your surroundings.

    And it is truly a shame that in the U.S., rape/sexual offenders don’t get more jailtime (life would be best, IMO). It’s horrible to the victims and their families to know that the offenders will be released in such a short time (and this happens very often too!)……….absolutely horrible that it happens.

  168. Rebecca wrote:

    Great essay. It was hard to read. I recently realized that I had been “not-raped” by my current boyfriend several years ago on a camping trip. He wanted to have sex on the beach after we’d arrived and set everything up. I was uninterested for a variety of reasons. But I still “consented” to it for only one reason: I had been a bit impatient with him earlier in the day and I thought that if I didn’t give in to his pleadings, then it would be some kind of tipping point and and he would want to leave me and then clearly the universe would implode (thanks paranoia and low self-esteem). Recently I called this experience what it was to his face; I knew that I had to be honest with both of us about what had occurred if our relationship was to go on. We are still together and now he knows A LOT more about consent.

  169. Charity wrote:

    Thank you for this. To will, scott, jim, and any other men who are reading and thinking, “wow, i had no idea,” please remember this piece when you see men/boys harassing women/girls, when your friends make comments about some girl’s ass, when some guy you know makes a rape joke. this needs to be shared with men so they can get a fucking clue, not just the women and girls we know and love.

  170. SunlessNick wrote:

    Very excellent essay. Thankyou for it.

  171. Ros wrote:

    Thank you for writing this essay. It’s a tough read, but as I was going through it, I kept having flashbacks to conversations with my friends.

    I’ve got experiences like this. Every woman I know has experiences like this.

    What hurts most is that it’s considered “normal”. I want better for my sister, and I want better for any daughters I may have. And I expect more from the world, dammit. We all deserve better than this.

  172. Ali wrote:

    For anyone still making it through all the comments:
    Please don’t just show this essay (or book) to your daughters/girlfriends/nieces/etc. Show this to the men in your life too. They need to see what we go through and how insidous it all is.

    In other words, I second Charity.

  173. zooeyibz wrote:

    And then there’s that whole other category: the actual rape that is just ‘Not Rape’ to the rest of the world because it didn’t involve someone dragging you into an alleyway…

    Sadly, our culture has managed to divorce sexuality from sexual pleasure. Girls are only taught to value their sexuality as a commodity to win male approval so how can they possibly know the difference between desire and coercion?

  174. Feminist Review wrote:

    This post and all of the amazing comments that have followed reminded me of Jennifer Baumgardner’s new I Was Raped campaign, for which she has designed a t-shirt and is fundraising in order to make a film. Perhaps it’s something that some of you will want to look into as a way to collect these powerful stories.

  175. Anon wrote:

    Thank you. This has been the most painful read of my life, but I hope it’ll prove to be cathartic. It’s painful to realise that this experience resonates with so many women. Painful to realise that there’s complete impunity. Painful to relive my own Not Raped instances, those hot-faced adolescent moments of shame and guilt.
    Even in my protected, upper-middle class world -or especially there, I don’t know- I’ve had this type of experience. Ranking all the way up from catcalls, lingering looks, cars slowing down, men blocking you in the street, men physically stopping you grabbing your arm or waist, men taking advantage of a crowded room or underground car, right up to sexual assault. And that’s not even getting into the dynamics of emotional blackmail or simply conveniently not checking for consent.
    I’ve been lucky in having very few serious things happen to me, but until not too long ago, I constructed those as being my fault.
    My fault that I ended up having sex with that initially interesting guy, holidaying in Costa Rica when we ended up in an isolated spot and he didn’t “hear” my no. Better give him what he wants and get it over with. Better to be humiliated than risk aggression or hurting his ego. My fault for ending up in that situation.
    My fault that the first guy I ever kissed kept pushing for just a little bit more and trod my boundaries several times. My fault, I should not have indicated sexual interest at all by kissing him.
    Bull.
    So thank you.

  176. Christa wrote:

    Thank you for that touching story. I myself experienced a Not-Rape experience when I was around 9-10. Sometimes, I feel as if that memory was just a figment of my imagination. And some days, I feel as if I could distinctly remember it.

    Thank you for sharing your story. At least, I know that even at that age, I wasn’t alone. Thank you.

  177. ennuh wrote:

    Such and amazing essay. I will repost.

  178. Danielle wrote:

    It can be quite difficult speaking up about a rape or a not rape, but I’m glad you have given this community your story. Having been through similar situations in my life I know how hard it must have been to write this, but hopefully it will spread like wildfire and help create awareness and a change of attitude about sex in society today.

