The following is a questionnaire on sexual assertiveness as well as tips
for preventing date rape. Respond to the questionnaire and then study your
answers. Does anything stand out for you? Just how clear are you about what
your rights are?
After this questionnaire, there are some suggestions about
Date Rape
prevention.
People have the right to:
1. Make their own decisions regarding intercourse or other sexual
activity regardless of their partner's wishes.
Never
Sometimes
Always
2. Use or not use birth control regardless of their partner's wishes.
Never
Sometimes
Always
3. Tell their partner when they want to make love.
Never
Sometimes
Always
4. Tell their partner they don't want to make love.
Never
Sometimes
Always
5. Tell their partner they won't have intercourse without birth control.
Never
Sometimes
Always
6. Tell their partner they want to make love differently.
Never
Sometimes
Always
7. Masturbate to orgasm.
Never
Sometimes
Always
8. Tell their partner they are being too rough.
Never
Sometimes
Always
9. Tell their partner they want to be hugged or cuddled without sex.
Never
Sometimes
Always
10. Tell their relative they're uncomfortable being hugged or kissed in
certain ways.
Never
Sometimes
Always
11. Ask their partner if they have been examined for S.T.D.'s.Never
Sometimes
Always
12. Stop foreplay at any time, including the point of intercourse.
Never
Sometimes
Always
13. Refuse to have intercourse even though they may have had sex with
their partner before and enjoyed it.
Never
Sometimes
Always
Date or acquaintance rape means being forced or pressured into having sex
by someone you know--against your will, without your consent.
Know that it could happen to you: studies at colleges indicate that
between ten to 25 percent of women report they were raped by men they
knew..
Be assertive in setting boundaries for relationships. Even casual
unwanted contact should be firmly discouraged. It is easier to fight off
a big attack if you've practiced on smaller intrusions.
Judge a person by his behavior, not his race, looks, socioeconomic
status, or even his relationship to you. Watch out for someone who:
gets hostile when you say "no"
ignores your wishes, opinions, ideas
attempts to make you feel guilty or accuse you of being uptight
if you say "no" to sex
acts excessively jealous or possessive; keeps tabs on your
whereabouts
displays destructive anger and aggression
Define your limits, i.e., how much touch you want with different
male friends (handshake, kiss on cheek, kiss on mouth, hug with both
arms, intercourse, no touch). Think about this in advance, even though
you can change your mind later.
Defend your limits: "I don't like it when you do that"; "I like you and
I don't want to go to bed with you"; "Let's go to the coffeehouse (instead
of around the lagoon)." You have the right to be respected, to change your
mind, to say "no" or just say, "Because I don't want to." Practice saying
"no" clearly --don't hint, don't expect anyone to read your mind.
Be prepared for his reaction to your defending your limits. Possible
reactions include hostility, embarrassment, blaming you for leading him on.
You are not responsible for his behavior or his reaction; if he is someone
you care about, you may wish to help him through the embarrassment, but you
do not need to feel responsible. You have every right to your own decisions.
Most date rapes involve men and women who conform to traditional, rigid
sex roles so it is important to examine sexism in order to prevent rape.
Avoid stereotypes such as "anger is unfeminine" that prevent you from
expressing yourself.
Be aware of situations when you do not feel relaxed and in charge.
Stereotypes of passivity, coyness, and submissiveness can contribute to a
climate for male aggression -- which is his stereotype.
Communicate clearly! Say "no" when you mean no; "yes" when you mean yes;
stay in touch with your feelings to know the difference.
Believe and act as if you come first, without exploiting others. Treat
yourself and others with respect.