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To The Woman I Frightened This Morning...

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WillyKat

Diamond Member
I’m sorry that seeing me about to cross your path this morning frightened you. The unusually dense fog and the darkness of 6am didn’t help. I meant you no harm. I was just out for my morning walk, something I try to do every day. It helps me heal. But there was no way for you to know that.

I’m especially sorry that while our paths then appeared to go in different directions, the destination was still nearly the same. I crossed the street and turned right; you walked down the street and turned left to cross it. You were heading to your car and I was heading right past it, by different routes. Seeing me--and I know in that soup I probably appeared like a sasquatch compared to you--on an intersecting course again brought you to panic, or close to enough.

It took me a second to sense your fear was because of me. It took me another second to think about calling out to you that it was OK. But by then, your door had already chirped unlocked and after a bit of shuffling, the door closed and locked. Too late. And what could I say? Really, what could I possibly say and what reason would you have to believe me. Nothing.

Every thief, rapist, and murderer will say that you can trust them. How many victims heard that shortly before being victimized? I know I did and perhaps you did too, which brought us to this morning. We live in a world where women, for their own safety, have to assume that any man they meet on a dark street or parking garage may harm them. We live in a world where men that would never do such a thing feel unfairly suspected. And for those of us that know the pain of sexual abuse, that can really sting.

I’ve felt that sting probably half a dozen times in my life. Every single time I wanted to say or scream that I’m not like that. There was only one occasion when I actually said something. I frightened a young woman in a parking garage. She jumped, screamed, and then giggled as we nearly collided on the stairwell. “Sorry, it’s OK” I said, or something like that. After we passed I turned and said something like, “hey, don’t ever show fear like that. Even if you are afraid, don’t let it show. And carry your keys like this [with the pointy end sticking between the fingers], like a weapon. Look like you won’t take any shit from anyone.”

What brought us to this? We should be allies if not friends. Just imagine what could happen if there were something where safe people could know each other. A secret code, or something. But if there were, how long would it be before the abusers figured it out and do what they do best, deceive?

It’s OK. I’ve learned to not take it personally. In fact, if you were my daughter I would advise you to do exactly as you did. Run to your car, get in, lock to the door. I just wish this world was different.
 
I live in my own world. (I'm very aware of this fact. Everyone I know is very aware of this fact.) I've spent my whole life terrified and never thought of things from the other side. Never really thought that many of those threats (both male and female in my case, well, many, many females in fact) are probably not really threats at all. Thanks for showing me the flip side.
 
I feel very sad that men have to live in a world where they are always looked at like they are potentially dangerous. It really isn't fair.

I'm sorry guys. It's a really hard situation all the way around. :(

I don't know how you live with being looked at like that. I get a tiny fraction of the same kind of "back off from a scary person" experience and it is devastating for me.
 
You get used to it because there really isn't any other option.
To echo @WillyKat , you really do just have to grit your teeth and bear it. Unfortunately society has a clouded view of men who *LOOK* scary. It is like the old saying 'no smoke without fire!'. If we look mean and violent society brands us in part as being just that.

I literally look like a typical English Bull Terrier eating a nest of spitting Cobra's, no one is going to think I am harmless. I too have simply got used to the way people perceive me, even if there were nothing closer to the exact opposite.

:hug:s to all the guys on here who have this stigma attached to them, just because they look mean and strong.
 
Right after I read this thread I went for a walk. A very long walk in my fitness gear. I look like a jogger and I know men notice me and it does make me uncomfortable. Especially when they are in a truck and make faces at me and I'm worried about being dragged into the some strangers truck (scary scary moment).

Normally other men out too doesn't worry me. I hope I'm a safe jogger/walker all around. Not just about sexual assault but also about road safety. And honestly the only time a man worried me today was when he was walk in my direction but he didn't look serious so I got nervous because I couldn't figure out why he was there. He wasn't in fitness gear, but grungy clothes. But when I got closer he stepped aside and walked on the grass so I could walk on the side walk.

Maybe he noticed my discomfort?

And then I thought of this thread of course. I'll think about this some more. It's a good topic @WillyKat. It's human.
 
@WillyKat
Willy, it is a beautiful post. I think perhaps you might consider submitting it. I do not know if it meets with what Anthony is looking for, but many people would identify with the effects of a changing world and the triggers in simple everyday living.
:hug:

I have read somewhat similar stories concerning car locks and profiling. It might make a difference. I know you did for me.
 
@WillyKat Thanks so much for posting this. I love your letter to the woman. I wish those I feared could send me something like this in retrospect of such a moment.

There are men in my life who have scared me just by being them, even though they are my friends/associates/whatever. I had a close friend who was a vet with PTSD, and he was in love with me. He terrified me, as much as I knew and felt him as my guardian, not my assailant.

I know it killed him (and others, including the man who is now my partner) that he could see the fear enter my eyes so often. I wish I were still in touch with him. I tried to find him recently. He moved across the country. I want to tell him how often he saved me in my dreams, how he would appear and the bad guys would vanish, and the love and appreciation I felt for him in spite of my frequent instinctive fear response to his personality and stature.

I once ran away from my cousin's house. I don't remember why, but I was in Miami and quickly found myself in a neighborhood I didn't like. A young man about my age was seemingly following me. I would cross the street, he would cross the street. I was so upset I shouted, "Can I f*cking help you with something?" He asked me for a cigarette, voice meek and apologetic. I gave him one. We sat down. He had run away from his home too. Sometimes things aren't as bad as one perceives.
 
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