
I was not at the wrong place at the wrong time. Their eyes followed me with a laugh— or perhaps a mock— as I sit on the stand. My anguish did not mean a thing and I only reaped what I have sown.
I was asking for it.
When my shaking hands pointed at man across the room, I saw them smirk. My giggles the other night begged to differ the word I am trying to utter, R A P E.
I was asking for it.
Before the judge, the defense flashed a picture of my girlfriends and I. Hands holding a glass of vodka, laughing with our heads thrown back, the neon lights flashed before our tight miniskirts. I felt dirty with shame as I buried my face in my palms.
I was asking for it.
I should have known better the moment I slipped into my short skirts and high heels. I should have known the danger and the danger I bring. You see where this is going, right? When a man twice your age stops you with a leering face, it is your fault. Men will be men, and we are but a single piece plucked from their ribcage that they need to reclaim. It has always been their birthright.
I was to blame when his groin pressed down on me as his tongue slithered all over my skin. My shouts were that of ecstasy. My tears were that of joy, they say. I fucking liked it because my breath quickened with every thrust!
I was asking for it.
He showed the marks on his back with pride. That night, I buried my fingernails deep into his skin. God, I wished they were knives. Each night, the bare wall in my bedroom echoes his moans. His groans. The sound of slap from an unrecognizable monster plays on repeat. No anti-depressant or pill can help me sleep.
I wish they were knives.
I wish to be guilty of murder.
I wish I had killed that man.
I was never told being a woman is an open invitation to be fucked. That I am a platter of legs, thighs, breasts, and neck served for hungry beasts to devour. And when the meat is handed free, what kind of animal would dare to scowl?
I was asking for it, wasn’t I?
“Duterte, in a speech in Mandaue City, joked that his hometown of Davao City has a high number of reported rape cases because it has many beautiful women. Those who attended the President’s engagement laughed at the joke.” –GMA News
This is Philippines. Where a president jokes of pardons for soldiers who rape. Offers Filipino ‘virgins’ to foreigners with purchasing power. And orders soldiers to shoot women rebels in the vagina, so they become ‘useless.’ This is not the first time and it will not be the last.
This morning, through a friend’s post, I read a circulating issue regarding one Angkas driver here in Cebu. Angkas, a motorcycle ride-hailing service accessed through a mobile booking app, has been one of our reliable mode of transportation for quite some time. It appears that he was pressing the lady passenger to come with him to a motel.
This afternoon, in a sports warehouse, a man kept on stealing a gaze. As I was checking out shoes, he brushed his hands to mine “by accident”.
Tonight, as I get out of work, I do not want to go home. I assessed I have gotten used to it but the thought of men giving you catcalls and ogle as you pass by them is equal parts disturbing and tiring.
No harm done, they say. But what of the seconds we spent holding our breaths? What of the palms curled into a fist, just in case? What of the trembling knees? What of the fear as we breathe? Don’t these count?
September 10, 2018 at 6:37 pm
This is a very strong piece Maria…i hope it gets through to all the women out there…for whatever reason…rape is rape….and yes its never fun to joke about a woman being raped for being beautiful…though we all know we have to dress up responsibly so as not to attrack attention but still it doensnt mean these perverts have the right to do it..
P.S.
We (whole family) have moved already…we no longer reside in the Phil..
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September 10, 2018 at 8:06 pm
This is a very strong yet disturbing read Maria. I agree with what Mich says above. It’s not about being pretty its objectifying women and devaluing us. stand strong sister, we are mighty in numbers, we are soft but not weak. I am sad to hear that this happens in a country where my nieces live.
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September 10, 2018 at 8:29 pm
Abi ko ako ray nadisturb sa angkas issue 🙈🙈🙈 suki pa naman ko labi nag saputon kos traffic ug kasakay 😭😭😭
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September 10, 2018 at 8:35 pm
Kaayo. Sa angkas sad baya ko musalig ug sakay kay convenient sya and safe kay naay records.
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September 10, 2018 at 8:51 pm
Haaay 🙈🙈🙈 wa nagyuy safe rung panahona
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September 10, 2018 at 11:03 pm
This poem makes me so angry because you’d think in this day and age, humanity would have progressed enough that we no longer have to argue that what a woman chooses to wear or not wear does not equal consent, that a woman is more than just a sexual object. I feel sorry that this is the world where our sisters and daughters and nieces have to grow up in.
This is one of your strongest pieces of writing, Maria.
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September 11, 2018 at 12:06 am
well done write…all of it!!
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September 11, 2018 at 10:54 pm
This leaks the horrible state of mind men have because men like this one. It is really despicable and saddening. I can taste the blood in this piece. Strong. Fierce.
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