Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dunno, if it were me and she was a friend, I would want to talk to her about the night she was raped out of concern for her, and because you were there. I would think that worth of about her employment prospects would be a distant, distant second. You sound like you are still kind of annoyed with her about her behavior that night though, so maybe don't get in touch unless you can be compassionate about it.
I reached out to her yesterday on the phone and she said everything is cool. She also posted this morning about how she's fine and she will continue posting about personal experiences. She suggested people not read if they are uncomfortable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She posted something about regretting her one night stands now that's she's a Christian. Another post lecturing people to save sex for marriage. And a third post about being raped in college. I remember that night because she left me at a club alone to leave with some random guy and it was like 9:30pm when she left. We didn't even have drinks!I found out hours later when she called me to tell me that she left. This is the first time I am hearing about rape and we're now in our thirties. I'm not sure how to respond. She's never really been active on Facebook until recently. Any words of advice? Would these posts hurt her in anyway when she is looking for employment?
The Stanford case has brought up a lot of feelings for some rape victims. I think for some they feel courage to speak their truth after reading the woman's incredibly courageous victim statement from the trial. She's in her 30's, she hardly needs a lecture on how to process her feelings and what she should/shouldn't share.
She's also posting about her promiscuous life before she apparently found God. It's just too much. And she wonders why people in college stopped talking to her because she's crazy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She posted something about regretting her one night stands now that's she's a Christian. Another post lecturing people to save sex for marriage. And a third post about being raped in college. I remember that night because she left me at a club alone to leave with some random guy and it was like 9:30pm when she left. We didn't even have drinks!I found out hours later when she called me to tell me that she left. This is the first time I am hearing about rape and we're now in our thirties. I'm not sure how to respond. She's never really been active on Facebook until recently. Any words of advice? Would these posts hurt her in anyway when she is looking for employment?
The Stanford case has brought up a lot of feelings for some rape victims. I think for some they feel courage to speak their truth after reading the woman's incredibly courageous victim statement from the trial. She's in her 30's, she hardly needs a lecture on how to process her feelings and what she should/shouldn't share.
Anonymous wrote:She posted something about regretting her one night stands now that's she's a Christian. Another post lecturing people to save sex for marriage. And a third post about being raped in college. I remember that night because she left me at a club alone to leave with some random guy and it was like 9:30pm when she left. We didn't even have drinks!I found out hours later when she called me to tell me that she left. This is the first time I am hearing about rape and we're now in our thirties. I'm not sure how to respond. She's never really been active on Facebook until recently. Any words of advice? Would these posts hurt her in anyway when she is looking for employment?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dunno, if it were me and she was a friend, I would want to talk to her about the night she was raped out of concern for her, and because you were there. I would think that worth of about her employment prospects would be a distant, distant second. You sound like you are still kind of annoyed with her about her behavior that night though, so maybe don't get in touch unless you can be compassionate about it.
I reached out to her yesterday on the phone and she said everything is cool. She also posted this morning about how she's fine and she will continue posting about personal experiences. She suggested people not read if they are uncomfortable.
Anonymous wrote:Dunno, if it were me and she was a friend, I would want to talk to her about the night she was raped out of concern for her, and because you were there. I would think that worth of about her employment prospects would be a distant, distant second. You sound like you are still kind of annoyed with her about her behavior that night though, so maybe don't get in touch unless you can be compassionate about it.