Synopsis: To understand the true significance of her traumatic experience, college-student Laurie must undergo a radical and empowering cognitive therapy.
Tags: mc mf fd hm
Word count: 6119
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Dear Reader:
This story delves into themes of rape, power, and race. It might be someone's stroke fiction, and that's greatālet me knowābut it likely won't appeal to many.
So if you do like this story, please let me know. If you hate it, let me know that, too. But if want lighter fare, go elsewhere. There are many truly excellent writers on this site.
Best,
Adam Lily
**********
The girl in the waiting room hugged herself. She'd have to talk about what happened to her, and that thought horrified her. She'd spent months trying not to think about it, not to talk about it, to deal with it by not dealing with it, and what had that gotten her? No sleep. No concentration. Unexplained bursts of crying that could of course be totally explained. Fear of men, friends slinking away, fear especially of
(can't study, can't work, can't sleep, can't get out of bed, don't want to)
ā.
The girl needed help. She knew that, now. Which is why she was here.
The waiting room. All so normal, exactly what she expected for a mental health counselor's office. Ecru walls, long blue sofas and firm orange armchairs, ferns and philodendrons and rhododendrons. Drowsy clove scent in the air. The short-haired middle-aged white slightly dumpy
(don't fat-shame her don't age-shame her)
receptionist who had welcomed her in with professional courtesy but certainly hiding suspicions. Right? Anyone who needed counseling had to be suspicious. Had to be (
weak. Unhappy. Unwell. Unable to cope. Unable to grasp. Unable to live. Another lunatic? Another weak woman?
)
Powerless. The girl was powerless. Against the man, against what he had done to her, against what she had done to herself, against what she had let him do to her. She let him do this to her. She had let him
ārape meā
rape her. In that alley. She had been so stupid, and he had taken advantage of that stupidity. This was her fault, this hole
(i'm a dumb hole stop it brain please)
she was in, and she didn't know how to get out of it.
She needed help.
I need help. I am here for help, and if I don't get it, I am going toā
"Laurie? Laurie, I'm Georgetta."
"Uh," said Laurie. In front of her stood a tall black woman
(African-American, you know better)
in a long vibrantly patterned dress
(they like their patterns STOP)
and with spectacular dreadlocked
("dreads")
hair was holding a caramel-colored
(is that okay?)
hand out to her. Laurie took the hand
(take firmly but not weirdly)
and was comforted by its dry warmth and strength as the tall black
(don't see color why notice her color but doesn't difference matter)
woman helped Laurie to her feet.
Georgetta smiled warmly. "It's nice to meet you. You're taking an important step. Please come into my office."
Laurie smiled wanly. "Sure. Yeah. Yes. Nice to meet you, too."
Georgetta's office. Warm but dry, sunlit, a little twinkling dust in the air for magical character. Earth colors and red everywhere. Long red sofa bearing African-patterned
(AFRICA IS NOT A COUNTRY)
zigs and zags. Standing wooden sculptures, knee-high, of people with features so extreme that had the counselor been a white man their presence would have signaled he was an appropriating racist, if she had been a white woman their presence would have indicated a foolish person, but Georgetta was black and tall and comforting
(clean well-spoken articulate STOP)ā
.
Laurie slumped miserably into the sofa across from Georgetta in an authoritative black armchair.
"Laurie," said Georgetta. "Please. I know from your intake formāand it's completely confidentialāwhat happened to you. But I need to hear it in your own words. I'm here to hear you and here to help you. Please tell me what happened to you."
"O-okay."
"And Laurie--and this is very important." Georgetta pulled a tablet from a hidden drawer and placed in on the coffee table. "For me to listen to you, to really listen to you, I won't be able to take notes. May I record our session? So that I can really help you and not take notes?"
Laurie winced. She hated her own voice, her dumb, breathy, stupid voice. It sounded so blondeā
Georgetta smiled. "I hate my own voice, too. We don't have to do that if you don't want." Georgetta began to return the tablet to the drawer.
"Wait. It's okay. If you think it will help, you can record me."
"Only if you're sure," said Georgetta. "This is your session. This has to be what you're comfortable with. You're the one with the power, Laurie. This entire session is under your control."
Power. Power. She hadn't felt powerful for so long, that she had any power at all. Not since that nightā
"Okay," said Laurie. "You can record me. It's fine."
Georgetta smiled. "Thank you." She retrieved the tablet and worked her fingers over it and set it on the table between them.
"Please," said Georgetta. "Tell me what happened to you."
Laurie told her.
********
A pile of snotty, mascara-stained tissues squatted wetly at Laurie's side.
"I'm so sorry," said Laurie, snuffling. "I'm such a mess. But I was so STUPID, I walked down THAT ALLEY, and I was DRUNK, and what I let him DO TO ME and I'm SO DUMBā"
"Laurie. Look at me." Georgetta's voice shone like mahogany. "This was not your fault. You had every right to walk down that alley. You have every right not to be afraid, no matter where you are. You have every right to go where you want, when you want, without fear. You need to put the blame where it belongs: On the man who did this to you. And on the culture that sanctions it."
Laurie snuffed, nodded. "I know all that. I know. But it's so hardāand I can't sleep, and I see his face, smell his breath, feel his hands, his weight, taste his. . . ."