by Suff » 01 Nov 2017, 00:52
I completely agree that some men have been getting away with lecherous behaviour for decades and the whole system was tilted against women rather than being a level playing field. There was a time when fending off groping was an occupational hazard and I always felt it was the most sleazy and offensive behaviour.
Personally I'm not the touching kind so I watch those, who seem to be unable to have a conversation with a pretty woman without putting their hands on them somewhere or other, with, perhaps not incredulity, but with a certain amount of disdain. Women either like to be touched by those they know or they do not and they are usually not backwards about making it plain.
I live in France where friends shake hands (men), or kiss cheeks (Women and men in the same family). Yet that's it, start touching arms or shoulders or, god forbid, waists or hips and you will find yourself simultaneously rebuffed and ostracised. Unless, of course, the lady in question invited the attention (highly unlikely).
I'n my dancing life we have a large circle of friends (70 or more), whom we are very friendly with. Most of the women in that circle will expect me to kiss cheek or kiss and hug when I meet them. Given that we're touching women all the time in dancing there is a bit more latitude to, perhaps, touch an arm in affection at the end of a dance with your dance partner (of the moment, Scottish Country you change partners almost every dance).
However I would never consider putting hands on those women otherwise and at least three of them Expect a big hug when they see me and one of them likes to rest her head on my chest when she gets hugged (don't assume, it is a friendly thing, not an overly friendly thing).
So setting that scene of my assumptions and tolerances. I think we are heading rapidly towards the wrong direction. Yes there are those out there who get exactly what they deserve, but there are also those who are going to get really burned by this. Because it's getting to the point of Guilty until proven innocent. Now given the attitude of the Police and society as a whole over the last 5 decades some might think that is just comeuppance. But I've never felt that this kind of backlash is warranted, no matter the provocation.
I watched two women on the Tube about 4 weeks ago. On the Jubilee line at Waterloo we stand 10 to 15 deep in queues and you really do have to move into the carriages and start imitating a sardine. So this incident happened and I was watching. One woman got on and was clearly not going to move in, she wanted more space. The second woman did what everyone else does and crowded onto the train. The first woman, still refusing to move into the space suddenly and loudly said "DON'T TOUCH ME". The Second, older, woman, said "I didn't" in a very disgruntled voice. Had this been a man it could have been a very awkward situation which might have got out of hand. Yet it was clearly the first woman, determined to force everyone else to give her more space, touchy and on edge in her own body language, who was out to cause trouble.
I worry that these situations get out of hand fast in the current environment of 0 tolerance, fed by dicks like MP's who think they can send their secretaries out to buy something intensely personal and quite embarrassing.
Just two weeks ago I was on the Central line in a jam packed carriage. I'd got myself into the back of the doors which did not open for the 5 next stops, so that I wasn't in the way. I was bent over with my head in the curve of the door. In front of me was a young, rather pretty, woman who was getting closer and closer at every stop as people crowded together and everyone but me, jammed into the doors, was being thrown about by the movement of the train. The young woman in question was facing me and about six inches away from me which is, sadly, today, inside my focal length. Had we had even one sudden lurch, I might have wound up with her lips on mine, they were at the same height with me bent over and absolutely nowhere for me to move.
Hopefully, in that situation, the young woman would have passed it off as what it was. Then again, who knows?
There are 10 types of people in the world:
Those who understand Binary and those who do not.