I went to bed extremely early last night. After waking up to find myself asleep on my couch at 9 pm, with my notes falling off my chest and on to the floor, it seemed the only reasonable course of action, you know? Anyway, at some point I heard our front doorbell ring. I struggled back into consciousness long enough to stumble to my door, make sure it wasn't someone important (aka, Ryan), and head back to bed.
This morning, Steph told me about our visitor. It was the resident from upstairs, the dark-haired one that we never normally see. She came and knocked last night and asked if she could come in and talk to us. I guess she was sort of stumbling around what she wanted to say, and Steph came right out with, "This is about the new neighbor, isn't it? Is he bothering you too?" and the girl was like, "Yes, he is!"
Our street has been having a pretty high turnover lately. It's a very short one-way street, just across from our main classroom and the rest of the Loma Linda campus, and we recently had a new family move in about halfway down. They consist of a big black man, who spends all day every day fixing cars, his mean white wife (?), and his little boy who roars all the time, regardless of small matters like neighbors who are trying to study. Anyway, if his wife is in evidence (and usually screaming at him), he pays us no mind--but if not, he calls at us as we walk home.
"Hey, ma. Hey, why won't you look at me?"
"Hey, girl, you make me scared riding that board so fast."
"Hey girl, what's your name? I said, what's your name? How do you keep your hair so pretty?"
If we don't answer, or pretend not to hear him, he keeps yelling at us until we're almost to our front door. When he was trying to talk to me yesterday, the last thing I heard before I shut the front door was, "Why won't you motherfucking answer me?"
Steph and I were talking about how we always pretend to have a phone call when we walk home, or how we walk on the far side of the street, or try not to make any noise if he's got his head down under the car hood, so he doesn't realize we're there. Neither of us ever make eye contact. She told me that the girl upstairs was telling her that, last night, her boyfriend walked her home and told the man to stop talking to her. He got cursed out for his trouble.
Our landlord is a really nice older man who genuinely cares about all of us here, and I was going to ask him this afternoon if he would anonymously talk to the neighbor and ask him to stop. And that might do it--but then again, it might not, because I don't really think he's going to care that he's making us uncomfortable. Because he's going to feel that it's his right to talk to us from his own house in whatever manner he wants to. Because, unfortunately, that's rather how our society functions.
It is absolutely ridiculous that we should be pretending to be on the phone, or hiding from him, or acting like we don't hear him, in order to feel safe on our own street. I think that as women we incorporate this kind of stuff into life everyday because we know if we don't, we can get hurt really badly. Killed. So we have support groups and we plan about the best ways to avoid the wrong kinds of attention, the safe places to go, the times when you have to make sure to stay in pairs. It makes me think of the quote, "Society teaches women how to avoid rape; it doesn't teach men not rape."
And, while we're not talking about something nearly so extreme, I'm sick of it. Not on my street. I'm tired of being nervous and uncomfortable, I'm tired of having the way I walk or how often I've been home commented on every time I walk past, and I'm done with being afraid, because that's all the planning and strategizing is doing--trying to compensate for fear.
I'm considering how best to do this, but I may just talk to him myself. I'm not sure the best way to go about it--still deciding. I mean, that guy seems to get angry really easily, and even though he's big and fat and probably slow, I'm really small. So if Carter does talk to him, and it doesn't work the first time, I'm filing charges. Enough.
2 comments:
Goodness, this makes me spitting mad.
I agree with you.
I hope you get a solution that works.
I wish we could find a way to stop this sort of thing from happening. And it happens so very much. Ugh.
Sorry.
I have no idea what that's like.
I have no clue what to do.
I have no ability to help you.
If it doesn't work out, and you have to charge him with something, don't worry about it. It's the right thing to do.
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