As a society, we have been too obsessed with women’s bodies,
equating her honor and worth solely with her physical form.
This obsession has led us to deny women their full autonomy—a
denial of their right to psychological agency and cognitive
freedom. In rape, we often talk about the physical violation, but the true
exploitation lies in the violation of the mind. The anger should
not be just about someone touching the body; it should be about someone’s control
over your will, your decisions, your sense of self—which
is central in sociology, psychology, and anthropology.
For centuries, women’s value has been tied to their physicality,
making them vulnerable to psychosocial objectification. This
cultural conditioning teaches us to focus on the body while neglecting the
importance of mental autonomy. Rape isn’t just a
physical crime—it’s a direct attack on a woman’s cognitive sovereignty,
her right to make decisions, a concept fundamental to social theory.
We need to understand that the crime isn’t just touching her
body—it’s the exploitation of her psychological space, manipulating
her emotions, and trampling her mental freedom. Until society
acknowledges mental autonomy as valuable as physical autonomy, the real crime
will remain unnoticed and unaddressed.