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Susan Estrich
25 May 2012
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The Alley

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I made it to the corner.

The last time I tried, I didn't even get that far. For the first time in 30 years of nonstop traveling, I managed to literally "lose" (not the airlines, me) the suitcase with the jeans and sneakers I planned to wear when I snuck out of my hotel to head over to the alley. So much for that.

The next time, my daughter was with me. I hadn't planned it. The rental car's GPS had yet to be adjusted to the Big Dig, and there we were, on Mass. Ave, heading toward the intersection. I lost it. I screamed at my daughter (I hope, I think, I pray one of the few times I've done that) for her lousy navigation skills and drove as fast I could.

This time, I was wearing the jeans. This time, my daughter was not with me. This time, it was broad daylight — of course, it was also broad daylight that day — on a Sunday morning. This time, I was going to do it.

I took a deep breath and turned on the left turn signal of my rented Camry, thinking of the day I did just that in my yellow Maverick.

The cars behind me started beeping.

They had turned it into a one-way alley.

I drove around the corner. The next street was one-way the wrong way. Then I couldn't take a left. I circled back and found myself, again, looking down the alley, but this time from the right lane, where I could see it. After all those years.

There was nothing to see.

It is just an alley. I had forgotten all about a hill in the alley that I would climb to walk around the corner to the front door. People who live on Commonwealth Ave, one of the prettiest streets in Boston, park in this alley. I wonder if any of the young people living there now, in one-room apartments like the one I used to live in, know that, probably before they were born, someone's life changed one Thursday afternoon in that alley.

I have spent much of my life in the lemonade business. Rape me, and I will become the world's expert in rape law. I will work to change the law, to change the teaching of the law. Treat me like dirt, the way the doctor at Boston City Hospital did, and I will spend the rest of my life working to make sure no woman is treated that way.

But the lemonade was for other people. I could never turn the alley into lemonade.

So, finally, I went to the alley. Not all the way down, but far enough. And this is what I found: just me. I was 21 years old. I was working two jobs. I got raped on a Thursday night. On Friday, I got the locks changed (he stole my car, with my keys on the chain) and moved back in. On Saturday, I graduated from college. On Saturday night, I went to work.

I look down the alley, and I think not of that man but of that 21-year-old girl, alone. Where did that strength come from?

It came from me.

It was what I found, all those years ago, in the alley.

To find out more about Susan Estrich and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate website at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2011 CREATORS.COM


Comments

5 Comments | Post Comment
Susan,
I am a conservative (especially fiscally) but I try to read all sides of issues.
I just wanted to say that over the past couple of years, I have been enjoying your column. You seem to have a lot of common sense, deal with FACTS, and THINK about the issues instead of letting your feelings control your opinions.
So sorry for your losses and what happened to you years ago. As someone who lives by the motto "that which does not kill you makes you stronger", you sound my kind of person. Keep sharing and best wishes for the future for you and yours.
Sally l
Berry, KY
Comment: #1
Posted by: Sally
Fri Mar 11, 2011 5:59 AM
Susan, I too am a conservative, but a fan and enjoy reading your columns. Please do an old English minor, a favor. Please used sneaked instead of snuck. My English teacher in Junior High would string me up if I said that. Keep up the good columns. By the way, I used to live in Boston, before the Big Dig and it always amazed me that street would change names once you got to the Back Bay area. Go figure. Thank you.
Comment: #2
Posted by: marc scheel
Mon Mar 14, 2011 7:48 AM
I too am a conservative but I read your column. You are a thoughtful voice of reason. Your compassion and honesty are always worth listening to. I am sorry for this terrible thing that happened to you and commend you for using it to make a difference in the world, rather than letting it destroy you. Thanks.
Comment: #3
Posted by: AmazonGrace
Tue Mar 15, 2011 6:10 AM
I'm another conservative who tries to hear both sides.This column touched me and I think, helped me understand a little of how you have arrived at your political philosophy. My heart goes out to you. God bless the survivor who prevails in the end.
By the way, I frequently read your column and find that even when I'm not persuaded, you present a fair and logical point of view with passion and clarity. Also you never sink to the ad hominem level of many of the left pundits. So over the years I've become a bit of a fan. Stranger things have happened...I have a very liberal friend who now loves Pat Buchanan.
Comment: #4
Posted by: Brian E
Tue Mar 15, 2011 1:56 PM
Susan - I didn't want this to be public but apparently that is the only way I can send you a message. I have written one time before. I wanted you to know that although your articles appear on the "left" side of our Huntsville Times, and that I am mostly a "right" person, the more you write the more I like what I read - and the more I believe you may be one of the few legal folks who is a human with feelings, regrets, careful analysis, and a host of other admirable characteristics. Keep up the good work - you are very much appreciated.
Jim Kennedy
Comment: #5
Posted by: Jim Kennedy
Tue Mar 15, 2011 2:35 PM
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