    I’m appalled whenever I hear someone say “she brought it on herself.” Thats the worst assumption in the world. Are so many people blinded and think these things are acceptable just because of the way a female is dressed, the way she walks, or maybe simply because she’s a natural flirt? That doesn’t make it right, ever. When it comes to young women, I honestly fear for the future generations is the general way of thinking doesn’t start to change. Fashion magazines and clothing stores start selling less and less modest outfits for children and young women and because its fashion, their parents buy it for them. I’m not saying we all should be nuns, but if fashion keeps taking a turn for “more skin” then men need to be taught that just because the woman shows more skin, it doesn’t mean she’s “calling out to you to have sex with her.” I bring up with subject in specific because a year or so ago, here in Australia, one of the Muslim religions leaders here in Sydney commented over a rape case basically saying it was completely the woman’s fault because the way she walked with her hips swaying, the clothing she was wearing and the smiles she might give a man. It was cause of great upset and John Howard (the former Prime Minister) had a very public statement against the leader. The good thing? There are, thankfully some people who seem to be getting the idea of how things need to be change about how a gender views the other, but on the other side of the coin, as long as we have people in the world who thinks the woman is at fault, we’ll continue to have women hide their problems and be uncomfortable approaching a friend, family member or even police for help in their situation.

    I can tell you my own story. Its not always easy to stand up against someone and though I wish now, looking back, that I did, its something I have to live with daily. I was raped by a man who I’d been dating for a very short time when I was 18. He was 28 and against better judgement from my father who told me I shouldn’t see an older man of his age I decided to go on a few dates. He seemed like a nice guy, but I was wrong. I started to get both concerned and confused when he started calling me and telling me he’d pick me up at my house and then never show or call again and leave me waiting, nearly all night. It was at this point that I decided to snoop, he never was willing to disclose his job to me and so I figured maybe his job kept him away. I was right. He worked as a computer programmer and defence worker for the Department of National Security in the US (when I still lived there). From what I found out later, he worked on their defence missile systems, hardly someone I wanted to take to court, how would I know they wouldn’t cover things up?

    Well, a week later he came back and wanted to see me, he called me up and said we’d meet halfway and then he was going to take me for a surprise dinner. So I met him and left my car and got into his against my better judgement. Before this time he seemed a perfectly fine guy. Instead of dinner he took me too a motel, which confused me, although it was pretty far from where I’d normally driven and I had no idea where to go. He raped me. He left me there in the morning, he was gone, his car was gone, so I called a friend to get me and made up a story.

    It wasn’t until a few months later that I felt myself again, even if only a little. I finally told two of my close friends, but with the clause, “do not tell anyone.” Sometimes I wish I would have said something, though in this case, I don’t know what I would have done. I don’t know if I would have been strong enough to allow a court pick me apart and try and tear at my character and make me seem like some awful person. I didn’t know how I’d cope with that.

    After having such awful experiences with dating though near me I consoled myself with talking to a friend I’d started talking to online nearly six years back, on the hpnoe. We talked nearly everday and when I needed someone, he was there. I helped him clean up a previous drug problem and he helped me fix my life. He’s my husband now and we’ve been married for three years living in Australia. I can say, that while I still hold some sorrow for not having said something when it was still possible to make a difference, I am much more comfortable talking about my situation now then I was after it had happened. My parents know, although I’ve never told them much. In fact, when I moved overseas I gave them a book I filled out called “about me” and plugged it in there. They knew something was up when I stopped seeing the man, but they never asked, thinknig it was just a typical break-up. I am thankful to have supportive parents who have tried to help me through this as best as they can.

    I’ve had depression for a good while now, but things are starting to look up and slowly get better.

    The fear, depression, silence and falase assumptions need to stop, not to mention the way the courts deal with these crimes needs to change. Someone who has already dealt with both mental and physical tramua should NEVER be put through such vile questioning. If they didn’t break the victim down to nothing, more women might be willing to stand up for whats happened and speak out before its too late to have something done about it.

    -Danielle

  179. Pope Lizbet wrote:

    @ lee 152:

    If we Pagans have suuuuch a tradition of respecting women, why are Pagan festivals so often places where women are ogled, harassed, or pressured into sexual activity? Why am I teaching workshops on this very problem to Pagans?

    Goddess worship don’t erase rape culture. If you really want to show respect for women, try actually…showing respect for women, by not invalidating their experiences.

  180. Glynnis wrote:

    Thank you for writing about this.

  181. Emily wrote:

    I can’t say that I’ve ever experienced a “not-rape,” but I have had unwanted attention.

    It seems to come with the territory of being a girl.

    I worked retail for many years, and I know the heart-pounding anxiety of when you’re closing by yourself, and a man who stares just a little too long comes into the store. How you hope someone else will come in so it’s not just you and him.

    I used to knit at work, and I always made sure I used my smallest needles, so I would have something to defend myself should the need arise.

    Guys just don’t know what it’s like to live in constant watchfulness for anything that even seems remotely threatening.

    And I don’t consider myself a paranoid person.

  182. Teresa wrote:

    Thank you for sharing this amazing reality check. Gutsy, honest, and similar to SO many women’s experience. You are a strong woman of courage. Thank you again for sharing.

  183. Lauris wrote:

    The problem with Not Rape is that it lies on an indeterminable position on the sex spectrum. My experience, if it can even be called Not Rape, started when I was twelve.

    My older brother was my best friend until I was ten or so. Around that time he hit puberty, and I feel like it skewed him somehow. The kid who’d carried around a stuffed dog named Spottie was now screaming at me if I bumped into him in the hall and punching me for standing too close. Sometimes he scared me, but at that point the days when we’d play with stuffed animals together still felt like yesterday and I was inclined to forgive him. I chose to stick to a policy of ignoring him unless he was nice, which was almost never.

