My name is Erin S. and I'm a collective member at Vancouver
Rape Relief and Women's Shelter. This means that I work both
on our 24-hour crisis line and in our transition house for women
and their kids who are escaping male violence. I've been a collective
member for nearly a year now and it is a big part of my life.
A day in my life is always a busy one. Today I had class
at the community college I attend, and the lecture was about the
historical subordination of women. The class is a second year
criminology course about how society criminalizes women. It's
especially interesting, as all too often we're educated about
the role of men in society, or their theories, and their history.
This is important, but at the same time where are the women? So
all in all, the class is a good look at how and why women have
been left out of criminological studies, and the socio-economic
factors surrounding "crimes" like prostitution and theft.
So after the day of post-secondary education, I hop in my
car and head from the college to Rape Relief, as I have heaps
of work to do. I'm stuck in traffic, as per usual, so I have
a good chance to think about the film I saw the night before.
I borrowed the National Film Board film Not a Love Story from
the college library, as it critically examines the pornography
industry. My mum and I watched it together and to say the least,
we were both disturbed.
It was made the year before I was born, and I'm thoughtful
that I've grown up the last 21 years with women who are depicted
in such demeaning and horrific ways all for men to be able
to purchase them, through magazines, videos, lap dances, and off
the street. As I'm driving, I look up at a huge billboard with
a woman lying down, near naked, wearing construction boots, supposedly
advertising the laces on the boots. I'm angry and disheartened
as I think about the irony that the model in the picture is unlikely
to even get work in the construction trade because she's a woman,
yet a company still uses her body to sell products to that same
trade.
I arrive at the transition house and pass through the kitchen
saying hello to the women who are currently living there,
two of whom are making dinner and laughing together. I introduce
myself to a woman who I haven't met before, named "Laura"
who tells me that she's just moved in the day before. She reminds
me of a friend that I've known for years; her face looks like
a friendly one, inviting a conversation, although right now she
looks a little scared and uncomfortable. I tell her that I'm really
glad that she's here and that I hope that she feels settled soon.
I offer to make us a pot of tea and she accepts so we sit down
at the table to talk as the kettle boils.
She starts her story, one of control where he has attacked
her self confidence by questioning all of her decisions, calling
her names and not letting her have good friends. Sometimes he
punched or pushed her. She says she doesn't understand why she
loves him even though he treats her this way. Two of the other
residents come and sit at the table, listening patiently as the
new woman speaks.
One resident named "Brit" tells the woman that she's
not alone, and that her story sounds a lot like the one she
has told in this same room. Laura says that she's not sure whether
or not she wants to leave him yet. I tell her that I'm glad that
she's here, even if it is only for a few days to think of what
she wants to do next. One of the women leaves the table for a
moment to bring a box of tissues to the table, as Laura has started
to cry, and we all hug her, telling her that she probably needs
a good night's sleep as she hasn't been sleeping well lately.
So finally it's time for me to head back to my home I'm tired
and know that I and my team are still on duty for any crisis calls
that may come that night. I hop back in the car and start
my half hour drive home, thinking of the woman who I met tonight
at the house, and how she has a most difficult road ahead of her
as she decides what she'd like to do next.
I guess I could feel discouraged, but I don't because
the five women who are on my evening team and the five women in
the house with their little children are all fighting back in
their own ways. Overall I feel determined, and the women who I
meet are all so inspiring that I feel hopeful that things are
going to get better for all of us.