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I'm Not Sure If I Was Raped But It's Bothering Me.

  • Post starter Post starter Osuja
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There's a bit of misinformation going on here.

Rape, in soooo many jurisdictions, does not require any element of "force".

Ejaculate canntake several days to leave the body. That does not mean it stays "alive" and can cause pregnancy several days post-coitus. Eggs get fertilised pretty quick, or not at all. Complicated stuff.
 
Still baffled people are talking about the OP's alleged alcohol problem while knowing next to nothing about her, the circumstances that led to her previous traumatic experiences, or this one - which may or may not have been what she's feared.

You can get raped when passed out drunk, you can get raped when sober. You can get raped doing all the "right" things, or doing all the "wrong" things. To come on here and lecture this woman about the possible role she had in this possible rape is negligent and misguided. If her question had been "why does this always happen to me?" - sure, spitball away. If the discussion had led to how to prevent this with HER, of course, offer guidance. But ALL she wanted was some help with what steps to take now to get a handle on her sinking feeling that something may have happened.

I'll be sure not to come looking here for support if god forbid something happens to me I may have been able to prevent.
 
I cant believe this is still going on nearly a week later. Poor woman. The main thing is that this woman needs help - she needs someone to help her. Regardless of whether she was drunk or not this does not give anyone the right to do anything to her. Friends help each other - she must change her friends and get a support group who will help her. Then things should start to change in a positive direction. Good luck again
 
I am shaking my head at this thread. No wonder people don't report. Even other sufferers will judge whether it's your actions that caused what happened or not. What a shame.
 
If the OP had not said herself that she wasn't sure if she was raped, and that she is often "paranoid" about these things, people's feedback would have likely been different. Also if it was obvious from her story that she was raped -- the feedback would be different.

But judging from her shoes being in the other room, to the guy kissing her and then ignoring her on Facebook -- there's really nothing to point to rape here. Especially when the OP repeatedly stresses that she might just be being "paranoid."

The only thing that is obvious here is that she doesn't remember what happened and is currently experiencing major anxiety because of that, and because of her past history of rapes. Since her past history of rapes always happened when she was drunk, it really seems obvious that she should stop drinking. There's no "blaming the victim" here, as much as you want to turn it into that.


Many of the people commenting on this thread are actually rape victims themselves (at least I am). And it would be a disservice to this OP to not mention the harmful role alcohol is playing.

Personally, I think it's insulting to women everywhere to imply that they are completely helpless beings who can't take any actions of their own to prevent rape. Telling someone to work on quitting drinking when drinking is obviously causing huge problems is not blaming the victim, it's common sense, especially since so many rape victims resort to alcohol to deal with their trauma.
 
Similarly, if the OP had said she couldn't remember because she was using some illegal drug (heroin, for instance) and that all her previous rapes had happened while she was on that drug, I bet no one would be jumping all over people for telling her to quit using.

But because it's alcohol, a legal drug, people seem to think advising her to quit is harsh. Look at how many rape victims go on to get re-traumatized because they develop drinking problems -- it's frighteningly common.

The OP's rapes were all pretty recent, so when she says she thinks it's happened again when she was drunk, it's just glaringly obvious that she needs to stop drinking to deal with shit. She's still processing her previous rapes, and she needs to focus on doing that -- sober.
 
that is so true about if it was drugs no one would be getting upset at people for saying to stop using. I agree with everything you say.
I don't think it's judgmental to say the truth no matter how much others may shake their head!
I had a bad drinking problem myself and you do get up a stage where no one cares enough any more to even say anything.
That's worse
And yes, I agree that anything you can do to stop yourself being retraumatised is worth doing. It is far from s perfect world, there's no point pretending it is
 
The entire thread is interesting (and so are all of the points of view about an almost entirely closed subject- rape and the feeling of a person being violated). Even though I have previously posted here, people (by their own interpretations of the words and not necessarily by interpreting what was said correctly) have a tendency to pervert what was said, implied, or what someone else interpreted what someone else said or anything that wasn't said.

I agree that the woman needs help. I don't think the woman asked to be raped or that the woman was helpless and never said anything of the sort. I merely stated that using alcohol is a bad idea and makes any person (especially a woman like the person who claims she was in the situation she was in- for perhaps another time or two). Saying an opinion is stating what could be a very good truth (and it should not be misinterpreted or perverted). I did say get help and that I wish her well. I showed her the different kinds of "help" and the fact that some of that "help" could hurt her more.

In my view, doing all you can to eliminate the possibility of being vulnerable is a really great idea (still while respecting the sensitivity of the issue at hand and without discounting her telling of her experiences). The world is a hard, harsh, violent place and human life (and the sense of innocence) is really extremely fragile. When any one gets violated in some way, as human beings, our perception changes. Many people who post here are victims of violent crime, trauma, war, and other kinds of abuse who have in some way been violated.

By the way, we have a duty to make sure we avoid being vulnerable to avoid being proclaimed a potential target because if we contribute to someone's temptation to be brutal or victimize us and an event like this happens, we are responsible ourselves for contributing to the temptation. That's why I leave money in a closed pocket some place and not hanging out on some dresser drawer in plain sight- the helps prevent those tempted to steal from stealing and makes them work a lot harder to steal or rob it if they are going to commit that crime. So, suggesting deterrents to avoid crime and victimization is good advice.

One more thing, subduing someone with "roofies", choloroform, or other drugs to commit a rape and combining that as a mixture to alcohol is really a more subtle form of force but it is still force because most people are being subdued by being drugged against their will. In addition to that, a gun or knife or weapon may not be used since only chemistry is involved, but it is more insidious also because the use of chemistry means to deliberately take advantage of another is also a manipulation of the mind on a much deeper level. These kinds of things can take a much longer time to recover from than a person using deliberate force without chemistry (which is another form of manipulation on a different level that a person can recover from quickly because it was something that happened that they know for sure was way out of their control). Chemical force like that is intentional because it is really another great form of one person gaining total control over another against the victim's will and drugging someone to do it.

Having said that, nix the alcohol and the more than likely eliminates or greatly reduces the likelihood of that subtle force by chemistry being used and greatly minimizes temptation for others to commit an offense. Most men have a tendency to try to control women and get them to "knuckle under" to them as though it's their right. That's unfortunate. Women deserved to be lifted up, respected, and loved. After all, they are people too.

People should continue to come to the site to report what's going on and get help. I would synthesize the information here- that is, sort out the good from the bad. No fear here. Use the good and dump the bad.

As another true belief, more drunk women are raped than sober women. Alcohol increases a woman's chance of getting raped by four times more likely than a sober woman.

I hope the OP gets help, nixes the alcohol, and understands all of the information imparted followed by using the good stuff and ditching the bad.

Sincerely,

The Snowy Owl.
 
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