    One day when I was twelve, we were watching TV together when he turned to me and asked if he could feel my breasts. “I just want to know what they feel like,” he said. I was hesitant. “I’ll keep my eyes closed the whole time,” he promised. And that was that. I felt like he was asking me for something so paltry that I was obligated to let him. I lay down on my back. He pushed my shirt up and felt up my breasts. I sat there and tried not to fidget too much. Ten minutes later, he withdrew, turned away, and continued watching TV.

    I didn’t feel violated. I still don’t. My brother was just curious; he didn’t have any breasts of his own to feel, so he turned to me instead. To me it didn’t even feel sexual. What came after did.

    My brother had become increasingly volatile from the time I was ten until I was twelve, but after that, it was like he had gone completely insane. I remember feeling so confused and hurt all the time since he was continuously calling me a stupid bitch and an empty-headed whore for no apparent reason. He’d also push me around–not really beating me up, but constantly pushing me into the rail on the stairway, kicking me, elbowing me as he walked past. It hurt emotionally more than it did physically, and it left me in tears more than a few times (and every time he’d stand outside my door, making loud fake crying noises and calling me a crybaby). What had I ever done to him? Why was he acting this way? What had I done wrong and how could I fix it? I felt, and to a certain extent still feel, like it was my fault; our parents favored me unfairly to the point of almost ignoring him, and the fact that I got better grades than him at school and could explain his coursework to him when he was confused without even being in that class or that level only made things worse. The two years I had spent essentially ignoring him along with our parents had made whatever issues he’d had even worse, and though I couldn’t have been expected at ten to know how to deal with whatever was wrong with him, I still feel bad that I chose such a wrong course of action.

    But the screaming and the hitting was only half of it. The other half, he was nice–too nice, almost. He would gather me up and hold me really close. The most sexual thing he did was feel my butt a little, but it still bothered me. I didn’t want him that close. It was weird. But it was the only time he was nice to me, so I put up with it just to see him smile and talk to him a little bit without getting yelled at. He only ever let go when I managed to make an excuse he found good enough and squirmed away. He never got mad then, only really disappointed looking, like I was the best thing that had ever happened to him and he didn’t know why I would leave. I sometimes wonder if he’d stay nice all the time if I just let him hold onto me longer.

    I’m sixteen now. He’s leaving home next year; he took a gap year, but he’s finally going off to college. I’m relieved that I won’t have to deal with him any more, and a little guilty that I’m relieved. My brother obviously has some emotional issues, and I wonder sometimes how much worse I made them.

    I’ve had some pretty serious emotional issues too, though I’m not sure if this thing with my brother is to blame or not. It makes me sometimes think about telling people, but what would I say? “My brother holds me sometimes”? It would be ridiculous.

    I don’t even have any evidence that it was sexual, which makes me wonder: what if it wasn’t Not Rape at all? What if it was just Not Anything? It leads to a variety of broader questions. Does the act itself make the crime, or the emotions of the victim? Is it possible to rape (or Not Rape) someone without even realizing it? Can this situation even be called Not Rape?

  184. Carin wrote:

    This made me cry so much. Thank you for putting into words the confusion and fear that I and every girl I knew went through during our adolesence.

  185. Eva wrote:

    Thank you Latoya, for posting this essay.

  186. Laurie wrote:

    I apparently was one of the lucky ones. I have never been Not raped or even cat called. Unfortunately though, many of my closest friends and fellow students at my woman’s university were not so lucky. Thank you for opening my eyes, I forwarded this to everyone I know.

  187. abw wrote:

    Doug, I will be the FIRST to say it goes both ways but lets face it, women have a hard time convincing people that it happened to them ninety percent of the time even though nine out of ten times they are telling the truth. Women are usually guilty until proven innocent. Anyway LYNN, alot of men do not find this hard to believe-alot of them are in probably in denial. They probably do not want to face this reality because (A)some feel they are capable of doing this(B), some either consciously or subconsciously condone this behavior, or (C) some feel guilty about being potential complicit bystanders to actual rapes or being apologists for rapists so need to feign ignorance or chauvinism. Anyway, Myles I am glad you wrote your two posts-especially when you wrote your post to clarify that you meant no ill will; that you were covering the phenomenon from a male perspective. Anyway, I also agree that molestation can be a factor in men acting out sexually. I think this is factor in promiscuity among boys and girls,STDs, unplanned fatherhood/ pregnancies, and abortions but I digressed. Anyway, like several readers posted, I am tired of women getting the share of blame when they get raped, unwanted attention, or assaults; also, I cosign on the fact that men need to be raised to respect women and themselves. Finally, I hate the double standard where it is heresy for women to promiscuious but acceptable for men to be too.

  188. abw wrote:

    Anyway, I am glad people are speaking out against the catcalls! I wonder though, does anyone notice how some women get ridiculed and get lampooned for not being considered conventionally pretty. That some women get reverse catcalls for not looking conventionally feminine and wearing revealing or tight clothing. I am not saying catcalls are better, I am trying to add another dimension but I am not able to put in words what I am talking about. I am sure these women have experience variations of not rape but I don’t have a term for it. If I got of topic that wasn’t my point!

