Do you remember the board game Battleship? If Scrabble did not exist,  Battleship would be my favorite game. It is beyond exciting to hide  behind your board and plot. Unfortunately, I do not allow myself to play  this game anymore because the urge to cheat is so strong. *SPOILER  ALERT* The trick is to keep track of the coordinates your opponent calls  out so you can move your ships around without getting hit. I am not  entirely sure whether this is legitimate strategy or flat out cheating,  but I long ago decided to retire from the game to keep my integrity  intact. I have seen an electronic version of the game, so maybe when my  offspring are old enough to play, I will be able to play with them  without cheating. Maybe.
In my defense, I had solid reasons for believing the way I played the  game was legitimate strategy and not cheating. In real life, you better  believe battleships will change positions to avoid getting hit. I still  see it as cut from the same cloth as list making: I am “writing” down  the calls my opponent as made so I can make an informed decision about  my next move. (Have you ever met anyone that takes Battleship this  seriously? See why I no longer play?)
Though my days of Battleship are probably over, the game comes to mind  from time to time. For four years, I was an advocate for survivors of  domestic and sexual violence and their children that were receiving  state assistance. It was intense, joyous, chaotic and empowering all at  the same time. The most often used tool in the Advocate Toolbox is  providing information. It seems so simple to someone outside the trauma  of violence, but it is a lifeline for a survivor. As I am borderline  obsessive compulsive with list making and information collecting,  advocacy came naturally and sometimes it felt like playing Battleship:  coordinates will be called out and I was helping the survivor navigate  by providing her with support, information and validation. Sometimes we  took a hit, but I helped her prepare for next time.
Once an advocate, always an advocate: it is less a job and more of a  lifestyle. You cannot “unsee” injustice once you see it.  These days, my  advocacy involves less front-line work with individuals and a much  larger population: I advocate for women. I have seen beauty unfold since  I began my advocacy role: women are beginning to once again embrace  their womanhood.  I had blinders on in regards to true feminism when I  first became an advocate: I thought being a feminist meant being  pro-choice and avoiding the family life. I worked in a field where I was  the only pro-life person I knew. I did not hide that I was pro-life,  but it certainly was a topic I avoided discussing because I felt it  would compromise my career path in the long run, and I truly felt a  calling to advocacy.
Then I became a mother. I have not experienced anything sweeter in life.  I was extremely fortunate to work for an agency that supported mothers:  I was able not only to bring him with me to work for the first six  months of his life, but they allowed me to use a conference room with a  lock when he needed to nurse! I felt supported and empowered. It was a  tough decision to make when I decided to leave to be at home with him  full-time. I still miss the work and the environment, but I walked away  feeling passionate about finding real solutions to violence and  injustice.
Though I have not been a paid advocate for nearly two and a half years, I  find ways to educate my family, friends and anyone who will listen  about violence against women. Until about six months ago however, I was  still uncomfortable identifying as a feminist. I felt certain that true  feminism did not seek to separate a woman from her children through  abortion, but I thought I was alone in this certainty. The birth of my  daughter also left me with questions: How do I be her primary example of  womanhood? What values do I want her to have? Is feminism counter to  these values? Then it happened. One Saturday I was cruising my Facebook  newsfeed and stumbled into a heated discussion about true feminism. The  passion ignited into action. I spent the evening researching and  discovering the New Feminism movement. Among many other new feminists, I  came across The Guiding Star Project. Words cannot express the  giddiness I felt! New feminists are on to something amazing, and I  simply must be a part of it. At that moment, I became a proud New  Feminist.
I am thrilled to be a contributor for The Guiding Star Project. I am  ready to be a voice in this movement, and to be able to use my given  talents in a far more satisfying way than in a game of Battleship!

	
	
Beautiful.