I saw him as I rounded the corner. A sunny day on a quiet street. I wanted to be on his side of the street but I heard him through my headphones talking, I presumed to me, and so decided to keep my path. Off went the earphones but my already brisk pace remained steady. I held him in my peripheral vision, a habit borne of experience.
He crossed to my side of the street. His pace faster now, or maybe I imagined it. I heard his voice, although now I was unsure who he was talking to. He mumbled something about meeting me at the trashcans, just as I approached a few trashcans stashed on the side of an apartment. And without a second thought I jogged. Jogged right through a parking lot, around a corner and straight to the busiest street I could find. I’ve long forfeited the fear of hurting someone’s feeling.
It has been a while since I've felt the unpleasant internal rush from a stranger’s unknown intentions. Pandemic living maybe? I don’t know why, but as I revisit today’s encounter I am thankful for the reprieve.
Before I'd left for the store I'd debated wearing a bra. One of the most liberating things about COVID has been my renunciation of bras (much to my mom’s dismay). Underwire is the devil and bras are, by design, binding. Around the house and family, I am “born free”. With strangers and job interviews, I conform to the norms of our day. But the store? The store is up for debate. Had I driven I'd likely have kept my free status and not thought much about it. In the tank-top I'm wearing I'm as likely to get stared or commented on with or without so, why bother?
But walking demands I consider what type of attention I might arouse from strangers when I don’t have an easy escape path. So I put on the bra.
And yet…
I realize that my senses might be heightened because of a recent argument I had a friend. An argument about...consent. Or rather power. Maybe intentions? An argument that has left me struggling to respond to him when he reaches out.
It started with the idea that some advances, man to woman, are unwanted. Especially in secluded places or late hours. He argued that it was unfair to “forbid” a man from approaching a woman and it made every man out to be a predator and every woman his victim. He questioned rape statistics and when our waiter, a complete stranger, disclosed her own victimization he brushed that off as anecdotal. Never mind the feelings of the person he’s approaching, he centered his feelings of “I want”. Desire trumping fear. Power usurping discomfort.
I cursed at him and fumed. A “fuck you” that echoed across the patio where we sat. Not my finest hour but it felt willful. It felt cruel. It felt dangerous.
We managed to find a stopping point. I don’t remember how. I apologized for the cursing but not the sentiment that caused it. I couldn’t I apologize for that because I don’t know a woman who hasn’t been effected in some way by the power dynamics of a man’s unwanted attention. The need to smile as he compliments because she doesn’t know how he’ll take rejection (but can’t smile too much or she’ll be accused of leading him on). The impulse to have sex even if she didn’t want to because now he’s aroused and she doesn’t know how he’ll take a “no” when he feels owed a “yes” (and acquiescing feels safer). A brisk run through a brightly lit neighborhood (because she’s also had a man angrily scream “raggedy bitch” at her after he followed her in the dark and rebuffed his advances. Or the hands on her hips, her butt, the “just playing” from friends.
So I put on a bra to go to the store.
It changed nothing. There was still unwanted attention, still words I didn’t request. It changed nothing except if this walk hadn’t ended with my possible misunderstanding of this man’s intentions or my ability to outrun him, if something awful and awfully common had happened, a bra might have rebuffed at least one extra injury, “well what do you expect, look how you are dressed?”