Every 2 minutes someone in America
becomes a victim of sexual assault. That means by the time you finish listening
to your favorite song or reading this post 2-4 people have been
assaulted.

You never think it could happen to
you:
I would never
walk alone at night, I would never go down a dark alley, I would
never get myself in that situation, etc.
I never thought it would happen to me
either. Until it did...
I wasn't
walking by myself, I wasn't drunk, I wasn't
alone. I was in a bar full of people and surrounded by
friends, I had maybe 2 drinks, I was dancing,
having fun, and within a few minutes some stranger changed my life.
He decided that he was in control of
what I wanted. Never asked and I never saw it coming. I thought a million
things would run through my mind but nothing did. Finally, I hit him and
grabbed my friends and got as far away as possible.
After the fact I clearly was in
denial. Nothing wrong happened, it was my fault, I was asking for it, I
deserved it. My friends reminded me that was not true. That is when the tears
started.
Then I began to spiral downward.
There is no specific manual for how to act after a sexual assault, trust me I
googled it. Everyone is different and you become an expert at yourself.
The first night I was in shock. The
second night I cried and slept ridiculous amounts. The third night I got drunk.
The fourth night I decided enough was enough, I want to be
okay.
Sometimes it just hits me and I begin
to cry (I never used to cry) and then I can't stop. Sometimes I get really
angry at everyone around me because they don't get it. Sometimes it is harder
than I thought it would be. I was walking across campus and stopped at a
crosswalk and a guy biked up next to me. Then the smell of the
stranger's cologne from that night hit me. I started shaking and my
palms got really sweaty. The guy on the bike (very good-looking) did nothing
wrong, he did not even know and yet it took me 10 minutes to calm myself
down.
So, for anyone out there who has gone
through this the one thing I am realizing is it is okay to not be "over
it". Someday I will stop thinking about it all the
time. Someday I will be able to go downtown with my friends
again. Someday I will laugh again more than I talk. Every day I get a
little closer to that "someday".
People post all the time when they
are a victim of a robbery, a burglary, a hit and run, a car
accident, or when they physically get injured but assault has become the
victim's fault and something to be ashamed of. I know I was ashamed. Then I
realized if I wanted to change the stigma around sexual assault I had
to start with myself. Sweeping it under the rug just adds to the
problem.
Friends/Family, you do not have to
have the answers for someone. Just being there means the world to us. Just
reminding us that it is going to be okay someday but maybe it is not okay today
and that's just fine. Even after going through this I could not tell
you what the perfect words I would want to hear are. But, I can tell
you that reminding us that you love us and just allowing us to cry when needed
or laugh when needed is important. Going to Chipotle with us and just letting
us talk about nothing always helps (maybe that's a personal one!) Understanding
that when isolation takes over and we just want to be left alone that it is not
personal. Getting offended only makes us feel worse. It is not about you it is
about us trying to heal.
Our lives have been shaken up and we just need some stability from someone. That someone can be you.
Please, do not treat me like a delicate flower because I am not. I am still the sassy, sarcastic, funny(in my opinion) person you always knew. Now I am also an advocate. I am someone that can remind people they are not alone. I am someone others can turn to when nobody else understands. I am a statistic and I am going to help change the stigma.
Our lives have been shaken up and we just need some stability from someone. That someone can be you.
Please, do not treat me like a delicate flower because I am not. I am still the sassy, sarcastic, funny(in my opinion) person you always knew. Now I am also an advocate. I am someone that can remind people they are not alone. I am someone others can turn to when nobody else understands. I am a statistic and I am going to help change the stigma.
"Today
I choose life. Every morning when I wake up I can choose joy, happiness,
negativity, pain... To feel the freedom that comes from being able to continue
to make mistakes and choices - today I choose to feel life, not to deny my
humanity but embrace it."