Workshopping Rape
LatestElissa Bassist has a piece in The Cut today about her struggle to say she was sexually assaulted by her first “real-deal boyfriend”:
I was a senior in college, 22, and one of those late-in-life virgins, waiting for the ideal circumstances to have sex. When we had sex the first time, it hurt. When we had sex every other time, it hurt. But I had no way to describe what was happening in the dark, no way to talk about it, no language to explain.
In 2008, after we’d graduated and broken up, he e-mailed me confessing he’d cheated with four women (not simultaneously, but just as unimaginable). Like the responsible and terrified educated woman I was, I got tested for AIDS and STIs. During the exam, the gynecologist asked me if I’d given birth. Huh? I’ve never been pregnant. She said my cervix was ruptured, torn in such a way that it looked like I’d given birth to a baby. A human-size baby. I was broken on the inside and nobody knew, not even me.
Either I check the box or I don’t. Do the mornings I’d wake up to him thrusting into me count? Does it count that I stopped thinking I was “having sex” and started thinking “I was being had sex with”? A torn cervix, does it count? Check the box or do not check the box.
Six years later, Bassist submitted a book chapter about those events — her first attempt at devising a “language” to explain what happened — to a workshop class in her Masters of Fine Arts graduate program. Some sample passages:
I never said, “No, no, no.” When I’d cry – almost every time we had sex – he asked if he should keep going. Keep going, I’d say. Just finish. And he would. He could.
What is the difference between saying “No, no, no,” and praying the man you trust will stop when he sees you crying? How about when he hears you screaming?
I would look at him, concentrating every part of me on the mouth that kept saying it loved me … And he didn’t know. I could see that he didn’t think he was doing anything wrong or unusual. He and I could feel things so differently while we were at the center of one another.
Bassist called the piece “How Not to Lose Your Virginity,” and a classmate critiqued it by titling his response, “How to Make a Guy Cringe.”
“‘Rape’ hints @ a criminal act. Was this criminal?” he wrote. “You need to invent a new word for your situation. Diet Rape or Rape II. Caffeine free rape [sic]. A rape substitute. maybe [sic], ‘I can’t believe it’s not rape.’ Just trying to interject a little humor in here. Not sure what to say. I hope your cervix is better.”