Category Archives: V-Day 2012

V-Day: Until the Violence Stops

This woman is my hero.

Every year Valentine’s Day rolls around. Every year something happens all across the world that has little to do with roses and diamonds. It has everything to do with women.

It has to do with respect.

It has to do with pride.

It has to do with love.

It has to do with survival.

Above all, it has to do with justice.

On a day like Valentine’s, I reckon people don’t want to think about rape. I know I seldom want to think about rape.

It’s hard to make my fingers move on the keyboard.

Like many, many women across the country and the world, I don’t have a choice sometimes. For me, it’s because rape is something that exists in my memory. It’s because it is a reality for many of my closest friends. For people I love. Violence is even more common. Abuse.

As V-Day dawns again, I don’t have much to lend the movement. I don’t have the money to build shelters for women in Africa who flee genital mutilation or invading armies that mutilate entire generations — body and soul. I don’t have the money to stage an event. There aren’t many resources I have to lend to Eve Ensler‘s cause.

But I do have one thing.

I can raise my voice. I can break the silence. I can bring attention on this day to the plight of women — and men, because male survivors are often omitted from this discussion — across the globe. I can raise my voice to tell others like me that they are not alone.

You are not alone.

You aren’t. I’m here. There are a billion like us. I wish there were less of us, that we were somehow more alone than we are. Because this community is not one of peace. It’s one born of being made helpless. Of being violated. It’s born of someone saying to you that you have no say in what happens to your body.

Your body.

My body.

No, you are not alone.

It isn’t pretty, and it isn’t okay. It isn’t okay that women around the world are still subjected to abuse and violence at the whims of people who think they are more human than we are — or that we are less. To invade a person’s body it takes a denial of the victim’s humanity, of their self, their sacredness and validity.

When it is over, it can be difficult (it can feel impossible) to get that validity and sacredness back. To call it, coax it from the depths to which it fled.

But I’m not only here to say you’re not alone.

I’ll say it again, though. You are not alone.

I’m here today to say that you can get your sacredness back. Your validity. You can get it back. It’s not impossible. It’s like climbing K2. Every step can freeze you to your core, and one false move can fling you into a chasm when you least expect it. But you can do it.

You can.

You see, gentle viewers, violence against women is real and wormlike. It threads its way into our lives. If you scratch the mere surface of many women’s memories, you’ll find it hovering there. Who do you know who has experienced it? You don’t have to answer, just think, imagine that person.

I remember after my rape how long it took for me to call it what it was. I knew him, I rationalized. When I finally told a couple close friends, the stories began to pour out. A woman raped by an acquaintance. One raped by her friend. Another by a date. Somehow the near totality of my friends had their own stories, stories that had sunk in silence for so long that they’d never told me about them.

Today is a day for women.

Today is a day for men.

Today is a day for humans to come together and say that violence against one another is wrong. That violating one another  harms more than just bodies. Today is a day to give legitimacy to the stories that have been silent for so long and to celebrate the courage of survivors around the world to keep going, day after day.

Through pain. Through memories. Through the mountain that always tries to kick you back down its slopes.

Today is the day to take one another in hand. To help someone make that climb. Because if we climb together, it’s less likely for us to fall.

I want to close with a series of strung-together quotes from the documentary V-Day: Until the Violence Stops. This film documented the impact of “The Vagina Monologues” as they were performed all over the country and all over the world.

Read and take heed, gentle viewers. Go tell a woman she’s valuable today. Tell her she is worthy. Tell her she is valid and that her boundaries are built to be honored. If you hear someone insult her, if you hear someone make her uncomfortable, raise your voice.

Our female bodies are a mystery. We don’t know pleasure and how to talk about it, so we sure don’t talk about when we’re sexually assaulted.

One in three women are raped, mutilated or beaten.

FEAR and GUILT take away power and spirit. Most women feel like it is their fault that they were raped or assaulted. Instead of enjoying their bodies and creativity, they live in silent terror.

When you release your story it becomes the world’s story. Women who finally stop hiding their stories realize that they were not responsible for having bad things happen to them.

RESPECT goes to those who: EXPECT it, COMMAND it and REFUSE to live without it.

V-Day: Until the Violence Stops

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Front Line Hero: One Man’s Battle for Women

There is an article I read several years ago that sticks with me even now like some viscous substance I can’t shake off. If you read the article, you’ll understand why.

Trying to figure out how to start this essay, I can understand Eve Ensler‘s words at the beginning of that article she wrote for Glamour magazine. I understand her hesitance, her fear that her words would make people shut off, shut down, stop reading. Again, I will start with a promise of hope before I delve into today’s topic. Again we will wade into darkness together before we come back out into the light.

If you’re ready, take my hand.

Far away from most of us, there is a country ripped by war. The Democratic Republic of the Congo (the DRC) has been vied over for centuries. Under King Leopold, her people were brutally oppressed as he rifled through the country’s hills and lush jungles caring only for the diamonds and other resources that flow so richly in that land. And for the last fifteen years, the DRC has seen another war. What started as an insurrection to oust Mobutu Sese Seko became something else entirely.

A war on women.

The Congo is the most dangerous place on the planet to be a woman or a girl.

While for the world, 1 in 3 women will be beaten or raped in her lifetime, in the Congo that statistic looks almost hopeful. 48 women per hour are raped in the DRC. That is 34,560 per month and 414,720 per year.

This is not confined to conflict areas. Once a minute, a woman is abused in her home. I would also like to point out that these instances are only reported rapes. The actual numbers could easily be much, much higher.

