The Shame He Put
Under My Skin
Author’s Note
This essay contains explicit descriptions of sexual violence and degrading language used by a perpetrator. I include those words because they are part of the violence. Predators count on the closed room staying closed, on the survivor being too ashamed to repeat the words that were said, and on the world preferring a cleaner version of the story.
I am not writing this to display pain. I am writing it to return shame to its source.
There are sentences that do not end when the person finishes speaking. They remain in the body for years, not as memory alone, but as something foreign the nervous system keeps trying to metabolize and cannot. Some sentences are not only spoken. They are implanted. They continue to live inside the person long after the room is gone, long after the man is gone, long after the visible life has resumed.
One of those sentences was said to me after rape.“You made me a bad man from the good man I really am.”
I carried that sentence for many years. From the outside, life kept moving. I defended my dissertation, crossed an ocean, became a psychiatrist, wrote, taught, and helped others carry pain I had not yet fully named in myself. But the sentence stayed somewhere under the skin, not because it was true, but because it had been placed there at the exact moment when my body was too shattered to reject it.
This was not spoken after seduction, a mutual affair between equals, a shared mistake, or a complicated adult situation later softened by language because the truth would require too much courage. It was said after the second rape. He was twice my age, married, professionally established, protected by title and reputation. I was twenty-four years old, his PhD student, and he had authority over my academic life and over the future I was trying to build.
Before he left that room, he left something else behind. He handed me the moral weight of what he had done and asked me to carry it for him.
That is the horror of shame reversal. The perpetrator does not only violate the body. He leaves his shame inside the person he harmed and walks out wanting to remain good.
The Scene of Degradation
The scene I need to write about did not begin in that room. The day before, I had given a lecture at a major conference in neuropathic pain, in front of almost a thousand physicians and scientists. I spoke about work I had taken seriously. I did well, and people supported me.
He had brought me there as my mentor. In public, he stood beside me as someone who was supposed to guide my formation. The next day, in private, he used that place in my life against me.
He interrupted the silence and said, “I was observing how you did the lecture yesterday; you did a great job. However, you should learn how to use your mouth and tongue in different circumstances, please proceed.”
He took the dignity I had been allowed to feel and brought it into the humiliation of that room. After that, even the part of me that had stood before others as a mind no longer felt untouched by what he did to my body.
I said no, and he slapped me.
I started crying.
I remember feeling that something in me dropped very far down, below the person I had been when I stood in front of that audience and believed my work and effort meant something. There was no confusion in him, and no tenderness I could reach. Because he was my mentor, his cruelty carried the weight of recognition I had once needed from him.
“You Don’t Deserve to Be Kissed”
When it was over, I was still crying. The tears were not a performance or an appeal. They were there because the body had understood humiliation faster than the mind could name it.
He saw me crying, and for one brief second there appeared to be something almost like a response, but even that response became another injury.
He said,
“Don’t cry. I don’t want you to cry. I should kiss you probably, if you cry, but you are not the kind of woman who will be kissed. You don’t deserve to be kissed.”
There are sentences that do not need physical force to continue the violence.
He had already used my body, and then he stood over the emotional wreckage of what he had done and decided what kind of woman I was allowed to be. Not a woman to be comforted or met with tenderness, but a woman who could be used and then placed below tenderness. That was a different cruelty, not the cruelty of desire but the cruelty of contempt.
I did not have the language for that then. I only felt myself fall, as if my worth had dropped below the floor, below the ground, below the place where a woman can still imagine herself returning intact to her own body.
There is a particular humiliation in being denied tenderness by the same person who has just taken access to the most vulnerable parts of you. It teaches the body that being touched does not mean being seen, that being wanted does not mean being valued, and that the moment after male gratification may be the moment when the woman learns how little she mattered.
That sentence joined sexuality to exclusion from tenderness.
It did not only say, I will not kiss you.It said that I was not the kind of woman to whom tenderness belonged.It said that my tears did not restore my humanity, that my pain did not require his care, that what he had done to me had somehow lowered the category of woman I was allowed to be.
Spoken after violation, while my nervous system was already shattered, it entered me with the force of a verdict.
This is one of the ways shame becomes sexualized after rape.
The wound is not only the act itself, but the moment after the act, when the perpetrator reveals what the body meant to him. I was not treated as beloved, protected, respected, or even pitied in a clean way.
