Content warning: This piece details experiences of sexual assault and may be distressing for some readers.
With the recent media attention on the issue of sexual harassment and assault, it would be fair to say that for many people light has been cast on some pretty deep and dark corners of their experience, or that of the people close to them.
This was brought home to me by the steady stream of women posting #METOO in my Facebook feed, many of them close friends and even family. I could not help but ask myself, how had I not known? This lead me to think about my own #METOO experience.
Something I have realised since having kids (and a lot of therapy) is that being ‘open-minded’ is different to being ‘open’. I have always regarded myself as a fairly open-minded person, but I keep a lot of my thoughts, feelings and experiences to myself for myriad reasons.
Some are to do with being hurt or judged and some are out of habits that are, at least in part, socially constructed. One such example is a sexual assault that I experienced when I was about eleven or twelve years old and a warning – I am going to briefly but not explicitly detail it here.
Listen: The Mamamia OutLoud team discuss #MeToo, and debate whether the act of doing something publicly does make a difference.
I attended a holiday program in late primary school. It was held in a very large church building, with many musty rooms over a number of levels. I did not know anyone at this holiday program and I snuck away up creaky stairs to explore. I found a small room with a comfortable couch and some old Readers Digest Annuals. Thinking that I had found a refuge from the chaos and the noise, I settled down to read.
After a period of time, one of the holiday program supervisors came upstairs and found me. My sense is that he was youngish and not very senior, but I do not remember much about him. He sat next to me on the couch and started talking to me, although I have no recollection of what we spoke about. Soon he asked me if I would like a massage.
Top Comments
I’m a lil torn on this one to be honest. I appreciate & applaud your intentions to keep your beloved lil ones safe! I commend your comment that “it is insulting & futile to rank incidents of this nature, as so much depends on subjective experience” but I think it possibly stuck in the back of your mind a bit more than you thought. #metoo but I never had these kind of books or personal conversations with my children when they were so small. I, of course discussed stranger danger, the importance of being comfortable around other friends, feeling safe around family members & other people they were likely to come in contact with, body safety ideas such as their body belongs to them, they can say no to touching to anyone, no secret is ever big enough not to share with your parent’s, the different kinds of secrets etc etc etc but I kind of feel at those ages telling them something like that could do extra harm as they possibly wouldn’t fully understand. As my children have grown my conversations with them have gotten more detailed & I am certainly not judging anyone’s efforts to keep their children safe, just commenting on my own experience.