Women are the Congo’s most valuable resource. And that resource is being raped faster than it can recover. It’s hard to type these words. As I watch my screen, it swims through the standing tears in my eyes. For a moment I’m almost grateful for my own experience. Because in spite of the horror that exists in those statistics, it pales in comparison to the atrocious, violent brutality of those numbers.

These women aren’t just being raped. They’re being destroyed from the inside out. Stay with me and please continue to read. I promise we’ll get to the part with hope. I am sorry for having to show you this darkness, but it is a human darkness, born of the most poison parts of the human condition. And it must be acknowledged if it is to be fought.

Fight we must.

Women have been raped in front of their children, their families. Soldiers have forced women to watch as they rape the women’s children and kill them. Women have been raped with the barrel of rifles, have had rounds unloaded into their bodies where they destroy their internal organs, gut them inside. These women develop horrible infections. They cannot control their bowel movements or their urine and leak constant streams of excrement because their insides have been annihilated.

Worse, the victims are ostracized. Cut off from what’s left of their villages. Left too wander and suffer alone. I don’t know how many have died.

Dr. Denis Mukwege. Image via africansuccess.org

But I do know it would be far, far more if it weren’t for a man named Dr. Denis Mukwege.

Dr. Mukwege founded Panzi hospital. This is a place for women to go to recover. He operates on them. He patches their insides. Even the women who haven’t had rounds unloaded into their bodies often develop lesions, infections, and fistulae that fester and can cause death. He heals their bodies to the best of his abilities, and with the community of other survivors and nurses, he also helps heal their spirits.

Dr. Denis Mukwege is my hero. He sometimes performs up to 10 surgeries per day during his 18-hour working days. He has become the world’s leading expert on how to repair a woman’s body after she has been gang raped. Because of his tireless efforts, he has been awarded with a dozen different honors, including the Clinton Global Citizen Award, the Wallenberg Medal, and has been honored as a Chevalier de la Legion d’Honneur in France. He has also trained many others to perform the surgeries. He has been called the Angel of Bukavu.

The women who come to Panzi hospital come broken in more ways than one. Rape, when used as a weapon of war, destroys not only the bodies of women but the souls of all people. Children forced to watched their mothers violated, spouses held down while their wives are gang raped — this creates a level of psychological damage that nothing else can compare to. These women, if they survive, bear scars. Scars within their bodies, deep inside.

And yet when morning dawns at Panzi hospital, you will hear their voices singing. You will hear them raise songs to God and praise him. Some women have rescued orphaned babies and pour themselves into raising the children as their own to start a new family.

These women have hope again. These women survive. 

The hope for the Democratic Republic of the Congo lies in the women of that land. Dr. Denis Mukwege is helping to make sure that hope is not snuffed out.

Partnered with Eve Ensler, they have founded the City of Joy, which is a place women can go to recover more fully, to learn skills, and to become whole again. It opened last year, and its first class just graduated.

Tomorrow is V-Day. Tomorrow is the day to acknowledge that over one billion people on this planet have been beaten or raped. Tomorrow is the day to celebrate hope and the ability of women, of men, of humanity to overcome darkness. Please join with me to help share the message of hope. Please join with me to break the silence.

Tomorrow will be the final post of my V-Day series. I hope that this message has sobered you. I hope that it has shocked you. I hope that it has inspired you to take action, even if you think it is a small action. Even if you, like me, don’t have millions to help expand Panzi hospital and the City of Joy.

There are many ways to help. Tweet about V-Day (#vday). Talk about V-Day. Have conversations with women and men about the cause. Open a dialogue. Break the silence. Blog about V-Day tomorrow. Share your own story, or a story of someone who has touched your life. Attend a V-Day event in your area. You can donate to the V-Day cause, or directly to work in the Congo. Be strong. Be hopeful.

Together we can affect change. Together we can break the silence.

Until the Violence Stops.

Read More:

An article in the Guardian about the statistics from the DRC.

The original article in Glamour by Eve Ensler “Women Left for Dead — And the Man Who’s Saving Them.”

Women’s Words: Art Changes Lives

I remember the first book I read where I actively realized the author was a woman. Subsequently, this was the day I also realized that made her different than men. I remember cleaving to her words like they could sustain me. I devoured her books, and went searching for more.

As a child, I read Beverly Cleary‘s Ramona series over and over again, but though I loved the books, I never really got that lightning strike to the forehead. I also read a few books by Judy Blume, but it was Patricia Wrede (pronounced REE-dee, as Ms. Ginger Clark — her agent — told me) who made me think something was up in literature.

I picked up Dealing With Dragons as a young girl wandering the children’s section at Powell’s Bookstore in downtown Portland, Oregon. The cover shows (or it did in that printing) a young woman in a maroon dress facing down a dragon. When I started reading, this initial image did not disappoint. Princess Cimorene is not a typical princess. She doesn’t want to embroider cushions or learn twenty-seven different acceptable responses to being insulted by a diplomat. She wants to learn to sword fight and make cherries jubilee. She wants to have an adventure, and she certainly couldn’t care less about finding a prince to marry — which is, unfortunately, her parents’ primary concern.

Princess Power.

So what does she do? She goes looking for dragons and volunteers to be a dragon’s princess. Like ya do.

I remember the light bulb going off in my head. I thought, “Now THAT is a princess!” I had my princess fantasies like most young girls — hard not to when you factor in all of us being force-fed Disney till we could recite the movies by heart and competed over who could “be” Ariel better. The princesses I liked most in those movies were Belle and Ariel — Ariel because she did her own thing and fought for what she wanted and Belle because she loved books. The scene where the Beast gives her the library still gives me chills. But ultimately, there is a bad guy trying to hurt these women, and it’s a man who saves them.