He used me, then ranked me, then denied me tenderness, as if even comfort would have been too generous for the kind of woman he had decided I was.
I carried that sentence for years in the body’s hesitation around tenderness, in the difficulty of receiving desire as something clean, and in the inability to believe that male closeness would protect me from male contempt. Somewhere inside, the body had learned that a man could create the degradation and then leave the woman feeling degraded by it.
The Shame Reversal
And then he gave me the sentence that would outlive the room.
“You know I am in a relationship. The things I did to you, you forced me to do. You made me a bad man from the good man I really am. This is all your fault.”
I did not understand, in that exact moment, the full violence of what he had just done with language.
I understood only that something had been taken from me and then something else had been placed inside me before I could even name the first injury.
He had used power, degraded me, heard my no, answered it with physical violence, and watched me cry. Then, before leaving, he gave me an explanation for his violence that made me responsible for it.
That is where sexual violence became moral violence.
He did not merely say that he was in a relationship.
He made his relationship my burden.
He did not merely say that he had done things to me.
He made those things my responsibility.
His betrayal became my guilt, his desire became my contamination, his violence became my moral debt, and his shame became the object he placed inside me before leaving the room. It was as if he could not walk out carrying the truth of himself, so he left the truth with me.
This is shame reversal.
It is not ordinary blame and not simple denial, because it does not only protect the perpetrator from consequence. It rearranges reality around his need to remain innocent.
He could not tolerate the sentence “I violated her,” so he created another sentence and placed it over me: “She made me do it.” In order for him to remain the good man in his own mind, I had to become the woman who corrupted him.
What made the sentence so poisonous was that it entered me at the exact point where trauma had already broken the self’s capacity to protect its own borders.
I was not standing there as a calm adult with a strong internal boundary, able to separate his shame from mine. I was young, terrified, humiliated, dependent, and already split from myself by what had happened. The body after rape is not a courtroom where evidence can be calmly arranged. It is a flooded place, searching for meaning because the human mind cannot tolerate meaninglessness around violation for very long. Into that flooded place, he inserted an explanation. The explanation was false, but it arrived when my nervous system was most vulnerable to receiving it.
For years, I did not fully understand that I was carrying his self-protection as if it were my own shame.
- Because the violence had happened through my body, the shame felt bodily.
- Because my womanhood had been attacked, the shame felt feminine.
- Because sexuality had become the place where fear and humiliation entered me, the shame felt sexual.
I mistook the location of the wound for the source of the wound, and that is one of the cruelest effects of this kind of violation. What felt intimate did not belong to me simply because it had been placed in an intimate place.
The feeling of contamination was not evidence of my corruption.
It was evidence of his displacement.
Why Predators Misplace Shame
Some predatory men want access to the woman and innocence afterward.
They want the body, the control, the gratification, the ego repair, the feeling of power, but they do not want the moral meaning of what they have done.
They want the act without the knowledge of themselves as the person who chose the act, and that split is where the shame begins to move.
I did not understand then that narcissistic and malignant personalities do not only attack what is weak. Often they attack what feels too alive in another person, too visible, too difficult to make smaller by the usual methods of charm, dismissal, correction, or quiet contempt.
They may never name it as envy or injury.
They may not even know what has been touched in them.
They only feel the person in front of them as an intolerable size, and the attack becomes the way they try to restore proportion inside themselves. This is one of the hidden logics of narcissistic injury. The woman they degrade is not always the woman who meant little. Sometimes she is the woman who meant too much, the woman whose existence made them feel smaller than they could bear.
Months later, we were sitting in his office finalizing research statistics when he looked at me and suddenly asked, “What did you find in me as a man?” I remember the question stopping somewhere in me, because the honest answer was so far from what he wanted that I could not say it. As a man, he had already destroyed whatever he was asking me to confirm. I did not feel admiration or desire. I felt disgust, and I felt trapped by the grotesque intimacy of his need to be reassured by the woman he had violated.
At the time, I heard only the insecurity in the question.
Now I hear something more exposed.He wanted to know whether some part of him still existed in my eyes as desirable, masculine, powerful in the way he needed to imagine himself. After taking from me, degrading me, and making me carry his shame, he still wanted me to repair the image of him as a man.
I think this is why his violence toward me was not random.
He could not tolerate the size of me in relation to the size of himself.
