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One of the 'things' that put me on the
road that I eventually followed in becoming a police officer,
bodyguard and self protection teacher, is my own inherent 'distrust'
and rebellion against what we'll call conventional wisdom. I can't
tell you how painful it has been for me to listen to law enforcement
officials, lawyers, judges and even so-called self-defense experts
expressing either or both of these same beliefs. Especially in light
of all of the evidence that's available.
Anyway, one day, several years ago,
minding my own business, I find myself in a McDonald's restaurant.
While enjoying lunch with my wife and two children, I pick up on what
sounded like an evangelical presentation at some table across from
where we were sitting. This, coupled with the obvious discomfort
displayed by the faces and bodies of the man and woman that were the
recipients of the message, caused me to give the conversation more
than casual attention. At the time, I was a federal police officer
with about six years of street experience under my belt, so
disturbances like these were something that I naturally and instinctly
tuned in on.
What I found when I looked was a small
woman, roughly in her late twenties but no more than thirty, talking
to a couple at the next table. The look on the woman's face was no
less than passionate and her tone was very direct - almost panicked.
But, not for herself, for the man's female companion. What I heard
next, forever changed the way that I would talk about the subjects of
rape and women's self-defense.
You see, this woman, we'll call her
Susan, had been the victim of rape. By the time I met her, Susan had
recovered significantly from what would be described today as post
traumatic stress disorder - the traumatic mental and emotional
aftermath of what began as a physical attack on her body. Unlike most
victims of rape though, Susan had taken it upon herself to tell every
woman - and man or men connected to her - her story, the lessons she
had learned, most of all, to learn how to protect herself! In fact
Susan was on a crusade. She gave talks to schools, groups, and yes,
even the impromptu presentations like the one I was witnessing, in a
McDonald's restaurant. And, she was very good at it. Because for
Susan, it was personal.
I think that part of the reason for the
discomfort in Susan's listeners was that Susan was talking about a
subject that is taboo, and especially with strangers. I mean, really,
rape? That's sex, right? Yeah, sure, it's a crime, but it's a
"sex" crime - "sex" - you don't talk about that,
right? But Susan did, and she was passionate about it.
Susan was passionate about it because
this one incident, this one type of assault that's routinely
trivialized and ignored in our homes, in our schools, and, yes, in our
courts, had shattered almost every belief that she had about the
crime, who it happens to and her own ability to cope with it.
She was looking at and talking to the
man when I came into the conversation. "Do you love her?,"
she was asking him. "How much?"
"Of course," he said.
"But it's my job to protect her." All the while his
companion snuggled close to him, nodding in agreement, but abviously
avoiding the committed look in Susan's determined eyes.
"But, you can't protect her,"
was Susan's reply.
"Can't protect her?" The very
words stab into a man's ego and the look on her target's face told me
that this was a sensitive issue and one that was not open for
discussion. Because for him, and most men in general, protecting one's
loved-ones is not a possibility, it's a given.
But, Susan was unstoppable. "How
much time are you with her in an average day?" was Susan's next
question. "Do you work? Does she? Because," continued this
little woman with fire in her heart, "unless you're with her
every day, all the time, you can't even begin to say that."
Then, came Susan's personal story of
trajedy in the face of what she had held to be true for her entire
life. Everything she had been taught: good girls don't have to worry
about rape, only the pretty or promiscuous girls get raped, if it does
happen just give him what he wants and you'll be fine; every belief
she could think of that supported her self-assurance that 'she' was
not and never would be a target, was shattered and crushed by the
reality she had never been taught and for many women, never accepted.
She told the couple that, prior to her
attacker's brutal assault, she too held the beliefs that she was
hearing from them. She told them that their answers were not unique.
She heard them from just about everyone, everywhere she went. But, as
Susan found out, these answers where only providing a false sense of
security - security that had at it's foundation not stone and mortar,
but toothpicks and glue. And, if her listener's did nothing to correct
those beliefs, they would find themselves in the same condition she
was left in by her attacker - used, confused, and feeling empty and
lost, with nowhere to hide.
As Susan's story went on, we find that
the physical wounds from rape heal very quickly compared to the
invisible scarring that, like seeds waiting for Springtime, lies
dormant under the surface - hidden from the world - until the right
time. Because, as Susan pointed out, what she didn't know about rape
combined with what she didn't know about how her body would respond to
it, caused her more hurt and suffering in the long term than the
actual physical act itself.
Susan told her listeners that, she did
not resist her attacker. After all, he just wanted sex, right? It's
just about the sex. She did not resist, consciously. Well, not until
he started beating her.
Susan's story shows the truth that rape
is not a crime of sex, it's a crime of violence. I know you've heard
this before. It's the cornerstone of the whole rape-prevention
educational system today and is at the forefront of programs given by
rape crisis centers in most places in the world. And, while this is
not the truth in every case, especially in date rape and rape
involving college girls where the man really does want the sex and is
willing to get it by force, in Susan's case, her assailant didn't want
sex for the pleasure of sex. No, to him, sex was a weapon to dominate,
humiliate, and control a woman because it attacks her at her very
core. To a rapist, sex is a tool that, when used in this way, violates
that one part of a woman's body and her inner-self that she believes
she has complete control of.
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In part 2, you'll get a glimpse of the
aftermath of Susan's experience, her discoveries and eventual
realization that both allowed her to recover and re-introduce the
family members and other male friends she had alienated back into her
life. I hope you've been able to learn something from this story up to
this point. To read part two of Susan's story and find out how it
changed me and my approach to teaching self-defense to both men and
women, go
here.
About the author: Jeffrey M. Miller is the
founder and master instructor of Warrior Concepts International. He
specializes in teaching the ancient ways of self-protection and
personal development lessons in a way that is easily understood and
put to use by modern Western students and corporate clients. To learn
more, visit his website at www.warrior-concepts-online.com
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