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“I am unable to leave my house as I simply can’t stand it any more”

June 22, 2015 By Contributor

I am a 34-year-old woman living in Melbourne, Australia. I have been harassed by men in public for my entire adult life. At this point in my life I feel utterly worn down and broken by it.

Today for the first time I am unable to leave my house as I simply can’t stand it any more.

Countless times men have followed me, made rapey comments about my body, yelled sexual threats out of cars, and whispered them in my ear. I simply have too many stories to pick just one. Literally hundreds. I brace myself every time I step out of my house, and can never fully relax in public spaces wherever men are around.

Young men, old men, white men, Indian men, refugee men, disabled men, men alone, men in pairs, men in groups. Men of all ages and races.

Never can I leave the house without being relentlessly reminded of my female biology in the most degrading and vile ways. I have lived in four cities and it is the same everywhere. I will be out in public somewhere thinking about what I have to do that day, about work, about a friend I am going to visit, about my next creation as an artist…..not thinking about my biology until suddenly a man yells some sexually aggressive abuse at me to remind me that I am a woman and thus a subhuman object.

I dream about being able to go out in public without being constantly forced to think about my biology instead of what I am doing in the world that day. After 16 years of abuse from male strangers I am ready to bind my chest and shave off all my hair. I have an ʺhourglassʺ shaped body and it is hell to wear this body wherever men are, particularly living in a porn sick culture where large breasts are so intensely fetishised.

I wear no make up and no revealing clothing and shave half my head, but no matter what I wear or how I cut my hair I can never not wear this body. I am met with disbelief when I describe all this to some people. The only thing I can do to try and reduce the male harassment is attempt to save money to buy a car so I never have to walk on footpaths. Ever again.

– Anonymous

Location: Australia

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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

“We cannot hide from these people who hate us!”

June 21, 2015 By Contributor

Hi everyone, i want to praise your commitment in this importance issue, i a man and i suffer from harassment in my university from a guy, who i think is homophobic, that whistled at me when i was walking in the corridors of my faculty.

This man works in the faculty as a administrative assistant because i see him in the offices.

This is a really true story that a share with you, i wanna encourages other to talk more about this problem, because we all are equal as a human beings and deserve respect in public spaces, we cannot hide from these people who hate us!

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

Including a special reporting office in the police station, making this problem public in social media like facebook, twitter with photos and videos, and creating a non government organization that speaks out on this and promotes news laws to punishes this issue.

– TGI

Location: University

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

“He was trying to slap my butt while going almost 30 miles an hour”

June 20, 2015 By Contributor

I was riding my bike home from class on a busy road when I heard a car swerving unusually close to the bike lane from behind me. I immediately tried to get out of the way, almost hitting a parked car. As the pickup truck passes me, I saw an old guy (around 50) hanging out the window with his arm extended, laughing loudly and shouting, ʺWhoops, I missed!ʺ He was trying to slap my butt while going almost 30 miles an hour in his car.

I couldn’t help but wonder what he must have been thinking about my body during the time they were driving behind me, and that made me feel horribly embarrassed and ashamed. I was furious that he put my safety at risk – not just my comfort, like most cat-callers do, but my actual physical well being – to get a laugh at my expense. Why did he think he had that right?? I know I wasn’t doing anything wrong, that the onus of his behavior is on him and not my actions or appearance, but it still made me feel like I needed to fix something.

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

Right now I think it might just have to be a case-by-case thing. Next time someone makes me uncomfortable in this way, I’ll talk to them about it, assuming the situation allows for that.

– CS

Location: Seattle, WA

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

Nicaragua Street Harassment Report Release

June 18, 2015 By HKearl

Nicaragua Team Report Release
Click on the image to access the full report.

Our 2014 Safe Public Spaces Mentoring Team Observatorio Contra el Acoso Callejero, Nicaragua, surveyed 900 women about street harassment in the city of Managua in the last months of 2014. More than fifteen volunteers interviewed women ages 14-55 at bus stops across the city.

ocacencuesta15

You can read about their preliminary results here. Today they are officially releasing the full report at a big event, with a press conference.

Congratulations to them and many thanks for their dedication to bringing attention to this issue in their country!

