Humanity Beyond Clothing
After my friend shared his girlfriend's troubling story with me, I struggled to voice my objective opinions. Instead, I offered the kind of sympathetic remarks a well-meaning person would use to comfort him, wanting to avoid adding fuel to the fire of the situation.
Apparently, they had been in a relationship for a long time, dating as far back as their undergraduate days, without any major disagreements or misunderstandings that would threaten their bond. However, the current issue is much more intense than anything I could have resolved with my pep talks like several others. Unfortunately, I am close to both parties—it's almost like one friend dating another friend—putting me in a difficult position. I find myself torn between them and consciously reluctant to take sides, a balancing act that panned out complicated in the long run.
THE MISFORTUNE
My friend's girlfriend, Tolu, is someone who expresses herself through her clothing; what she wears is often influenced by her mood and the weather, which can come off as immodest depending on the environment and culture. According to Timmy (not the guy's real name), Tolu went to a neighbor's apartment, someone who had recently moved in, to charge her phone, only to be sexually assaulted by him.
During police questioning after the man was arrested, he claimed, “Tolu dressed scantily to his apartment to seduce him into sleeping with her under the pretext of charging her phone".
MY PAST BELIEF SYSTEM
I believe that Tolu is anything but not a seductress. I genuinely know that her intentions were misinterpreted by that criminal. Still, I found myself blaming her for inviting misfortune upon herself. I thought, "If only she had worn something more appropriate," and, "Even if she felt hot, she shouldn’t have dressed so revealingly when visiting a stranger's home." In doing so, I overlooked a crucial reality: dressing modestly or immodestly doesn't stop an abuser.
THE CHANGE
For some time after the incident, I struggled to be there for Tolu because I felt angry with her and even more so with Timmy for not seeing beyond the mess that had erupted in their relationship. My strong belief that "the way you dress is the way you're addressed" dominated my thoughts in the wake of Tolu's pain. However, one day, while returning home after a tough day, I was approached by an Agbero (a term used for a Lagos tout). I asked myself, "What attracted me to him?" but I had no answer, especially since I was wearing something rather unattractive that day.
THE RESOLUTION
What is destined to happen will indeed happen, regardless of how one dresses. My conviction that dressing a certain way dictates how one will be treated is no longer a belief I hold. Everyone deserves to be respected, irrespective of what they wear; even the madman roaming your street deserves that much. Ultimately, we are all first "Human" before we are defined by our clothing choices.
©️ Medemausi 🌟
All pictures are mine.
Posted Using INLEO
Normally I would say a sorry or I hope it gets better but society is fucked. A man was raped by his fellow man which led me to understand that people will be people and go ahead to do crazy things and then blame it on someone else. What I do feel sorry for is Tolu who had to experience the unjust vindictive treatment of a broken society. I hope she gets better.
Still, we should hope it get better because, we obviously can't handle it if it grew worse.
Thanks for reading through this. @deraaa
A woman in burka got raped by men who felt women are properties to be owned, and treated anyhow they like. Does that mean that the woman was wrongly dressed? Nope. It only means that a criminal is a criminal irrespective, even if Tolu had not dressed 'seductively', he still would've found her attractive to carry out his heinous crime.
Uhmm
I really don't know what is becoming of our society. I thought I had heard it all, but what you explained right here is really astonishing.
This is hard. Dressing is not an excuse for rape. It doesn't matter whether a person is covered up or scantily dressed, a criminal will always do his dirty desires.
I also think that we should dress modestly not because we don't want to be raped, but because we owe ourselves decency.
This latter part nailed it all.
Thank you for your thoughtful comments as always..
There are several sides to the story. The man got Tolu's dressing and intention wrong because it's kinda the normal move some ladies make, though, this doesn't justify his actions in anyway.
I believe that you'd be addressed the way you're dressed, because men judge first by appearance, it is naturally. It only takes few level of understanding to know that it's not all true because some judge beyond the looks, I mean, don't judge a book by it cover.
Sure everyone deserves respect, irrespective of how they dress
Sure!
Thanks for reading through this.
I was about to comment this but I'm glad you changed your thought pattern about this incidence. The society is hell bent on dictating how a woman should behave, should talk, dress just to be safe.... but the truth is, it doesn't stop perverts from being perverts.
But we can't speak the truth without being completely honest either. How you dress is how you are addressed. It's important to at least be rational in regards to our self-presentation too. Dressing for one's mood is no excuse to dress in a way that says, "come get me".
I feel sorry the lady had to go through such. I hope she picks her lemon, make a lemonade and pour it on the abuser's face so it may sting his eyes. 😂 But above all, I hope she learns to at least, no matter how little, protect herself. Not by covering up but by rebranding her self-presentation.
Thank you for sharing this!
You made quite a lot of additions here.
Thanks for your thought-provoking contributions to this subject matter. @whatmidesays
My pleasure.