Advice for Moms

13 Characteristics of a Date Rapist: A List You Need to Share

Me Ra Koh

13 Characteristics of a Date Rapist – Advice for Moms- Dallas Speaker & Author

In response to the Steubenville Rape Trial, I want to share one of the most powerful lists you’ll ever read.

Characteristics of a Date Rapist: A List You Need to Share

Before photography, I spoke around the country on the topic of sexual assault after publishing my first book, Beauty Restored: Finding Life and Hope After Date Rape.  Whenever I would read this list, the room would go silent.  And I heard the cry of my own heart as college student after college student, teen after teen, said “If only I had heard this list before I was raped.  Maybe I would have known.”

Below are 13 characteristics of a date rapist.

If you know someone who is displaying these characteristics, does that make them a rapist?

No.

But if you know someone who is in a relationship with someone exhibiting several of these behaviors, that person may not be a safe or healthy person to be in intimate relationship with.

This is the list I wish I would have known before my own date rape.

This is the list I’ve shared with thousands of youths, college students and women conferences over the last 20 years.

Below this list, I will also share my own date rape story and show how these characteristics revealed themselves. This way, you can see how this list plays out in real life.

Although there is no profile of a typical date or acquaintance rapist, experts have identified behavioral characteristics that tend to be exhibited by date and acquaintance rapists.

I encourage you to share these 13 characteristics with all the young people in your life — especially those in a place of vulnerability.

13 Characteristics of a Date Rapist

1. Displays anger or aggression, either physically or verbally. (The anger need not be directed toward you, but may be displayed during conversations by general negative references to women, vulgarity, curtness toward others, and the like. Women are often viewed as adversaries.)

2. Displays a short temper; slaps and/or twists arms.

3. Acts excessively jealous and/or possessive. (Be especially suspicious of this behavior if you have recently met the person or are on a first or second date.)

4. Ignores your space boundaries by coming too close or placing his hand on your thigh, etc. (Be particularly cognizant of this behavior when it is displayed in public.)

5. Ignores your wishes.

6. Attempts to make you feel guilty or accuses you of being uptight.

7. Becomes hostile and/or increasingly more aggressive when you say no.

8.  Acts particularly friendly at a party or bar and tries to separate you from your friends.

9. Insists on being alone with you on a first date.

10. Demands your attention or compliance at inappropriate times, such as during class.

11. Acts immaturely; shows little empathy or feeling for others and displays little social conscience.

12. Asks personal questions and is interested in knowing more about you than you want to tell him.

13. Subscribes excessively to traditional male and female stereotypes.

Excerpt below from my first book, Beauty Restored: Finding Life and Hope After Date Rape, and adapted from Carol Pritchard’s book, Avoiding Rape On and Off Campus.

My Story

I met him the first week of my college freshmen orientation. He was charming, funny and a leader on campus. He was studying to be a Youth Pastor. I had never been away from home, and due to a painful relationship with my dad, I was hungry for love and attention.

The same week, he showed up at my dorm room. I remember wondering how he knew where I lived, but pushed the question aside. He asked if I wanted to go out on a date. I suggested a group date, but he pushed for time alone. I ignored the uncomfortable feeling inside and agreed (#9). The older girls were excited for me. They knew him, and he was funny with everyone. Why should I worry?

Soon after, we started dating more consistently. At first, he loved everything about me. But after a few weeks, things shifted. I remember coming out to the dorm lobby to meet him for dinner, and he asked me why I had chosen to wear something so awful. I went back to my dorm room embarrassed, in tears, and changed my clothes. He began telling me that my friends were talking about me and were not to be trusted (#8 in 13 characteristics of a date rapist). I should spend more time with him, and after all, I hardly knew these new college friends.

One day, while driving in the car, I disagreed with something he said. He grabbed my thigh and squeezed tightly. While holding my thigh and smiling, he calmly told me that I was out of line. I felt trapped and afraid, but again, I didn’t listen. Then he let go of my leg and laughed. This was the beginning of him grabbing my thigh with an iron grip when he wanted me to pay attention (#4 and #7). If only I had known this was an actual characteristic of date rapists.