UPDATED: Here are photos and some of the media coverage!

6.18.15 Nicaragua Team REport Press Event 26.18.15 Nicaragua Team REport Press Event 36.18.15 Nicaragua Team REport Press Event 4

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Filed Under: SSH programs, street harassment

France/Brazil: “I Still Feel the Same Terror”

June 15, 2015 By Correspondent

Luiza Pougy Magalhaes, France/Brazil, SSH Blog Correspondent

The very first time I witnessed street harassment, I was very young. I was so young that I didn’t really understand what a passing taxi driver meant when he called my mom a “yummy mommy”, when he looked right at her and said, “Oh mother may I.”

He was stuck in traffic right by my house; his collar opened all the way down to his chest, his arms out of the open window of his taxi. We walked by, completely unaware of his existence. Upon hearing his words, my mom stiffened, her back straightened, she held my hand tighter, and pulled me closer. I remember how I could feel her discomfort, and how I felt uncomfortable myself. I couldn’t understand why he had chosen to direct those words at her. I remember I wanted to protect her. I hated that man and I wished no one would ever speak to my mother like this again.

Today, I can still feel the terror I felt when he stared as we walked away. Now I know that she must have shared that terror. Probably more so than that; she must have felt violated and disgusted, shameful even – ashamed to be spoken like this in front of her daughter.

While I recall every detail of this particular scene, I doubt my mother remembers it at all. When street harassment becomes a daily struggle, we tend to block it out, rather than have it engraved on our memories. Nonetheless, I have a few stories worth sharing.

A couple of years ago, while wandering the streets of Brazil, I got lost. Knowing Brazilian men, I was very careful when asking for directions. I approached a couple of women, but had no luck. I saw a man; middle-aged, a clean-shaved face, impeccable posture, well-fitted suit, and glasses. Surely a well-educated man like himself would do no harm. I walked towards him with a shy smile. Before I could even say anything, he started calling me things; made comments about my legs, said he would pay money for me. Shocked and terrified, I left; mouth wide-open.

That day I learned that street harassers are not exclusive to certain demographics.

A few years after, I walked by a man with a toddler. The little boy lovingly leaned against the man’s chest. Just as they left my eye-sight I heard a whistle and a malicious comment. I turned around. The man was grinning and nodding, his boy looking at me, wide-eyed. Usually, street harassment makes me angry. Then, I just felt sad. Sad thinking about how this boy would be raised, what misogynistic values would be passed on to him.

Sad to realize that there was still a long way to fix society.

Living in France, street harassment also occurs regularly – once, at a supermarket I go to with frequency. The cashier’s line was long and I got distracted on my phone. The sound of a quiet giggle in my ear woke me from my trance. I turned around. There was a guy behind me, doing obscene, sexual gestures. I pushed him off, screamed at him and his friends – his audience. What really shocked me was that none of the cashiers, security, or general staff – who knew me well, I must say – did anything about it. They just looked at me; frowned faces at the foreigner girl who was making a scene.

That day I realized that people don’t think street harassment is a big deal, that street harassment is not taken seriously.

Months later, walking by my university, also in France, I crossed paths with a student; his gaze fixed on me. He licked his lips, hissed, and growled when we locked eye-contact. I called him a creeper and continued my way. He freaked out; started yelling that I “better watch out and have some f***ing respect, bitch.” In disbelief, ashamed, and also terrified, I picked up the pace and pretended like I wasn’t the one he was yelling at.

That day I realized that harassers see their victims with such tremendous inferiority that just the thought that they could stand up for their selves, pushes them over the edge.

You would think that years in the receiving end would have made street harassment any easier to deal with. However, I still feel the same terror that little girl felt when her mom was catcalled by that taxi driver. I feel my back straighten and stiffen just like hers did. I feel uncomfortable, violated, and ashamed, just like she must have felt. After all this time, I still don’t understand why the taxi driver stared, why the man commented, the father whistled, the boy hissed, the guy gestured. And to be honest, I don’t think I ever will.

Luiza is a 20-year-old from Brazil who considers herself a citizen of the world. As a teenager she moved to Singapore and now she studies International Business in France.

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Filed Under: correspondents, Stories, street harassment

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