By MARK GREENE
I live in New York City where, when I walk down the street, I see literally thousands of women a month walking towards and past me. Women of all ages, shapes and sizes. The range of interactions has some variability, but 95% of the time, it works like this:
Many of the women I glance at are intentionally not looking at me. They are avoiding all eye contact, seemingly staring into some specific spot on the street that does not contain a man’s eyes. If they glance and notice I’m looking at them, they look away very quickly. What I see in that moment is someone being careful. Very very careful.
I glance at women. I don’t look at them for more than a second or two. I never stare at them. I glance at them because they are lovely, or interesting, or fashionable, or simply in my path. I also glance at them for the same reasons I glance at men: to judge their intention as they approach me, to see if they’re texting instead of looking, or to insure I don’t get run over.
Because I have a solid sense of who I am and what my intention is, I glance at women without the feeling of guilt or nervousness I carried as a teenager. There is nothing wrong with a glance. But to look longer at a woman you do not know? Or worse, to stare? That is a different thing. For the very same reason I do not make and hold eye contact with men (or for that matter, dogs I don’t know) I do not look overly long at women, because it suggests an intrusion. Something for which I do not have permission.
Top Comments
Funnily enough I've found women are far more likely to hold eye
contact with me than me with them, but my anxiety disorder plays a part
in that.
I usually try keep to myself where possible and ensure you give people space in enclosed areas. A tip I heard for instance on making people feel safer, especially women is to ensure you aren't between her and the exit. Be mindful of your presence, if they are sitting then don't stand over them, ensure you respect peoples bubble of personal space. Pay attention to their body language, if you sense they are uncomfy then ensure you aren't making them uncomfy.
And for gods sake, don't stare at people, make lewd comments, catcall or just generally harass people.
Wonderful article. It's almost like a relief having a man be so sensitive to this (I'm sure many might be, but it's the first time I've read such thoughts from a man). Interestingly however, if feeling vulnerable from someone dodgily following me or harrassing me at my bus stop (which is near pubs and a strip club), I will make very clear eye contact as I've heard this is a deterrent - it's assertive and you can identify them. Not sure if the theory is true, but it does seem to make people go away.