Not so with Cimorene. She manages to save the dragons. With her intelligence. Her wit. And occasionally her sword and the magic she taught herself.

From Patricia Wrede, I jumped to urban fantasy with L.J. Smith. As much as I dislike The Vampire Diaries books, the Night World series made me cheer for its strong young women — young women who climbed mountains, slayed vampires, aspired to be paleontologists and astronomers, and found love on their own terms. I read Lois Lowry’s The Giver. I read Lynn Beach’s Phantom Valley series. O.R. Melling. S.E. Hinton.

As I grew older, I read Charlotte and Emily Bronte. Joyce Carol Oates. Katherine Kerr. The words of women shaped me. In high school, I discovered Jane Austen — a woman truly writing in a man’s world. She wrote with wit and fervor for story as well as mirth and humor. She wrote one of the best opening lines I’ve ever seen: “It is a truth universally acknowledged that a young man in possession of a large fortune must be in want of a wife.” If women in the early 19th century could write strong female characters, then

It was also in high school that I took an independent study creative writing course with my best friend. We spent most of our time writing our own novels, but we did have one major project. We had to choose either a genre or a particular author and read as much as we could of it and write an analysis of the differences between books, the evolution of the genre, and look in depth at the themes. I chose fantasy. I read David Eddings and Tolkein, Lloyd Alexander and Terry Goodkind, and I remember that the only female fantasy author in my school library at the time was Katherine Kerr. The only one.

Perhaps you noticed in my litany of author’s names that several had initials. L.J. Smith. S.E. Hinton. O.R. Melling. Let me add another: J.K. Rowling.

It’s no secret that they are women, not with trusty Google, but the fact remains that these remarkable women may not have achieved the same scope and reach if their names had been less generic. When I first heard of Jo Rowling, I thought she was a man. Same with L.J. Smith. Same with S.E. Hinton. Same with O.R. Melling. Now when I see an author who uses initials, I assume she is a woman writing in a male-dominated genre — and often, I’m right.

I won’t argue about it. I think it’s anyone’s choice, and I might one day do it myself. (M.E. Mears has a nice ring to it, no?) But if you scratch the surface of modern literature, you will find women. Hundreds of them.

When I think of the words of women, I think of voices like Maya Angelou and “I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings,” and how her drive and immense ability to overcome the trauma of her past made her into a woman sought out by Martin Luther King Jr. and Malcom X to help them in the Civil Rights movement. Her words are all the more powerful because of the life she lived. I think of The Color Purple.  I think of the simple dignity of a woman named Rosa Parks who said, “The only tired I was, was tired of giving in.”

I think of the words of Libby Roderick, who sang, “Women’s arms hold up half the sky, and women’s voices sing out half the songs, and if this world is ever going to ring with hope we must make a right to more than half the wrongs.”

I think of the words of Eve Ensler who wrote: “I think of the security of cages. How violence, cruelty, oppression, become a kind of home, a familiar pattern, a cage, in which we know how to operate and define ourselves…”

Women’s words have power. They have the power to shape young girls and boys into women and men who refuse to tolerate abuse and violence toward one another. They have the power to heal, to shine light into the dank recesses of a soul and renew. They have the power to move people, to teach people, to show people the worth of women.

All it takes is to make up your mind. To make a choice. To join your voice to theirs whether you’re a woman or a man. To decide not to give in. To say something when you see men harassing a woman when she walks alone. To speak up when someone puts women down. To validate women’s boundaries, women’s bodies, and women’s vaginas.

Yes. I said vagina. You should say it too. Men feel pride for their penises, and vaginas should never be a thing of shame. Too often they are. It’s why when vaginas are invaded, humiliated, and taken by force, women are afraid to speak up. We fear judgment for saying the v-word. We fear the disbelief of others. Their censure. We fear being thought a whore, because deep down I think every woman fears that word and the endless striving to survive the cutting blades of the dichotomy.

Fear kills love. Fear kills us all.

I am a woman raised by hundreds of women. Their words buttress every aspect of my being. Their voices send fear scuttling into the abyss.

Words have power. How will you use yours?

I have learned over the years that when one’s mind is made up, this diminishes fear; knowing what must be done does away with fear. – Rosa Parks

A World of Women, A World of Hope

I had planned to profile many women today. I had heard the echo of names…Maya Angelou…Rosa Parks…Susan B. Anthony…Frida Kahlo…Natalia LL…Simone de Beauvoir…women from around the world who made a difference. As I sat pondering this post, I saw a face, and I knew it was her story I had to tell. A story that somehow reflects each of these others even though she is someone from another world, and one few of them would recognize. Even so, her voice echoes through us all before we’ve ever heard her name.

I want to paint a picture for you. As I sit here with my husband leaning his head against my knee, I see a face. Her skin is caramel brown. A scarf covers most of her hair, but what peeks out above her forehead is a lustrous walnut color.

Her lips curve into a half-moon shape as she lets a small smile brush across them. It’s a simple moment frozen in time. A photograph of a girl. What is striking about her is not the young beauty that will undoubtedly mature into something even more stunning. It’s not the half-moon smile.

It’s her eyes. They are a deep, dark chocolate. They are lit from within with an unexpected glimmer. Those eyes know something.

Who is this girl?

Her name is Nujood Ali. And at age ten, she was already divorced.

