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“I don’t want people to be scared of walking alone”

July 22, 2017 By Contributor

I was only minutes away from my home when two boys (one on a bike) walked not too far behind me and started shouting things like “fat a**” and loudly saying to each other “look at it jiggle!” and more rude comments. Bear in mind that I am a 14 year old girl and the two boys looked around 16 or 17 years old. The experience made me feel really uncomfortable and embarrassed. When I ignored them they started getting violent and shouting things like “don’t f****** ignore me” and “you ginger c***” (I’m not even ginger, I’m a brunette).

They followed me all the way from where I was to my local shop (which is about 5 minutes away from where they started following me). I should’ve gone into the shop and told someone and asked if I could stay there for a little while but in the heat of the moment, I was scared and took a quick turn, running down a familiar street and trying to get away from them. I luckily lost them before they got too violent.

I was so shocked and scared that I just kept walking an alternative route back home and called my mam. I was so scared and I don’t think I’ll be walking alone again for a little while, I’m just glad that they didn’t follow me further. This happened about two hours ago.

I feel better now and I have stopped shaking but my boyfriend isn’t too happy about it. I want catcalling to stop and I don’t want people to be scared of walking alone like I am now. I’m only 14 for god sake and just think how bad it could’ve been if they were older men. Catcalling and following needs to stop because it did not make me feel good about myself or confident or anything else that people might try to convince you, it was scary, embarrassing and made me feel frustrated.

It’s ridiculous that people like me can’t just walk around and have freedom without feeling scared of other people.

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

Educate young people on how catcalling can be dangerous and make people extremely uncomfortable, also educate people on how to intervene with catcalling.

– Anonymous

Location: Newcastle, United Kingdom

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 idea
s.

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Filed Under: Stories, street harassment

“I am scared that he saw where I live”

July 21, 2017 By Contributor

So I just got back from a walking my dog in the park where something really creepy happened. As I was walking along one of the alleys, there was a guy who noticed my dog and started immediately taking photos of him and calling him to come. I pulled my dog as I immediately felt bothered about this guy taking photos of my dog without asking permission. I started walking home as I already started to feel restless and my dog was tired.

As I was walking I noticed the guy walking alongside us, on a parallel alley speaking on the phone and looking at me continuously. I chose to go out on a different exit from the park and the guy kept following me whilst speaking on the phone, or pretending …not sure. I crossed the street as I exited the park and the guy stayed on his side but kept walking in the same direction and kept looking at me. At this point I was terrified. It was broad daylight but still I was afraid that his intention was to snatch my dog from me.

I slowed down and pretended I was entering a certain house to see if the guy still followed me. At this point I was walking behind him on the other side of the street. He kept on going and talking on the phone. Seeing that he kept on walking, I turned left to where my house was and entered, but at this point the guy reached the corner of the street and turned around to see where I was. He saw me entering my house for which I am terrified!

I locked the door and looked out from behind the curtains and I saw the guy turning around, walking towards my house, walk past it and stare at the house!!! He seemed to go back to the park. I don’t know what to do. but I am scared that he saw where I live and might come to steal my dog when nobody is at home.

– DP

Location: Valentine’s Park, Gants hill

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

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Filed Under: Stories

SSH Condemns Deeply Troubling Remarks by Education Department Official

July 20, 2017 By HKearl

The acting head of the Office for Civil Rights (OCR) at the U.S. Department of Education, Candice Jackson, made headlines last week for her dangerous remarks about college sexual assault. Jackson was quoted in The New York Times as saying, “Rather, the accusations — 90 percent of them — fall into the category of, ‘We were both drunk, we broke up, and six months later I found myself under a Title IX investigation because she just decided that our last sleeping together was not quite right.'”

Those words are appalling, and Stop Street Harassment strongly condemns them.

As a national nonprofit organization working to end gender-based street harassment worldwide, we’re keenly aware that the public sexual harassment that we’ve documented for years doesn’t happen in a vacuum: It is part of a broader rape culture that minimizes and perpetuates sexual violence, including on college campuses.

At its core, street harassment is about exerting power over someone else, disrespecting them, and in most cases sexually objectifying a person without consent. It is on the same spectrum of behavior as sexual assault and rape. Indeed, our societal acceptance of street harassment – often regarded as the price women and LGBTQ people pay for being women and/or LGBTQ – reflects a culture that normalizes disrespect, accepts unsolicited comments about another person’s body, and tells perpetrators that their actions, however unconscionable, are okay.

