Last night I was mugged. They didn’t get my bag, but they
took my sense of safety and calm. While some may say I won, I'd say it was draw -
what they did get was far more valuable.
It happened two doors down from the gates to my building. It
was 9.45pm on a Sunday. The street leafy and residential with security
men at the end of every driveway. I was walking home alone after dinner with girlfriends
thinking about our discussion of current events – Israel/Palestine,
Russia/Ukraine, the doomed jetliner. We ate fried morning glory and commented on how
lucky we are to live where we do. From consulates to tour books, all rate
Bangkok as safe as London or NYC.
I didn’t see the motorcycle or the passenger jumping off. I only
heard the heavy running steps and then saw feet. I knew. I clutched my bag
tight. I screamed – a voice I didn’t recognize, a voice that sounded foreign. He tugged. I tugged. There was something long
and white in his hand – a baton? A rolled
up piece of paper? I wondered if he’d hit me. I froze. Then he let go and
disappeared off on the back of the bike. 20 feet away a security guard sat in a
folding chair. He slept through it all.
Women are easy targets. We are weaker. We are more vulnerable.
I know this.
Shaken, but unhurt, I
posted news of it on Facebook. My female friends responded immediately, along
with one Irish guy from my days at Guinness. Some women called, some emailed,
some IM’d, some facetimed. I needed them. I needed their comfort, their words,
their understanding. I felt less
isolated and more stable with each voice of concern. They understood the fear of men - the fear of
being attacked and the horror when it happens. 16 women reached out - some I haven’t
talked to in years. And only one man.
Violence against women is real; whether it’s the Gaza Strip,
Crimea, Indian rapes, Nigerian kidnappings or just a mugging on a pretty street
in Bangkok. Women understand the fear. Men don’t.
Last night I thought of male friends and ex-boyfriends. I
wished one of them had been there to walk me home or give me a hug and promise
me he’d look out for me. In those first moments, I craved a man’s comfort, their
protective strength- the feeling of security that comes from having a guy
beside me. While the female voices rolled in I wondered, where were the men? I wanted
their words, their understanding and reassurance. I wanted a man to stand up
for me. To be angry on my behalf. To don his cape and rescue me. I
wished for a man who'd insist on walking me home and who wouldn't believe
me when I say I can take care of myself. I wished for a man who'd do it out of genuine
concern and not some vague sense of duty. I wished for a man who wouldn’t let me
feel guilty for recognizing my vulnerability, for asking him to go out of his
way. I wished for protection in the old-fashioned damsel-in-distress kind of way. I wished for a guy to ask if I was ok.
Today’s women are supposed to be strong and proud - "We don't need men!" I feel
pressure to live up to that. To not cry. To say it doesn’t bother me. To say it
won’t beat me down. Some say I am bold
and independent. I say bullshit. Inside there’s a fearful little girl ashamed to
show her weakness. Ashamed to admit her dependency. Ashamed to admit she doesn't want to do it by herself. Ashamed to admit these things that are right here on this
page. All I really want is to curl up and let someone take care of me. I am weak. I will lose a cat fight to a cat. I
am tired of pretending.
Last night, I went back down to the street. I spoke to my building
security guard. Yes, yes he told me with the famous Thai smile and nodding
head. It happens all the time – his face lit up as if we were talking about the
frequency of rainbows on the horizon. He pointed out all the security cameras. The
owner’s son was translating and delivered the news like a pot of gold. Neither was alarmed, concerned or in any way
consoling. I felt betrayed.
I was mugged once before, 2.5 hrs in to a 3-month
backpacking trip through Central America. That time it was two men in a car.
That time was more violent. That time I didn’t tell anyone until after I came home. Except one friend knew - a guy - he never followed up. I lost friends and
made enemies that summer. I was diagnosed with PTSD. My mom was concerned. My
dad didn’t want to know.
I have talked to male friends about my worries before. They
dismiss it and tell me not to live my life in fear. I don’t. I live it in a
perpetual state of risk assessment and avoidance. Personal safety crosses my
mind of a daily basis. For men I wonder if it even happens monthly? They say
goodbye to female friends at the bar and their thoughts turn to… hot dogs? Porn?
Game of Thrones? The hot Thai chick across the street? I say goodbye and
immediately enter into navigational assessment. How dark are the streets? How
populated is the sidewalk? Should I step aside to let the lone guy behind me
pass? Does the resident homeless guy look high tonight? How rowdy are the boys? Will a moto rob me if
I walk? Will a taxi car-jack me if I
drive? Does the driver look too drunk? Why
does he keep staring at me in the rearview? Is he turning where he should turn? Dammit,
what’s the safest way outta here?? Then there's the real
question - where exactly does pro-activeness
turn to paranoia? After last night I’m really not sure.
Women have tactics and plan Bs and safety networks. Mostly they
work. Mostly men are unaware. A few months ago a friend in another ‘safe’ Asian
city helped a guy home who was too drunk to make it alone. She carefully put
him to bed, turned to walk home and was attacked on the way. Another found
herself in a dodgy Bangkok taxi with a young driver who wielded a crowbar and
enough English to demand all her money. These are the stories women live and men
dismiss.
Today, I feel angry.
I want a man to listen. I want a man to feel my insecurity. I want a man to
have instincts for a woman’s safety. Most of all, I want a man to walk me home.
Update: It took me 5 days to leave my apartment after it happened. Not so much out of fear but because I work from home and didn't really have to go anywhere. It was Thurs afternoon and I rode in a taxi to a meeting for work. I sat in the back and clutched my purse - the same one that survived the mugging. I did feel anxious - my chest constricted an I developed a cough as I tried to breath.
ReplyDeleteGetting out of the taxi I threw my bag on my shoulder and cough site of something wrong - a piece of leather shooting of at an awkward angle. It had been sliced, peeled in a long straight strip. I discovered he must have had a knife - the white thing in his hand. Although that gave me a slip back into panic I'm just grateful he didn't use it on me.