Born in Yemen in 1998, at age eight her father arranged a marriage for her to a man in his mid-thirties. Though her husband was “required” to wait until she matured (started menstruating) to consummate the marriage, he didn’t wait.

At age eight, Nujood Ali was repeatedly raped and beaten by her husband. Two months into this hell, she managed to run away to the courthouse where a judge noticed her. She told him she wanted a divorce.

I can imagine his silence. I can imagine his horror as he wonders if this is a joke. In her memoir, she says that he stammered a bit asking if she was married, how she could possibly be married.

“I want a divorce.”

This judge found her a lawyer named Shada Nasser, a woman who built the first female-headed law practice in her city. By April 15, 2008, Nujood was a ten-year-old divorcee.

When I was teaching students with emotional disturbance in D.C. a couple years ago, I found Nujood’s memoir and bought it. I had all male students, and our discussions ranged far and wide. We discussed Markus Zusak‘s The Book Thief and the instances of racism, genocide, and ethnocide in the Second World War. We discussed their experiences growing up in southeast D.C. in a school that is 100% African-American in a city where the economic lines are drawn right along the racial lines. We also often discussed women. We read a few chapters of Nujood’s story aloud, and I remember the hush in the room when we came to the part of her first rape.

“That’s just wrong, Ms.” Jay said. I nodded at him. Somehow those words sum it up very well.

It is wrong. What happened to Nujood — what happens still to young girls around the world forced into being women before their bodies even say they’re ready — it is wrong. It rips open the fabric of souls, tears at the weaves of human decency and dignity.

Here is what amazes me: that young girl, torn from school (which she loved) and forced into marriage, beaten by her husband’s family and called a whore, raped by her husband — that young girl risked everything. She fled a hellish situation and made her way to a frightening, unfamiliar place and put herself into the hands of strangers. She did all that, and then she managed to speak the words.

“I want a divorce.”

What power exists in that simple declaration!

How much courage, how much inner strength would it take to do what this woman did? I call her a woman because not only was she forced into the role, but because her pure courageousness in the face of extreme adversity is what forges women. I hope for her sake that she is able to have what’s left of her childhood to be a child, but her experiences transcend childhood, and if you read her memoir, you will see that her words echo that glimmer of light within her eyes. They tell her story. They sometimes wrench your heart into a knot, but ultimately they show that even someone quite small, even the quintessential and stereotypical imagery of weakness — a little girl — can stand up.

She didn’t cry “like a little girl.” She didn’t whine “like a little girl.” She didn’t pout or stomp or huddle in a corner “like a little girl.”

She set out into a hostile world. She stood up against a hostile family and a hostile husband. She fought for her own safety when hers was the only voice on her side. She showed her mettle and said she would not stand for the invasion of her dignity — and she did all of it like a little girl. Like a strong little girl. Like a woman in a child’s body. That is the power of little girls. That is the power of women.

Nujood is just one example. Her story is moving and poignant. Around the world, in every country and city, there are women like her. Women who persevere and overcome adversity. There is a world of women.

A world of hope.

You can find Nujood Ali’s memoir titled I Am Nujood, Age 10 and Divorced at your neighborhood bookstore. Royalties from book sales help support her family in Yemen and pay for her tuition to school. Nujood wants to be a lawyer and help end child marriages in Yemen. As Nicholas Kristof, op-ed writer for the New York Times put it, “…little girls like Nujood may prove more effective than missiles at defeating terrorists.”

A Learning Journey

Today’s post is by Friday Fellow and blogger Kana Tyler. She was one of my first friends on WordPress, and she has been an inspiration to me since she first discovered my blog. Kana is a survivor and a fabulous writer, and I urge you to all check out her blog. I know you will love her words as much as I do.

A Learning-Journey Toward Valuing my Gender…  And Those who Share it!

I labored for a lot of years under the weight of an odd prejudice. I was determined not to be considered a girl. And I don’t mean that in the girl-vs-woman sense of politically-correct nomenclature; rather, I made it a point in every possible situation to take my place as “one of the guys.”

I think it started in junior high, when I realized that the easiest way to talk with boys was to skip the awkwardness of girl-talking-to-boy conversation attempts and jump right into their football talk.  Football games were sort of my daddy-daughter bonding thing at home, and it turned out to be a natural way to hang out with the boys who would otherwise have been entirely unapproachable.  And it wasn’t a façade, actually—I found the boys easier to be around than the girls. None of the drama, the back-stabbing, the barbed nastiness and cruelty I dealt with in the junior high girls’ locker room (a location which, I’m pretty sure, rates a placement among Dante’s Circles of Hell)…

I wasn’t a tomboy, or even athletic—I’m too uncoordinated to manage anything involving a ball, but I was nonetheless fiercely competitive about proving my “guy-ness.”  Every summer I spent a week on a 50-mile canoe trip around Lake Coeur d’Alene with my church camp, and I spent every trip out-paddling, out-firebuilding, out-knot-tying, and out-woodsman-ing every boy who attempted to rise to the challenge.  In high school it was the height of coolness to wear a boyfriend’s letter jacket—and although my sophomore year I was dating the Senior captain of the cross-country team who made a regular habit of ambushing me in the hallways with his jacket, I was stubbornly determined to wear my own goddamn letter jacket.  Being too uncoordinated for most sports, I figured I was at least stubborn enough to run in circles for a long time, so (to the boyfriend’s chagrin) I earned my own track letter and bought my own jacket.

