Ok this is a bit harrowing but we do need to talk about it.
You know this whole “why did the police ignore grooming” thing in the 2000s?
Well I was a kid in the 2000s. I was born in 1996. And I want to talk about what society thought about “girls making bad choices”
🧵
So I had a friend when I was 12 who had been a victim of grooming by an older boy, and she’d been moved to my school after being bullied. She was what was called “promiscuous and precocious” in 2007. Now we’d say traumatised and vulnerable. Anyway.
She started dating this boy in our class and sent him nudes. This was flip phone era and totally new. When he broke up with her, he showed everyone. The whole school saw. The school called HER into the headmaster’s office to discuss it.
The next day, we had a big assembly with the whole school, about how dangerous and stupid it was to send nude pictures of yourself, and how it was a criminal offence and you’d go to prison. Yes: if you, a 12 year old, sent someone a nude, YOU would go to prison. This is 2007.
No word about it being bad to share nude images of a child without their permission. No word about how your boyfriend shouldn’t abuse your privacy or even to go to an adult. No: we would go to prison. If the adults found out what we had done, we would go to prison.
So the boys worked out that if a girl had sent them a picture they could make her do anything. They would demand oral sex, sex, sex for their friends, whatever they wanted. They’d film girls giving them head and then threaten to “send them to jail” if they didn’t comply for more.
The boys started pulling up our skirts for “banter”. This grew to molesting. When a boy did it in front of a male teacher, I was asked to stay behind after class. The teacher quietly advised me to wear gym shorts under my skirt to “avoid any more embarrassment.” It was MY fault.
So all the girls now wore shorts under their skirts, just to protect ourselves from the unpunished abuse of the boys in our classes. As we got older- 13, 14, adult men started getting interested in us too.
Another assembly. We, girls, weren’t supposed to be STUPID and FOOLISH and trust men to help us. To be honest with us. Not to hurt us. We watched a video where a girl got into a car after missing her bus and was raped. It was her fault. We shouldn’t be like Jess Who Got Raped.
Problem? Well, the girls who had been groomed by grown men by that point didn’t want to get into trouble. They didn’t want to be slut shamed and called stupid and irresponsible. They were incredibly ashamed. So now grown men could get away with it: just like the boys in our class
…had already done.
We had learnt, absolutely, that if you were sexually abused, exploited, or violated, it was your fault and you would be punished.
If you went to an adult for help, it would be your fault for not wearing shorts, sending nudes, or trusting your uncle.
This is the culture I grew up in. This is MY childhood. My privileged, recent childhood. I’m 28. I can absolutely understand why the police didn’t do anything. Society thought we were sluts, whores, and asking for it. Not *children*.
Sorry this is long. I’ll end on one memory that has haunted me, if I may:
I’m 15 and it’s a hot June day in Cambridge. My 14 year old friend wants to get alcohol and drink it in the park. I don’t. I’m terrified of getting into trouble.
She goes up to a random man standing outside of a newsagents and asks him to go buy her vodka. She’s clearly a child. So am I. He’s in his forties.
He asks her if she’s single. Something in me is uncomfortable. “No, come on, let’s go,” I say, grabbing her arm.
He turns to me, his face furious, and says “No, don’t tell us what to do. You are staying. You both are.” I want to run but I can’t leave her with this strange man. He grabs my shoulder and her arm and tries to pull us into a side road.
I’ve had enough by this point and I run and run and run all the way to Cambridge station. I stand there and text her non stop. Eventual she saunters up and triumphantly shows the bottle. “It’s just head, Mads,” she says. “It’s no big deal.”
She was 14. Had she done it before? 🧵
I’ll wrap up the obvious on the last post for those who didn’t get it: I couldn’t tell anyone what had happened because a) I would get in trouble over the alcohol and talking to strangers b) I didn’t want to get arrested over it
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✨ Things You Can Do To Feel Happier All By Yourself ✨🧵
1. Go for a walk. Sounds super cliche but even 15 minutes will help take you out of your negative spiral because you’ll be experiencing the world around you, not whatever is panicking you.
2. Ground yourself. Touch your face, touch the wall, be aware of your shoes. Whatever is upsetting or devastating, you are in this body, this is yours, you are here, you are alive.
3. Get a dopamine fix. Listen to a comedic podcast, put on that dress you feel beautiful in, make yourself some banana bread. Things made you happy outside of what is hurting, and they can again.
So earlier today I looked great (just facts) and this random guy sexualised me, saying I was 'really turning him on' and had 'an amazing body'.
And it made me so incredibly sad and I couldn't really put my finger on why. But I think I've worked it out 🧵
Another man (friend, lovely friend) said something over lunch and it suddenly fitted so much of the puzzle together in my head. "Who are you sleeping with?"
"No one."
"But so many men are after you."
"Yes. I don't want them."
For him, this didn't make any sense.
For me, it makes total sense. For years and years, and years, since I was about 14, men have continually tried to fuck me. Non stop. Every day. You become kind of oblivious to it as a woman. The barista. The colleague. The landlord. The friend. The simp. The plumber. Ad nauseam.
No stupid MLM 'online course' in incel business is going to make you 'instantly rich'.🧵
And before you say, "But Madelaine! You're not super rich, how can you contribute here?" Money bores me to death after a childhood with stockbrokers. But here's how to actually 'get rich':
1. Stay the fuck out of saturated markets.
If all your sad little incel friends are also buying and selling in the same market, it's hot. And hot means volatile. Big fish will win, you definitely won't. You'll be buying at the highest pricepoint with minimal insight.
2. Remember the ABCs of investing.
Anything But Crypto. And before you say 'But XXX made money on crypto' they knew what they were doing and that was precrash. I have a beanie baby to sell you, moron.
As a high value female, I've decided to take incel culture seriously and dissected this highly scientific dating advice that will definitely work. Everyone knows retired kickboxers in Romanian jails are the authority on human behavioural ecology.
So here's what to do 🧵
1. Invest your hard earned capital in buying between 30-40 cars.
I didn't know this before I educated myself, but what I actually want as a HVF is a man with a taxi fleet. Women are famously highly knowledgeable and interested in cars, and this is essential for attracting them.
2. Don't take the time to understand a woman's needs, interests, or preferences.
Again new to me, but it turns out that women don't like emotionally stable men who demonstrate maturity. Be emotionally absent for the assured outcome of a woman who is 100% right for you.
Women have equal IQs to men on a global scale, and trend towards scoring more highly in school and exams.
2. "Women are less intelligent"
Women have equal intelligence scores to men, but men are more likely to overestimate their intelligence.
3. "Women are more emotional than men"
Women tend to vocalise emotions like sadness or frustration more readily than men, but men are far more likely to express sadness and frustration as violence or anger. This is largely socialisation and linked to culture.
You didn't rape her but you did get her drunk with the purpose of lowering her inhibitions. You didn't rape her but you lied to her about the situation in order to get her consent. You didn't rape her but you did insinuate that it was unsafe for her to withdraw consent.
You didn't rape her but you did demand sex in exchange for shelter and her safety. You didn't rape her but you did target a woman you felt would be vulnerable enough to do what you wanted. You didn't rape her but you didn't ask because you knew she would have said no.
You didn't rape her but you did use the threat of private images and footage becoming public to continue a sexual relationship. You didn't rape her but you did select a woman you knew people wouldn't believe or didn't have enough power or means to challenge you.