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“Don’t ever come back and leave women alone!”

January 8, 2017 By Contributor

It has happened my entire life from the time I was 8 until I was 45 and no longer looked “young” enough to get harassed. Since then it happens a whole lot less, but it can still happen if they see me from behind and think I’m younger. When I turn around the look on their faces is priceless.

The one incident that stands out for me is the time I was getting on a bus and my husband and friends were behind me. Some guy stands up in his seat, grabs me, throws me into the seat beside him and says, “You’re sitting HERE!” I go to get up, he pushes me back and that’s when I lost my temper. I screamed, “You moron, I’m with my husband and friends who right there.” Then when he turned to look behind him, I picked up my feet and shoved him across the aisle into the empty seats.

He sat there frozen then looked at my husband and said, “Are you gonna hurt me?”

My husband just laughed, “No, man. It looks like she already did and my wife is martial arts trained, so good luck with that.”

Everyone on the bus laughed and the guy went to the front of the bus waiting for the next stop, just staring at his feet. When he got off, the bus driver yelled at him, “Don’t ever come back and leave women alone!”

I remember that one, because it was when I finally stood up for myself, plus while I’d had men catcall me or try to chat me up, no one had physically ever tried to grab and restrain me.

I stopped tolerating harassment a lot after that.

Optional: Do you have any suggestions for dealing with harassers and/or ending street harassment in general?

Get really good at trusting your instincts and what type of situation is in front of you. Read Gavin de Becker’s book The Gift of Fear because it is hands down the best book I’ve read for learning to trust that little voice inside you. Understand a guy shouting something at you from a car that keeps going on past you is very different than the guy scooting up to you in a deserted subway station or who tries to take advantage of a crowded subway by mashing themselves into you.

Next, if you are not a loud boisterous person or you are shy or just have a go-to setting of, “Be nice to everyone,” take some self-defense classes (ones that teach you what to do in bad situations, not ones showing you how to do impressive roundhouse kicks type stuff) or assertiveness classes or even just yell things like, “NO, STOP IT” and “GET AWAY FROM ME!” in the mirror until you can do that easily with a loud authoritative voice and you don’t feel shy or feel stupid doing it.

Stand up for others when you see it happening to them. Don’t look the other way and silently be glad it’s not you they’re targeting. Our silence and our passiveness to let bad things happen to other people feeds street harassment. Do the same things you would for that person that you would do for you if it were you.

– Anonymous

Location: Los Angeles city bus

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

Three Ways to Help Stop Street Harassment in 2017

January 6, 2017 By HKearl

A new year is upon us and if you are looking for ways to get involved in making the world a better, safer and more equitable place, we can help! Here are three things you can do this year, immediately, to help raise awareness about street harassment — and work to end it.

1. Apply to join our first Blog Correspondents cohort of 2017. This volunteer position entails writing a monthly article (500-800 words) about street harassment and/or activism in your community. This is an important way to show this is a problem all over the world… and that there are people all over the world dedicated to ending it. The position runs from January (now!) to April 2017, apply today.

2. Plan to take action during International Anti-Street Harassment Week. From April 2 to 8, 2017, hundreds of groups and tens of thousands of people all over the world will join together to raise awareness about street harassment. This is the 7th year and in the past, groups in up to 41 countries have participated by marching, wheatpasting, sidewalk chalking, holding workshops and rallies, writing op-eds and holding tweet chats. How will you take part?

endshweekpostcard2017

3. Spread the word about the National Street Harassment Hotline. You never know who will need this toll-free 24/7 support — spread the word over social media or in person about the hotline. You can also donate to help cover the cost of running it in 2017.

twitter-im-chat-english

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Filed Under: anti-street harassment week, SSH programs, volunteer

Three men literally hold court to decide her feelings of personal safety

January 6, 2017 By Contributor

I’m 53, I have been stared at, followed, stalked, and plain harassed since I was 18. I do not think I’ve ever had a job where I was not subjected to some kind of sexual harassment.

