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Dangerous Men

Photo by Geranimo on Unsplash
The world is full of dangerous men 

They are brutal and calloused, and cold

The world is full of dangerous men, they said

Cover up, don’t go out too late

Head on a swivel, don’t retaliate

Don’t reject them too hard

Don’t love them too soft


The world is full of dangerous men, they said

I was fourteen when he broke my head

He said that I was special; he thought I was cool

He said that I was too smart for my high school


He was twenty seven

Living in his mother’s attic and selling weed to children

Now, I am twenty seven

It is only through this lens that I understand

The world is full of dangerous men


I left home at sixteen and ran all the way to the ocean

A man, almost thirty, rented his spare bedroom to me

There is a lot I won’t say about the July of 2015

But I do remember the carpet burns

I remember the past unwinding

I remember the Sherriff office and the voicemail that he left me

I remember the HIV antibiotics, just in case

I remember the flash of the nurse’s camera as she documented me

All the wounds and ligatures and choke marks

I remember showering in the dark


The world is full of dangerous men

I remember my father telling me

“It was your fault that you left”

“What did you expect”

“The world, it’s full…of dangerous men”


Justine Castereno is the same age as me

A Navy sailor, honorably discharged for the things that happened to her at sea

Vanessa Guillen, an Army soldier who dreamed of the good,

Before she was bludgeoned to death in the dank corners of Ft. Hood

The world is full…of dangerous men


Molly Miller, Tessa Curley, Mona Lisa Two Eagle

Stolen from the purgatory of the reservation lands, still missing

The world is full…of dangerous men


To be a woman

Is to be subjected to naked violence

Kristen Stewart braved a camera in her face to say

“Having a female body is an overtly political act”

We laughed her away because, why would you say that?

It’s so cringy

It’s so dull


Until you are the woman standing in the examination room

Dialing your phone

Praying for the state to help you recover

Praying for intercession, for someone to say

That you don’t have to birth the baby born from rape


“Blood visible from space in Sudan shows evidence of Darfur genocide”

ABC News reports like it is just another day

It is just another day

The blood of children and women, the weight of shame

How many have died?

We really can’t say

150,000, maybe more

Those numbers are ten months old

No journalist has hit the ground since then

It’s hard to say, but what we know,

Is the world is full of dangerous men

There is a knock on my door, it’s Halloween

A little boy stands in front of me

Dressed up as a T-Rex, the brutal relic of killing

Asking for a Snickers bar

Sticky palms outstretched

He is so soft in the moment, I wonder

How long until he becomes someone

That no one will recognize

Someone that no one questions

How long before his spine bends under his first act of violence

The world is full of soft boys who grew into brutal men


Shannan Watts was smothered

The bodies of her children stuffed into oil tankers

Her husband, their father, found someone new

He hated her for what she grew in her womb

He is still living in Waupun, Wisconsin

In a max security prison, the only one who survived

The bodies of his daughters still floating

In crude oil with their brother who never got to begin

The world is full of dangerous men


When I was 20, I called my grandmother crying

I told her my life was falling apart

I had no husband, no family, no plan

She surprised me by saying, “Thank God”

Thank the God that saw her through fifty years of the Presbyterian Church

The God who birthed her four children

The God who stayed on her bedside each night

The God who showed up in the gray space of the meantime


My grandfather outlived her

He is 89 years old, softly decaying

On a waterbed history of drunkenness and cheating

Did he ever love her? Did he know what love means?

And I fight to love him in the confines of his legacy


The family he built, and ripped apart again

The world is full of dangerous men

And the women are left with the stories


My father and I sat at the barstools of Twin Peaks

Half-naked waitresses brought us our drinks

I told him that I knew about the prostitutes

I knew about him cheating

Through eyes, glassy and bloodshot, he whispered

“You don’t know what it’s like to be me”

His second wife, so sick that she couldn’t bend to his conformity

He traded away $3000 a month just to feel something

The women were my age and fighting for security

Fighting for the pay stubs to begin again

The world is full of dangerous men


They are the men that I love

They are the men of my family

The world is full of dangerous men

And every single one of them has fallen to sin
Gianna May Ruland
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Gianna Ruland is a Colorado native who currently resides in Nebraska. She is a student at the University of Nebraska where she is earning her Bachelor's of Social Work degree (BSW). She currently works at a retirement home as a Social Services Coordinator in her town. Her lived experience as a survivor of physical abuse and sexual assault inspires her to help others in her community. Her passions include helping other victims of child abuse and sexual assault find healing through community resources.

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