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BOOKS
Grave
Decisions | Strong
On Defense

Published
by Simon&Schuster, first printing in, 1996.
It's theme; Family
Protection
A
MotherandDaughter Cindy's Story
In 1984, Wendy, my fourteen-year-old, and I participated in a crime
defense course at her school in La Jolla, California. We heard things
we didn't really want to hear. We were told to expect injury. I
wasn't prepared for this experience to be so mentally and physically
exhausting.
Over and over
I wondered if we really needed to hear the awful stories being told
in the program. Why couldn't we just learn how to defend ourselves
without the stories? I didn't really want to know what happened
during kidnapping and rape. But we stayed.
My friends
questioned my judgment in introducing my daughter to this world
of violence and crime. They feared the stories would have a devastating
and negative effect on her. Well, they did have an effect, they
saved her life. She listened, she remembered the stories, and she
made her decisionshe would refuse to submit to any attacker.
She would scream, resist, and fight to protect herself.
Five years later,
in 1989, when she was at college, I got a phone call one early Saturday
morning in October. My daughter, who was living a half mile off
campus, called to say that a man had tried to rape her and that
he had cut her some. She assured me everything was under control,
and there was no need to come up to be with her. I was on an airplane
in ninety minutes.
A man had snuck
into her house, used a knife from her own kitchen, and tried to
rape her. Her response was instantaneous, thanks to her training.
I'm so pleased I didn't weaken when I began to question whether
or not we should attend that real-life course. It made all the difference
in her life and mine.
Wendy's
Story
October 1989. I was a twenty-year-old junior at Lewis and Clark
College in Portland, Oregon. I returned to my apartment at 3 A.M.,
having been out with friends. About a half hour later, some kind
of movement woke me up. A man was sitting on my bed, rubbing my
legs. At first, I thought someone I knew was joking around. I sat
up, pushed him to the floor, and shouted, "Cut it out!" He sprang
back, jumped on top of me, and put a knife to my throat. With his
other hand he covered my mouth, crushing my face.
My
body seemed to slip away from me. It was like I was stepping out
of my body and seeing this happen to me. He planned to rape me,
I knew it. A paralyzing fear started to overwhelm me. I could feel
my strength draining away. But, just as suddenly, something in my
mind shouted, "Don't give up." I was starting to feel anger. His
pants were off. His knife was pressed against my neck. I remember
fighting the urge to give up. He was trying to get my legs apart.
Something in me was shouting, "Stop himfight him." It's funny
what goes through your head in a crisis. I remember from the training
program, we were told it would be that way, our mind would float,
that we would have to fight against that. I had to concentrate,
to focus.
Then
I did something I never thought I was capable of:
I grabbed the
knife blade. With my other hand, I struggled to gouge his eyes.
I didn't have
time to hesitate. I just did it. Grabbing his knife is what stopped
him from raping me. I remember thinking, "You'll have to cut off
my fingers, I hate you." Anger and fear drove me. I think hating
him helped me hold on to the knife. .. to have made the decision:
he would have to cut off my fingers before he raped me. Something
inside exploded, something I didn't know was there. He told me,
"I'll kill you." I thought, "You had better mean it, you son-of-a-bitch,
because I'm going to fight this." I struggled to free my mouth.
I started creaming.
I have never screamed that loud. I was screaming my housemate's
nameI knew she was home sleeping in the other room. Then I
heard her screaming. That made him jump up. He tried to take off,
to run. Blood was everywhere; on my sheets, my pillows, my face,
my nightgown.
He let
go of the knife when he bolted away from me and off my bed. He was
trying to get his pants on and escape. I lunged after him. I had
the knife in my hand. My hands were slashed and dripping with blood,
but I didn't feel a thing. I remember hearing in our training program
about a woman who had grabbed her attacker's knife the instant it
was out of his hand. That story had stuck in my mind. I was still
screaming. I should have gone the other way and escaped,
but I didn't. It was as though I was no longer in control of my body.
I stabbed, him right in the face with his own knife as he was trying
to fix his pants. He took off leaving a trail of blood. In fact,
he even dropped his walletthat's how he was caught.
I must admit
to being proud that I didn't give up. I knew I must resist the attackI
had to fight it. It was just one of my personal survival decisions
I learned about. A decision I had made a long time ago and didn't
have to think about when it faced me. I remember believing I would
win. I was going to end it nowmy way, not his way. I never
questioned myself. There was no time. I listened to those rape stories.
They helped me make up my mind. That night, my adrenaline exploded
and the action seemed to come naturally.
Another
thing that helped meI knew I was going to be cut, I expected
it, so when it happened, it didn't scare me. I was badly cut, but
he didn't get what he came for. It's been several years since it
all happened, and I don't always sleep well at night. I have nightmares
and some bad memories. My mind goes back to that night now and then.
But, I'll tell you this . . . as bad as it was, it could have been
a lot worse.
What
Wendy Did Wrong
Attacking him instead of escaping was a mistake. But it's not an
uncommon mistake when people are on autopilot and enraged. For example,
many purse-snatch victims have chased the thief and wound up badly
injured. To overcome that kind of mistake, think escape and only
escape when you mind-set.
What
They Did Right
Cindy and Wendy did everything else right. It's never too early
to prepare your children to face danger.
Wendy decided
she feared rape more than injury. That was a pivotal decision. She
knew she could be injured, so she wasn't paralyzed by fear. She
had made a bottom-line decision: she would make raping her the hardest
thing a man ever does against her.
For
the Record
Wendy recovered from her wounds, graduated, and is now a commercial
photographer. She speaks to women's groups about personal protection
and has appeared on nationally televised talk shows.
Wendy's attacker
was a teacher with a prior criminal record for sexual assult. He
was sentenced to six years for his attack on Wendy, served two,
and is now out on parole as a registered sex offender. He got his
former teaching job back. Something is wrong when a rapist is paroled
and allowed to teach again.
I
recall a talk show host's referring to Wendy's response as courageous
and fearless. I said to him, "Courage is overcoming fear, not being
fearless." Fear can paralyze and panic the strongest of us or fill
the weakest with courage beyond any degree they've ever knowncourage
driven by a rage-filled determination. Which it will be for you,
if you are ever targeted for a violent crime, depends on which you
fear most: injury against yourself in trying to escape or control
by the attacker and his crimes against you?
It is essential
to remember that initial injury is far from the worst consequence
of violent crime. Once he has you under control and isolated, you
may face death, and as a woman, torture and rape, too.
If what you
fear more than anything else is injury, you will not have the determination
necessary to escape a criminal attack. Never. When frozen by fear
of injury, you will believe all the criminal's promises, you'll
be unable to concentrate on saving yourself, and you'll never notice
any fleeting opportunities to escape. The criminal will use your
fear to control everything you do. Then you're his "bought
and paid for," as cops refer to it.
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