Be Strong, Be Wise. Amy R. Carpenter
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Название: Be Strong, Be Wise

Автор: Amy R. Carpenter

Издательство: Ingram

Жанр: Руководства

Серия:

isbn: 9781631950889

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СКАЧАТЬ them integrate the tools without sounding like a textbook or manual? In the end, I decided to go with my gut and trust that the average eighteen-plus-year-old person is able to grasp several concepts simultaneously, as well as apply them to their own life (albeit, with some help.) In this way, I deliver the material as directly as possible, giving the reader all the information they need to know without using a lot of unnecessary descriptions or clinical mumbo-jumbo. Also, the topic is not a light one, but there is a way of talking about it in a light manner.

      Chapters 1 through 3 set the backdrop, providing information to readers of any age, but by Chapter 4, the narrative voice changes and is directed solely to young adults. In conversational style, I address the reader as “you” through the remainder of the book.

      To write about the experience of the average young person when it comes to intimate relationships is like trying to identify a favorite movie, which is to say, impossible. In Chapter 7, when I discuss sex and dating, I opted for minor graphic descriptions to get the necessary points across. There are readers who may find these too graphic or, conversely, too innocent. If the tools are accessible, it does not matter. Additionally, the accounts of sexual assault are written sparsely for the most part. This is out of respect for the contributors’ stories. They are not mine, and certain details aren’t necessary to a discussion on safety. In order to ensure privacy, all the contributors’ names have been changed.

      The questions at the end of each chapter help integrate the information and make it more usable, which means the wisdom available is determined by what the reader brings to it.

      Lastly, since women are far more likely to be victims of assault, I discuss sexism as a primary risk force, along with homophobia and transphobia. That said, the guidelines here are written for both men and women. The pronouns “he/she” are used primarily throughout the book, and when discussing the gender-fluid community, the pronoun “they” is used exclusively.

The Making of a Movement

      Most young adults don’t think sexual assault will happen to them. They might feel they’re too well-supported, too smart, too sheltered, or too worldly to ever become a victim. And yet, according to the Rape, Abuse, and Incest National Network (RAINN), there’s a sexual assault approximately every ninety-two seconds in the US, with more than half involving victims between the ages of eighteen and thirty-four.

      Perhaps the most unresolved issue of our time, sexual assault—classified as “unwanted sexual touch”—is also a taboo subject. Victims often choose secrecy; in fact, according to RAINN’s reports, out of 1,000 sexual assault cases, only five offenders will serve jail time. As a psychotherapist, I’ve treated sexual trauma for nearly twenty-five years, and I’ve never gotten used to hearing the troubling stories my clients have shared. When the #MeToo movement came along, so did the realization that I’d spent enough time in my career responding to assault, and perhaps it was time to work on preventing it.

      The #MeToo movement helped us break down walls of secrecy by creating an arena where survivors could share their stories in the form of two simple words: me too. Now it’s time to create a new movement focused on keeping young people safe.

      Another Kind of College Prep

      When I taught sexual assault prevention classes at a local high school, the students knew how to respond to the “what-if” scenarios that took place in familiar territory, like school. For example, when discussing whether it was okay for a coach to slap an athlete on the butt as they were heading onto the field, the responses were mixed but immediate. Many of the young men answered in the affirmative, while the young women answered with a concrete “no.” We explored gender differences and the definition of assault as it applied to sports in the lively conversation that followed.

      When we talked about life after high school, the reactions grew vague. To their credit, why should the average eighteen-year-old apprehend, let alone understand, something they have not yet experienced, especially when experience is how we learn? Yet often that is what parents, teachers, and young people expect. Somehow, through trial and error, osmosis, or a keen gut instinct, college-age adults will go off into the world and just figure it out.

      I liken this to travel. Before visiting India, I read every guidebook I could get my hands on, watched documentaries, and played twenty questions with anyone who had been to that immense country. Still, nothing could have prepared me for the teeming, electric, and sometimes overwhelming reality of India. Life after high school can feel much the same; like something altogether different, because it is.

      No matter how independent or savvy a young person may be or how many adventures they experienced, life after the age of eighteen is a whole different ball game—a new playing field, new rules, new teammates, new learning habits. While their mentors in high school, whether a coach, a parent, or a teacher, were apt to say what was expected on any given day, after high school, young adults are on their own as both coach and team member. The good news is this can be one of the most exciting stages we get in a lifetime.

      The average college freshman is no slouch and usually far more aware than most adults give them credit for. However, the #MeToo movement has taught us a few truths that can’t be ignored because they affect how to play the game of adulthood. Although these truths were around long before #MeToo, the movement helped bring them forward into a whole new light. Here are a few of the biggies:

      1 1.If you are female, there’s a twenty-five percent chance you will experience sexual assault before you graduate college or have been in the workforce for four years (rainn.org).

      2 2.If you are male, you are not guaranteed safety, since seventeen percent of reported sexual assaults occur against men.

      3 3.If you are a member of the LGBTQ or gender-fluid community, the rates are even higher, with studies suggesting that approximately half of transgender people and bisexual women will experience sexual violence at some point in their lifetimes. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, forty percent of gay men have experienced sexual violence other than rape, compared to twenty-one percent of heterosexual men.

      All of these stats are even more troubling when we consider that the ACLU has estimated ninety-five percent of rapes on college campuses go unreported. Now we have a generation of college students who should be overjoyed at the prospect of independence but instead many are expressing fear. On June 8, 2016, Terrin Waack, a Sporting News intern and a student at the University of Alabama wrote an article titled: “As a College Student, I Live in Fear of Sexual Assault.”

      In it, she writes, “I’m scared because I’m surrounded by stories of rape and sexual assault, so much so they’re becoming a norm. When another instance arises, it’s no longer shocking. It’s almost expected: Who’s next?”

      Terrin’s words echo the thoughts of many college students, especially women. Yet aside from whether or not to carry mace, the prevention terms we use haven’t strayed far from “stranger danger” and “good touch, bad touch,” terms children learn as early as pre-school. The statistics indicate that СКАЧАТЬ