this post was submitted on 28 Nov 2024
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this happens in a public park.

first time this happens to me afaik. I was just stretching with black leggings and a t-shirt. I noticed him 100 yards away walking around but always looking at me. Upon making eye contact he would look away but as soon as I turned to stretching, he'd look at me.

He started slowly approaching me and at one point stood at like 15 yards from me, but still separated by a fence. At that point I decided to cut my work out short and left avoiding eye contact.

I consider myself lucky because he didn't follow me.

What scared me the most is he was bigger and taller than me.

If this ever happened to you, how did you react? How do I react next time this happens?

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[–] [email protected] 172 points 6 days ago (26 children)

Lots of people giving advice here, but I'm not seeing the most important advice being emphasized.

Always trust your gut. Listen to that uneasy feeling and act on it.

We developed this intuition over millennia for a reason. Your subconscious will pick up on cues even if you consciously aren't catching it.

[–] [email protected] 41 points 5 days ago (1 children)

The Gift of Fear by Gavin de Becker is a book about exactly this. It's definitely worth a read, and his methods have been used by countless celebrities & public figures to assess threats.

[–] [email protected] 11 points 5 days ago

You got me, this is what I’m referencing.

If the topic of books comes up in conversation with random people I always recommend it if that’s the only book they read in their lifetime

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[–] NewWorldOverHere 40 points 5 days ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (2 children)

First - great job!

Take some time to recognize that you did well, even without practicing beforehand. You realized something shady was going on and got yourself safely out of there. You took action when you needed it most.

Ok, now to your questions.

You always want to check around you:

  1. What are your exits? Can you get to your car?
  2. Are there other people around who can help you?
  3. Are there any other threats? (Is there another man coming up behind you?)
  4. Do you have cell service to call police?

Once you have those questions answered, you can decide what you want to do.

-Sometimes, the answer is to leave immediately.

-Sometimes, you can go hang out with other people at the park and pretend to know them. Just tell them you’re scared of the guy watching you, pretend laugh for a couple minutes with them, and hopefully he leaves. If he doesn’t, then you can still leave, but he “knows” you were just with “friends.” You can even ask them to walk with you to the exit.

-Sometimes, the answer is to call a taxi so the guy can’t see what car you get into, and come back later for your car.

-Sometimes (as long as there are other people in the park), the answer is to confront him (from a distance). “Why do you keep looking at me? It’s weird.” Or, “Stop looking at me.” Or, “Fuck off.”

If you’re a woman, this isn’t the last time you’ll have an encounter with a guy like this.

In the future, recommend going with a friend or a dog if you can. Or, try to meet up with a local yoga group at the park (or start one!).

Final note - you didn’t deserve this. You deserve to be safe doing any activity in any clothing in any area. I’m sorry that wasn’t your experience. Sending you hugs.

Edit: One other option I forgot - Situation permitting, get evidence. Take a picture and/or video as you walk away. Your priority is still your safety, but getting evidence is helpful too so that you can identify the person later on (and also back up your story when it’s questioned because #america).

[–] [email protected] 20 points 5 days ago (1 children)

I get that it's not very fun to talk about, but I wish women would tell men about these constant risk assessments more often. We live in parallel worlds and it seems most men are completely fucking oblivious - even many of the mostly well meaning ones. And even when they're told about it they might initially dismiss it as crazy talk.

[–] [email protected] 7 points 4 days ago

Yes. Say it out loud.

I am almost 50 years old and understood for the first time this month that the reason my wife doesn’t like going out alone to explore new places is fear of men and not fear of getting lost etc.

For mumble-mumble years it has never occurred to me to wonder about this

[–] BambiDiego 4 points 4 days ago

She definitely doesn't deserve this.

That being said, addressing him directly and with power, but calmly could be an option. Don't do it alone, but approaching a little and saying "I've noticed you at least 5 separate times and it's creeping me out, please stay away from me."

He'll most likely deny it or try to play it off, maybe even insult her, but standing her ground and saying "I don't believe you, I'm only asking nicely this time, there's no next time without the cops" and then walking away.

