![]() ![]() “It was all casual and cool.” But the night changed her: she felt like something about her had been contaminated. “We basically chatted like old acquaintances,” she says. ![]() When it was over, they got up and got dressed. At some point, there was intercourse-a part she doesn’t remember well. “I just kind of thought, ‘I’ll let this happen.’ I didn’t know how I could make it not happen.” She remembers the roughness of the motion injured the inside of her cheek. Suddenly, Mark pushed her head down toward his lap, saying that it was okay if they didn’t have a condom, that she could just go down on him. Pillay objected, saying they didn’t have a condom, that she didn’t want to do this there, on the sand, in the dark. #MeToo and the Secrets Indigenous Women Keep.“He had a way of almost gently or lightly pushing me,” she says. Then, Mark somehow had her down on the ground. It felt too soon-there was no sense of intimacy. Pillay was confused by how quickly he was moving and how little her reactions seemed to matter. “There was a part of me that thought I was supposed to like this and want this.” But she didn’t. “He was a very popular, attractive guy,” Pillay recalls. It wasn’t long before Mark (whose name has been changed and who did not reply to multiple requests for comment) was trying to kiss her and pulling at her clothes. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |