Society has allowed rapists to define what resistance is: screaming, crying, scratching, pushing, kicking, biting, punching. I didn’t resist like that. My resistance was to wriggle a bit, turn my head away when he tried to kiss me, try to stop his hand going into my bra and knickers, push him ineffectually, talk about wanting to get my cab; all things which normal men recognise as not being enthusiastic participation when they are engaging with women but pretend it’s a grey area when they talk about rape. Rapists have managed to get society to believe, that what I did, was consent.
Because I didn’t resist in the way rapists - and society - say that women should resist, they define our non-participation as consent.
"A section of the article “How I became a rape victim”
(via sociolab)
BOOM, rape culture at work… Can I also add, when you are in a situation that involves rape or you think might involve rape or looks like it might involve rape in a few minutes, its usually pretty scary to scream and kick… Especially if you know this person and sometimes might even care about them and think they care about you too. It is much more likely that you’ll say “No.. Lets stop.. I don’t want to right now..” etc
(via jojoholmes)
“Rapists have managed to get ME to believe, that what I did, was consent.”
(via whos-scruffy-looking)
![comedycentral:
Bat Stewart and Robin Colbert by Jeff Matsuda, Creative Director of the Batman Cartoon.
[via Reddit]](http://24.media.tumblr.com/d74dc018c35abdf66698814711013e2c/tumblr_mgf5j7V6jx1qz8x31o1_400.jpg)
Bat Stewart and Robin Colbert by Jeff Matsuda, Creative Director of the Batman Cartoon.
[via Reddit]
“To love another person is to see the face of God”
- Victor Hugo, Les Misérables