Tags
#MeToo, assault, Brett Kavanaugh, Christine Blasey Ford, Hearings, time to get angry, US Supreme Court
“Think of your son. Think of your husband,” Trump continued. “I’ve had many false accusations. I’ve had so many. When I say it didn’t happen, nobody believes me.”—Donald Trump mocks Christine Blasey Ford’s Testimony at Mississippi Rally

Dr. Christine Blasey Ford testifying before Senate committee [Image Credit: The Cut]
I sat in front of my computer, riveted to the live feed of the hearings. I watched Dr. Ford’s gut wrenching testimony and Brett Kavanaugh’s bewildered, infuriated response. And as the tears poured down my face, I remembered…
Events such as this happened to almost every woman of my generation. Lives were ruined, damaged, or simply never realized full potential. Overall, we got on with the business of living despite the memories we didn’t let ourselves think about.
BUT THAT’S NOT WHAT WE WANT FOR OUR DAUGHTERS AND OUR GRANDDAUGHTERS. IT HAS TO STOP.
Sure, decades have gone by since the events below occurred. I’ve had a good life. But I couldn’t help wondering…if I heard that my “date” was going to be in a position to make decisions about women’s rights to decisions about their own bodies, would I be as brave as Dr. Ford? Even though like her, I have spent so many years deliberately quashing that memory that I would also have trouble describing the house, or even the day it happened, I would like to think I could be as brave as her.
WARNING: This post from a few years ago is not my usual humor or review post topic. The following contains graphic language and content.
“Give it to me.”
The first time I heard it was on a date. Still in high school, I was flattered and thrilled when the guy I met at the dance said he was already in college. We went out a few times, group things like football games and friends’ parties. He asked me to dinner, and after the pizza said he wanted to swing by his parents’ house. When we got there, he acted surprised that nobody was home, but invited me in anyway. The necking was almost immediately rough. I said I needed to go home, and the next thing I knew we were on the floor, my hands trapped, and his teeth biting hard, mashing into my mouth. I tried to shout, but my voice came out in a whisper. “Please.”
Somehow I was sitting up, arms wrapped around myself. He brought me some ice in a towel, and told me he’d take care of me. When my mouth stopped bleeding, I said I was tired and asked him to take me home. I remember that I said “please”. When we got to my house, he kissed my cheek, said again how sorry he was, and started to get out of the car. I told him my parents were probably still up and that I’d go in alone.
All I could think of was that I wasn’t supposed to be at a guy’s house if his parents weren’t home, so I told my mother we’d been kissing a little hard and that I just needed to put ice on it. I wore high-necked, long-sleeved shirts to hide the bruises that blossomed by morning. The next day, a huge bouquet of flowers arrived. First time I got flowers. My mother put them on a table in the living room, and I didn’t enter that room again for the two weeks it took them to die. My friends said I was lucky—with me being alone with him at his house, it could have been worse. I didn’t feel lucky.
“Give it to me.”
The difference was that this time I knew it was going to hurt. The mugger wanted the wallet in my hands. It was late night on the south side of Chicago, where I was in college. When he punched me in the mouth, I dropped the wallet. The police officer who took my report in the emergency room (as the doctor stitched my mouth and taped what would be a scar on my chin) said I was lucky—with me being “someplace I shouldn’t”, it could have been worse. I still didn’t feel lucky.
But it’s taken me years to realize that those were the same crime. Those experiences stole precious things from me. For years, I was nervous about dating, about going out after dark, or being in any situation where I might again be “lucky”.
The message was that it was my fault. My fault for voluntarily being in the wrong place at the wrong time. I never thought about whether that was true or not, until I had daughters of my own. My daughter was away at University when I got a call. She’d been crossing the street—on a sunny morning in a marked crosswalk—when another student in a convertible hit her. She went flying, landing on her head. She was lying there bleeding, with head and hip injuries that would take years to heal, when the police officer (after first comforting the sobbing driver who’d run her down) told her that she was lucky. Lucky that her long hair had been pinned to the back of her head, softening the impact. Lucky that she wasn’t dead. She told him that she could have been more unlucky, but lucky people don’t get hit by cars.
I was thinking of this when I heard that Malala Yousafzai won the Nobel Peace Prize. The announcer on the radio said that Malala had been “lucky” to survive the Taliban gunmen who boarded her school bus and shot her in the head, or those who issue streams of threats.
“We will kill you in such a harsh way that no woman has so far been killed in that manner.”
Hell, no. That’s not luck.