About three years ago, a man, roughly 60 years old, moved in next door to my home. He began initiating conversation which I rebuffed and never participated in except to nod, smile and excuse myself. The behavior escalated to stalking, waiting in front of my house in his car, and more conversation, following me down my driveway and asking inappropriate things, such as: was I happy being married?

Finally, I told my husband and avoided ever going to the front of my house. My husband and I decided to get a restraining order after the stalker came into my front yard, startling me while I was watering plants. The signing judge was great, issued the order, and was sympathetic. The stalker got a pro bono lawyer from some “community ” group funded by the county and appealed. I appeared on my own, mistake, even though my county web site emphasizes victims can appear on their own.

The judge, (really, referee), was rude, couldn’t understand what the problem was, and proceeded to label me as having “issues.” The restraining order was overturned. Shocked, my husband and I went home and put our home up for sale. We sold our home of 22 years, without a yard sign in a matter of days and quickly moved.

We live only 6 blocks away but I recently saw our old “neighbor “, as I was taking the garbage out, I ducked behind a retaining wall, he didn’t see me. Can you ever imagine a scenario where a court referee, man, a stalker, man and a lawyer, man literally hold court to decide your feelings of personal safety?

– Anonymous

Location: Minneapolis, MN

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

“Get away from my child”

January 1, 2017 By Contributor

I spent winter break in Vietnam. Having lived overseas my whole life I tend to let my guard down. Around 10:30 PM I was standing outside a travel agency and cafe. Around me were a bunch of foreign tourists. My mom was fewer that two meters away talking to a travel agent. A man tapped me on the shoulder and said, “You’re beautiful. ”

He was only an arm’s length away. Shocked I took a second to think, then responded, “Thanks, I am 15.”

I should of said it louder. I said it in a tone that was closer to a mumble rather than a normal speech volume level. My mom instantly came over and told him to get away from me, “Get away from my child”, “leave” and “step away from my daughter.”

She had her hand up signaling him to back away. He tried to defend himself. Or so I thought. It started with, “Your daughter? Well you’re beautiful too.”

My mom was unfazed and didn’t even stop to listen to him. She kept telling him to go away. Meanwhile I looked at the ground, clearly pissed but unable to speak. Eventually he did leave. The encounter only lasted a minute. This was my first encounter of street harassment. I am ashamed that I wasn’t able to stand up for myself. I am ashamed for all the people near by who did nothing to help. I am ashamed that our society tolerates this.

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

Educating the next generation of men and women about street harassment. Teach it in schools, stop it early on. Through the education we can create equality.

– FC

Location: Ho Chin Minh, Vietnam. On the street.

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

Late December 2016 News Round-Up

December 30, 2016 By HKearl

Some of the highlights of this month:

Across one weekend, women from 43 cities in 29 countries reported their experiences of street harassment to the BBC for the 100 Women season.

VICE offices asked women from 13 European cities if and where they feel unsafe alone at night, and how they deal with that feeling.

The city of Buenos Aires (Argentina) enacted a law making public sexual harassment illegal and requiring public education campaigns.

Eleanor Gordon-Smith, a writer/reporter in Australia confronted her catcallers and figure why they do it.

Youth in Cambodia made films on topics like street harassment.

In Timbío, Colombia, there is a new non-binding decree around street harassment along with a city-wide public education campaign.

Protests erupted in Bogota, Colombia, after a man kidnapped a seven-year-old girl from her yard, then raped, tortured and killed her.

A group of Egyptian women organized a “short-dress march” to call for respect and a change of attitudes around street harassment.

Street harassment is contributing to high obesity rates among women in Morocco.

More than 1000 people took the #IWalkFreely survey in Nepal and 98 percent of all women said they had been harassed.

Activists in NYC prepare bystanders to take action against harassment as bias-based attacks soar following the U.S. election.

American singer Ariana Grande speaks out against street harassment, sexism and objectification.

In this video, the woman speaks back to her street harassers.

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Filed Under: News 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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