Submitted to: Contest #28

The Bathroom

Written in response to: "Write about a date that was so terrible you’ll never forget it."

Creative Nonfiction

This horrible event that has undoubtedly scarred me for perhaps the rest of my life, was just one event that lasted about a minute. But it was enough to make that day the worst day of my life.

I was in kindergarten, five years of age. It was lunch time. We all went to the restroom to wash our hands. I also had to go to the toilet, so I went into a stall.

One of the flaws of the bathrooms in kindergarten was that it was for both boys and girls. Maybe that was not the problem, but there was something else. I was afraid of locking the stall door, for some reason. But I was five years old, so I suppose I must have thought that I would get locked in. I can’t help but think sometimes that if I hadn’t been scared to lock the stall door, none of it would have happened.

So, I was going about my business while others were washing their hands just outside. I suppose most of them had finished washing their hands when it happened.

Suddenly, the door of the stall I was in flew open. I froze, terrified of what was going to happen next. I saw two boys from my class, smirking at me and laughing.

“There is worse than the worst!” one of them said.

I felt exposed, because I was. I felt ashamed, and shocked that these guys would do something like this. What did he mean by what he said? Why were they looking at me like that?

I don’t think they opened the stall door to go to the bathroom. I really don’t. Why would they do that together? And if they were just going to go to the bathroom, they would have closed the door the moment they realized that I was there. But they didn’t. They smirked, and they stared. They stared until all my dignity was gone. I consider this sexual assault, looking at me like that and laughing and taking my dignity from me. To this day, I suffer from the trauma of that day. I have decided to cover myself up and dress modestly just to reclaim my dignity and to have more self-esteem. I don’t think I can ever forget or forgive those guys as long as I live.

Posted Feb 09, 2020
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RBE | Illustrated Short Stories | 2024-06

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