Lucky is not having to worry about whether your failure to say no loud enough and often enough means you are saying yes, like Emma Sulkowicz who is carried her mattress around campus to protest Columbia University’s failure to discipline the student she says raped her, despite similar complaints from his other victims.
Lucky is doing a professional job without an unending stream of anonymous rape and death threats because you’re a woman like Zoe Quinn and Anita Sarkeesian in a troll-dominated field such as game development. And lucky is not fleeing your own home like Briana Wu, head of development at Giant Spacekat, following violent threats against her and her family listing her address and personal information.
“Women are the niggers of gender,” the email said. “If you killed yourself, I wouldn’t even fuck the corpse.”
I blinked at my phone, fighting simultaneous urges to hurl my phone across the room in anger and cry. Later that day, someone texted me my address — telling me they’d “See me when I least expected it.” —Opinion by Brianna Wu
You know what? Malala and these other young women are not lucky. They’re brave. Brave enough to stand up and fight for their rights to education, to control their own bodies, to equal opportunities, and to defy those who threaten them with rape and death for doing so.
I think it’s time for all of us to stop being so lucky and start being mad.
A hero
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Our hero.
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Absolutely
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This was beautifully written. We need to shout and they need to listen. Why can’t people see what is happening right in front of them, us?
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It’s so much easier to hear what you want to hear, especially when you feel that nobody has been on your side for a really long time—and that the “other” side is targeting things fundamental to your worldview.
So no, I don’t think that anybody is really listening to anyone who isn’t specifically identified as being on their side.
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I’m hoping with so many brave women coming forward now exposing these creeps that those who can make a difference will finally listen.
🔹 Ginger 🔹
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All of us who remember Anita Hill would like to hope so too. We just don’t really believe it.
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Well said, Barb. No human being, regardless of race, age, gender or belief, who goes through violence or abuse of any kind, should ever have to ‘think themselves lucky it wasn’t worse.’
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As Great Aunt Fanny used to say, פֿון דײַן מויל אין גאָטס אויערן. (“From your mouth to G-d’s ears.”)
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Greataunt Annie-Beatrice used to say that too 🙂
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I always thought we might be related!
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Wouldn’t surprise me at all, Barb!
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After all these years of fighting for equality, we still are not truly equal, are we? We still are viewed by far too many as playthings followed by distrust and not worthy of being believed. Sadly, this is furthered by the president and his old men – the old men that have control of our lives. I just saw a headline wherein Grassley saays the FBI found “no evidence of wrongdoing” in its most recent “investigation” of Kavanaugh – I expect he will be confirmed. I expect he will be confirmed and carry his taint on to the Supreme Court. I expect women’s battles for “worthiness” will continue.
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The FBI found exactly what the were allowed to find. Try being in Europe and explaining what is going on in America to your neighbors.
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Not that it’s easy to explain in Scotland, but I usually start with, “Remember Brexit?”
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I’ve not been to Scotland, though my grandfather was in the 72nd Seaforth Highlanders, but I think Brexit compared with Trump, Kavanaugh… is an ice cube on a hot August sidewalk.
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“This kind of behavior isn’t just offensive; it also imposes real costs on women. The burden of avoiding and enduring sexual harassment and assault results, over time, in lost opportunities and less favorable outcomes for girls and women. It is effectively a sort of gender-specific tax that many women have no choice but to pay.”—Amanda Taub in her column, The Interpreter, New York Times
Looks like the tax is going up.
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Afraid so. Time to pull up our big girl panties and hunker down for a long battle.
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Panties up. Let the hunkering commence.
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Oh Barb… he made me so very sick to my stomach. It’s a confederacy of rapists… and their behavior is already having a negative impact on the men I work with. I’ve really got to get out of here…
Thank you for this post. Hugs.
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I think we all NEED to get you out of there. How do you feel about Scotland? (I have a spare bedroom!)
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I appreciate the kind thought and vibe, Barb. TGIF hugs!
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Like hardly fits the content but I know that you will understand. It seems that a small part of the country is obsessed in destroying life itself for everyone else. More nails in America’s coffin.
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On good days, I tell myself that this is all a good thing. At least more of the roaches are being exposed to the light. On bad days, I think they are just scurrying back to their dark holes and waiting until the light is turned off them.
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Alas, I wish I could be so optomistic. They have everything sewn up and the Democracy has been eradicated. In this internet age, it is much easier to cut them off at the knee if only people were willing to do what is necessary. I don’t believe they are there, yet.
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You are so right. They are brave. I hope you don’t end up with that worm-puppet Kavanaugh.