  189. Anoncuzikindaliveher wrote:

    “It makes me sometimes think about telling people, but what would I say? “My brother holds me sometimes”? It would be ridiculous. I don’t even have any evidence that it was sexual, which makes me wonder: what if it wasn’t Not Rape at all? What if it was just Not Anything? ”

    Then there’s also the faint whiff of incest, which may keep people from interpreting the actions of their relatives in that way to avoid that unique brand of stigmatization… additionally, norms of appropriate affectionate behavior/exploration vary within and among family units and the individuals that comprise them, which serves to blur the lines even further. After I hit puberty, my father suddenly developed a habit of patting me on the bottom. I told my mother that it made me uncomfortable… he never did it again, and we never spoke of it again. I don’t like to think about it very much, because the possible implications disturb me… because it happened so long ago, I revisit it so seldomly, and it just “doesn’t fit” with my ideas about what kind of family I have/had, it feels hazy, like “surely, I dreamt it… that couldn’t have happened.” But I know it did.

  190. Sevenofnine wrote:

    @ Latoya,

    I’m behind in my mail, and just read your most provocative post. I also enjoyed your 3 part series from March, 2008

    “Debunking myths about statutory rape, race and class, parts 1, 2 & 3!”

    Those of your readers who haven’t seen it, can find it here:

    http://www.racialicious.com/2008/02/29/debunking-myths-about-statutory-rape-race-and-class-part-3-of-3/

    Taken together, the two posts help clarify what you mean by “NOT RAPE, ” which is a new term to some.

    You explained it in your first essay:
    ” All these things happened from the ages of 12 – 15. One of the events I will describe starts at age eleven. We were not in the mindset to make adult decisions, or even good decisions.”

    That seems to apply to the events you describe as “Not Rape,” which can also be called Aggravated Sexual Harassment, Molestation or Coercion of a minor by family members, or adult strangers. You said in your post that the

    “Not Rape epidemic spreads – through fear and silence, which become complicit in perpetuating the behaviors described here”

    OK, so much for definitions. I’d like to point out
    that the most egregious example of “Not Rape”
    as you define it, was not mentioned anywhere in either of your posts on the subject, or the discussion, of nearly 100 comments.

    The rape of a prostituted man, woman or child is one of the best examples of “Not Rape” because as they say ” a prostitute cannot be raped.”
    I hope your readers understand this is not true.
    Even an adult prostitute expects to be paid!
    If she is coerced to have sex without being paid, it is rape, but many law enforcement officials, e.g police, prosecutors and judges don’ t think so!

    In addition, many prostitutes start around age 13, which makes any sex with them statutory rape. The girls usually look older and their pimps give them fake ID so they can prove it. When these young girls are arrested, they have until recently been sent to jail with adults.

    Sex with a prostituted child is considered “Not Rape,” as is sex with an adult who expects to be paid, but is not. As a rule, the police can’t be counted on to respond favorably, when a prostitute is kidnapped, or raped, or robbed, beaten or even killed! These are all examples of ‘Not Rape.’

    For your readers who do not know, in most places, vulnerable boys are “not raped” (coerced, molested, ) and even prostituted as children, in nearly equal numbers with vulnerable girls. I hope that your readers realize that many of the children “not raped” by teachers, priests, rabbi’s and older children are boys!

    ======================

    @Phaegan – If you have experience teaching in Korea, you are no longer a child. As an adult, I wish you could make lifestyle changes to be safer. I’m not sure what they are, but as an adult, with the help of experts, I am confidant you will find an answer. Mayor Bloomberg is also short. What does he do to be safe in his travels? Do you need to have alot of money to be safe? Too many close calls are a warning sign!

  191. j wrote:

    Wow Latoya. This is perfect. It’s a horrible topic but the way your wrote it was perfect. And I applaud your courage for writing this. And I’m so sorry about what happened to you. I’m just glad you weren’t seriously hurt physically. And of course, it’s not your fault that you didn’t speak up on the your no-rape. And it’s not your fault that the other girl got hurt. The fault lies squarely on the shoulders of those pathetic sad rapists.

    Every woman has had to navigate the dangerous waters of unwanted male attention and sexual pressuring. Arguably, we never grow out of that stage because even as adults, we encounter sexual advances in inappropriate places. Luckily for the most of us, we’ve learned how to handle it.

    I completely agree that we need to do more to teach our young girls about the subtleties of different kinds of rape. The way I see it, pressuring someone, tricking someone, lying to someone to get sex is rape, even if it does not meet the legal definition.

  192. Lauris wrote:

    @ Sevenofnine–Not rape is more than just statutory rape. It is, as I understand it, any sexual situation that doesn’t qualify as rape but which isn’t consensual. Phaegan may no longer be a child, but that doesn’t mean she wasn’t not raped.

    Mayor Bloomberg probably wasn’t the best example. As an older man, he isn’t particularly vulnerable towards being not raped, and as a government agent he has a certain degree of protection when he travels.

  193. Katie wrote:

    I’ve never been ‘not raped’ nor even given unwanted attention. I used to be so envious of the girls who got attention from guys, but now I’m just feeling grateful.

    I now am married with 3 sons. I will use this type of information in teaching them about their responsibilities toward women.

