I Thought My Engagement Ring Would Act as a Shield Against Men. Nope.
In DepthDoes my engagement ring conjure a force field when I wield it against prying men? It feels as though it should. It certainly became my new knee-jerk protector—just as a middle finger, rolled eyes, and a husky “fuck you” were back in my single days.
As I shuffle toward wifedom, nearly a third of my 18-month engagement already gone in a flash, I’ve gotten used to certain things. Used to clipping off my wedding planning updates at the five-minute mark when talking to new friends (12 minutes for close ones) during drinks. Used to hanging back during “single talk” unless my insights are explicitly welcomed in. Used to the new social patterns, but not quite used to the ring on my finger, or the power I imagine it should hold.
I simply assumed the rock on my hand would keep men at bay—street harassers and sulky exes and their grimy ilk. I’m not saying this instinct of mine is a good thing, this sense that because I symbolically “belong” to one man, I should also be symbolically undesirable and essentially invisible to all others, but it would at least be a pleasant side effect of engaging in the systematically oppressive act of, well, getting engaged. After years of heybabys and smilegirls, my ring began to feel like a beautiful ticket to a new plane of existence, one where I was to be avoided like some kind of plague.
Yeah, right. The men still find their way in. All the fools on the subway, legs splayed open, canine tongues out, wet eyeballs licking me toe to head, slow not to savor but to challenge me: Try and stop me. And I stand over them with my book, like every other woman in New York has done a million times before, trying not to notice, trying not look—but at least I have this thing, I think, on my hand. This thing that says “off limits, assholes.” So I pretend to rub my temple and flash it at the fucker. I make a Z-shape with it across my body, from left shoulder to lower-right rib, from lower-right rib to left hip.
A force field?
If getting married is attaching myself to one man and one man only, and becoming a spoke in the wheel of the patriarchy, so be it, but let the ring get this here man looking at something else, sweet Lord hear me now.
Another time, The Scary Ex has found me on Gchat again. My insides sink down and suck in—every six months now, for the past six years, he has found a way to remind me he’s still out there, daddy longleg limbs still creeping, and teeth still oh-so-slightly invested in finding me and sinking cold venom into my veins.
“I’m thinking of moving to New York…” he types from hundreds of miles away.
No. No no no. Nonononono.