Despite what people like Jackson claim, sexual harassment and violence aren’t okay, made-up, or the victim’s fault – not when we’re talking about street harassment, and certainly not when we’re talking about college sexual assault. We demand better from our nation’s public officials and will continue to speak out when they make such damaging statements.

Signed,

The Stop Street Harassment Board of Directors

(Thanks to our board member Patrick McNeil for drafting this!)

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Filed Under: News stories, street harassment

“Men don’t hoot in appreciation of beauty”

July 18, 2017 By Contributor

I was in a city with my family on the 4th of July. We’d been out all day, walking and sweating among the throngs at a festival–so that when the sky finally darkened and the fireworks began over the plaza, I covertly removed my bra and tucked it into my daypack. AT LAST!

What I hadn’t accounted for, in my 53-year-old audacity, were the city lights and the crowds—after the fireworks–and so I was forced to walk back to our hotel with my arms crossed over my chest, particularly since I was wearing a lightweight top, and was having too many hot flashes to bear putting on the red, white & blue button down that my 16 year old lent me from his closet.

As we approached a small intersection outside the plaza, and the crowds dispersed, something beautiful caught my attention, and I paused, and crossed a side street, as my husband and son kept on walking, deep in conversation about a car they’d seen or about the Air Force flyby we’d all witnessed before the fireworks.

I took out my phone and lifted my arms above my head to get the shot, and as I did, a car drove by, and a young man with wavy black hair hung his head out the backseat window, like a dog, and hooted–which I found so disorienting–like a wave of the past crashing at the shore of the present–that it wasn’t until the car caught the light just ahead that I lifted my middle finger into the air and moved it in an arc across time and across the space that defined me apart from him even while he continued to spew appreciation for my breasts.

It’s taken me almost two weeks to share this experience, and I’m still not entirely clear about it. What is clear is something that I hadn’t understood when I was young and desirable–all those years when I was expected to be attractive to men, even while the attention made me cringe, even as it empowered me, and as it disabled me from focusing on my capacities instead of my curves:

Men don’t hoot in appreciation of beauty,
they do it because they are entitled:

To women.
To the streets.
To society.

That someone thirty years my junior would still stake that claim infuriates me, even while my mind wants to be flattered: Yay, I still get an A. On appearance.

F*** THAT.

I do have beautiful breasts, particularly with the gravity of aging counteracted. But they’re mine. They’ve fed and comforted two baby boys into preschool. They’ve been offered in love making to one man for 31 years. They’ll be with me, if I’m fortunate, when I die.

I was 16, and working in the Hospital Lab, when I watched the Pathologist cut a section of a large, yellow-encrusted tumor out of an elderly woman’s breast after I’d emptied the breast from a plastic jar onto the specimen table.

“Why would she have waited so long to see someone?” I asked.

“She must have been afraid,” the other assistant said.

Later, I would rinse the formaldehyde from the breast before dropping it into the trash can. It was that summer that men started “hitting on me,” younger still when they began commenting on my developing body. My father. My uncles. Their friends.

I wonder if any man knows what it is to be afraid of your body.

To want to hide.
To be ashamed.
To cringe.

Because of the way you look at it.
Because of the way you talk about it.
Because of the way you make what is ours, yours.

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

Sharing our stories publicly. Raising awareness.

– Kelly S

Location: Albany, NY, USA

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 idea
s.

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Filed Under: Stories, street harassment

“I actually fought back against catcallers”

July 17, 2017 By Contributor

I got out of a cab with my mother around 11 a.m. on the side of a busy street, and a truck was stopped at a stop light next to the cab with three “men” in the front. I looked up and they started to wave at me. I was starting to get tired of feeling helpless and giving catcallers the feeling that they won by my shutting me up, so I flipped them off and walked away with my mom. As we were walking on the side of the street, the truck moved from the middle lane to the right lane next to the sidewalk, and slowed down beside us and they told me to “say hello”.

My mom told me to ignore them and eventually they drove away since they were stopping traffic. At that moment it made me feel powerful because I actually fought back against catcallers. However as the day went on, I began thinking about what they said to me after and that maybe I shouldn’t have flipped them off because I wouldn’t have had the second encounter, or I could have done something more, such as spit in their truck window or take a picture of their truck and call the company and complain.

– Anonymous

Location: Brooklyn/NY/USA, Atlantic Avenue

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 idea
s.

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Filed Under: Stories, street harassment

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SSH will not publish any comment that is offensive or hateful and does not add to a thoughtful discussion of street harassment. Racism, homophobia, transphobia, disabalism, classism, and sexism will not be tolerated. Disclaimer: SSH may use any stories submitted to the blog in future scholarly publications on street harassment.
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