At University of Hawai’i I hung out with four local guys, one of whom owned a junker jeep, and every weekend the five of us would pile our Scuba gear in the back (with me perched on top of the dive bags) and drive around to the sunny side of the island to dive all weekend and sleep on beaches. It was a “no girls” club, they insisted, and I was pleased to qualify for inclusion by virtue of my low-maintenance guy-qualities.

In my first marriage, my ex-husband often said (sometimes in jest, sometimes in anger) that I was The Guy in the relationship. Facing any conflict, I tended to address facts and attempt calm problem-solving, while he tended to go off on illogical tangents about how he felt.  (And if you detect my dismissive attitude about dealing in the currency of emotion, you can see how that didn’t help things as that marriage unraveled…)

On a biology field trip in college I brought breakfast to the motel room of one my guy classmates, and while we sat on the bed eating cinnamon rolls and reading the paper, his roommate hollered from the shower to make sure there were no chicks in the room.  “Nope,” my friend answered complacently—and when his roommate emerged and yelped, “You said there were no chicks!” my friend answered (in a Duh sort of tone), “That’s not a chick. It’s Kana.”  For years, I considered that the highest of compliments.

And when my teenage stepsons ruled that the “Tyler Boys” designation included me—because they consider me one of the guys—I took that as a compliment as well.  In fairness, they did intend it as such. But in fairness to my extra X chromosome, I have too long slighted and dismissed the strengths of women. Or my own strengths AS a woman.

I went through the first three and a half decades of my life with only a single close female friend, sticking fiercely to the notion that I didn’t like girls.  My own strengths I attributed for years to guy-ness rather than valuing the fact that I was a woman with those strengths.  And it was an ironic attitude, given how readily I would rise to rage whenever I ran up against limitations other people tried to place on me based on my gender.

When my current husband and I ran a Hawai’ian restaurant, I practically took the head off a salesman who came in and asked if I, by chance, knew who the manager was. It was a regular enough occurrence for salesmen to ask me if they could speak with the manager or owner (never mind the neon sign above the door reading “Kana Girl’s Hawai’ian BBQ,” and the name “Kana” embroidered across my apron—clearly the tattooed gal in the pigtails and tank-top wouldn’t be the one in charge), but this guy took it to a whole new level with his implication that I might not even know who the manager might be. ..  Another salesman, even after I had introduced myself, insisted on waiting for my husband to return from a supply-run before he would start his pitch.  I didn’t tell him he had already lost his sale; I let him sit for half an hour until Keoni returned to tell him, “You’ll have to talk to Kana Girl about that. She’s the owner—I just cook.”  Priceless look of chagrin when the guy realized his error of judgment…  But truly, it’s an error I’d been making in some form myself for decades.

In short, I spent decades devaluing my own extra X chromosome, and devaluing the company of other people with the double-X, even while bristling at people who didn’t take me seriously because of that very characteristic.

Enter Alcoholics Anonymous, which I approached as a place to be saved from my drinking, and which has turned out instead to be a Program of Living which is saving me from myself in a multitude of ways.  When I first approached my Sponsor several years ago to ask if she would take me on, her single question to me before accepting was: “Are you willing to go to any lengths?”  Would I be willing to do absolutely anything she instructed me to do?  My very first test, as it turned out, was her requirement that I go to a weekly Women’s Meeting in addition to the twenty or so mixed meetings I already attended. Whoa, Nellie!  I don’t do woman-groups.  I don’t need that, and I don’t like that.

My protests were met with the ruthless reminder that I had agreed to go to “any lengths.”  (But wait! I didn’t mean that! I just wanted to be able to stop drinking!)  Ha, that’s not how this thing works.

One of the tenets of A.A. is the idea that no one—regardless of the depth of their professional training or book-learning—can help an alcoholic the way another alcoholic can. And I add to that the long-overdue discovery  that women can reach and touch each other in ways that guys (bless them!) simply can’t.  All my notions about myself seemed to turn themselves on their heads when I realized that I had  gathered a large circle of intimate woman friends, whose strengths I admired and respected, whose insights guided me in my Recovery, and (gasp!) whose companionship I thoroughly enjoyed.  And having been hauled around to a new viewpoint, I find myself grateful to belong to a generation of women willing to share their experiences.

Eight years ago, while visiting my grandparents, I miscarried my second child—and my grandmother’s only comment, when I returned from the E.R. still bleeding and grieving, was the observation that “This is why in my day we didn’t tell people we were pregnant.”  I had only been a couple months along, and I had gleefully shared the news with all my friends and family.  But I was glad to be able to reach out for the support of the people in my life while I dealt with the loss.  I discovered, quite to my surprise, that miscarriage is a far more common experience than I had previously imagined.  Along with the prayers and comforting words from friends, the women in my life also reached out with their own experiences—and their hard-earned understanding.  We in America have a condition my doctor called “Gerber Baby Syndrome”—the deluded automatic assumption that every pregnancy will result in a ruddy-cheeked healthy infant.  It’s a delusion fueled by a historical lack of conversation on the subject—and my grandmother suffered her own miscarriage (yes, she had this experience too) in silence and alone. And evidently with a sense of shame, judging from her belief that a pregnancy itself should be kept secret rather than risk anyone knowing if it should end abruptly.

Why on earth would the loss of a child be cause for a woman to feel ashamed? It’s no more logical than the equally evident sense of shame which is so common among women who have been raped. But there it is. And I like to think that ours is a generation finally shedding the communication-constraints which prevented my grandmother—and millions of others—from experiencing the love and support and prayer and empathy of other women in times when those very things were most needed.

