An anti-harassment video went viral a couple weeks ago
titled “10 Hours of Walking in NYC as a Woman.” If you haven’t seen it, it’s
worth a watch, but what intrigued me more was the comment section. The majority
of the comments were criticizing the video for treating all forms of catcalling
as identical: for acting like calling a woman on the street “beautiful” was the
same as calling her “sexy,” which was the same as throwing her a sexually
explicit comment. It got me wondering:
are all whistles created equal?
As a gringa
currently living in a Latin American country, the topic of catcalling has been
at the front of my mind the last couple of months because I get an unusual
amount of attention on the street. The other women in my study abroad program
have noticed the same response, and I was discussing it with one of them the
other day when a male friend piped in. He posed the question:
“But what would you
prefer? To be attractive and catcalled, or to be ugly and ignored?”
Besides the obvious disregard of a right to bodily autonomy
implied in the (honestly innocent) question, it made me realize how little many
kind-hearted, well-intentioned men understand the feeling of receiving appearance-based
comments on the street. I think a lot of men feel alienated from even
approaching the topic because oftentimes women will bite their heads off for
not immediately understanding why hearing “beautiful” on the street, no matter
how benign the intentions, is never a compliment.
Because we need to stop calling it a compliment. We need to
eliminate that word from the discussion entirely.
Why? A compliment makes me feel big. I think it’s fairly
universal that when we hear we do something well, it makes us stand a little
taller over whatever it is we’ve been praised for. It could be a strong public speaking
voice, perfectly winged eyeliner, a quick wit, anything. The feeling in our gut
is positive, and we feel as though we’ve grown a couple inches.
But here’s the thing
about catcalling: It makes me feel small. It makes women feel small. Over
the last few months, I started paying attention to how my body would automatically
respond to attention from strangers on the street. My shoulders stoop forward,
my eyes fall to the ground, and my pace increases without me even thinking about
it. This applies to stares, whistles, “beautiful”s, “sexy”s,- any kind of
unsolicited attention. I’ve been working on maintaining a confident composure, but it requires a conscious effort. Kind of a weird
response to a compliment, right?
So why do I feel the need to do this? The short answer is
that women get raped. All the time. We get groped a lot too. And while we know
there’s a 99.98 percent chance that our interactions with that guy won’t go any
further than a single comment, he’s still a stranger to us, and we have no way
of knowing if he’s in that .02 percent. Because if he is, he’s probably
stronger than me, he would probably win that fight, and in a world that’s been
conditioned to wonder what I might have done to invite it, I’m not about to
incriminate myself by having the audacity to make eye contact.
And this is so, so unfair to the other 99.98 percent, many
of whom probably think that they’re brightening my day with a compliment, that
I’ll walk away with my head high.
Women have been trained to believe, possibly unfairly, that if
a man finds you attractive in any way, he wants to have sex with you. There’s a
humorous quote that’s been bouncing around the internet for a while now: “If a
guy calls you cute, he’s complimenting your face. If a guy calls you sexy, he’s
complimenting your body. If a guy calls you beautiful, he’s complimenting your soul.
All three of those guys want to f*ck you, though.” Saddled with this belief, I
don’t feel any different if I hear “beautiful” or “sexy” or “I want to put my
____ in your _______,” because deep down I feel like they all mean the same
thing coming from strangers on the street, unfair or otherwise. I don’t know
him, I don’t know his intentions, and I never asked to hear his opinion on my
appearance.
So here’s my official PSA to all the wonderful, well-meaning,
non-rapey men out there: If you don’t know her, keep it to yourself. Spread the
word. Make a T-shirt. Because the world is damn lovely, and I’m tired of staring
at the sidewalk.