Marriage talk How I was raped by my husband on our wedding night (READ)
Eden Strong of YourTango pens an article about marital rape and how real it is in modern society. Most people frown when a woman ...
https://triment.blogspot.com/2015/08/marriage-talk-how-i-was-raped-by-my.html
Eden Strong of YourTango pens an article about marital rape and how real it is in modern society.
Most
people frown when a woman claims she was raped by her husband,
forgetting that sex in marriage is meant to be consensual not one sided.
Everyone
wants their wedding night to be a dream come true, so how do you deal
when it turns out ugly especially when the cause of your grief is your
significant other whom to vowed to love till death do you part?
Read how a woman got more than she bargained for on her wedding night:
I
was sick the day of my wedding and had struggled to make it through the
ceremony and the reception. Once in our room, I was struggling to keep
from collapsing in a feverish heap under my dress. I always imagined
losing my virginity on my wedding night and I wanted the moment to be
everything I'd always dreamt it would be. I loved my new husband and I
wanted to give him something special, not some half-assed feverish
attempt, so I told him I wanted to wait until morning.
That didn’t stop him from peeling off my white dress.
I started crying and said that I was scared, but he told me that everyone was scared on their first time.
I tried to get up, but he held me down, saying that as my husband, I needed to trust that he knew what he was doing.
I told him I wanted to wait until I felt better, but he told me that he had waited long enough.
I
don't even remember much of what happened after the initial struggle,
all I know was that one minute I was a virgin, and the next ... I
wasn't. I remember sobbing. "That was awful," he spewed at me. "I can’t
believe I waited all this time for that." As he wrapped his arms around
me with a trap-like grip that I couldn’t escape from, his voice went
from angry to stern as he said, "I'll show you what you need to do from
now on, and you'll learn. You're my wife now; we're supposed to be
having sex." His words came across as more of a fact than a reassurance.
So there we were, my virginity gone and my heart broken. I felt like I had let him down.
I felt like I had let myself down.
So
many thoughts went through my head: Why couldn’t I have been one of
those wives? Why did I have to ruin our first time? Why had I failed at
giving him something I had planned my whole life? Why did it hurt so
badly? Why was I so terrified? Why did I feel so dirty?
But
I never got any better at it. "You resist too much, you cry too hard,
and you aren’t any good," he would tell me every time we had sex. "I
can’t even come because you are crying so effing hard, I can’t even
stand to look at you," he would hiss in my face as the weight of his
body crushed the air right out of my chest. "You'll need to try harder
next time."
I was his wife. Sex is supposed to
happen in marriage. Why couldn’t I be like all the other wives? Why was I
failing him so miserably? Why did the thought of him make my stomach
churn and the feeling of his skin upon mine make me wish I were a
million miles away?
Somewhere along the way I
stopped saying no. 'No' didn’t mean anything anyways. Fighting back was
fruitless and crying just made him berate me. I began to believe that I
was a terrible wife and that terrible wives need their husbands to put
them in their place.
It wasn’t long before I just
started to fade away. Anywhere was better than where I was, and anything
was better than living in my own failure. Each night, when he would
climb on top of me, my body would be there but my mind drifted away to a
world where he didn't exist, where I didn't exist.
Years
went by and children were born. The sex never got any better and he
never got any gentler. I never learned how to please him the way he
needed.
Eventually he found other women who could.
Now
that he's gone, I realize that although we stood together at the altar
and vowed to give each other love, respect, honor, and commitment—he's
the one who didn't live up to our vows. I gave him my love, respect,
honor, and commitment and he took everything.
Sometimes
I wonder why it took me such a long time to realize such a fundamental
concept: that no means no and rape is rape. I think it's because rape,
sadly, is still a very fluid claim. "She was drunk," they say. "She
teased him," say others. There are so many reasons and excuses and gray
areas that pull the victim into the blame category and it all creates an
awful place where facts go to die.
"I’m married," I assured myself.
I said "I do," but I never said yes. And as soon as I said no, it became rape.