When I finally broke off the relationship, he followed me everywhere. He wanted another chance, another date, another opportunity to make up for how wrong things were going. No matter how many times I said no, he didn’t give up. Flowers showed up at my door, cards with confessions of love. He felt that God had brought us together. I was being too uptight, unforgiving. How could I not give him another chance, he asked. The girls around me swooned. Was I making a big deal out of nothing? He would not accept no for an answer. (#5 and #6)

So I agreed to one more date, as friends, on Valentine’s Day. But after dinner, he didn’t take me back to my dorm. He took me to an abandoned parking lot.

I remember being trapped, unable to get free from the car.

The moment I gave up fighting and went far away in my head to survive is unforgettable. I didn’t know what was happening to my body.

He drove me back to my dorm, telling me that he’d give me a call some time soon, with a casual smile and wave goodbye.

Standing in the shower with all my clothes on, shaking and crying, I wept for hours.

It was Valentine’s Day in 1992.

I started changing the way I dressed. Baggy clothes and dark colors hid my shape and emotions. They hid me.

In the coming months, I heard he had done this before. I was number four.

I remember standing in the court room. Alone. And a woman judge asking me why I didn’t just get out of the car if things were “that bad.”

I remember feeling raped a second time by the court system.

If someone would have told me about these 13 characteristics, I may have realized my gut instinct was, in fact, telling me the truth. I may have thought twice about spending time with him. And even though everyone on campus seemed to love him, I may have given this list a second look and decided not to date him. But I never saw the list, and I was a broken 19-year-old who had zero self worth.

Before I became a photographer, I authored the book Beauty Restored: Finding Life and Hope After Date Rape. These 13 characteristics of a date rapist are one of the resources. I spoke wherever I could at women’s conferences, college campuses, and youth groups and did over 40 national TV and radio interviews to bring awareness to a topic that is often kept quiet.

Throughout My Years of Speaking

In my many years of speaking, I have witnessed how far reaching date rape is. I have held high school girls in my arms as they have sobbed uncontrollably. Junior high boys wept under the chairs of the church. Grandmas have confessed not telling anyone of their rape for over 60 years. The loss in their voice, the grief, believing that swallowing the shame year after year was necessary.

These characteristics came to me after my rape. But you can share this list with friends, young people, youth groups, and college students to help prevent this horrible crime. Awareness is the key. Awareness has the power to make all the difference.

Date/acquaintance rape is never about sex, but power.

The mind often feels crazy, second guessing everything, wondering if you are making a big deal out of nothing. And too often, I have found that the victim has been deprived of healthy love to know the difference.

But we can change that. With our culture struggling to know how to respond to rape, you can have a powerful conversation with the young people you know. Working together, we can stop the shame and confusion. And even speak a word of hope to the one who is already hurting in silence.

One of My Favorite Types of Photo Shoots

If you have endured the trauma and pain of sexual victimization, I’m so sorry. As you can see, I know it well. One of my favorite types of photo shoots is a transformative one that reconnects you with the beauty of your heart and spirit. It is a gentle, healing and celebratory process of who you are today.

Schedule a Discovery Call with myself or our wonderful team. Through asking thoughtful questions, we help you uncover treasures in who you are. This is a photographic experience unlike any other. It would be a honor to take you through this unique, meaningful experience.

Click Here to Schedule Your Discovery Call.

xo,

m

13 Characteristics of a date rapist: a list you need to share was first published on Disney.

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  1. I will share this. Hugs!

  2. Powerful article! Thank you for your bravery

  3. Me Ra Koh says:

    Thanks so much for sharing this post with your communities. As I read the comments on FB from different people who are sharing this article, my heart is heavy with how many are sharing that they too have experienced this kind of pain.

    The day I saw the news, and what was going on, I knew I needed to switch my attention with work and take the time to write this. But can I say that after I was done, I went to yoga and then sat in my car and cried. The pain is over 21 years old, but it is always with you on some level–whether it be for healing reasons, sharing hope, or remembering where you’ve come from.

    If one person shifts their path towards a healthier road, a healthier relationships, knowing a little more deeply that they are worthy of the best, all our FB sharing and likes will have changed that person’s life. And that makes all the pain worth it, all of it.

    Love you all, and thank you for continuing to share this,
    Me Ra

  4. You are so right MeRa. Knowledge is key to so many things and you never know who and how this will help someone.