Anonymous wrote:Anyone who has the guts to try and touch me without my permission, they can come on. I have no problem dispatching someone. My body, my boundaries, my right to protect myself however I have to do it. I don't have to worry about that, though. I am not the kind of woman anyone wants to mess with. I look like exactly what I am: A dangerous woman who has lived too long and too hard and has seen too much. Don't allow yourself to be a victim, OP. No one has the right to grope you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Never. I'm in my mid 40's, went to clubs/parties almost every weekend in college, but never took publc transportation. Even now as an adult, the only time I take public transportation is when traveling in other cities.[/quote
Do you consider yourself attractive?
Yes, in college I was definitely attractive. Men would flirt/ask for my number, etc. but no one ever tried to grope me until we were actually on a date/making out —which is a completely different scenario than being groped by a stranger.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was groped many times in junior high and high school and it always was a big joke. The boys would try to pull our string bikini's off at the public pools. It was boys being boys.
Now in the #metoo days when a sexual assault (groping) is committed by a teenager at school it makes headlines and the citizens come out with their pitchforks to extract a pound of flesh from the sex offender.
It's actually why Christine Blasey Ford's story didn't faze me in the least. I thought it almost certainly did happen as she described it, but that sort of thing happened to many young females in the 80s - unwanted groping, throwing on beds, wrestling - myself included. I had an occasion where I was terrified and thought I might be raped. But I must say, it was so commonplace among the girls I knew that I didn't feel traumatized by it.
I cannot even tell you how many times I was groped - breasts, derriere, crotch. I didn't realize it was sexual assault until someone at the law firm where I was a paralegal told me that it was. I was 25.
I went to Prep parties at the time. Boys cornering you in a room, pushing you into a room, throwing you on a bed and not letting you out was common. But like CBF if you showed some strength you could get away. I’m sure some didn’t.
Or maybe that was the extend of their “game” - to prove they could dominate and intimidate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was groped many times in junior high and high school and it always was a big joke. The boys would try to pull our string bikini's off at the public pools. It was boys being boys.
Now in the #metoo days when a sexual assault (groping) is committed by a teenager at school it makes headlines and the citizens come out with their pitchforks to extract a pound of flesh from the sex offender.
It's actually why Christine Blasey Ford's story didn't faze me in the least. I thought it almost certainly did happen as she described it, but that sort of thing happened to many young females in the 80s - unwanted groping, throwing on beds, wrestling - myself included. I had an occasion where I was terrified and thought I might be raped. But I must say, it was so commonplace among the girls I knew that I didn't feel traumatized by it.
I cannot even tell you how many times I was groped - breasts, derriere, crotch. I didn't realize it was sexual assault until someone at the law firm where I was a paralegal told me that it was. I was 25.
I went to Prep parties at the time. Boys cornering you in a room, pushing you into a room, throwing you on a bed and not letting you out was common. But like CBF if you showed some strength you could get away. I’m sure some didn’t.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was groped many times in junior high and high school and it always was a big joke. The boys would try to pull our string bikini's off at the public pools. It was boys being boys.
Now in the #metoo days when a sexual assault (groping) is committed by a teenager at school it makes headlines and the citizens come out with their pitchforks to extract a pound of flesh from the sex offender.
It's actually why Christine Blasey Ford's story didn't faze me in the least. I thought it almost certainly did happen as she described it, but that sort of thing happened to many young females in the 80s - unwanted groping, throwing on beds, wrestling - myself included. I had an occasion where I was terrified and thought I might be raped. But I must say, it was so commonplace among the girls I knew that I didn't feel traumatized by it.
I cannot even tell you how many times I was groped - breasts, derriere, crotch. I didn't realize it was sexual assault until someone at the law firm where I was a paralegal told me that it was. I was 25.
Anonymous wrote:Have you been groped? Where did it happen? It's happened to me many times (like on the subway for example) and while it pissed me off, I didn't report it to the cops because I thought it wasn't even a crime. Groping is considered sexual assault now, but years ago it wasn't, am I right?