  194. FilthyGrandeur wrote:

    i supposed i was Not raped about two years ago, by one of my college professors. i didn’t want to say anything, didn’t want to tell anyone, and when i told my boyfriend i cried, and was so relieved when he wasn’t mad at me, and neither were my parents. i reported the professor (who is old enough to be my grandfather) to the school alongside another professor whom i deeply trust and was so grateful because i had to report the incident to the vp of student affairs–i was crying because he just stared at me like i was wasting his time, like he didn’t believe me. and if it weren’t for my trusted professor helping me tell what happened, i don’t think the vp would have done anything (the bastard). i kept thinking how i didn’t want to make a huge fuss–i just wanted out of the class with my A intact (sad, i had to even bring that up just so someone couldn’t accuse me of lying to boost a grade). i didn’t want anyone blaming me like i knew they would, wondering why i deliberately stayed after class so i could talk to him alone (a habit i formed with all my professors to get extra help with homework or writing), why i would go to his office after class and chat (again, something i did with a lot of professors), or why at first i didn’t suspect anything was wrong when he sat next to me instead of behind his desk, or why the lights were off, or why i let him stroke my shoulder and get in uncomfortably close before i made some pitiful excuse and fled.

    thank you for posting this, for naming not rape, and making me feel less alone, less ashamed, and less responsible for something i couldn’t control.

  195. LJ wrote:

    This is a fantastic article, and reading through all the comments was incredibly worthwhile, although it made me want to cry or break something at times.

    I’m seventeen, so I can really understand the feelings of vulnerability and confusion and helplessness that so many women spoke about in their comments. That I’ve come this far without experiencing anything like the devastating sexual assaults described above is thanks to a caring, supportive home environment and a certain amount of sheer dumb luck, but most of all it’s thanks to a good education about rape, Not Rape, personal safety and my rights as a girl and a human being.

    I really believe that every single piece of education about these issues I got added up and helped to protect me. When I was very young my mother told me that if any grown up ever touched me inside my panties or in any way at all that scared me I should tell her straight away, and never be afraid or embarrassed to do so. She said that bad people might say that they would hurt me if I told, but that this was a lie and that as soon as I told, the police would take them away and lock them up forever.

    How brilliant is that! Not only does telling this to a child help them to realise that a rape or assault is wrong and that they can speak out about it, but it can actually help to prevent them from becoming a victim in the first place. Paedophiles say that they can look into a crowd of a hundred children and pick out the ONE who is too confused or shy to tell on them. Thanks to my mother’s words I was never that child.

    Another great source of information for me as I was just starting to hit puberty was girl’s magazines – in Ireland and the UK we have ones like “Mizz” and “Bliss”, I’m not sure what you have in the states. Although these magazines weren’t perfect in every way (they were often very focused on beauty culture and fashion) they had advice sections where girls would write in about both rape and not-rape experiences, and the message was invariably that this conduct was unacceptable and they needed to tell someone. They also had articles about safety, self-defense and advice on how to cope with violent or sexual assaults.

    One of the most valuable experiences of my life in this regard was something called the KAS (Knowledge and Safety) program, run by the local Rape Crisis centre, that took place in my school every Friday for a number of weeks when I was fifteen. The whole class, girls and boys, were educated about rape, sexual assault and sexual harassment. We discussed the impact of rape, the way it could destroy lives and leave someone feeling guilty and dirty for years. We looked at the myths surrounding rape like “she was asking for it” or “only slutty girls get raped” and the issue of informed consent. We spent a whole afternoon talking about the impact of child sexual abuse, another learning about safety tips for parties and nightclubs, and another talking about sexual harassment, flirting and what was or wasn’t acceptable behaviour in school or in the workplace. I think the program was even more valuable for the guys than it was for the girls. They got so uncomfortable and so shocked when rape and the aftermath of rape began to be discussed in detail. A lot of points of confusion were cleared up for them when we came to talk about consent and the whole ” no means no” question. We talked about male rape and sexual abuse, and how even tough straight guys can be raped and molested. The program was intense and a lot of the content was grim and depressing, but there was a check-in round at the end of each afternoon when we were each asked how we felt, and our school guidance counsellor was really great and sensitive about it. At the end, every one of us agreed that while difficult, the program had been extremely worthwhile.

    All you people with children, girls or boys, I urge you, beg you, IMPLORE you to contact their school and find out what rape/sexual abuse education they are providing for the kids. If the answer is none, DO something about it! Talk to your local rape counselling centre or even local law enforcement to see if they’ll come in to talk to the class. If someone says “Oh but that material is too shocking for children!” tell them that LIFE is shocking, and that this information could make all the difference to their own child some day.

    Education helps girls and boys protect themselves from rape and sexual assault, to cope better if they’ve been victims of either, and also might help a potential rapist to understand that other people are not there for their gratification and that everyone has the right to respect.

    I hope some day in the future I’ll have a daughter who’ll read articles like this and say “Wow mom, things must have been tough back in those days, I’m glad it isn’t like that now.” Because even now, when children of my own are just a distant idea on the horizon, the alternative scares me too much.