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We probably will end up with him. But at least we can say we raised a lot of our voices and didn’t just roll over. And hopefully, that will turn into people voting. The only good thing that I think could come of all this at this point…
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Reblogged this on poetry, photos and musings oh my! and commented:
CHRISTINE IS A HERO AND THE FBI ONLY FOUND WHAT THEY WERE ALLOWED TO.
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Thanks for the reblog Léa!
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Thank you Barb. It was just what I was hoping someone would do and it is all the better coming from you.
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Tonight I said to my husband that I believe our girls are safer today than I was thirty years ago. He couldn’t believe me and was pretty sure I was wrong. But I don’t believe I am. I think due to so much publicity around assault and converstation he thinks it’s more common instead of realising it always happened but almost everyone stayed quiet.With greater education of men and louder voices from women the world is changing. Slowly I accept but I still believe it’s improving. I really can see a future so much more equal and safe for future generations of women.
As for your own story, what awful memories to have. Well done for writing about them, it doesn’t matter if it is fresh or old it’s never easy to speak out and while no one should feel they must, writing or speaking of them can at least show others they are not alone.
I’ve no comment on Trump. Wouldn’t waste my words!
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I’m in awe of Christine Blasey Ford, and also of all the young women out there who are standing up, pointing fingers, and saying, “#MeToo! This stops now.” Of course, they are threatening an extremely fundamental world view for so many, and this makes them scary, the enemy, the target. They are so brave.
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Yes, whatever about coming forward but when it’s so public. Very brave women indeed.
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More like “Throw-Up” Thursday. This has got to stop. Mitch McConnell has also to be held accountable for his role in all of this. Yes, Trump is disgusting. Kavanaugh is a sad excuse for what a justice should be, and what women have had to endure and still are enduring is sickening. The old white boy network needs to be overturned. I’ve decided I’m only voting for ethical women of valor until we begin to turn this around.
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#ThrowUpThursday! I love it.
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And there are no national borders for what you describe. That’s the scariest part. You can’t escape no matter where you go.
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That would be true if I believe that every man is a potential abuser. But I do NOT believe that. I know plenty of men—most of them, in fact—who have NEVER, even in high school, trapped a woman on a bed with a hand over her mouth. So the bravery and miracle of current brave women stepping forward, of the #MeToo movement, is to call out the ones who do, and put them on notice. Let them know this has never been okay, but now it’s also going to cost you.
So yeah. I think about my husband and my son. I think they would never do what Christine Blasey Ford says Brett Kavanaugh did. But if they did, I hope that a brave woman would step into the light and tell the entire world about it, and that they should have to suffer the consequences. Because it’s what abusers deserve. They don’t “deserve” to be on the Supreme Court. (Plenty of people aren’t.) But I’m thinking they do deserve to have their actions cause major, ongoing problems in their lives.
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Yes. But it takes a single drop of poison to ruin a cauldron of porridge. That drop is there all over the world!
More strength to the women who speak out…
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You are so right.
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Yes!
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#MeToo but I have never spoken publicly about it. I carry it with me every day, and it happened 26 years ago. So he got away with it. His friends (all male) called him ‘the conqueror’ as he left me bruised and bleeding, to join them in the room next door. Apparently I was ‘lucky’ as he spiked my drink. I am sorry it happened to you, but well done for speaking out and hopefully helping to change this situation for all women in the future.
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WordPress really needs to get something besides “Like” for us to push. Your comment made me feel so many things—anger, sadness, disgust—and none of them approached “like”. So until they get a better button selection, please let me say how sorry I am that you and others went through this.
Out of curiosity, how would you feel if you turned on your TV tomorrow morning and saw your abuser’s face in a news story about how he was being vetted for a position where he would have some kind of say over women’s decisions about their bodies? (Unfair question, I know…) I’d really like to think I would have the strength of Anita Hill or Christine Blasey Ford.
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I really appreciate you writing this post. I was not capable of articulating why the whole ‘I am more concerned for my sons …’ made me sick. You did a great job and it was good to read people’s comments to what you wrote. Yah, so thanks…
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Thank you. I agree with you that the current language makes me sick.
We ALL need to think about our sons and stop making it just our daughters’ job to “stay safe”.
Instead of saying a girl “got pregnant”, say a man impregnated her. Instead of saying a woman was assaulted, say a man (men) assaulted her. Instead of saying a woman was raped, we should say a man raped her. Instead of saying a woman is a passive victim, say a man is an active assailant.
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