When Emmie extended her generous invitation for me to share in this space as part of her V-Day project, she shared with me about Eve Ensler’s work with rape survivors, and about her own experience as a victim.  When I replied with reflections on the rape attempt I suffered at the hands of a married state senator (who’s still leading the Idaho Republican party with his “family values” schtick), I led off my commentary with the remark that it probably wouldn’t surprise her to know that I’d also had a rape run-in, given the unfortunate statistical likelihood of it being SO.  But her response really got me thinking. She wrote, “I’m somehow always surprised. That surprise comes with this aching, pounding, sob within that there are always more of us. Always more. That’s why this project means so much. In spite of the progress women have made in the last century, people still need to understand that beneath the surface of mothers, sisters, and friends, the remnants of the ‘always more’ lurks when they don’t expect it. “

For me, it took a long and roundabout journey to arrive at the realization that the women in my life are a resource of strength and comfort and empowerment and prayer and empathy.  That, in fact, women are AWESOME, and enjoyable, and that the strengths I respect in myself aren’t strengths despite my second X chromosome.

At the same time…  Those girl-on-girl cruelties which so decidedly (and so early) set me against my own gender…  Those weren’t imagined.  And with a young daughter at stake, that worries me.  She came home last week upset because “Ruth is being mean” to her at school. And interestingly enough, it was my husband with whom she shared all the gory and tearful details of her social distress.  Truth be told, she couldn’t find a more thoughtful or insightful listener than her stepdad—and I simply hope she won’t follow her mother’s path of devaluing members of her own gender as a potential resource for the heart.

Statistically speaking, it’s almost a certainty that my daughter (and yours) will experience bullying at the hands of another girl. Statistically speaking, it’s not unlikely that she’ll experience a rape attempt.  (And in the case of my own daughter, statistics point to the likelihood of a struggle with alcoholism as well.) BUT…  We are none of us slaves to statistics—and if I can’t prevent the bad things in her life, my hope is that I can at least help shape a woman who will survive with spirit whatever challenges Life throws her way.  And maybe, with many of us speaking and sharing, we can even work to change some of those statistics.

When Emmie spoke to me about a project of speaking out and empowering women and spotlighting women we admire—I realized to my delight that I’m surrounded by them.  “They” are YOU.  I’m honored and grateful to know the readers-and-writers and friends here in the “blogosphere,” and to see how amazingly we CAN make a difference. (Consider SOPA if you doubt!)  And that’s a comforting thought as I think about the world my daughter is growing into.

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She Saved the World A Lot

I am a writer. As such, I believe in the power of fiction to be a vehicle for truth, change, and inspiration. Today’s post is a tribute to just that — to a remarkable woman of fiction who has inspired women around the world and continues to do so years after her creation.

This woman changed the face of television’s portrayal of women. She showed the world that a tiny blonde can do more than run upstairs while chased by a murderer and die in the first five minutes of a horror flick. She showed the world that a woman can do more than just get rescued. She showed the world that a woman can live a life of honor and self-sacrifice.

She showed the world that a woman can transcend tradition.

She showed the world that a woman can be a hero.

If my epitaph ever said that, I would be proud indeed. Image via buffy.wikia.com

When I was a little girl, I wanted to be a fighter. I’d play Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles with my friends in preschool — but one boy would always make me be April. “You’re a girl. You have to be April.”

I thought April was stupid. All she did was get rescued. I wanted to be Michelangelo or Donatello. Or Leonardo or Rafael. I did not want to be April. I wanted to kick Shredder’s butt. All the boys said girls couldn’t fight. They said girls couldn’t rescue boys — that was the boys’ job.

When I was about eight, I discovered a movie called Buffy the Vampire Slayer. To my eight-year-old eyes, it didn’t seem as campy as it does to my now-27-year-old eyeballs. Here was a girl who could fight. Here was a girl who kicked butt. When the show came out when I was twelve, I didn’t watch it because I thought it wouldn’t be as good as the movie. It wasn’t until my sophomore year in college that I moved in with a girl named Casey and plunked down to watch season five on DVD.

Before Buffy Summers became the Slayer, she was the popular girl. She was a cheerleader, a Fiesta Queen, and she had the perfect life — with the exception of the growing arguments between her parents. Then one day, some middle-aged guy showed up and told her she was chosen to fight the vampires. And that she was the only one who could do it.

After a suitable series of “SHUT UP!” and “Yeah, right” reactions, Buffy came face to face with a few vampires, and her new calling got real. Fast forward about a year. Buffy moves to Sunnydale with her newly divorced mother. She starts high school after having been expelled for burning down the gym at her last one. She has lost every bit of security in her life — her mother pours herself into opening a gallery, mostly ignores Buffy, and reads too many pop parenting books.

No midriff top today.

Buffy doesn’t want to slay vampires in Sunnydale. It ruined her life in L.A. Landed her in a mental institution for two weeks. But when she discovers that an ancient vampire is seeking to break free of his mystical prison? She hunts him down even though a prophecy slates her to die at his hands. She risks her life — and loses it.

That should be game over, right? Except the Master made a mistake and dropped her in water. Instead of him killing her, he let her drown — and Xander is able to resuscitate her. When Buffy goes after the Master, she crushes him and stops him from opening the Hellmouth.

