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Fight Back Against Rape - With Fear! by Mellisa Soalt Rape. It’s a four letter word that plunges women into the basement of their fears. And it’s every parent’s unspoken fears for their daughter. You can’t always see it but it’s there, crimping women’s sense of freedom. "When I walk home in the evening, I am gripped by a hyper vigilance that creates great tension in my body and runs a fast-paced tape of warnings and nightmare scenarios through my mind," wrote one student. Her anxieties are echoed by countless others: two-thirds of American women "do not feel safe." Some call it paranoia, but the fear of sexual assault isn’t unfounded. The most underreported crime in America, it is estimated that 12.1 million American women have been the victim of "forcible rape" and that 1 out of 8 will be assaulted in her lifetime. An age-old crime, rape often encompasses sexual or psychological torture; a woman’s terror and pain becomes little more than fodder for a predator’s amusement. When in the presence of this evil intent, you know it, immediately - it’s nightmarish sensation is primal, hard-wired. An icy chill, then panic ricochets through your body, catapulting you into a Darwinian jungle of predator and prey. It shatters the veneer of civilization and connects you to the terror of becoming a sacrificial lamb. The aftermath of rape can be devastating, profoundly altering a woman’s sense of self at the core. Far more than a heinous crime against one’s body, survivors often describe it as a "shattering" experience. No woman is immune, yet few are prepared. Years ago, women were taught to rely on the Good Guys to protect them from the Bad Guys - a dangerously flawed strategy as women are typically alone when assaulted. (Plus that Good Guy / Bad Guy line can get blurry fast if Jekyll plays switcheroo with Hyde.) Being rescued is a comforting thought, but only as reliable as divine intervention. Putting the Controversy To Rest Studies have finally dispelled the myth that women are unable to protect themselves and that resistance will only "make things worse," replacing this erroneous claim with newfound data: immediate and aggressive responses including fighting back are effective. Conversely pleading, reasoning or appealing to a rapist’s humanity is not - the latter being "almost universally futile," notes Dr. Judith Herman, foremost authority on trauma and author of the best selling book Trauma and Recovery. "By not resisting rape, women may be putting themselves at greater risk," says Sarah Ullman, assistant professor from the University of Illinois at Chicago. Of course fighting carries risks, but Ullman’s research on resistance strategies concluded that a woman’s "level of physical injury is mainly determined by the offender’s use of violence" and initial blows struck, not because she fought back. Having choices and defense skills may also be critical in the aftermath. "The women who fought to the best of their abilities were not only more likely to be successful in thwarting the rape attempt, but less likely to suffer severe distress symptoms," wrote Herman. "By contrast, women who submitted without a struggle were more likely to be highly self critical and depressed in the aftermath." More good reasons why women need to learn how to counterattack. But before we get to essential strategies, we need to appreciate the dual nature of fear. A Package Deal Fear is a double agent, both ally and enemy, informant and saboteur. You cannot control fear, but how you react to it. It can save or imperil, empower or enslave you. A primeval emotion, fear is hard-wired into our survival instinct. It alerts us to danger and is the voice of intuition. It elicits that uh-oh feeling that tells you to get moving and triggers the adrenaline dump prepping the body for action. Honoring this emotion has saved many lives. "The moment he got in my car, I was flooded with fear," one woman later remarked. (‘He’ was a sicko who orchestrated a parking lot mugging then ‘rescued’ her so that, indebted, she would drive him to his vehicle.) After tricking him into stepping out of her car, the woman swiftly drove off and discovered the rape kit - knives, rope, duct tape — in his attaché case. But women are equally vulnerable to becoming victims of fear, immobilized by its grip. The Myth of Fearlessness Fearlessness has been touted as the Holy Grail of the warrior arts. It’s a seductive notion, but nothing could be more dangerous or further from the truth. "Saying that you don’t feel fear is like saying that you don’t feel hunger, thirst, love or hate. Everyone feels emotion, fear being one of the most powerful," writes the legendary former bouncer Geoff Thompson in his book Fear: The Friend of Exceptional People. The goal of any fighting art should never be to eliminate fear (reduce it, yes) but rather to replace helplessness with skills, and to re-train the body and mind to respond and react instantaneously. Without fear there is neither courage nor urgency of action. It isn’t fear per se, but hesitation that is the enemy. When it comes to rape, there’s no mincing the truth: being slammed down and pinned by a larger, pumped up creature intent on raping or ravaging you will, at least initially, evoke abject animal-like terror and can quickly suck the life force right out of one’s body. No amount of warrior-within affirmations is going to change that or banish fear. Fear does not respond to, nor is it abated by, trickery — it is a deeper more purposeful emotion, ordained by Mother Nature. As was poignantly rendered by Ambrose Redmoon, "Only an enemy can initiate a warrior." Beyond Hope and Fear To effectively fend off a rapist and not be immobilized by fear one must prioritize. The decision to not be raped, to escape and survive, must supersede all other concerns including the fear of injury — the biggest obstacle to fighting back. "If what you fear more than anything else is injury," says survival expert Sanford Strong, "you will not have the determination to escape an attack. You will believe all the criminal’s promises and never notice fleeting opportunities." Rape is essentially an act of terrorism. A rapist can hold a woman hostage with her very own fears, and will effectively use a woman’s terror to gain compliance and render her powerless - "bought and paid for," attests Strong. The debilitating effects of fear resound in writer Sally Kempton’s words: "It is hard to fight an enemy who has outposts in your head." Piercing the Heart of Terror It can happen in a heart beat, but the prime directive to fight back takes place, not just in the mind or body’s adrenal system, but on a deeper more spiritual level, set into motion by this bottom line decision: what is non-negotiable. It is this innermost decision that issues a woman’s resolve, evoking the requisite will and wrath that compels her into battle, her spirit leading her body. This flicker of reckoning can antidote potentially lethal passivity and spawn an indomitable fighting spirit, paradoxically liberated from both hope and fear. Crossing this threshold leaves many to later remark: I didn’t know I had it in me; something inside rose up and said NO; that’s when I went for it. Instead of succumbing to fear, we need to use it as a weapon. Sensations of fear and adrenaline must become the trigger that catapults women into action. You must learn to turn the rapist’s own weapons of intimidation — the vehemence of his words and actions - back onto him in a merciless counterattack that I call "return to sender." A strategy that embodies the true spirit of reversal. To combat rape and increase your fighting chances, arm yourself with these essential strategies:
| What do you mean "Fight like a Girl"?
"In a stranger-rape situation, if he allows you to see his face, you get his name, or you can somehow otherwise identify your attacker, and he knows it, it’s all the more important to get away from him, even if he has a knife and you are risking injury. Because unless he’s quite inexperienced, he’s likely to kill you to leave no witnesses." Program a Long Time Coming "The concept of enlightening women to 'fight like girls' is a long time coming. We should have been doing this years ago. The female body is built differently and can be used effectively against a male attacker if trained properly. Defend University and the Rape Escape program have proven again and again that the Fight Like a Girl program is successful, easy to learn and easy to deliver."
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