The early morning hours of May 8, 1981, found me, an eighteen-year-old freshman at Syracuse University, walking through a tunnel near campus. The air was cool, the path familiar, until it wasn't. A man was there, suddenly, with a knife, his voice a chilling promise of death if I screamed. But I did scream, a primal defiance against the terror that gripped me. He threw me to the ground, my head striking the concrete, and the world momentarily blurred before sharpening into a brutal, inescapable reality. I was raped, beaten, left for dead in a place a police officer would later tell me I was "lucky" to escape from alive, another young woman having been murdered there not long before.
The immediate aftermath was a landscape of stark contrasts: the clinical detachment of police interviews, the bewildering stares of strangers, and the suffocating weight of an experience that cleaved my life into a before and an after. Returning home to Pennsylvania between freshman and sophomore years, I encountered a different kind of assault - the victim-blaming attitudes, particularly from my father, who implied my presence in the park late at night was an invitation to the horror. It was a cruel irony, to be blamed for my own undoing.
Back at Syracuse, I found a fragile solace in creative writing classes, studying under luminous figures like Raymond Carver and Tobias Wolff, and especially Tess Gallagher, who became a vital anchor in my tumultuous healing. Yet, the police had no leads, and the attacker remained a phantom. Then, one day, months later, a jolt of recognition on the street: a man whose back, whose build, whose posture, ignited a terrifying certainty. I called out to a nearby officer, and he was detained. But the path to justice was fraught; in the lineup, my attacker brought a friend who closely resembled him, leading to a misidentification and his temporary release.
Eventually, through a DNA match from a hair recovered after the attack, he was arrested again and convicted. The relief was immense, but it was not an end to the haunting. The following summer, choosing to remain in Syracuse, I faced another devastating blow. My roommate, Laya, was attacked in our apartment, in my bed, and her assailant spoke my name, leading police to suspect a revenge plot orchestrated from prison. Though Laya understood it wasn't my fault, a chasm opened between us, a silent accusation in the air.
The years that followed were a descent into a different kind of darkness. Manhattan became a backdrop to a spiraling existence, marked by heavy drinking and heroin use. The trauma of the rape had isolated me, creating a hypervigilance that made night work impossible and darkened my days with depression and nightmares. It was only later, after reading Judith Lewis Herman's "Trauma and Recovery," that I recognized the insidious grip of post-traumatic stress disorder, a label that finally offered some understanding to the fractured landscape of my mind.
Finally, a move to California marked a turning point, a conscious effort to escape the unhealthy environment I had built around myself. It was there, I reflected, that both hell and hope resided in the palm of my hand. The journey of healing was arduous, a continuous struggle to reconcile my identity with the indelible mark of victimhood. Yet, in that struggle, in the raw honesty of confronting what had happened and its profound aftermath, lay a hard-won wisdom: "You save yourself or you remain unsaved."