It didn't used to worry me, but in those days I think chaps were a bit more restrained.
I used to walk up to the shop with my 3-yr-old daughter and pass a barrage of whistles from a house in the process of construction. One day there was silence and then a large young man shuffled forward and said 'It is Miss......, isn't it?' An ex-pupil. There was respectful silence afterwards and thereafter a chorus of 'Good Morning'.... I rather missed the whistles!
I rather miss the sexual harassment I got between 14 and 44. I also get a bit disappointed now when young people and young women give up their seat for me and the men sit there looking straight ahead!
Like a lot of these sort of things, it all depends on interpretation, mood and the way it is presented to one....and one answer/investigation conclusions will never fit all...
I doubt women who makes lewd comments about men are ever reported and having worked in half and half, mostly male and mostly female environments, I know which was the worst!
Women will complain about anything these day, it's jus.t a bit a good natured banter. Obviously someone has decided the whilstling is not enough attention and they want more by complaining.
This was discussed on a late night radio phone in, and it was suggested that it was a female superiority thing, and that it was dependant on who did the whistling, ie would she had complained if say someone such as George Clooney had done the whistling?
Getting whistled at here and there, regardless of who it's from, isn't a problem, imo.
Being whistled at by the same people, daily, for a period of months, would start to make most women feel extremely uncomfortable. Especially if they also invaded her personal space.
I can understand her feeling uncomfortable about passing these men every day, but I think calling the police was a bit OTT.
Dare I say it, there might [will] come a time when she thinks "no one's looking at me any more".