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USA: Florida Chalking Awareness Day

December 28, 2015 By Contributor

This post is from our Safe Public Spaces Team in Florida, USA. The SPSM projects are supported by SSH donors. If you would like to donate to support the 2016 mentees, we would greatly appreciate it!

By Tena Gordon

12.6.15 chalk awareness day - FL5In addition to our library event in October educating teens about street harassment, on December 6, 2015, Me=You: Sexual Violence Awareness (MYSVA for short) held our first Chalk Day! We set up on the sidewalk along Degroodt Road, outside our local library. Jineth (the member of MYSVA pictured to the left) held a sign to attract the drivers in passing vehicles to participate. Unfortunately, this was not a successful strategy. Next time, we are going to host Chalk Day at a place with less vehicle traffic and more foot traffic.

12.6.15 chalk awareness day - FL 1Anyway, people on foot and bike stopped and wrote messages against street harassment or just signed their name. We offered them a free informational, promotional package and free water. The most touching part of the day was when Rachael (the jogger pictured to the right) came back and brought her daughter of high-school age to sign her name, too.

Also, to our surprise, Sergio (the student journalist pictured below) from our school came and participated. He took pictures of us chalking, and he did a story on our event that aired on the school news.

In total, about 10-15 people participated. They were mostly of middle-age, not our targeted demographic, so next time we will have it in a place where teens hang out more frequently. Overall, Chalk Day raised awareness about street harassment, our main goal.

 12.6.15 chalk awareness day - FL 3  12.6.15 chalk awareness day - FL

Tena Gordon is the MYSVA Coordinator and a high school student in Florida.

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Filed Under: SSH programs, street harassment Tagged With: florida, sidewalk chalking

“I felt utterly degraded and helpless”

December 20, 2015 By Contributor

I was on my way to school, and some guys rolled down their window and shouted something out to me. They hooted as well, and then sped away. Bear in mind, I am a 14-year-old girl, who was in school uniform. I felt utterly degraded and helpless, and it made me feel like I was somehow to blame as there was nothing I could do.

– Anonymous

Location: On the street, outside my local train station.

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See the book 50 Stories about Stopping Street Harassers for more idea
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Filed Under: Stories, street harassment

“They humiliated me just because of my appearance”

December 19, 2015 By Contributor

There’s a wholesale store of electric goods near my apartment. I pass by the store everyday on my way to school. There’s no any other option from my apartment to a subway station. Over the past few months, some workers from the store have been harassing me (and one of my female roommate) saying things such as “Hi beautiful/ hey you look gorgeous today.”

Usually, I ignore men like them who try to talk with me as then the men give up. However, the workers from the store are so determined. They have escalated the harassment to saying things such as “Look at her ass or f**king Chinese don’t speak English.”

Even though I wasn’t raped, I felt that way and was so mad cause they humiliated me just because of my appearance.

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

I think the law about street harassment should be defined more and more strict against the people who harass. I tried to find a law to punish them but there’s no such a thing yet.

– NMH

Location: New York City, NY

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Filed Under: Stories, street harassment

“I ran and I ran and then started crying”

December 18, 2015 By Contributor

On Tuesdays and Thursdays, I go to the gym at about 6 p.m. To get there I walk five blocks, five quite deserted blocks. Since I got robbed very near that street, I don’t like walking there too much because there’s almost no people.

Anyway, I was heading to the gym today at 9:30 a.m. when a guy started to slowly cross the street (heading my way) (I didn’t even realise) only to come close to me and literally whisper “suck my dick for a bit mami”.

In the moment there was NO ONE else around so I started running because it was my first impulse. I immediately thought the guy was running behind me but luckily he wasn’t. I ran and I ran and then started crying because I hate men like that.

It made me feel like I was worth nothing. It made me feel tiny and weak. I felt like he could grab me and do whatever to me right there and I’d be helpless. I was carrying my pepper spray in my hand but didn’t even think about using it at the moment.

Did I do the right thing by running? Do you think I’ll meet that guy again?? There’s always a police officer right next to my house but no police officers in those five blocks. Should I advice that police to place more officers in those blocks?

– Paloma

Location: Buenos Aires, Argentina

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Filed Under: Stories, street harassment Tagged With: Argentina

“I’d just been harassed for the first time”

December 11, 2015 By Contributor

So one summer I was hanging out with my best friend for a day. Keep in mind, I was 15 at the time. It was pretty hot out that day, so I had on a fairly light outfit: a pink sundress that fell right between my knees and my fingertips lengthwise, a wide-brimmed sunhat, and a pair of plain white flip-flops.

Her mom came by my apartment and picked me up so I could go over to her house (she lives a little ways out of town, definitely not within walking distance) but they needed to stop at the grocery store first. I went in with them, since I was kind of hungry and had some money on me, with the intention of buying some snacks. They took a little while, since they had a whole list of stuff to get, but all I picked out was a package of brownies from the bakery and a couple candy bars that were on sale. Since they had a full cart and I only had three things, I decided to just go into the express lane while they went through the normal one next to me.

As I was putting my stuff on the counter, though, this creepy guy who had to be 50 or 60 or so with this huge, scraggly beard got in line behind me (there were three other lanes open) and started putting his stuff on the conveyor without putting up one of those divider sticks first. Naturally, the cashier got confused and asked me, “are you two together?” I know she meant PAYING together, and I just looked over at him for a second, looked back to her, and said no.

But this guy, this creep who was literally probably as old as or older than my grandpa, just looks at me with this creepy suggestive smile and says, “I wouldn’t mind if we were.” Like, this couldn’t have been the only time he’d done this. It just felt too planned. At this point I could literally just FEEL his eyes glancing all over me and checking me out. It made me want to lose my lunch right then and there.

My friend was still in the next checkout aisle over with her mom watching this all go down, and I could see her eyes go wide as I glanced over at her. It registered with me immediately that I’d just been harassed for the first time.

And although I was absolutely petrified on the inside, my face and voice remained completely deadpan as I looked over at the creep and said “I’m 15.” At this point even the cashier was giving the guy the “are you kidding me” stare.

And this guy’s expression didn’t even change, really. I mean, the news obviously came as a surprise to him, but he still looked intent on flirting with me. What a pervert. “You don’t look 15,” he said back to me.

Now I was really torn between just walking away and letting it go or just straight up slapping the guy, but I was inside a store, and my friend and her mom were literally right in the next aisle over, so I didn’t want to start up some big scene. I ended up just paying for my snacks and walking over to my friend (and kind of hiding behind her a little because my skin was crawling at this point) to wait for their cashier to finish ringing them up. My friend consoled me and tried to calm me down as we left, and thankfully I was feeling pretty much better when we got back to her house.

Seriously, though. Not only should that guy not have been hitting on me in a public place like that in the first place, but he should have at least stopped when I told him I was 15. I mean, come on. I’m a child, dude. And you’re, like, at least 50. That’s just sick. That was the first time I’ve ever been publicly harassed, and I have a feeling it won’t be the last.

– Abby

Location: Checkouts at the grocery store in town

Share your street harassment story for the blog.
See the book 50 Stories about Stopping Street Harassers for more idea
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Filed Under: Stories, street harassment

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