Metaphor
For some reason, I’ve been suddenly surrounded with sexual assault issues this week–in the lives of people I know, in films, on blogs, in email discussions with friends, etc. Everywhere I turn the topic is coming up. I’ve been wanting to write about a few of these recent encounters with the topic, but I’m finding it hard to get started.
I guess since I’m tired, for brevity’s sake I’ll start with what I think will be the shortest one.
I won’t go into the details of that got me to what I’m going to write below, because it’s someone’s personal story and I don’t feel comfortable revealing that without their permission. But let’s just say the topic came up of why someone who was sexually assaulted, but not raped (by this I mean no penetration of any type) would have such a difficult time recovering emotionally from it.
In answering this, I came up with a metaphor that I think may helps explain and (hopefully) combat the harm produced by one of the problematic responses many people give victims–and that victims also often require of themselves–after a sexual assault: That is, asking for an assessment of the “degree” of the assault. And once that’s been asked, measuring whether the level of emotional response is “appropriate” relative to that “degree” of physical trespass.
Here’s what I came up with to get through to people about it:
When it comes to sexual assault and its emotional after effects, degree doesn’t really factor into it. Trying to measure the “allowable” emotional impact of something like a sexual assault and how a victim “should” respond based on that is basically the same as if a child came up to you crying and told you an adult had just walked up to him on the playground and punched him in the face, and you asked him to tell you exactly how hard the adult had punched him, and on what part of his face, because if it “wasn’t too hard” or “in too bad a place” then he really needed to stop crying already.
No one in their right mind would do that. They wouldn’t be thinking about whether the kid had a right to be upset; they’d be running to the police to get that abusive bastard locked up before he left the park.
As in that scenario, when it comes to sexual assault, the degree of the act doesn’t matter–the fact that the act happened is what matters, and what holds all the emotional impact. What matters is that something wrong was perpetrated, and it’s harmed the person it was perpetrated on as a result.
There are no “shoulds” or “shouldn’ts” in terms of the feelings around it. It’s an extremely upsetting, scary, and traumatic thing, and it is always seriously wrong behavior on the part of the perpetrator, regardless of degree. Whenever someone disrespects and devalues another’s body, needs, and boundaries, that is a dangerous person. And the victim of that person has survived a dangerous situation. It would makes sense that she or he would feel strongly about it, and that it would have strong after effects.
Asking a sexual assault survivor to “quantify” her or his assault–or, if you are a survivor yourself, telling yourself you have to quantify it–is never helpful to healing from that trauma. It is only harmful.
And also, in my experience, those of us who have been sexually assaulted–no matter what our assault was like–also do this same thing to ourselves. We tend to try to minimize the event by telling ourselves it was “not that bad” or that “nothing really happened” or that we “shouldn’t be making such a big deal about it.” (Or all three together.) But actually it’s just the opposite. It WAS bad, something DID happen, and it IS a big deal, no matter what the physical situation was or how “far” the perpetrator(s) got before he/she/they stopped his/her/their unacceptable behavior.
That last sentence is one of the most important things to stress to a victim of sexual assault, no matter what type of assault it was, no matter how long ago in the past. There is no minimizing of it, regardless of degree. And it’s not something people “just forget and get over.” Or that they get over at a predictable and standardized pace. It lingers. It is trauma, and the brain and body reacts to trauma over an extended period. It doesn’t let you forget.
So stressing that sentence to a traumatized survivor is a far better, more supportive option than questioning the “degree” of someone’s assault vs. their emotional response. That’s not what a victim needs. Ever.
So what do you think? Does that opening metaphor work? I find often that sexual assault often makes people so uncomfortable, they can’t seem to think properly, but if you can take it outside of the context of sexual assault and use a comparative association, people can sometimes get what they’ve been unable to see right in front of them the whole time.
—
Update: I’ve been getting a lot of hits on this article from AAG’s blog and elsewhere today, so I’ve decided to republish some posts from an older blog of mine that document some of the history/struggle/growth/healing I experienced around my own assault, including my personal story. If anyone would like to read them, you can find all of them categorized in the order they were first published here.
