My Body, His Decision
Friday evening, early September. It’s just after seven o’clock
and I’m on my way home on the first of two short bus journeys. I’m tired and
looking forward to an evening doing very little. The clocks are still on summer
time and the sun has only just started to descend in the sky.
At the stop after mine, three men board the bus. They are
laughing and joking amongst themselves, loudly. One of them has no hair and is
so red in the face the colour has spread over his entire head. He looks as if
he had been lightly simmered. They’ve clearly been drinking. They stand
directly in front of my seat and so, as the bus moves along the road, I watch
them, wondering if they are at the beginning of a big night.
The bus reaches my stop. I move to get up. There’s a man in
front of me and a woman behind me but we can’t move, one of the three raucous
men is blocking the way and only moves when his friend alerts him to those of
us waiting. He steps to one side and stands by the exit.
The man in front of me passes him and exits. I follow. As I pass
the man by the door, I feel something grab at my hip. It is only once I am on
the pavement that I realise it was hands.
Before this moment, this tiny stitch in the fabric of time, I
had heard several friends tell stories of harassment on public transport; from
creepy passing comments to masturbation, the stories came in all shapes and
sizes. I took public transport well aware that these things happened and that
they could, in theory, happen to me. While I never actively made any plans of
what I would do were I to find myself groped, grabbed, poked or harassed in any
other sexual manner, there was, I realise now, a conviction that I would do
something, anything, other than stand by, were the situation to arise.
Instead, I find myself standing there, unsure what to do. I’m
angry. I’m really angry. I turn to the woman who disembarked behind me and I
ask, loudly because the doors to the bus are still open, ‘Did he touch you
too?’
She has a look of disgust on her face. ‘Yes’ she says.
I’m livid. I want something to happen, I want to challenge him,
I want the bus driver to do something, I want somebody to do something. But
everybody just watches.
After a beat, I say loudly, turning back to look at him, ‘That
is NOT Okay.’
But once the words leave me, they stop fuming and become limp
and pathetic instead. I feel powerless.
The door closes but the bus doesn’t move, waiting for the
traffic lights.
I shoot the man standing by the exit, the man who touched me, an
angry stare, trying to reclaim some dignity. I have a face, I have a name, I’m
not just a body. I go to the front of the bus, hoping the bus driver will do
something. But he doesn’t and the man who grabbed at me is left undisturbed. Instead,
he sticks his tongue out and the bus pulls away.
Uncertain what to do, I make my way to my second bus stop around
the corner. As I wait, I call two friends, one after the other. Neither picks
up but after a text saying I need to talk, I speak to both within the hour.
I tell them I’m angry. I swear more than I usually do and that’s
saying something. I tell them this isn’t right. They agree. There are tears in
my eyes that fall creep out onto my cheeks but they can’t see them.
It was a minimal movement but I’m shaken by how I feel after.
I get home and call my mother. I rage to her about it. ‘How
awful’ she says. ‘I know how you feel’ she says. She tells me a story about
herself aged fourteen at the cinema. How a stranger sat in the seat next to
hers and put his hand on her knee. How as the minutes passed and she sat there,
unsure what to do, he moved his hand further and further up her thigh. When he
got halfway, she stood up suddenly and ran out of the cinema.
I start to cry. It has been a long week. It has been a long day.
It has been a long hour. I am tired, tired and angry. I cry because a man
thought it was alright to touch me, however briefly, without my consent. I cry
because a man thought it was alright to touch my mother, without hers. I cry
because she wasn’t even an adult when it happened and her age made her
vulnerable. I cry because I am an adult and it happened and my age didn’t protect
me. I cry because as women we are vulnerable and we shouldn’t be.
It has been seven months since this happened. On the advice of
my friends and my mother, I informed the police. They were very supportive.
Concerns I had that the incident was too minimal for them to trouble with were
unfounded. They told me all incidents of sexual harassment and, what they
officially called this, sexual touching, were worth investigating. It could,
they told me, be the start of behaviour far worse by this individual. These
patterns of behaviour are important to monitor, they said.
Part of me tried to reason with myself before filing a
complaint. There was, after all, minimal contact between myself and this
individual. It was a tiny moment in time. I didn’t want to waste police time.
And I didn’t want to be over-dramatic. But I’m glad I did. The Transport Police
didn’t find anything and I don’t think they will. But they listened, they
cared, they told me it mattered. They validated my feelings and agreed this man
needed to know what he did was wrong.
In the meantime, I’ve been left somewhat skittish on public
transport, especially in the months that followed. Luckily, a few months after
the incident, I stopped needing to take that particular bus regularly at the
time. But I still find myself more cautious on public transport, more
suspicious of the men around me in case any turn out to have wandering hands
also.
While this event was but a few seconds, it reminded me of how
vulnerable women can be in public. This is, in large, something men take for
granted, not appreciating the planning that goes in to a journey into the
public sphere when you are a woman.
Driving with another woman at ten o’clock one night, we passed a
man going for a run. We both agreed we could never see ourselves doing that and
were shocked that he felt so free to do so. Secretly, I felt envy. When winter
sets in, I have to plan my runs around the shortening daylight hours and resent
the early evenings. It’s frustrating.
What can we do to improve this? It goes back to the idea of
consent. We teach children to kiss and hug adults, even when they don’t want
to. We teach young girls not to ruffle feathers, not preparing them for the
moments when they need to stand up for themselves. I remember as a teenager
being groped a disco and thinking this was alright as it was in a setting deemed
socially acceptable for such advances. When trading stories from the disco with
friends, I said some boy had pinched my bum to which a friend replied, ‘yeah
but that’s nothing, everybody got pinched.’ But it wasn’t nothing and the
gesture was not acceptable. Only now as an adult can I see that. Perhaps if I’d
known back then that grabbing a girl’s bottom isn’t an acceptable way to show
attraction, that it demonstrates a possessive intent instead of appreciation, I
would have been angry. Perhaps if I’d felt confident enough to stand up to a
boy, I’d have said something. And perhaps in doing so I would have had the
courage to say something more last September.
Perhaps not. Hindsight is always a benefit and we can’t change
what has happened, only hope to be better prepared for the future.
This week, I saw an article about a woman who experienced sexual
harassment of a more persistent and disturbing degree on a bus journey. She
tweeted her experience, including what the passenger who harassed her said and
did and what the bus driver said and didn’t do. She said she’d spoken to the
Transport Police and they were helpful. It’s comforting to know they continue
to treat all incidents seriously and kindly. In the meantime, I wish all
readers, male, female, non-binary, young and old, safe travels.
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