Weâve heard it too many times:âShe made a bad choice.ââShe knew he was violent.ââWe warned her.ââWhy canât I say that out loud?âHereâs why
Weâve heard it too many times:
âShe made a bad choice.â
âShe knew he was violent.â
âWe warned her.â
âWhy canât I say that out loud?â
Hereâs why: Because that kind of judgment doesnât stop violence. It just shifts the blame.
If we really want safety, healing, and accountabilityâwe need to stop pointing fingers at victims and start fixing the systems that fail them.
Hereâs what âShe shouldâve known betterâ doesnât do:
1. â It Doesnât Make Women Safer
Blaming someone after the harm is done doesn’t protect the next woman. It only isolates the person already hurting.
2. â It Doesnât Change the Laws
Not a single policy, shelter expansion, or safety law has ever been passed because someone said, âTold you so.â
3. â It Doesnât Make Him Run Out of Victims
Abusive people donât struggle to find new partners. They are rarely short on targets. Shame doesnât slow them downâit just keeps survivors quiet.
4. â It Doesnât Account for Charm, Manipulation, or Coercion
Many violent people are charismatic, respected, even adored. Abuse often comes after theyâve gained trustânot before.
5. â It Doesnât Help People Who Want to Leave
Even when someone realizes theyâre in danger, leaving safely can be deadly. Victims need options, not lectures.
6. â It Doesnât Protect Against Sudden Violence
Not every violent partner has a long rap sheet. Some people flip in a single moment. You canât always âknowâ what someone is capable of.
7. â It Doesnât Offer Safe Exit Plans
Where can she go tonight? How can she leave without alerting him? Who can help her with money, kids, documents? Thatâs what matters.
8. â It Doesnât Educate the Next Person
Your judgment doesnât teach others how to spot danger or ask for help. Empathy, education, and real stories do.
9. â It Doesnât Address the Bigger Picture
This isnât just about one woman, one relationship, or one man. This is about a culture where violence thrives in silence, judgment, and broken systems.
10. â It Doesnât Center the Survivor
âShe made a bad choiceâ centers youâyour hindsight, your comfort, your image of how things should be. It erases the complexity of her reality.
11. â It Doesnât Make Space for Growth
Survivors often have to process shame, fear, confusion, trauma, and manipulation. The last thing they need is you adding more weight to carry.
12. â It Doesnât Build a Safer Society
Want to help? Hereâs what actually works:
Emergency resources
Survivor-led education
Fast exits with protection
Public policies that donât punish victims for surviving
đ Judgment doesnât stop cycles. Support does.
We donât need hindsight.
We need foresight.
We need empathy.
We need action.
Because violence isnât prevented by saying, âShe shouldâve known.â
Itâs prevented by building a world where she didnât have to knowâbecause safety and support were already there.
Letâs stop saying âshe shouldâve known better.â
Letâs start asking:
How can we help her get out?
How can we make sure the next person doesnât go through this alone?
#WeSurviveAbuse #SupportSurvivors #StopVictimBlaming #BuildSafetyNotShame #ViolenceIsTheProblem