No insulting, no debating. It's a notice.

And of course, actually follow through, you see him again then call the non-emergency line and make a report. He can lie all he wants, once somebody has 2 or 3 police reports to prove he keeps showing up where they are then they can get a TRO within days.

It's not fair that she has to essentially make this her part time job, but it can be an effective option that doesn't have the side effects of making her look or feel at fault.

It's incredibly frustrating that the one being wronged has to keep their composure

[–] [email protected] 93 points 6 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago) (5 children)

I'm not sure there's any other good reaction than the one you had.

Maybe he was just "checking you out" and being very untactful and impolite about it (i.e. he's just awkward).

Maybe he was looking at something else near you ... but probably not.

But also maybe, he's not right in the head and was thinking about doing more than just looking...

My advice (as a guy) is either:

  • Look for another person nearby (or a couple/group), voice your concern, and ask them to walk with you away from the situation.
  • If that fails, just do your best to leave but stay situationally aware.

I'm also going to add, that "look for help thing" includes looking for random guys that weren't creeping you out that might be walking by. I know there's the whole stranger danger thing that most of us were raised with, but ... most guys are not rapists. If you just look for a normal looking dude (or someone that really looks like they've got their shit together) and ask them... I'd say 9/10 they'd be more than happy to get you out of that situation.

We need to (as a society) normalize women letting guys know about problematic men.

[–] [email protected] 30 points 6 days ago (1 children)

If you just look for a normal looking dude (or someone that really looks like they’ve got their shit together)

A bit of a weird but I think true add-on to this in 2024: look for the one dude (or lady) with arms full of ink (tattoos). A person who spends countless hours in a chair and thousands of dollars on their work is highly recognizable and identifiable, things a would-be creeper does not want. Even if maybe their work looks a little gang or biker, people know who they are and are not the scary ones in this park at this moment. $0.02

[–] [email protected] 16 points 5 days ago

I would phrase that as "don't count out people with tattoos." There are definitely some people with tattoos that you still don't want to talk to (100% agree in 2024 though, tattoos themselves do not mean someone's a bad person and some of those folks are lovely) haha

[–] anon6789 16 points 5 days ago

I still feel grateful for being in the right place to help out some people many years ago.

I was headed to meet some friends down at the shore and right when I got to town , I stopped by McDonald's to grab something to eat. It was pretty empty, just the employees and 2 groups of kids.

There were 4 young teen girls and 3 or 4 older teen boys, and from the second I walked in, I saw the girls were very uncomfortable and the guys kept trying to get them to leave with them. They were trying to call someone to pick them up but nobody could come get them from what I could tell.

It was very dark out and the town was deserted, so I assumed they were not locals either so they didn't have many options.

I asked them if they wanted a ride and they quickly said yes and literally jumped in my car as fast as they could. They were a decent number of blocks away, and they were very happy to be back at their rental.

I assume nothing serious would have happened, but it probably would have made the rest of their trip shitty if they had to worry if those guys knew where they were staying. I couldn't have just ignored them without offering to help though, they all seemed on the verge of tears.

It was a little mind blowing how they'd just jump in a stranger's car, but I was at least a neutral party when the other guys were already verified creeps. I wasn't much older, about 20, so not in creepy old man territory yet, so that probably helped. As I said, I still think about how I got to be someone's champion that day, and it makes me feel good to know I helped out.

I imagine you're an adult, so you should have a decent radar for picking out some non-creep stranger. Don't be afraid to ask for help. I didn't have much time to process the situation until after the girls had left, but seeing someone desperate for help I'd think would have most people willing to accommodate getting you to your car or a better public place. Most people are good and would help out if asked.

[–] Yprum 14 points 5 days ago

I want to absolutely support this advice, especially the last sentence. It's quite hard for a guy that is aware of how they can be seen as threatening to offer help or stop a situation where someone is feeling threatened without making it worse. But asked to help? I'd drop what I was doing and offer some support if someone is feeling threatened right away. Most men are not creepy assholes that would rape you given the chance. On the contrary we hate those assholes too.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 4 days ago

Good stuff.

