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Instead of a work of fiction Writing of fantasy or addiction I chose to write about me instead. About something I thought was better left unsaid. They said I was confused, that I misunderstood Is this what it means to enter adulthood? It means we’re punished for being open? Or having to pretend we were just joking? I wasn’t a child, I was eighteen years old. Now I carry it, it comes back around, like the flu or a cold When it’s someone you know Someone you should be able to trust, where do you even go? We live in a world where men think being accused Is the same as being sexually abused. Where if a woman says something, she’s just lighting a fuse. But I’m starting a fire because I’m sick of living in hues of gray. I don’t want to sit back and pretend I didn’t lose something And then I turn on the tv and feel sick if I watch the news I see we live in a society where we teach girls to protect themselves We tell them to make sure he rapes a different girl, not you. One in three women they say, make sure it’s not you. And when we speak up, we’re told he won’t be punished. So why bother saying anything at all? We’re told we won’t be believed. Well not today, not for me. I’m tired of somedays, and maybe they’ll see. We live in a world where girls clothes are regulated To make sure it’s the boys who are educated. We tell our girls their cases won’t be advocated That boys will be boys, and their comfort is overrated. You’re homophobic because you don’t want To be treated the way you treat women And then you don’t want to be the villain Catcalling us on the streets But what if it was your daughter, your mother, your niece? Defending yourself, saying we can’t take a compliment And we have no choice but silence when you’re dominant. You walk down the street without a care But we worry we’ll be trapped in some nightmare Make sure it isn’t you. She’ll always be more drunk, showing more skin, be more alone And when you say nothing, you don’t even realize you condone it When you say she was drunk, it was her fault, You’re blaming a victim, letting him get away, And you’re saying it wasn’t really an assault You say if it was your daughter, you’d **** them Don’t you care what the other daughters will become? I won’t be silenced, Not in the face of this violence Not when a boy can **** a girl and get three months Where they can sit back and call us ****** and ***** Not when he can ‘grab em by the ***** But if I say something, they’ll just shoot me down or call me pushy. I’m tired of meaning nothing I’m tired of them thinking touching Without permission is their given right Instead of something that is literally disgusting. This poem demands to be spoken, And I refuse to be broken.
0
Oct 25, 2018
Oct 25, 2018 at 8:42 AM UTC
Broken
Instead of a work of fiction Writing of fantasy or addiction I chose to write about me instead. About something I thought was better left unsaid. They said I was confused, that I misunderstood Is this what it means to enter adulthood? It means we’re punished for being open? Or having to pretend we were just joking? I wasn’t a child, I was eighteen years old. Now I carry it, it comes back around, like the flu or a cold When it’s someone you know Someone you should be able to trust, where do you even go? We live in a world where men think being accused Is the same as being sexually abused. Where if a woman says something, she’s just lighting a fuse. But I’m starting a fire because I’m sick of living in hues of gray. I don’t want to sit back and pretend I didn’t lose something And then I turn on the tv and feel sick if I watch the news I see we live in a society where we teach girls to protect themselves We tell them to make sure he rapes a different girl, not you. One in three women they say, make sure it’s not you. And when we speak up, we’re told he won’t be punished. So why bother saying anything at all? We’re told we won’t be believed. Well not today, not for me. I’m tired of somedays, and maybe they’ll see. We live in a world where girls clothes are regulated To make sure it’s the boys who are educated. We tell our girls their cases won’t be advocated That boys will be boys, and their comfort is overrated. You’re homophobic because you don’t want To be treated the way you treat women And then you don’t want to be the villain Catcalling us on the streets But what if it was your daughter, your mother, your niece? Defending yourself, saying we can’t take a compliment And we have no choice but silence when you’re dominant. You walk down the street without a care But we worry we’ll be trapped in some nightmare Make sure it isn’t you. She’ll always be more drunk, showing more skin, be more alone And when you say nothing, you don’t even realize you condone it When you say she was drunk, it was her fault, You’re blaming a victim, letting him get away, And you’re saying it wasn’t really an assault You say if it was your daughter, you’d **** them Don’t you care what the other daughters will become? I won’t be silenced, Not in the face of this violence Not when a boy can **** a girl and get three months Where they can sit back and call us ****** and ***** Not when he can ‘grab em by the ***** But if I say something, they’ll just shoot me down or call me pushy. I’m tired of meaning nothing I’m tired of them thinking touching Without permission is their given right Instead of something that is literally disgusting. This poem demands to be spoken, And I refuse to be broken.
sbutler
Written by
31/F/Massachusetts
Oct 25, 2018
Oct 25, 2018 at 8:42 AM UTC
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