Sexual Harassment (Boundary Violations)
Sexual harassment involves unwanted sexual behaviour that violates personal boundaries. It can be verbal, behavioural, online, or physical — and it often becomes more serious when it is normalised or left unchecked.
Sexual harassment is any unwanted sexual behaviour that creates pressure, discomfort, intimidation, or humiliation. It is frequently a boundary test — a way of seeing what someone will tolerate.
Common forms of sexual harassment
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Repeated unwanted sexual comments
Comments about someone’s body, appearance, sexuality, or “what you’d do to them”, especially when it keeps happening.
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Sexual jokes or humiliation
Sexualised jokes, innuendo, “banter”, or public embarrassment that targets or degrades someone.
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Pressure for attention or contact
Persistent messaging, requests, demands, cornering, “just give me a hug”, or refusing to accept distance.
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Workplace or public-space harassment
At work, schools/college, sport, transport, streets, pubs/clubs, or online platforms — often where people feel trapped or watched.
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Power-imbalance behaviour
Harassment enabled by authority, seniority, age, popularity, status, or control over opportunities (shifts, grades, selection, promotion).
Why harassment matters
Harassment is often a boundary test ⌄
- “Will they freeze?”
- “Will they laugh it off?”
- “Will they feel too awkward to challenge me?”
Silence does not mean consent ⌄
Escalation risk ⌄
- the person harassing gains confidence
- others normalise it (“that’s just how they are”)
- power imbalance prevents reporting
- the target becomes isolated or worn down
Sexual harassment is often the gateway to escalation if unchecked. Early boundary violations are signals — not misunderstandings.
Early warning signs (simple recognition)
These are common patterns that often appear before harassment escalates:
- Boundary pushing
Ignoring “no”, continuing after discomfort, or turning every interaction sexual.
- Testing isolation
Trying to get you alone, moving conversations off public channels, or “don’t tell anyone”.
- Minimising & flipping blame
“You’re too sensitive”, “It was a joke”, “You’re making this weird”.
- Status leverage
Using authority or influence: shifts, promotions, selection, grades, access, social standing.
Harassment often continues because it’s framed as “banter” and the target is pressured to stay calm. The standard is simple: if it’s unwanted, it’s a boundary issue.
What you can do (low-conflict options)
These are designed to be usable under stress. Choose what fits your safety and context.
Boundary statements (short & clear)
“Stop. Don’t speak to me like that.”
“That’s not okay. Keep it professional.”
“No. Move back / give me space.”
“I’m ending this conversation now.”
If you can’t confront safely, you can still protect yourself by creating distance, moving to others, and documenting patterns.
Exit + safety moves (in the moment)
- Move toward people, cameras, staff, or open areas
- Use your phone as a tool (call someone, record notes, not confrontation)
- Change location: “I need to speak to someone” and leave
- If workplace: end the interaction and relocate to a safer area
- If public: step into a shop/venue, ask staff for help, stay visible
What if the person is in authority? ⌄
- write down what happened (time/date/location/words used)
- save messages or screenshots
- tell a trusted person early
- use formal reporting routes when safe to do so
Bystander / friend actions (safe, practical)
If you witness harassment, these options reduce risk without escalating the situation.
Quick understanding check
1) If someone stays quiet due to fear or awkwardness, does that mean the behaviour is okay?
2) Can harassment occur without physical contact?
3) Why take harassment seriously early?
After it happens (support + documentation)
You choose what happens next. Some people want formal reporting. Others want support, distance, and safety planning. Either way, documenting patterns can protect you.
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Document (quietly)
Write date/time/location, what was said/done, witnesses, and keep screenshots/messages. Patterns matter.
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Tell one trusted person
A friend, partner, colleague, safeguarding lead, manager, or trusted adult. Isolation increases risk.
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Use appropriate reporting routes
Workplaces and schools typically have policies. If a crime has occurred or you’re in danger, contact police/emergency services.
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Medical / specialist support (if needed)
Support is valid even if you don’t want to “make it official”. Your choice matters.
If a child is at risk or has disclosed harm, do not investigate personally. Focus on safety, record concerns, and use safeguarding routes immediately.
Where to go next
Continue when you’re ready.

