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The man in the ute yelled "disgusting fat pig" at her. Soon after, he was fired from his job.

When faced with street harassment, what should you do? 

A few years ago a friend of mine was walking along Cleveland Street in Sydney’s Surry Hills, on her way to work. While stopped at a set of traffic lights, a man in a ute yelled “disgusting fat pig” at her, making direct eye contact with her as he did so.

Instead of freezing or crumbling, she calmly made a note of the tiling company advertised on the side of the vehicle that he was driving, and once inside the safety of her office cubicle, she began Googling the company.

Before long she had a phone number and a choice in front of her.

Nina Funnell.

Option one: she could call the company and make a complaint, risking the possibility that she might be further humiliated, dismissed, or worse, that her abuser might answer the call and try to get an extra dig in.

Or option two: she could delete the phone number, avoid the confrontation, and try to push on with her day.

At this point I should point out that when confronted with random harassment, most women are socialised to choose some variation of Option Two: we avert our eyes from the group of young men who lurk outside train stations and wolf whistle as we walk by; we nervously laugh off the taxi-driver who tells us his wife bores him in bed, before asking whether we have a boyfriend; we pretend we didn’t just hear that thing that man yelled at us from a moving car, even though his words ring in our ears for hours afterwards.

The horrible truth about how women are treated online. Post continues below. 

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And when we choose Option Two it’s not because we are cowards. And it’s not because we lack initiative. And it’s most certainly not because the harassment and abuse doesn’t frustrate or perturb us.

No.

The reason we choose Option Two, is because in many cases our instincts tell us that this is the safer option in the moment.

And over time Option Two often has a way of becoming habit.

So when my friend found herself in her office, staring at a phone number and looking down the barrel of a potentially confronting conversation – history and experience would suggest that she would take Option Two.

Instead she picked up her phone, turned her number to silent, and called.

To her delight, her call was answered by the owner of the business who was appalled and deeply apologetic.

A young woman talking on the phone while working on her laptop
“Instead she picked up her phone, turned her number to silent, and called.” Image via iStock.
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“He instantly knew who I was referring to, and was like ‘that’s it! I’ve had it with him!” wrote my friend via email.

Soon after that, the abusive tiler was fired from his job.

Every woman I’ve repeated this story to has found it immensely satisfying.

It’s so rare, after all, that women are afforded any real avenue for recourse when they experience street based harassment. All too often street harassers speed off into the sunset leaving the woman feeling some combination of frustrated, enraged, and powerless. All too often the woman will then either shrug in helpless resignation, or berate herself for freezing or ‘not doing enough’.

And the fact of the matter is that these street harassers rely on their anonymity and their ability to make a speedy (cowardly) get-away as the basis for the attack.

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All too often, these men assume that they can get away with this type of abuse, which is precisely why they keep perpetrating it.

It’s also precisely why women should feel entitled to report it: to bosses, to police, to anyone who will listen.

Because that’s the only way it will ever change.

A man who abused writer Clementine Ford online was recently fired from his job.

Recently, another man lost his job after he made an abusive comment to a different woman. Meriton Serviced Apartments decided to let one of their employees go, after he abused commentator, Clementine Ford, online.

There are obvious similarities between these stories, the only real difference being that Clementine Ford is a well known feminist with a prolific social media following- and therefore the case has received widespread exposure.

But the basics of the case?

The idea that harassment of women is wrong, and that women have every right to lodge a complaint? These things are the same and they shouldn’t be in question.

And even though technology may have provided new avenues for abusers to harass women through, they have also provided women with different mechanisms to report with.

Women can now video capture the abuse they experience on public transport, or screen shot what they experience online. And the fewer of us who are left feeling stunned and helpless on the side of the street wondering ‘did that really happen? did anyone else even see that?’, the better.

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