As the seasons progress, Buffy matures. Though she longs for a shot at normalcy, she never gives up on her duty or her calling. Although she makes mistakes along the way, the vast majority of them are honest ones. Buffy falls in love with Angel, a vampire who has showed up in Sunnydale to help her. He’s different than other vampires — he has a soul. He’s trying to atone for his past, and they fall hard. Buffy is a hero, but she is also a young woman. What is masterful about her character is the marriage between her weighty calling and her desire for the same things everyone desires: love, acceptance, friendship, family. Her relationship with Angel may be supernatural, but it tells a very human story of a young woman who is mature beyond her years falling in love with a much older man who, after making love to her, becomes unrecognizable. When Buffy and Angel have sex, Angel loses his soul and reverts to the monstrous vampire who terrorized Europe for two centuries. He decides to try and end the world, which forces Buffy into a nightmarish struggle. Although Willow is able to restore Angel’s soul, it happens too late. And Buffy has to kill her first love to prevent the world from getting sucked into hell.

Absorb that for a moment. Can you imagine having to make that choice? Can you imagine putting a sword through the heart of someone you love more than anything on earth? Buffy goes to the darkest possible place in that moment, and although few people every live out that reality, the allegory there is poignant and affecting: sometimes your first love turns out to be something other than you expected and you have to make a wrenching decision to cut them loose before your world crumbles around you and you lose yourself in your own personal hell.

In that moment, Buffy takes her heroism to a new level of sacrifice. As the series progresses, Buffy shows remarkable strength and newfound confidence as she continues to battle the world’s demons. She is compassionate and kind. She helps people who can’t repay her and who never even know who to thank. At her senior prom after the re-ensouled and resurrected Angel has dumped her, her classmates say this about her:

This is actually a new category. First time ever. I guess there were a lot of write-in ballots, and, um, well, t-the prom committee asked me to read this. “We’re not good friends. Most of us never found the time to get to know you, but that doesn’t mean we haven’t noticed you. We don’t talk about it much, but it’s no secret that Sunnydale High isn’t really like other high schools. A lot of weird stuff happens here.”
Student #1: Zombies!
Student #2: Hyena people!
Student #3: Snyder!
[people chuckle]
Jonathan: “But whenever there was a problem or something creepy happened, you seemed to show up and stop it. Most of the people here have been saved by you or helped by you at one time or another. We’re proud to say that the class of ’99 has the lowest mortality rate of any graduating class in Sunnydale history, and we know at least part of that is because of you. So the senior class offers its thanks and gives you, uh, uh, this.”
[Jonathan produces a gold, glittering, miniature umbrella with a small metal plaque attached to the shaft]
Jonathan: It’s from all of us, and it has written here, “Buffy Summers, Class Protector”.

Through the series, Buffy battles everything she comes up against. She shows such true commitment and love that she even gets through to a vampire without a soul — Spike. Before he knows why, he falls in love with her. Though his methods are often humorous and awkward, he tries to show it by protecting her sister and having tea with her mother. At the end of season five, Buffy is again faced with a choice. She can allow her sister to die to save the world, or she can use her own blood to pay that price.

Three guesses what Buffy chooses. For the second time in the series, Buffy gives her life to save her family, her friends, and the world. She does it without a second thought. She does it with a look of pure knowledge and understanding.

Buffy lives a life of violence. She is a fighter. She takes punches — and sometimes even her own stake to the gut — and she always fights, no matter how bleak things look. She keeps trying and trying. I’ve heard people call her whiny, but I’ve never seen that. If she ever wants a break, wants a moment’s respite from the burden she carries — it’s a lot less than most people in her situation. She’s experienced sexual violence and came out of it somehow stronger. That moment also catapulted Spike into a decision to seek out a way to get his own soul back — not to win her over, not to prove a point, but to be a better man. To be a man who wouldn’t hurt the woman he loves, even if she never loves him back.

And Buffy? She sees the change in Spike. She finds it within herself to forgive him. There are many things in Buffy’s character that make her truly extraordinary, and that is one of them. Buffy champions Spike for the rest of the show, and I for one believe that her actions don’t show recklessness or a disregard for the safety of others — no. They show a belief in people, that people can rise above their pasts and their own demons and be better. That people can change. And that when they do, they deserve a chance to make amends.

They put the spark in me, and all it does is burn. Can we rest now, Buffy? Can we rest?

Buffy makes many choices throughout the seven years of the show. She has her feelings about things, her hunches. And oddly, her friends often don’t believe her — much to their detriment. She makes the best possible decisions with the information she has, and she understands that in war — especially a war against hell itself — there will be casualties. Yet she feels each one. She carries them with her. When she has the chance to share her power, Buffy makes another sacrifice. She chooses to share her calling, share her strength and power with the world. That is the mark of a true leader — a leader who could consolidate their power and hold it jealously but chooses instead to share it.

Tomorrow I will talk about my real life heroes. I will take you on a journey of women who have changed my life and have changed the world, but I believe inspiration can also be found in fiction.

Buffy Summers is this week’s Wednesday Woman. Buffy Summers is my hero.

Into the mouth of hell.

So here’s the part where you make a choice. What if you could have that power, now? In every generation, one Slayer is born, because a bunch of men who died thousands of years ago made up that rule. They were powerful men. This woman is more powerful than all of them combined. So I say we change the rule. I say my power, should be *our* power. Tomorrow, Willow will use the essence of this scythe to change our destiny. From now on, every girl in the world who might be a Slayer, will be a Slayer. Every girl who could have the power, will have the power. Can stand up, will stand up. Slayers, every one of us. Make your choice. Are you ready to be strong?

 

Until the Violence Stops, I Shall Raise My Voice

Hope like dew.

