This woman’s viral Twitter thread about men NOT assaulting her is a must read

We need to hear more stories like this.

college sexual assaults, harassment, assault, real-life encounters
Photo credit: via @behindyourback / TwitterMaura Quint shares about men responding appropriately.

For anyone who thinks stories of sexual harassment and assault are complicated, writer Maura Quint has a story for you. Actually, she has quite a few. Quint posted a thread on her Twitter account that quickly went viral in which she talked about a number of real-life encounters with men that started out sexual, involved her expressing disinterest, and the men responding appropriately.


It wasn’t an unrealistic hero’s tale of men handing over the keys to their autonomy. Rather, Quint’s incredible thread made it clear that the only variable in cases of assault vs. non-assault are when a man doesn’t respect the autonomy of the woman he’s propositioning. Her thread opens up in an all-too-familiar tone, where we’re led to believe it will go to an incredibly dark place:

date rape, Maura Quint, respect
Maybe? via @behindyourback / Twitter

Instead, Quint says her indifference to his proposition was met in kind with a guy just acting in a basic, non-rapey way:

honorable, educated, respectful
Should be expected. via @behindyourback / Twitter

She goes on to offer several other examples of being in sexual or potentially sexual situations with men who also managed to not sexually assault her:

women, real men, character
Annoyed but with character. via @behindyourback / Twitter
responsibility, honorable, equality
Meeting the right instead of wrong person. via @behindyourback / Twitter

And here’s the real kicker, Quint says she has been assaulted. To her, the difference isn’t hard to pinpoint:

role models, parenting, raising good people
Difference being whether they were okay with assault. via @behindyourback / Twitter

Her thread has been re-tweeted nearly 50,000 times and “liked” more than 100,000 times. Other women and some men jumped in with their own tales of drinking, partying and still, somehow, managing to not assault or even harass the women they encountered.

honesty, fairness, behavior
She married him. via @behindyourback / Twitter
social norms, civic duty, public responsibility
Men avoid abusers too. via @behindyourback / Twitter
love, kindness, consciousness, respectful
Kind and human. via @behindyourback / Twitter

It’s a stark contrast to the half-baked defenses of Brett Kavanaugh and other men like him. There are incredibly rare exceptions where a man is accused of assault or harassment and he is entirely free of guilt. But for women, or anyone for that matter, who has survived sexual assault or experienced sexual harassment, there is no “gray area.”

There’s being OK with assault and then there’s everything else. Whether or not we’re consciously aware of this, we’ve all chosen a side. But if you’re on the wrong side, it doesn’t have to be that way forever.

This article originally appeared on 10.02.18

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