    For what it’s worth, I send all my love to the women and men who have shared their painful experiences here. I think that by raising awareness of rape and not-rape they’ve helped to prevent stuff like this from happening again – so, as a young girl in a dangerous world, I personally thank all of you.

  196. Bjorn wrote:

    amazing! the first part is truely uncomfortable and makes the whole a compelling argument for what really needs to change in this culture (of course there are far more things)

    thanks!

  197. Sue wrote:

    As difficult as it is to write this, it is more difficult, still, to not. I was sexually assaulted, and blamed by my father for being a slut, at 12.
    I was not raped by my step brother at 13. I was date raped by my first official ‘boyfriend’ at 15. I was assaulted again at 17 by a different man. In all of these cases, since the precedent had been set when I was 12, I told no one.
    At 19, I married a man that 20 years later would refuse my offers of intimacy, only to awaken me in the dark of the middle of the night by raping me, awake or not. After 8 years of this, when my children were grown. I left. He continues to deny having ever done this. If I had not left, I would not be alive today. I have no idea where I got the courage to leave. I get up every day now, glad to be alive and grateful to be on this end of my life.

  198. regina wrote:

    What is a *trigger warning*?

  199. The Cruel Secretary wrote:

    @regina–From what I gather, *trigger warning* is to notify that whatever is pictured or written below that phrase may cause a person to remember a traumatic memory, like a domestic-violence situation, a sexual violation, etc., or otherwise upset zie. The memory and/or upset may set off, or trigger, a reaction, such as crying, uncontrollable shaking, and so on. The warning allows the person to make the decision to continue viewing/reading/listening to broadcast/post/what-have-you.

  200. Evan Carden wrote:

    @ regina

    As I understand it, a trigger warning is added when something in the post is likely to seriously upset a group of readers, especially ‘trigger’ unpleasant memories or reactions.

  201. Tif wrote:

    Being a young girl this post has made me realize so much! Thank you for everything. I just wanted to let you know that you have opened many eyes and taught so many lessons in just a page of writing. This story is explosive and really hits home for some people. Thanks you again.

  202. Anon wrote:

    God, I had no idea how many women have been raped and ‘not raped’. I think you all have alot of guts telling people about it, no matter how much it hurts. I teared up so many times reading these stories I lost count. So far I’ve been lucky, but I’m glad I read this anyway. More people need to learn about these, no matter the gender.

    Please, stay strong, and remember you aren’t alone.

  203. Anonymous wrote:

    thank you for posting this. it’s bittersweet that speaking about it brings up so many other stories. i was motivated to do organizing around rape for similar reasons–everyone has a story.

    my first event featured the film NO: The Rape Documentary (www.notherapedocumentary.org) by Aishah Simmons. if you haven’t already seen it, do watch it. It features black women telling their stories and it concludes what you have with your post–that Not Rape is also a danger–and that the two most succinct ways of stopping rape and sexual assault are to understand that ANYTHING that is not consensual is rape and that rape is not just a ‘women’s issue’. If, by and large, our perpetrators are men, then men also have a problem, which means our whole society has a problem.

    we don’t undermine rape culture when we advocate vigilance and Don’t Do lists, we just cope with it. if we want to stop rape, then we have to examine power, oppression, and humanity. we have to understand when and why people feel that violence against someone else is an option or choice and then address those factors.

    again, thank you for posting. the more voices, the better.

  204. Fallon wrote:

    Thank you for writing this. I was molested by my father for years as a child, until my adult sister (who had been similarly abused) called the Department of Social Services. My father went to jail and I went to a foster home until it could be determined whether or not my mother was guilty of negligence. My foster father did things, and attempted to do things that I viewed as sexual – they were Not rape. And my foster mother didn’t believe me when I told her. And my social worker never did anything about it – I d0n’t think she ever decided if she believed me. My foster father demeaned me in front of them, and insinuated that maybe my father had never done anything either, and I made it all up because I was a wicked little girl.

    The Not rape from my foster father was much more traumatic to me than the molestation by my father, and I think a big reason for it is because it was so ambiguous. Everyone thought I’d overreacted, or misinterpreted, to the point where now, I don’t know if I did. Did he really nibble my ear when I hugged him, or did I imagine that? Was it just his stubble I felt? Did I overreact when he picked me up, carried me into his bedroom, and tossed me on the bed? If I hadn’t bolted out of there and locked myself in my bedroom, would he have raped me, or were his intentions innocent? To this day, I don’t know, and I want to think that he was trying to be fatherly, and just didn’t know how to treat an abuse victim… but I just can’t make myself believe it.

  205. Liz Henry wrote:

    Every woman I know has these stories. Thanks for telling yours…

  206. Anonymous wrote:

    This really hit home for me. When I was 12, a rather young Asian man (18-19) wanted to take a photo of my dress. I wasn’t surprised, it was a formal dress, but he took dozens and dozens of photos and told me to take my jacket off, and I was too tired to protest. I ended up finding these photos online about a year later, on a pedophilia-related site, even though they weren’t really perverted. Just a kid in a dress.

    Ever since then, I’ve been terrified that every man I meet, young or old, views me sexually and I haven’t trusted a single one. I had no idea that things like that were happening to so many girls. Thanks for the story.

