The recent conversation around
sexual assault, harassment, and the powerful #MeToo mentions has had me
creating this blog entry in my head for weeks. I wasn’t really sure what my
angle was going to be, but I knew I had something to say.
When I first saw that celebrities
were the focus of this dialogue, while I felt for their plight and understood
that they had to sort of open the proverbial Pandora’s Box on this topic, my
initial reaction was “What woman hasn’t experienced
this to some degree…way more than just once in their lifetime?” So I was glad
to see Alyssa
Milano raise this on Twitter a few weeks ago by asking ALL women (or
people, really) to stand in solidarity with Harvey Weinstein’s accusers and
share whether or not they have also been a victim of either sexual harassment
or assault. She said, "My hope is people will get the idea of the
magnitude, of just how many people have been affected by this in the world, in
our lifetimes, in this country.”
On 10/16, I tweeted “I was
thinking about this the other day. Why should the focus merely be on actresses
and other famous women? #MeToo.”
I didn’t share any details about my experience with this topic and I don’t plan
to on here, either. That isn’t the point for me. But it’s clear from the sheer
volume of “#MeToo’s” that we needed this out in the open and that we have an
incredibly long way to go as a society.
I’ve been reading so many of
these victims’ accounts and wonder when it was decided that we no longer needed
to treat each other with respect or empathy. Obviously the behavior has been going
on—and accepted—for years, decades…centuries, even. Which makes me shake my
head in disgust. To me, the most fulfilling and rewarding part of being human
is just that: making real human connections based on the mutual respect between
yourself and another person. This brazen disregard for the victims’ boundaries,
feelings, and needs is something that I will never understand or accept.
And so I come to the second theme
in this piece: empathy. Which I write about often because it is embedded in who
I am. But I’ve never truly written about this experience. I have talked to
friends and family about it during the course of the past 17 years, but I’ve
never put pen to paper until now. When I was thinking about human connection,
respect and blatant disregard for someone’s feelings these past few weeks, this
experience kept forcing itself back into my mind. It’s a different kind of
harassment, but it still counts and I think that it’s finally time to speak
out.
I spent the semester in London
the fall of my senior year. For some reason, the majority of my flatmates (all 12
of us were from UConn) decided that they had no use for me. A few of them (and
by that, I really do mean about 3 out of 12) were friendly enough, but for the
most part I was ostracized for the entire three and a half months that I was
there. My hair was frizzy at that time, I didn’t have the same fashion sense
that I have now, I was a little overweight and I wasn’t confident in myself at
all. I was quiet, reserved. I didn’t go to London merely to drink and party—I wanted
to experience the culture and see shows at the theatre, go to museums and just
LIVE.
I can’t pinpoint exactly when or
how it started happening, but my flatmates started branching off into groups, usually
leaving me alone (with the exception of our classes). They left me at a bar
alone when I had had too much to drink and laughed at me when I came crying
back into the flat because I didn’t even have enough money to pay the cab
driver (He let me out anyway, clearly seeing that I was a wreck). One time when
we were all heading out for the night, one of the guys uttered, “Ever think
about who we would vote off if this were an episode of Survivor?” Lots of
laughing followed. I ignored it. Another time, we were out dancing and having
drinks at Cheers and two of the guys bought a round of drinks for all of the
girls except for me. Then one of them looked at me, saw a half-empty mug of
beer sitting on the bar, abandoned, and said “Here, you can have that one.”
Then he laughed and walked away, leaving me alone.
I heard one of the girls talking
to her sister on the phone about me in a whisper. I would sometimes get home
from a day of walking around the city and go straight up to the roof where you
could see the city. I’d be freezing but at least they couldn’t hurt me up
there. I wouldn’t come down until everyone was settled in and watching TV. Writing
this now is making me teary, not for what I feel now, but for the poor girl who
didn’t know how to handle any of this at the time. I didn’t speak up for
myself, not once. I tried to confide in the three friendlier flatmates, but
they didn’t believe me—they thought that I was embellishing everything and that
the perception was in my head. It wasn’t. And I wonder now if my experience
could have been more positive if one of them had.
I’m speaking up to give that more
vulnerable girl a voice. To defend her when I should have defended her at that
time. I have 17 more years of life experience at this point. I am confident.
(Side note: it took a LONG way to get here, but I honestly think that this
experience was the first step in getting me there, ironically enough. What doesn’t
kill you makes you stronger, right?) I am successful. And I still have empathy
and would never even dream of making someone feel like they weren’t worthwhile
of my time or energy. We all are until proven otherwise.