I can’t put them all up now, because it requires fixing lots of links and things, which is very time consuming, but I’ve put up three of the main ones and may put up more as I go along.
Posted by dea on Jul 22, 2008 in sexual assault ·
Tags: rape, recovery, sexual assault, support, trauma, understanding sexual assault






It seems like all I’ve been thinking about the last several days is this topic. (See? I can’t even name it.) I keep sitting down, needing to blog about it, and all I blog about is mice and roaches and crap.
Since the woman in my class came out about her experience and I had to seriously confront my own reaction to it, I can’t sleep. I mean, I can’t sleep more than usual. All of a sudden, I’m a wreck. I mean, more a wreck than usual.
You know, I emailed my friend from class, basically along the lines of my entry and your comment, and when she replied, her reply was mostly full of comfort and support towards ME. And I was all distraught. I was all thinking, ‘No. I’m not a victim. I can’t be a victim. I don’t want to be a victim. I refuse.’ And I was even more sleepless and upset, convinced I was dying from some weird disease, staying up way too late arguing online with fools in my Soci class, crying because my new scale says I’m heavier than my old scale… A wreck.
Because I don’t want to even use the words. Much less talk about it. Even when I know I need to.
Weird, huh?
C, I sent you an email response to this, but no, I don’t think it’s weird. I felt the same thing as you not too long ago.
I want you to know that you *don’t* have to use the words if you don’t want to. And you don’t have to talk about it if you don’t want to. You don’t have to do anything you don’t want to. Ever. But if you DO want to, and you really feel you need to, you can.
One thing I am testament of is that doing so will NOT destroy you. This I can promise you.
If my experience is any guide, you will know when you want to. It’ll come up and not be able to be put back down. You’ll NEED to do it, to just get it the fuck out in the open so you can living your damn life free of all that muck.
But you don’t have to do it right now if it feels too much. Maybe in another hour you will feel ready. Maybe not for another year. YOU get to make the rules.
Or maybe you *are* ready now. You just talked about it here. So you’ve already started.
Someone linked to this post after reading what I’ve written this week. THANK YOU for this post. You are so very right.
AAG: And thank you for yours. I’m glad we’re talking about it.
Because I was drunk I’ve been told what happened to me was alright. My best friend laughed it off. It makes me wonder if I have a right to feel as hurt as I do, or if I’m just dramatising things.
I like the metaphor, it makes a lot of sense. I might try showing this to my friend to get them to understand how I’m feeling.
Hi Vicky. First of all, I’m really sorry that something happened to you. No one deserves to go through that.
Second: Drunkeness, whether on the part of the perpetrator or the victim of a crime, is never an excuse. Let’s take it out of the context of sexual assault and use another example. Two people are drunk at a bar. Then one of the two people suddenly takes out a gun and shoots the second person.
Would anyone think the that because the guy who got shot was drunk, that he “didn’t really get shot?” That because he was drunk that he “deserved to get shot” or that it “wasn’t a real shooting?”
And further, if the guy who shot the gun was drunk, would anyone say he hadn’t committed a crime, because he “was drunk and didn’t know what he was doing?”
No, in that case, drunkeness would NOT excuse the crime, and would not be considered the victim’s fault.
It’s no different with sexual assault. The weapon is different, but everything else is the same.
Breaking the silence is the only way to break the silence. I know it as certain as I know my own name. Still, sometimes I wish it would go away, wish that I could turn it off and pretend that it wasn’t me that I was talking about.
Still, I will go on, putting one foot in front of the other and speaking up.
Thank you for sharing your thoughts. Absolutely beautiful home you have.
Thanks, Butterfly Temptress (cool name, btw).
Funny, though I know exactly what you mean, I just realized by reading your comment that I actually don’t seem to wish it wasn’t me I was talking about. I’m okay with it. I mean, obviously, I’m not okay with having been raped; in a perfect world, that wouldn’t have happened.
But despite all the struggles and adjustments that still sometimes need to happen as a result of that being part of my history, I guess I’ve actually gotten to some level of peace around accepting that it happened. Who knew.
Leave a Comment