Reality: Abusers Cultivate Silence, and Society Punishes Women Who Speak One of the most insidious myths about abuse is the idea that if
Reality: Abusers Cultivate Silence, and Society Punishes Women Who Speak
One of the most insidious myths about abuse is the idea that if women just spoke up sooner, the abuse wouldn’t have continued. This myth puts the responsibility for stopping harm on the victim rather than on the perpetrator or the systems that enable abuse.
In reality, Survivors of abuse, violence, and coercion do not live in a world that automatically believes them, protects them, or even allows them to speak freely without consequence. The silence around abuse is not because women are weak, but because abusers—and society—make speaking up dangerous.
Why This Myth Is Harmful
This myth assumes that speaking up is easy and that the world is eager to listen, but let’s look at what actually happens when women try to expose abuse:
- They are dismissed or gaslit. “Are you sure that’s what happened?” “Maybe you misunderstood.” “He’s such a nice guy—he wouldn’t do that.”
- They are blamed. “Why were you there?” “Why didn’t you leave?” “What were you wearing?”
- They face retaliation. Many women lose jobs, relationships, financial security, or even their lives for daring to speak out.
- They are met with institutional indifference. Police, HR departments, schools, and religious institutions have long histories of protecting abusers while punishing victims.
If speaking up was all it took to stop abuse, there wouldn’t be countless cases of Survivors who did speak up and were ignored, attacked, or punished for it.
Abusers Create Environments That Silence Women
Abuse is not just about physical harm; it’s about control. That control often includes:
- Grooming the victim to believe that no one will believe her or that speaking out will make things worse.
- Positioning themselves as powerful, respected figures so that if the victim does speak, they will be dismissed as “crazy” or “vindictive.”
- Using fear, shame, or threats to keep the victim silent—threats of violence, financial ruin, losing custody of children, or public humiliation.
A woman who speaks out against an abuser often does so knowing that she will face resistance, disbelief, and punishment—not just from the abuser, but from the very society that claims to care about victims.
The Burden Is on Society to Listen, Not on Women to Shout Louder
The question isn’t “Why didn’t she speak up sooner?” but rather:
🔹 Why don’t people listen the first time?
🔹 Why are abusers protected more than victims?
🔹 Why are women still being blamed for the harm done to them?
Until these questions are answered, demanding that women “speak up sooner” is nothing more than another way to excuse inaction and uphold systems that protect abusers.
Women are not silent because they don’t want to speak. Women are silent because society has proven, time and again, that it punishes those who do.