![]() The answer is more simple than it sounds. Rebecca Traister’s Good and Mad: The Revolutionary Power of Women’s Anger, takes this sickening information, digests it, and shouts through a megaphone what to do with it. I probably drove past that dumpster a hundred times, and I had no idea. She described thinking that’s what sex was, and not even knowing-like many-that it was assault at the time. A bright, religious girl-the kind that plays Belle in the school musical, and did-described being so distraught by her assault at sixteen that she didn’t tell a single person, and immediately threw her clothes away in an alley dumpster. Every day, it gets worse.Ī #WhyIDidntReport post by a woman from my hometown, Carrollton, Texas, bowled me over. ![]() Announcements and reminders of a myriad of violence against marginalized communities in recent months. #MeToo and #WhyIDidntReport, content warnings and rape testimonies from college campuses to closed offices to childhood bedrooms. Every day, I read distressing recollections from colleagues and friends. ![]()
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