I’m a male victim. My perpetrator was an ex girlfriend. It happened a long time ago and the assault itself didn’t give me much or any trauma. I’m lucky in that way. It wasn’t painful, just left me feeling confused, gross, embarrassed, and helpless. I’ve worked through that stuff. Which made me more comfortable to speak up about my experience.

But in the rare event I’ve brought it up it has always been painful due to how it’s reacted to. I sympathize with every woman who has been assaulted and understand more than you can know about not being believed or having your assault minimized… all that stuff. But let me tell you, try being a male victim. Literally nobody gives a shit.

I’ve been told to “sit down”. Pointing out something like “just because she was blackout drunk doesn’t mean she was the victim” woah boy. That one is a doozy because it was my fuckingremoved. Telling someone a SA victim has the right to defend themselves in whatever means they deem necessary? Not if you’re a man. Nope. Which is why I didn’t defend myself.

I’ve told exactly two women in my life about it. A good friend and my wife, whom I love dearly. That stupid bear or man nonsense that went around last year? Each told me, “you wouldn’t understand because you’ve never had to deal withremoved.” Independently they said this and it wasnt even necessary because i was on their side. Instantly felt like I wasn’t seen. Like I told them about one of the most serious things that ever happened to me and it wasn’t worth making a mental note of? Male victims just do not matter.

It sucks. Worse than the damned act itself.

I feel like this is the only place I can be heard.

  • LaughingLion [any, any]@hexbear.netOP
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    6 days ago

    I completely understand. Physically I’ve never been a very attractive guy but my ex was way out of my league. I feared at the time had I gotten physical to stop her, due to the location we were in, she might have been harmed. I literally considered as it was happening what people might believe if I harmed her if she decided to say I was the aggressor to save herself from the accusation. Plus, I did love her at the time and the fucked up thing is maybe still a part of me always will. But either way I decided the odds of me being believed just weren’t in my favor. Years later when I’ve spoken up anonymously, it’s only been validated. I thought things had changed after a bunch of movements about this, but those movements didn’t do much for women, much less men. Men who are victims remain invisible and only get lip service when convenient. The moment our story challenges someone, forget it.