30/09/2021
Iāve seen a few posts relating to women feeling unsafe after the awful news of Sabina Nessa being attacked and killed in London.
After having experienced cPTSD emotional flashback at the weekend after memories resurfacing, when I was followed and narrowly missed attack by a split second, where I caught the guy right behind me after having followed me from Oxford Street to Hoxton, by bus (2 separate ones) i had been targeted by a group working together to create a distraction of another suspicious male.
This came little under a year after a court case of a man who was stalking me and following me, as a member of the gym Iād never spoken to.
I would like to share what Iāve learned based on trauma study and maybe it will help someone.
I am by no means an expert, but by lived experience.
Questions re: r**e alarms
I think it pays to take whatever precautions so you have options, they are VERY loud, and may cause the attacker to bolt so yes, theyāre worth having in my opinion.
You can be prepared, but you canāt pre-empt what you would do in the situation in that moment as your fight, flight or freeze mechanism will kick in.
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This is why itās really angering when people say āwhy didnāt they fight back, run away etcā and very clear that theyāve never experienced a situation where fight, flight or freeze kicks in - it is a autonomic survival reaction; the fact that some people, like myself, can manage to partially override it is why we end up with PTSD as we donāt let our bodies carry out the full process in the way that animals do.
To come out with ridiculous victim blaming and shaming comments like that reflects mysogyny.
If there is anything absolutely worth doing, learn self defense.
Having that in your metaphorical toolkit could absolutely save you; attackers arenāt expecting their āvictimsā to fight back in anyway - be that physically or verbally challenging them.
Iām going to be popping Ruby into classes when I can.
On that note,
This is why itās so important not to tell white lies to children, or encourage them to prioritise being polite over being safe. Doing this jeopardises natural gut intuition and puts them at risk.
I was routinely gaslit throughout life and at the times where I fell prey to potential attackers was a time where I was being criticised for my standards by people I loved.
If youāve experienced gaslighting or feel like you donāt trust yourself or judgement, itās a good idea to gain support to regain and fine tune your gut instincts.
While feeling fearful is a natural reaction, itās not a state you want to retain as career criminals have been interviewed and referenced reading body language.
Take precautions needed, absolutely, empower yourself to be safe and vigilant of danger, but please donāt shrink your life in fear.