Today I’m going to tell a story, gentle viewers. It’s a story with a lot of feelings behind it, wrapped up in it, entwined in it. Some of those feelings are harsh like needles on very cold skin. Some of those feelings are like knowing you’re alone and unsafe in the dark. Some are relief like water. Others are hot like pain.

I promise you two things if you stay with me.

I promise you honesty. I will be candid. I will be open. I will paint a blurry watercolor and not a pen and ink to spare you details. But you will be among the first to hear this story.

I promise you hope. While this story starts on the outskirts of darkness and wades in, it also wades back out into the light.

I promise you honesty, and I promise you hope. If you take my hand, I will tell you a story.

My story.

This story doesn’t begin with a once upon a time, nor does it end with a happily ever after. It’s in no way a fairy tale, and that is okay. It shouldn’t be a fairy tale. It simply is. A tale.

They say it’s almost always someone you know. We humans fear strangers like we fear the night, but for me it happened in the broad light of day under a hot southern sun, and it was someone I knew.

The asphalt caught my shirt and jeans as I sat on the ground to end things with him. He lay next to me, puppy dog eyes full of knowing. Knowing that his words affected me. Knowing that I flinched from him already. He told me his earlier words were my fault. He accused me of lying with a smile on his face and  the whisper of a wagging finger behind his gaze. I had never lied to him. I told him it was over, and I meant it.

For a long time I thought what he did was my fault because I thought I owed him the courtesy of telling him face-to-face when he had already brutally destroyed my trust in him.

I told him it was over, and he tried to kiss me. I said no. Over and over I said no. I pushed him away. I repeated that tiny syllable. I said it louder. And finally I froze. I went somewhere else. And when I came back, it was over. In a tiny voice I told him I hadn’t wanted that.

And he told me I should have stopped him.

You know what I’m talking about, gentle viewers. You know what happened. You know what it was he blamed me for. I’m sorry if it causes you distress. But I promised you honesty, and I promised you hope. You have the first, and the second is coming.

Months went by before I could say the word. Three months passed before I had the strength to cut him from my life. Still he followed. He called. He asked to see me. He pried into my friendships and asked me about any dates. Seven months went by before he tracked me down at work and called me there. Seven hours went by after that before I called him and told him never to contact me again. Six months later, he tried to message me on Facebook.

Somewhere in that span of time, I admitted to myself what he had done to me. I said the word in my head, a tiny tendril of thought, a wisp of smoke in a darkened room. I said the word rape, and it sounded raw in my mind. I spoke to a few trusted friends. And when I did, some dam burst.

I wasn’t alone.

By everything sacred and warm, I wasn’t alone. Women I loved. Women I knew  and knew well. I hadn’t known that we shared that word. I hadn’t known. With one story we were suddenly bound tighter. Bound in silence and grief. I had always judged women who didn’t report their rape. I had thought insidious damning thoughts, wondering how things would get better if women didn’t tell. Until it happened to me. And now I know why they don’t break their silence.

Here are reasons, and some of them are mine.

He was a friend. He was well-known. Everyone loved him. He was charming. He was kind. No one would believe me. I had no proof. He was my husband. He was a cop. He was a marine. He was a fellow soldier. He was drunk. I was drunk. I’d slept with him before. I’m a man. It wouldn’t even go to trial. He didn’t leave a mark. He used a condom. He used his hand. He didn’t hear me say no. He’d say I was lying. No one would believe me. She was a woman. He was a politician. He was married. He had a gun. He told me he’d kill me if I told anyone. He said I had it coming. He said it was my fault. I believed it was my fault. 

Most rapists are never convicted. I think the number stands around 2%.

Something happened that day. It dropped a thick dark sludge into a pure place of my soul. It cut a ragged swatch from my confidence, from my self-respect. It made me feel weak and lesser and small. Those words, “You should have stopped me” ran on repeat in my mind. Could I have fought harder? Could I have kicked and screamed? Yes. I could have.

But no one would have heard me, and he could have hurt me worse. He was 6’3″ and over 250. I weighed half as much.

When I met my husband, the first few days of our acquaintance showed me something vital, something that began to slowly patch the rift in my honor and dignity. It was a simple, simple thing.

I set a boundary. He honored it.

That is hope. That is light and warmth and hope. That is what makes love happen, for it is the foundation of trust. It took the words of friends and family and the fledgling hope built by the man who would become my husband to show me that my boundaries are valid. That when I say no, that means more than “no further,” it means “back off.”

I shared my story with you today because in the three and a half years since I was raped, I have heard over a score of stories from women I love. I’ve heard even more from women I don’t know — but with whom I share that raw and frightening word.

I thank you humbly and from my heart for listening to my story.

There is a woman named Eve Ensler. Years ago, before I joined this community of survivors, I knew of her. She wrote The Vagina Monologues. She is a survivor of abuse and of virulent cancer. And she started a movement called V-Day that has raised over $85 million to stop violence against women and girls.

For the next week, I have dedicated my voice and my blog to sharing her vision. I promised you hope, gentle viewers, and I shall deliver. I will take you on a journey of hope and inspiration. A journey of renewal and vitality. I will tell you the stories of the women who have shaped our world and who have shaped my life. I truly hope you will join me.

Women are beautiful inside and out. Women are kind. Women are strong. Women are fighters. Women survive. Women overcome. Women have the power to defeat their pasts.

I hope you agree.

I hope you’ll share this week with me.

As always, I invite discussion. How have you seen women overcome tragedy (not necessarily sexual violence)? How have the women in your life shown you their strength? Their hope? Their ability to survive? 

If you tell me about one of your heroes, I will include her in Thursday’s blog about the women who have inspired me. 

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