  207. Nadia Montague wrote:

    Fantastic insight. Thank you for writing this.

  208. Petrie wrote:

    Freakin’ phenomenal work! Get the word out there girls.

  209. Shirl Bradley wrote:

    Though I’ve read numerous essays at this site in the past, I don’t check it regularly like I always tell myself I should. I usually end up here by accident. The contributors here are amazingly insightful – yours, Latoya, being the ones I most often find referenced on other sites. While I’ve often been moved by a thought provoking piece read here, nothing has resonated quite as deeply as did this particular piece. You are wise beyond your years.

    At 41, I thought all those incidents of “Not-Rape” were far beyond reach of my consciousness, but this essay proved they are still, just below the surface, scars unhealed, the scabs of which so easily scratched off. My soul bled tears as I read this and even as I am outraged by the frequency of these stories I am yet able to find comfort even now, so many years later, in realizing the breath of the sorority I unknowingly belonged to all this time.

    I was a tall girl who developed early and thus subjected to much unwanted, unwelcomed attention before I knew how to handle it. And when I was a month shy of my 14th birthday, things were taken to another level when an older, “friend of the family” began w/ showing me such attention, by which I was flattered by at first, only to become completely overwhelmed by. I managed to get away from the situation, but only temporarily. He was spending the night at our house would later climb into my bed w/ me.

    I was but a few years younger than you are now before I read a magazine article that finally opened my eyes to the fact that I had been raped. See prior to that, despite the fact that I had said “no” repeatedly and he forced himself inside me anyway, and all but made me his concubine for several subsequent months, I was under the impression that it had been something else. Something I didn’t have a name for really. It hadn’t occurred to me to call it rape, because he wasn’t a stranger and it didn’t happen in a dark alley, and once he came back for more my protests stopped. I actually thought for a while I was something “special” to him and even after I didn’t “see him” anymore I still thought that it had been some kind of “relationship”. Never mind the fact that I was an 8th grader and he was a grown man.

    One of the most poignant points you brought out (and there were many) was how we adult women need to take an active interest in the young girls we know. I have no children of my own, but I have 2 goddaughters, one who’s 15 now and I know she is struggling to navigate her world. You have inspired me so much today to think about how I interact with her, and how I should and will going forward.

    Thank you so much for this piece. It was written months ago, but today is the day I stumbled upon it, because today was the day I most needed to read it. You have no idea how timely this has been for me. I am in awe as usual at how God uses others to speak to me.

  210. Katie wrote:

    I’m sitting on my bed with tears pouring down my face as my own sequence of “not rapes” flash through my mind.

    My father forcing me to take my pants and underpants off before spanking me several times around the age of 2-6, sometimes in front of my brothers and sister.

    My father feeling/groping my hips and waist at age 11 and saying “yup, she’s developing all right.”

    My brother talking me into letting him suck on my nipple because he “wanted to know what it was like” when he was 8 and I was 6.

    My brother dry humping me as “punishment” after a fight when I was 10 and he was 12.

    My father walking in on me in the shower when I was 13 and when I yelled, he said “I don’t see what the problem is. I changed you as a baby.”

    A boy on the bus pantsing me when I got up to get off at my stop. I was 13.

    A boy at school grabbing my butt as we walked in a line to art class. Age: 13

    ^^the same boy grabbing my breasts a few days later claiming he was “making sure they weren’t fake.”

    My father holding on to me in an unwilling bear hug, holding me when I struggled, and rubbing his prickly face on my cheek and neck. Age 10

    My father making me “practice wrestling” with him. He pinned me down and lay on me for a good minute. Age: 11.

    Countless times being told by my father that because I was a B+/A- student, and not an A+ student, that I was good for nothing but whoring in the back room of a gas station.

    Countless possessive remarks about my body being made by my father. “I’m getting xx made for you, but I’ll have to tell the seamstress that the sizing will have to be changed because she won’t believe me when I giver her your measurements. I’ll have to say your breasts are bigger than she can possibly imagine…larger than anything she’s seen before…she just won’t believe me when i tell her.” Age 17

    “You’re lucky you got my excellent genes. That’s why you have such a great body. That’s why all my kids have good bodies.” Age 15

    Once I locked the door to my room (age 13) and it was beaten on until I opened it and I was told by my father “Don’t you dare ever lock this room again. How dare you lock me out. Everything in this house belongs to me and I have every right to go wherever I want in this house.”

    Age 13, I was reading in bed late at night but when I realized someone was coming up the stairs, i pretended to sleep even though my light was on. My father crept into my room, watched me for a while, then reached under my covers and into my pajama pants. After a few minutes, he left.

    Thank you so much for this.

  211. Emma wrote:

    Fantastic article. Thanks. to You, and everyone who has commented.

    I have one question: if not-rape, or even, rape has occured, is it OK to keep it quiet to yourself, if thats easier for you?

    A few years ago I was not-raped, it was by someone above me at my work, who had convinced me to come home with him to a party he was having.

    When I told my boyfriend about it he was very angry and tried to convince me to call the cops, to tell my parents, to tell my boss.

