I knew when I was three. My mom always told me that if anyone ever asked to see or touch my body to tell her immediately. Always come and tell.
When I was three years old we lived with my parents friend who had teenage boys. They were babysitting me, and they brought me over to the tv and turned on porn, they then led me to a shed and made me try a cigarette. All of it felt off, it felt yucky in my body. When I was with my mom again I told her, I didn’t question it, I didn’t wonder if I was overreacting I just knew, this was wrong.
At the blooming age of 12, a 25 year old family member flicked my breast and when I told him to stop he said that he could do whatever we wanted, even give me a titty twister if he wanted. He also texted me not long after asking me for pictures of myself just for his contact photo. There was no doubt, a line was crossed and I knew it was wrong, I told my mom again.
Knowing isn’t something you have or don’t have. It’s something that can be reinforced or slowly unraveled over time.
Things are different when it’s someone you’re supposed to trust. It’s one thing to recognize something wrong out in the world. It’s another when it happens inside your own home.
The clarity I had as a child didn’t disappear overnight, it got quieter in places where things didn’t make as much sense. With my dad, it wasn’t one clear moment. It was a pattern that felt..off.
It wasn’t that something obviously inappropriate was happening in the moment. We would be wrestling, normal, playful, physical. I didn’t feel uncomfortable in my body, until he made me aware of it.
He would react suddenly, dramatically, calling out that he had touched my chest or my crotch pulling away as if something inappropriate had just happened.
And I would feel this wave move through me, not because of hat had happened, but because of how he named it. Like my body had just been seen by him in a way I didn’t chose.
What started as moments that didn’t make sense… slowly became something I couldn’t explain away. He would ask me questions about my body, If I had pubic hair and if id show him. I said no every time, echoing what my mom had said “say no”.
Once I had a boyfriend he was asking me what I was doing with my boyfriend, not in a protective or parental way, but in a way that felt like someone was trying to enjoy the story, trying to get something out of it. “Did you swallow?” he asked with a grin.
By then it was as clear anymore subtle things had been happening for years. I knew something felt off, but I had already learned how easy it was to question that feeling. How quickly something could be explained away, minimized, or turned into something else. I kept telling myself he wouldn’t do that, it was done to him as a kid. I must be over reacting, or misunderstanding.
And then there was a moment where it wasn’t confusing anymore. He asked to talk to me in the bathroom and sit on his lap. My unease was huge I had never done either of these things before, I often felt like my dad despised me, so this kindness was unsettling. He told me that maybe there was a way he could help lessen my recent month long grounding. Said he’d smooth things over and talk to my mom. I warily said yeah that’d be cool and left.
Self doubt creeped in again, see he was just trying to help me, I felt off for no good reason. He just wanted to be nice my mind said, while my body stirred anxiety.
By the time something happened that I could clearly name, I had already been taught not to trust my own interpretation of it. He offered to let me sit in his truck while waiting for the bus because it was raining. “So I was thinking since I’m helping you get ungrounded, you could give me a panty shot.” Even in this moment I doubted my own reality, I asked him what thinking I had to have heard him wrong. But I didn’t he repeated himself clear as day. I said no and got out of the truck.
I walked away from that moment knowing something wasn’t right and immediately questioning if I was the problem. Part of me felt it clearly, that wasn’t a normal thing for a father to ask his daughter.
But another part of me started searching for ways to explain it. Maybe I misunderstood, maybe he didn’t mean it like that, maybe I was making it into something it wasn’t. I went back and forth all day between knowing and undoing that knowing.
Feeling something in my body tighten.. and then immediately trying to relax it by telling myself a different story. And I didn’t know where to put it because saying it out loud made it real and it wasn’t something I could take back. And if I kept it to myself I could keep trying to make sense of it.
Eventually, I told my boyfriend. Not because I was certain but because I couldn’t carry the confusion anymore.
And as I started telling him about the truck… everything else started coming up too. The wrestling. The comments. The questions.
Things I hadn’t fully put together before suddenly connected.
It was like, in the middle of saying it out loud, I was realizing, this isn’t just one moment. This has all felt off. And maybe it always has.
There was a part of me that felt clearer than it had in years. And another part that immediately felt the weight of that clarity.
No one prepares you for this part, the moment when you realize something isn’t okay, and at the same time feel responsible for what will happen if you say it out loud.
I remember thinking about what it could mean for him, what it could do to his life. What it could do to mine, I knew sometimes mothers didn’t chose to believe their daughters. Then I’d be the enemy to both of them. Even though I was uncomfortable, confused and overwhelmed, somehow I was also the one worrying about the consequences for me and him.
Thats how quickly it shifted. From knowing something was wrong… to wondering if saying something about it might be worse.
All those years of being told to speak up when something felt wrong were still in me. And even though my trust in myself had been shaken, I told. What followed after was complicated. Being told by my dad I had misunderstood only deepened the doubt I was already carrying.
What stands out now isn’t just what happened, it’s how quickly I learned to question myself, how fast something clear could become confusing. What changed wasn’t my knowing. My body knew the whole time. What shifted was my trust in it. Society teaches women to doubt themselves, to second guess their bodies and instincts. But deep down we know. I’m still learning to listen again, to trust, more and more, the knowing that was there all along.

Lakota Fradette
Olivet, MI
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