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#MeToo #TalkWeMust

Right now, #MeToo is all over social (and other) media. The campaign – started in the wake of the recent revelations about Harvey Weinstein’s disgusting behaviours towards women – gained particular traction as (mostly) women started to post #MeToo as their status on social feeds, in order to indicate that they, too, had been sexually harassed or assaulted, so “we might give people a sense of the magnitude of the problem” (as one typical comment to such a post reads).

Witnessing the pervasiveness of #MeToo status posts on my own social media feeds, I reacted, first with a short comment on a friend’s #MeToo status (see screenshot), then with a longer post on my own Facebook wall. Following my friends’ reactions to my post as well as other online discussions around #MeToo, this blog article is my attempt at structuring my thinking better than a string of random comments on social media can provide for.

One word of caution for those who read on: I write this as someone who has experienced sexual harassment and limited forms of sexual assault (for examples, see my Facebook post linked above). However, I consider non of my own experiences as traumatic, and I’ve been spared the more intrusive, disgusting, and violent forms of aggressive sexual assault – that, unfortunately, so many have explicitly described or implicitly hinted at in their own #MeToo posts. For those who believe that sharing experiences contributes to finding solutions, a good place to go is Musa Okwonga’s blog which he opened for (anonymous) contributions on #MeToo. With all this in mind, I’m aware of the fact that some of my thoughts in the following paragraphs might sound useless or even cynical to some who’ve gone through traumatising experiences. Should this occur, I apologise from the depth of my heart. If anything, my aim is to reduce suffering in all its forms – the painful memory of suffering, the fear of future suffering, the experience of actual suffering in the present, and the timeless suffering that cannot be linked to anything but itself.

Back to #MeToo: So – what’s all this about and what do we need to take away? Let’s start with three points that come through loud and clear in everything I read over the past couple of days:

  1. Sexual harassment and sexual assault are pervasive phenomena of our times. Maybe it has always been like that, maybe our day and age are worse. In either case: I haven’t heard of a single woman who said that she was never ever in her life sexually harassed or assaulted, and – to make clear that this is not only a gender issue – I’ve also heard of many men who have had similar experiences. There’s no point denying this pervasiveness.
  2. Sexual harassment and sexual assault create suffering for the one who’s being harassed or assaulted. Overstepping somebody else’s boundaries with regard to their sexuality (which often means: their body as the most tangible appearance of this sexuality) creates distress, pain, anger, and deep suffering – quite often for a very long time after the actual occurrence. This effect is at the very core of such transgressions, and it is what’s distinguishes them clearly from harmless flirtations, consensual body contact, and mutually agreed upon passionate sex (all of which, by the way, might come in kinky forms, but that’s a different matter).
  3. There’s a broad range of manifestations of sexual harassment and sexual assault. It can come in many different behaviours – from that unsolicited compliment on looks in a professional context and this obscene message received from a business partner all the way to physical violence, abuse, and rape. Also, the effect of such behaviours on the harassed or assaulted person can be very different – from mild annoyance all the way to outright trauma. And: It’s not like seemingly “smaller” behaviours always leave seemingly “smaller” traces, while seemingly “big” things cut seemingly “big” wounds. Some people deal with an unwanted one-night stand if it was just a bad choice of cocktails, and some people are triggered by a tiny raise of an eyebrow to go down a tunnel of fear, fight, or flight.

Putting these three points together, we end up observing that our times are plagued with a pervasive tendency of some members of our human species to inflict suffering on others – the exact form of which, however, is often hard to pinpoint, because the suffering produced is logged in the bodies, hearts, guts, minds, and memories of the ones being harassed or assaulted. This issue is exacerbated by the fact that the specific circumstances of sexual harassment or sexual assault are still enveloped in sheaths of shame, blame, and guilt on the side of those who are suffering – even in the very moment when they are happening. It’s easy and socially accepted to say: “Excuse me, you’re standing on my toe!” – usually resulting in the other person stepping off our toe and apologising. It’s everything but easy and socially accepted to say: “Excuse me, your physical closeness is making me cringe!” – and much less common to see such a remark resulting in the other person distancing themselves from us and apologising.

I’m taking the freedom to skip all biological and evolutionary takes on this subject, as well as all broad cultural perspectives on gender roles, machoism, or feminism. Instead, I want to suggest that one of the biggest issues underlying the pervasiveness of sexual harassment and sexual assault is our inability to communicate properly amongst human beings, in particular in cases where emotions are involved.

How so? Here are four requirements that would have to be fulfilled in order for us to stop sexual harassment and sexual assault in their very first beginnings – and, as you’ll see as you read on – all these are requirements that most of us are far from fulfilling in our day-to-day lives, let alone when emotions, desire, or sexual arousal come into play.

I’m painfully aware of these requirements being of a tall order. And still: If those who suffered can say no the next time a threat comes their way, and if they can reframe over and over again, until the trauma disappears into thin air; and if those who’re afraid they might unwittingly afflict suffering to others can remember to listen, and if they can practice to appreciate well – then, we might be able to talk. And talk we must. And then, hopefully (and maybe naively), the small share of those who deliberately engage in making others suffer will continue to be marginalised, shrivel and shrink into powerlessness.

#TalkWeMust

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