    I did none of those things, because, mainly I was (was I?) selfish. I saw it as far more of a hassle to ‘tell on’ this man. If I was to tell on him, that could mean a lot of embarrassment on my part (as I was unsure if it was my fault), and possibly months of unwanted publicity and court cases. Also, I didn’t even think it fair on that man to do such a thing to him.

    What is the right thing to do in this situation? My life would no doubt have been far different, more difficult if I had told anyone, and subsequently I have continued to live a good life, as I have just ‘got on with it’ as you might say.

  212. carol wrote:

    thank you so much

  213. barbara wrote:

    Thank you for this piece. I have had so many things happen to me as a child that I try not to revisit it, but I have a son that is 18, I am 31 so that makes it hard to ignore. I never and may not ever speak aloud the reality of his conception but I had to endure the name of hoe and listen to the I am so disappointed in you and of course the older teenagers and adult perverts coming on to me because “she !@%*ing anyway, she got a baby”. Even as an adult there are many people that try to do quick math and say oh you were a fast little girl. That is sickening. Thank you for this post.

  214. Maggie wrote:

    Wonderful piece. Good bless all the girls who have suffered.

  215. Jenn wrote:

    Thank you so much for writting this. I found this piece last night and sent the link to many of my friends. It really spoke to me. My stories aren’t as bad as yours or many people who have commented here, I’m not even sure if they fall under the category of “not-rape,” but I wanted to share them.

    The first time I think I was not-raped was my first year of middle school, I was 11 or 12 at the time. I had developed early, I had larger breasts than most of the girls I knew. Every morning I would take the bus to school, I don’t remember the first time it happened, but one day and then everyday for the rest of the school year, a boy would come over and sit down next to me every morning on the bus. He would try to touch me and whisper things into my ear, I don’t recall the exact words it was so long ago, but I remember feeling scared and confused. I started to sit with my backpack between us, but he still bothered me and tried to touch me. This went on all year. The bus driver noticed and would apologize to me many times on the way out, but she never did anything to stop him. The following year, I sat with a girl every morning and the guy never bothered me again. I have never told my parents and probably never will. I’ve only told two people that I’m very close to recently.

    The second time I think I was not-raped was the summer of 7th grade. My grandma had enrolled me in a basketball camp program because she thought it would help me make friends. Grandma thought I was too quiet and shy. I soon met a girl who wanted to be my friend there are I was very excited… However, I came to realize that she was very forceful and controlling. I had really nice hair and she’s be very insistent on letting her brush it. She’d take me into the camp bathroom and brush it in front of the mirror. I didn’t mind at first ‘cuz I was just happy that I’d made a friend and everyone else was being nice to me too ‘cuz I was her friend, but she was starting to make me feel really uncomfortable. One day I told her to stop, but she said that if I didn’t do what she said she’d tell everyone in the basketball program to stop being friendly with me. Immediately, I handed the brush back to her and let her brush my hair. This continued until the last day of camp, but she asked for my phone number and I reluctantly gave it to her. She would call me a lot and bother me over the phone, pretending to be other friends I had mentioned to her. This continued for months. At one point, I was terrified to answer the phone and couldn’t trust any of my friends because I was convinced they were her. I don’t know why I don’t tell anyone. I honestly believe I had brought this upon myself. It was my fault becuase I couldn’t stand up for myself. I thought this would never stop, but she slipped up one day. I wasn’t around and my father answered the phone. She was pretending to be one of my other friends again, but my dad didn’t recognize her voice as that friend and was immediately suspicious. He approached me about it the next day when my mom was at work and I broke down crying and told him that the girl was bothering me. He asked for the number and said he would take care of it. My father is a police officer, however, I soon learned that the girl’s father was a lieutenant which surpassed my dad in rank. My dad was concerned most for his job, so after he spoke to her dad and convinced her to stop calling he asked me to promise to never tell anyone especially my mother and of course I promised him. I never told anyone until years later in my senior year of high school.

    The third time I was not-raped was my freshmen year of high school when I was 14. I was at an aunt’s house and alone with one of her and my other aunt’s friends. They were having a party. Their friend seemed like a really nice lady and I think I may have had a sorta-crush on her at the time. She was really upset and she was telling me about how it was the anniversary of one of her friend’s death. I did my best to comfort her becase I felt really bad for her. She had been drinking a lot. All of a sudden, she kissed me and I was really surprised, I didn’t know how to react. I’d never been kissed before and this woman was old enough to be my mother. Nothing happened after that kiss, though, she didn’t try to touch me or anything. She said that she wanted me to come stay with her sometime, but I never did and I realize now that if I had agreed to stay with her that things probably would have become worse. I never heard from her again after that. She promised me a lot of things… I realize now though that there was something really wrong about that. I’ve only after told a few people about it. I’ve never mentioned it to my parents and I don’t think I ever will.

    Those are my stories. I have a strong distrust of men even though I was also not-raped by two women… I have issues with trust in general, but recently I’ve started being more trusting. It made me feel surprisingly better to type this out.

    Thank you again Latoya and everyone else who shared their stories.

  216. Barbara wrote:

    Thank you so much for writing this. I hope you don’t mind if I link to it on my blog “A Place to Talk About Rape”.

  217. F wrote:

    Thank you so much.