I need to say this clearly. I am extremely vulnerable now, but I was not when this happened. What I experienced didn’t come from fragility. It contributed to creating it.
After the first date, I sent Paul a message that was honest and open. I said I’d had too many bad experiences with too many so-so’s. It was context — me telling the truth about my history so I didn’t have to pretend I arrived unscathed by it.
He replied with reassurance. He said he was authentic and not another so-so. He said he wanted to get to know everything about me.
I let myself believe him. That wasn’t naïve. It was a reasonable response to what I was being shown — and to the care I thought I was sensing.
Things were going well until the end of one date, when something shifted. I felt it immediately. Passive aggression. Subtle, but sharp enough to register in my body before I could explain it to myself. A small internal tightening that said, something just changed.
Earlier that evening, almost casually, I’d said: “There are a lot of jerks out there.”
He disagreed with me.
I remember feeling quietly dismissed. It’s easy to disagree when you haven’t lived the accumulation behind a sentence like that. Women don’t arrive at conclusions like that lightly. They arrive there after years of being treated as disposable, misread, or expected to absorb poor behaviour politely.
I didn’t know then what was coming.
That weekend, I found myself unsettled. Alert in a way that felt deeply familiar. That old sensation of walking on eggshells — of scanning for signs, wondering if I’d done something wrong without knowing what it was. Not because I was weak, but because my nervous system recognised a pattern I’ve spent much of my life navigating: managing someone else’s mood without explanation.
By Sunday afternoon, I worked up the courage to ask what was going on. That took more out of me than it should have, because part of me already sensed the answer might not be safe.
What followed caught me completely off guard.
One moment I was asking a genuine question — what’s going on? — and the next I was being met with anger that felt sudden and disproportionate. The tone shifted so fast I struggled to keep up. Accusations came without explanation, stacking one on top of another, as though a private narrative had already been decided and I had been cast in it without my knowledge.
I remember trying to orient myself in the middle of it — trying to understand what I was supposedly being accused of, trying to remember things I was said to have said, trying to find a way into the conversation. I couldn’t. There was no space.
When he compared me to someone from his past, something in me went cold. I hadn’t consented to being placed into someone else’s story. I hadn’t been known long enough to be spoken to that way. I felt myself shrinking internally, not because I believed what was being said, but because I suddenly understood I wasn’t being seen at all.
My heart was racing. My hands were shaking. I could feel my body going into shock as I tried to stay calm and listen, hoping there might be a pause where I could finally speak. That pause never came.
Then he hung up.
The call ended abruptly, without resolution, without care, without even the most basic acknowledgment of how destabilising that moment was. I sat there staring at my phone, shaking, my chest tight, trying to steady my breathing and make sense of what had just happened.
I felt frightened — not in an abstract way, but in my body. The kind of fear that comes when emotional safety is pulled away without warning. I had done nothing to deserve that treatment, yet I was left alone to carry the shock of it.
Was he willing to listen?
No.
And that moment landed heavily.
Because this mattered to me. I had allowed myself, carefully and consciously, to feel safe and at peace — something I do not do lightly. I believed I was dealing with someone who meant what he said about being authentic and wanting to know me.
Realising that sense of safety wasn’t real was deeply destabilising. False safety hurts more than no safety at all.
I didn’t know what to do. It felt like my last hope had been smashed by the very thing I was promised it wouldn’t be. I didn’t know whether to try to respond, because how do you speak when someone has already decided a story about you and refuses to hear anything else?
I was frightened.
I was alone in a misunderstanding I had no voice in.
So I did the only thing I could.
I prayed.
I didn’t know what to do.
What continues to trouble me is how familiar this pattern is for women. No matter how kind, reasonable, or accommodating we are, the responsibility somehow shifts back onto us — to explain better, be calmer, try harder, or absorb more.
I’ve been told all of it:
• You’re not bitchy enough.
• You’re trying too hard.
• You’re not trying hard enough.
There’s even a book — The Rules — filled with instructions for women on how to manage themselves so men might finally “step up.”
Why is the burden always here?
Why can’t men step up simply because they are with a good woman?
Why is male anger so often excused or normalised, while women are expected to carry the emotional consequences quietly?
I was not okay with being compared to someone from his past in that angry call. I was not okay with being accused and then silenced. I was not okay with being left shaking, afraid, and unheard.
I am my own person.
Authenticity requires listening. Getting to know someone requires patience, curiosity, and emotional regulation. What happened that Sunday did not reflect those things.
I am angry — and my anger is valid.
In the days that followed, the impact didn’t fade — it settled. I replayed the call over and over, trying to locate the moment where things went wrong, wondering how a simple question could have led to such hostility. I felt raw and unsettled, my body still holding the shock. Sleep was shallow. Ordinary things felt harder. My thoughts kept circling back to the same questions, because I had been left without any answers. I carried a quiet ache — the grief of something that had felt promising, and the deeper grief of recognising yet another moment where my voice hadn’t mattered.
My fear and anger came from being harmed, not from being flawed. That was the truth I was forced to suppress. Getting to know someone requires communication. Where was my voice? Silenced, again.
I can’t be silent anymore. Because this matters to me.
To be continued…
See also : http://mystory-myvoice.blogspot.com/2025/10/interlude-mrs-harris-goes-to-paris.html
| Frightened, alone, misunderstood, shamed, silenced, harmed. |