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If You Have Nothing Healing to Say to Survivors, You Can Be Silent

In the early days of healing, Survivors are doing sacred, difficult work. They are not “just leaving.”They are grieving.They are remembering.They are

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In the early days of healing, Survivors are doing sacred, difficult work.

They are not “just leaving.”
They are grieving.
They are remembering.
They are mourning a version of love that betrayed them.

They are trying to piece together a story that the world keeps denying even happened.

They are detangling memories.
Reclaiming dignity.
Relearning how to trust their own breath, their own judgment, their own body.

Devising safety plans because the battle is not over. (The most dangerous time is when she leaves.)

They are asking themselves questions like:

  • Was any of it real?

  • Why didn’t anyone help me sooner?

  • Will I ever be safe again?

  • How do I survive what I now know to be true?

This is not the time for your hot takes.
This is not the time for your judgment masked as “advice.”
This is not the time to play devil’s advocate, to re-center the abuser, or to interrogate the Survivor’s timeline.

🌸 Here’s what is welcome in those early days:

  • Kind words.

  • Gentle presence.

  • Silence that does no harm.

  • Meals.

  • Rides.

  • Prayer.

  • Quiet companionship.

  • Resources.

  • Gifts for the children especially if she can’t afford them. Children experience a lot of stress and uncertainty. Remember they too are victims. 
  • Safety.

  • Help her with tasks. (cleaning, organizing, yard work, safety checks,)
  • Connect her with people who care about vulnerable people and are safety professionals with a high level of integrity. (Not impressed with fame & not for sale.)
  • And flowers.

If you cannot offer support—then please, offer nothing.
No questions.
No blame.
No minimizing.
No moral high ground.

Just silence.
Because silence, when it comes with respect, is better than cruelty dressed as curiosity.

💜 Survivors Need Time to:

  • Mourn the relationship—even if it was abusive.

  • Face painful truths without being punished for seeing clearly.

  • Begin to love themselves in new, unfamiliar ways.

  • Detangle love from fear, hope from harm.

  • Cry. Sleep. Grieve. Fall apart. Start again.

  • Build new definitions of love, safety, and self-worth.

That’s not weakness. That’s the cost of healing in a world that so often asks Survivors to stay quiet, stay small, stay grateful that it wasn’t worse.

So if you are not bringing peace, protection, or presence—bring nothing.
No call is better than a cruel one.
No text is better than one filled with blame.
No opinion is better than one that harms.

Let your silence be respectful.
Let your absence do no damage.
Let Survivors be held by what helps—and freed from what doesn’t.

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