He could not receive my attachment without feeling exposed by it, and he could not tolerate my professional promise, my youth, my mind, or even my need for him without turning that need into something he could dominate.
So he tried to reduce me with the same force with which my existence had unsettled him. He needed me lowered because something about me had made him feel small.
Clinically, this is a defense, but the word can sound too clean for the injury it creates.
When a man cannot tolerate his own shame, he may try to survive it by moving it into the woman he harmed. He begins to need a story in which her body, her silence, her fear, or even her inability to fight him in the way the world imagines resistance should look becomes proof that he was not the one who chose. The details may change, but the function does not. His shame leaves him and finds a place to live in her.
This is not only a psychological maneuver. It is moral violence. It protects the perpetrator’s self-image by damaging the survivor’s selfhood. What looks like his private defense becomes her long-term injury, because he remains clean in his own story while she is left feeling contaminated by what he did.
Understanding this mechanism does not soften the act.
It makes it clearer.
I am not interested in explaining predatory psychology in order to excuse it, or in turning cruelty into complexity for the comfort of the cruel. The point is not that he had shame. The point is that he refused to carry it, and solved his internal conflict by placing it inside the woman he harmed.
Power Gives Him Control Over Meaning
Power changes what the world is prepared to believe.
A man with a title does not enter the story as a neutral person.
He enters with reputation, age, professional language, institutional relationships, and the assumption of seriousness already arranged around him. Before the woman says a word, the room has often begun leaning in his direction.
That is what people miss when they ask why a student did not simply leave or report him when the first line was crossed. Professional sexual violence is never only about the body, because the body is attached to a life the perpetrator still has power to damage.
A student is not only afraid of what happened in the room. She is afraid of what he can do afterward, quietly, professionally, without ever needing to raise his voice. He can delay her work, damage her name, make her future harder to enter, and trust that the world around him will find his version more reasonable than hers.
Years later, when I tried to name the ethical reality of this history in a professional context, I received a response from the President of the International Association for the Study of Pain that showed me how calmly this protection can operate. The language was careful and procedural, but inside it was the old structure of disbelief. One sentence stayed with me because it said so much without intending to say it:
“Prof. X, whom I have known for over 20 years, has always had a very cordial, kind and respectful attitude towards me. Therefore, even on a personal level, I would not be able to judge whether or not he would be capable of very serious acts…”
That is how reputation protects private violence.
A man’s kindness to another respected professional becomes part of the reason his brutality toward a young woman is treated as difficult to imagine.
This is the captivity of meaning.
The predator with power does not only control what he can do.
He influences what others are willing to call it afterward.
He can make violence look like ambiguity, dependency look like consent, silence look like cooperation, and trauma look like instability, while everything around him continues to say that he is respectable, believable, accomplished, and necessary.
That is why shame reversal is especially destructive when it comes from a man with authority.
He does not only put shame into her.
He has a whole world ready to help keep it there.
Returning the Shame
The shame stayed because it entered me at the moment when I had no clean way to refuse it.
He gave me his explanation while I was still inside the damage.
I did not yet have distance from him, or from the future he still had power to touch.
So the sentence went in.
Later, the world made that sentence easier to believe.
It did what the world often does with violated women.
It looked too long at what I did after, and not long enough at what he did first.
It treated the fact that I kept working and continued with my life as if survival could be used against the person who had to survive.
After a history like this, trust in men does not remain simple.
I know this in a way I would rather not know.
A woman may keep living, working, loving people, even appearing strong, while something in her body no longer believes that male closeness is safe.
She may not hate men.
She may understand them, respect them, care about them, even see their pain clearly.
But trust is different.Trust asks the body to lower its guard near the very thing that once became dangerous, and there are men who know exactly what they are damaging when they make a woman afraid of tenderness for the rest of her life.
Sometimes that trust never fully returns.
Sometimes it returns slowly, almost against the woman’s own fear, and if it does, it should not be mistaken for naivety. It is not a woman forgetting what happened. It is a woman discovering, at great cost, that the past may not have the right to own every doorway to tenderness.
What I know now is that the shame was never mine.
The loss of trust was not a failure of love, womanhood, or perception.
It was the cost of surviving a man who made praise and degradation impossible to separate, and then asked me to carry the moral consequence of his violence.
For years, his shame lived in me as if it were evidence about who I was.
It was not.
It was evidence of who he was.
I am returning it now.
Vera Hart