If a random chick approached me or my group and said "someone is creeping me out can you walk with me to get away?" We'd be on our feet immediately.

I know in my immediate group, the gals would walk till she got an Uber or whatever, the guys would stay and stare at the guy, grinning/waving and making it clear his behavior is over.

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[–] mrcleanup 1 points 2 days ago

I'll just add, next time, find a group of women and attach yourself to them as soon as you feel unsafe. If this was a predator you are just doing him a favor by isolating yourself and leaving a public area. You want to be sure you are decreasing your anonymity, not increasing it.

[–] TotalFat 42 points 6 days ago (2 children)

If it's typically sunny where you yoga, wear a mirror ball bodysuit. Anyone that stares will get an eye full of glorious sunbeams.

Alternatively, get a big, well-trained dog. The kind that will orbit you closely without a leash.

[–] QuarterSwede 12 points 5 days ago

If I were a woman this is what I’d do. Great, loyal animal, that will give you peace of mind knowing they’ll keep the creeps away.

[–] [email protected] 41 points 6 days ago

Shout loudly: "Get lost pervert!"

This works better when there are lots of people around.

[–] [email protected] 26 points 5 days ago (1 children)

If you have your phone with you, try and get a photo of him. It sucks that you had to cut short your workout. It may be that what you experienced as "staring", he thought of as "looking" - men can be oblivious to how they are perceived - but that's no excuse.

I remember this one guy telling a bunch of us how he'd "helped" a woman late one night, by walking behind her on a deserted street, "to see that no harm came to her". Boy did we lay into him. In the end he understood that a) he had actually stalked this poor woman and b) next time he should cross the road so she had one less thing to worry about. What a dipshit.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 5 days ago (2 children)

So you know he had good intentions yet you're still calling him a dipshit.

[–] tfw_no_toiletpaper 4 points 5 days ago (1 children)

You canbe iinnocent and stupid, but these are not necessary good traits

[–] [email protected] 7 points 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago) (1 children)

No, but intentions matter. Autistic people are often socially awkward, blunt or clunky as well, but you wouldn’t call them a dipshit because of it, would you?

[–] [email protected] 1 points 4 days ago

The road to hell is paved with good intentions.

Consequences/results matter. Intentions do not. Following someone without proper consent is dipshit material, regardless of your Neuro designation.

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[–] sunbrrnslapper 24 points 6 days ago

I know this isn't an awesome answer, but safety is more important than standing your feminist ground sometimes: either go to another yoga class or bring a friend. It sux to rearrange your life because of some weirdo, but less than being attacked. Also, consider keeping mace or a whistle on you in case there is a confrontation.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 4 days ago

Throw a fake blood capsule in your mouth and flash a big grin.

That, or flash the piece.

/S

I'm sorry that happened.

[–] [email protected] 16 points 6 days ago

If you're alone and/or feeling potentially unsafe, you did the right thing no question. Prevent the situation from escalating, get away, leave him to his daily routine of making people feel uncomfortable.

If you have a greater audience and you're in a safer setting, you could consider calling him out. Make eye contact, flip him off, make him know he is not being appreciated. That could be a learning moment, but it could also be the moment when he starts giving you extra attention as you have acknowledged his existence and/or hurt his ego. So it could go both ways and should never be attempted without bystanders.

In a setting where you're in a mixed gender group, make a male friend aware of the situation and ask them if they could go tell the creep that they're making you uncomfortable. Men are sadly more likely to believe that their behaviour is creepy when it's coming from other men, in my experience.

Raising awareness of the issue in general is good, and judging by the comment section here so far there's not all that much of it around. So that's also something. I think this is really a question that should go out to men more than to women - what should we do when we observe men making women feel uncomfortable? How can we react in a constructive manner?

[–] [email protected] 10 points 6 days ago

You did the right thing: you kept an eye on your environment, and you had an exit plan.

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