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“We need change, it needs to stop.”

January 8, 2019 By Contributor

It was my junior year in high school, and I was in my car, window down, about one block away from my private Catholic school, where a casual “welcome dance” was taking place. I was wearing all red, including red lipstick, because that’s what juniors had to wear, and due to the amount of kids walking along the sidewalks in the area towards the campus, it was very obvious that I was an underage student. I was playing the song “take on me” from my car window to embarrass my friends when I entered the parking lot, and I was excited. Then it happened. A man, clearly over 18 (I would argue late 20s), pulls up next to me in his car. He rolls down his window and says, “Hey there sexy, aren’t you something to look at.”

I was uncomfortable, and genuinely afraid when I heard this. I avoided eye contact and stared straight ahead, silently begging the light to turn green. He then continued, despite seeing my obvious discomfort, saying, “You know, I love that red lipstick of yours…” and proceeded to tell me in explicit detail where exactly he wanted my lipstick to be.

I was disturbed, afraid, and horrified. I was underage, and had very little experience with boys in general, so It hurt even more. I started to roll up my window, he grew angry, telling me, “I know you want it,” followed by yelling profanities such as “sl*t, c*nt, and b*tch.”

Police were around me, as they were headed to the dance as well for security, and they didn’t notice or, if they did, they did not care. When I arrived to the dance, I took off my lipstick, crying, and blamed myself. I was wearing was a T-shirt and red lipstick, I was underage, I was in the safety of my own vehicle. How did this happen?

I blamed myself, when this man, who thought it socially acceptable to say these things to me, was the one at fault. I hoped I would never experience something like this again, but unfortunately I’ve dealt with harassment multiple times since then. We need change, it needs to stop.

Optional: What’s one way you think we can make public places safer for everyone?

Long term, we need to change the thought that women are at fault for street harassment, and end rape culture. To do this, although difficult, we could try to push for laws against street harassment.

– Anonymous

Location: California

Need support? Call the toll-free National Street Harassment hotline: 855-897-5910

Share your street harassment story for the blog.
See the book 
50 Stories about Stopping Street Harassers for ideas.

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Filed Under: Stories, street harassment

“One of the managers got the creepy guy to leave”

January 4, 2019 By Contributor

Got on the bus to head home from work. There was a guy sitting up toward the front who said hi to me and he looked at me in a way that made me uneasy. I decided to sit in the back and try to listen to music like usual.

A couple minutes later, I see the same guy walk toward the back and sit down in the seat in front of mine. I’ve got my headphones in, yet he starts talking to me, trying to ask me things like what’s my name and where am I getting off. I didn’t give him the info but he kept persisting and I told him I wasn’t going to tell him where I’m going and didn’t like that he followed me to the back of the bus.

At this time I was also texting my friend, telling them what was happening. Then I changed seats. As I was talking to my friend, I kept noticing the creepy dude was still looking at me and trying to talk to me. He kept pulling the cord but would stay on once he realized I wasn’t getting off.

I decided to get off at a stop way past my usual one and when I got closer to the stop, I told the bus driver that I thought the guy was going to follow me. Turned around and creepy guy was standing RIGHT behind me, claiming he was “just trying to make sure I got home safe.”

I told him several times I would be fine and had never asked for his “help.”

He proceeded to follow me all the way to a restaurant that I headed to in order to get away from him, yelling “just go home! I just wanna make sure you’re safe!!”

Thankfully I knew people at the restaurant and one of the managers got the creepy guy to leave, and a friend and their roommate gave me a ride home.

– Anonymous

Location: St. Louis, MO, US

Need support? Call the toll-free National Street Harassment hotline: 855-897-5910

Share your street harassment story for the blog.
See the book 
50 Stories about Stopping Street Harassers for ideas.

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Filed Under: Stories, street harassment

“You’ve got a hot body. Your head’s farked.”

January 2, 2019 By Contributor

Walking from my neighbourhood to the gym, twice along the way I was verbally harassed by men. One yelled, “You’re ugly. UGLY,” as he rode his bike past me. A further 10 minutes on, a drunk/high man said, “You’ve got a hot body. Your head’s farked.”

Funny, as it is on one of the first days I decided to be proud of myself as a woman, not afraid, not keeping my presence small to protect myself.

– BT

Location: Sydney City, Australia

Need support? Call the toll-free National Street Harassment hotline: 855-897-5910

Share your street harassment story for the blog.
See the book 
50 Stories about Stopping Street Harassers for ideas.

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Filed Under: Stories, street harassment

“I was followed around a bookstore”

December 18, 2018 By Contributor

I was followed around a bookstore today for well over 5 minutes. I did not want to believe I was being followed and so I began purposely going in random aisles and circling around one section several times and this guy appeared at the end of each aisle every time staring at me. I stopped at the end of one aisle and pretended to look at the books there hoping he would leave.

Instead he approached me and tried to give me a piece of paper with his address on it. No hello or introducing himself just, “Can I give you this? It’s my address and stuff.”

I was already on alert from him following me and my instincts were screaming at me to get out of there. All I could do was shake my head. He left the aisle after I refused to take his paper and I quickly left the store and ran straight to my boyfriend’s place of work which was nearby. I was fearful he was still following me and I didn’t want to lead him to my car. I was very shaken up by the whole encounter.

– TR

Location: Bookstore in Washington state

Need support? Call the toll-free National Street Harassment hotline: 855-897-5910

Share your street harassment story for the blog.
See the book 
50 Stories about Stopping Street Harassers for ideas.

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Filed Under: Stories, street harassment

“If It Will Traumatize You”

December 13, 2018 By Contributor

I experienced it a lot of times and in different places. Honestly, I don’t wear revealing clothes. I grew up in a conservative family. I don’t wear shorts, above the knee dresses and skirts, sleeveless, tube, etc. But no matter how unrevealing the clothes I am wearing, I am not safe from street harassment.

No matter what you wear, no matter how you walk, no matter how you act, they will do it to you and they don’t care if it could hurt you, or worse, if it will traumatized you.

* While waiting for a public transport in a bus stop, the drivers and even their passengers (vehicles that were passing by) were catcalling me.

* There was one time that I was walking from school to our home, there were a group of boys laughing and slurring something to me.

* Inside the grocery store, there were men (around the ages of 20 to 26, I guess) stalking me and were leering.

* Inside a bus, I was about to come out but still waiting in line because a lot of us were coming out, when suddenly, someone was touching my waist and he’s acting like it was all accidental when in fact he did it thrice.

* I was walking home, when a motorcycle came by (a driver & a passenger, both are men) and touched my breasts then, they drove so fast that I couldn’t see their faces.

* Another time this happened when I was also walking home. There were two boys riding a bike when they passed by me, suddenly one of them touched my thigh. Everything happened so fast that I froze and I just cried.

Honestly, as of now, I am still in trauma about the street harassment that I had experienced. I cry a lot of times every time I remember those incidents. Some of those happened a couple of months ago, and one of those happened hours ago. I searched in google about street harassment and it led me to this website. I don’t know if I already need to seek for help from a psychiatrist or someone that could help me. I no longer feel safe and everything that has happened to me is really hurtful.

– CL

Location: The Philippines

Need support? Call the toll-free National Street Harassment hotline: 855-897-5910

Share your street harassment story for the blog.
See the book 
50 Stories about Stopping Street Harassers for ideas.

Share

Filed Under: Stories, street harassment

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