bigfield said:
The men were asked what they do to prevent themselves from being raped. Why did you link this and then asked what men on TFT do to protect women?
the topic was a tangent from that thing I read, which I thought was provoking of further thought itself, but that also sent me on a tangent of, "okay, here's how we can help ourselves, and here's how we can see that others don't even think about this - what if they DID think about preventing rape? Not of themselves when they are never subject to it, but of others?
When women go out, they will often watch each other's backs. This is because most of them understand exactly what this means. The #yesallwomen posts go through lists of what women do for themselves and for each other.
What if, I wondered, men did some of these things for women more often? What if they were taught to think about it and get backs more often? So I asked the question the way I did because my first thought was, "maybe they do already and I'm not picking up on it? let's see what they come up with on their own without me leading the answers down a path that is already familiar to me? How can I open MY eyes?
So I genuinely wanted to know. Do you do anything? Like what?
One example for me is that when I leave work, it is known that there are people who feel extremely antagonistic towards me. There are three people who get this. This means, they just hang around at the end of the day, at least one of them, so that I'm not leaving the building alone. There are a couple of people who will try to counter antagonistic comments so that the commenter knows that the community thinks they are out of bounds - prevents the antagonist from thinking they have justification.
Another example is what women do for each other. They watch - if they aren't going to the bathroom together, they at least watch as a person goes to and from. And they take note of the people who are getting with their friends. And even strangers; they will
take note when they see someone getting very drunk, or getting alone (such as at a fair or carnival and a person is sober but unaware). They will just make the observation clear, "I am seeing you, I am remembering you," and this is a deterrent.
I think maybe one thing that I'm learning from this discussion is that men may not know what to look for. That makes this an opportunity. The overbearing space-invader at the park or bar or whatever. The dark parking lot with the close-parked van. The offer to walk someone out while saying, "let me tell the bartender I'm walking you so that you know I'm trying to help."
The discussion could bring out more things like that.
When women do things to "prevent rape", they are not doing them once the rape starts. They do it to PREVENT. There are opportunities for men, friends and strangers, as well to diminish the likelihood and capacity for rape to occur.