An Early Win in the Never Ending War
Original Story
When I was just about a year sober, I was sexually assaulted on the street early one Saturday evening walking to my regular AA meeting to make coffee for the group. I don’t remember the exact date, it was over 35 years ago, and I am still sober, although I welcomed medical cannabis back into my life in 2018, and I chose to let go of AA in 2020, because even during the almost 30 years I was abstinent from cannabis I was an outspoken proponent of harm reduction and full legalization and reparations, and opponent to the resistance of most AA members to fully embrace AA’s own tradition of respecting the individual medical decisions of its members, and our right to talk in groups about everything that impacts our spiritual well-being and by extension, recovery from alcoholism. I think it’s important to say this here because this is not just a story about an assault, or a sexual assault, it is about how we cope with the immediate events of grief and trauma as adults, and live with whatever the aftermath might be. And for me, because of how it all happened at that moment in time, this frightening event did not leave me with lasting trauma. I won this particular fight, and I share my story because I want other young women especially to know they too can win. You can win a physical fight against a sexual assailant, with no training, and a little luck. The luckiest components of my story are that my assailant never showed a weapon, and in the aftermath it seems he was not stalking me, it was a random attack. I was also always fairly strong for a very average size woman, and in good shape, walking 10-15 miles a week and waitressing back then. It was January or February at dusk, crisp and cold with patches of ice on the sidewalks still and snow on the grass in some places. The bus let me off on the main street of town and I had a ten minute walk over to the church where our group was meeting in an hour or so, and the sky was still bright as the sun set behind the trees ahead of me. The side street forked just past the bike trail over an Old Dominion rail line, with an empty field on my side of the street and on the right a row of houses locked up tight against the cold. I heard footsteps echo behind me, nothing unusual, until it sounded like he was starting to jog. My spidey sense twitched but after years sharing the byways with joggers, on top of the bike trail, I chose not to turn and look. In a second he was on me, right arm around my neck, left hand rising between my legs, under my long, narrow denim skirt, to graze my crotch. I heard myself yelling in a few bursts, grabbed his arm with both hands and dropped to my right knee, throwing him off me. He stumbled and took off running to the left past the church, and I never saw his face. I crossed the fork on the echoing street, the houses to my right dark and silent still, and ran up across the long lawn to lock myself in the church. I called the police on the pay phone in the basement pre-school hallway and my AA friends began to arrive long before the police did. Being me, of course I told my AA friends what happened immediately. I was surrounded by people who even if they did not love me supported me as someone in recovery, and there were a few who were already good friends, and some who would remain so for decades. I was not met with a single expression of disbelief or criticism. Someone asked me if I was thinking about drinking, and the answer was an easy no. I was relieved of the obsession and compulsion to drink in my first few days of sobriety in AA, and although I was unsure of myself and still had a healthy fear of drinking I did not struggle with the desire to drink, then or since. In that I am simply luckier than some, and no more virtuous than any other. When the police arrived, I already had an awareness that the circumstances of my experience, sober, surrounded by dozens of other sober people in a church basement on a Saturday night, to which I possessed the keys, in addition to my relatively “modest” clothes that cold night and being a young, white woman, meant that I was being treated as what was commonly called a “righteous” victim, the opposite of most people’s experience with both law enforcement and community. If it had been a summer night, and I was wearing my red heels with no stockings and a mini skirt, it is easy to see how it all could have been so different. And it shouldn’t be. The police called out the dogs and lost his trail in the snow near the hotel a few blocks away. I had to change my routine because we had no way of knowing if he was a stalker. I didn’t stop walking anywhere, just when and which way sometimes. And I never ignore my spidey sense now. Being assaulted that day was never in any way, shape or form my fault, and I knew it in my bones and it fueled my intuitive fight. By reminding myself that my spidey sense is perfectly trustworthy, and talking about it openly in my recovery, I have been able to walk the streets without fear ever since. Another reason for that was the immediate, unconditional acceptance and love I experienced from my community in the moments, hours and years following. It has given me strength to face down a few more bullies in the years since then too.