The brave women
who have spoken publicly about the sexual misconduct of people like Harvey
Weinstein, Donald Trump, Bill O'Reilly, Roger Ailes, and Bill Cosby are helping
bring those men to accountability for their actions. Their
stories have also opened a path for women to tell about similar misconduct from
lesser known men, stories that indicate that a certain permissibility of
treatment towards women I had hoped was a part of the past apparently is not.
To recognize its existence is the first step towards eradicating it. For that
reason, I offer my own story, which takes place at Cambridge University in the
late sixties.
Because students at Cambridge take only
one set of exams, at the end of their years at university, the weeks before
exams are full of tension and anxiety. After exams, release explodes in the May
balls, exotic all-night affairs at each of the colleges, accompanied by a week
of other social gatherings, such as the sherry party I attended in the
beautiful gardens of Queens College. Flattered to have been invited, I was
dressed to English-society perfection. The gardens were beautiful, the grass
thick and perfectly cut, as always at Cambridge, and the flowers in full bloom.
Butlers passed glasses of sherry on trays through the crowd.
At some point during the party a
dashing young man brought me a glass of sherry and introduced himself as Ian
somebody, a student at Trinity College. He was handsome and smart and debonair.
He flattered me by his attentions, and he saw to it that my sherry glass was
kept full. My head was spinning, but I was so inflamed by the occasion and by Ian's attentions that I didn't realize how drunk I was. Because in
1967 no one ever talked about the dangerous connection between sex and alcohol,
I didn't know to be cautious. When Ian suggested I follow him to his digs at
Trinity College, I had no objection.
Nor did I object when he took me to
bed. I was not fully aware of what I was doing, though Ian was. He never
hesitated. My virginity was no deterrent. "Isn't it beautiful?" he
kept saying, and I kept thinking, "No. It hurts. It hurts."
When I woke up the next morning and
saw the blood on the sheets and realized what I had done – what I had allowed
to be done to me – I was horrified and in shock. My impulse was to run away. I had
to go home. "You should wait until people are coming in and out of the
gate," Ian said, reasonably. "Then you can leave without being
noticed."
But I was terrified. I had to go home. I had to flee, to get away from this man. I walked through the
gates of Trinity College in the early hours of the morning, having obviously spent
the night in a man's room, but the porter, who must have seen me, didn't say a
word. (This was part of the culture of the day that allowed a Cambridge
University student of good breeding and in good standing to rape a woman
without repercussion.) I don't
think I was stumbling, but I felt all tight within myself, my vision no bigger
than one step in front of me. I made my way home and went straight to my room,
where I stayed for days. I didn't speak to anyone and hardly emerged to get food
from the kitchen. I lost myself in fantasies that Ian was in love with me and
was going to marry me. I was not applying myself to my studies. I was isolated
and in shock.
Classic rape victim symptoms.
My housemates were worried. Polly, another
American student, came into my room to visit with me. Talking about the sherry
party or Ian, whom she had seen at the party, or anything she thought might get me to talk about what had
happened, she said, in the vernacular of the day, "I'm glad you didn't let
him go all the way with you."
I crumpled. Tears that had been
shored up ever since that night poured out. I confessed what had happened. I
cried at last, but I was still numb and depressed.
One day, when the doorbell rang, someone
called up the stairs, "Diana. There's someone here to see you."
I went to the door. Ian was on the
doorstep with two of his buddies. My housemates crowded behind me, watching
protectively. Ian chatted with me for a few minutes, debonair and impersonal.
He didn't come in, and he didn't say anything in particular. He left with an
airy wave of the hand, turning to the street, followed by his cronies, who
hadn't said a word.
I have always thought that my housemates
had called Ian and told him he needed to see me. And they were right. That's
exactly what I needed to bring me out of my numbness. It didn't take me long
after that to resume my studies and return to myself.
No one called it rape. There were no
counselors to go to with my story. There were no repercussions on Ian, who, as
far as I know, might have deflowered a dozen more young women by deliberately
getting them drunk and taking them home with him. I like to think he has
learned better by now, that he has come to realize the harm he did to me, the
invasion of my body, the trauma he put me through, the villainy of his behavior.
I like to think that young men parallel in education, parentage, and social
status today would not think of doing as he did. But recent events would have
me believe, instead, that a culture of rape as tacitly acceptable in the eyes
of some men still exists.
It was many years before I could
call this incident a rape, though it was certainly what we today call date
rape. I am lucky that I recovered quickly and that the traumatic effect lasted
only a few years. I was lucky in having friends who knew how to take care of me.
But it has taken many, many years for me to admit that I was raped –
"admit," as though the shame is mine. I do feel shame in admitting
what was done to me, and I wonder – did Ian ever feel shame in having done it? Or did he boast to his friends
about his exploits – "deflowered a virgin last night" – drinking beer
in the pub the next day, before attending to his studies as usual?
How can there be comments at all in the face of such recognizable but, at the time, unmentionable assault? I also remember not having a word for such a violation...and as I read your courageous story, it occurred to me that women's lack of language to speak of such a thing was, for many of us, a deepening of the confusing devastation. Back in the era of our youth, I thought rape could be used only if one were to be left bloody, beat up, and unconscious on the city street. Now what horrifies me is that one of my beautiful grand nieces could experience what you did. Thank you for speaking out, you the wordsmith with a voice to make the necessity for change not only heard but felt.
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