When women cry out for justice, safety, healing, and the right to exist without fear, the response is too often not actionâbut distraction. Instead
When women cry out for justice, safety, healing, and the right to exist without fear, the response is too often not actionâbut distraction.
Instead of addressing the harm, society interrogates the woman:
What does she look like?
How does she say it? Did she ask nicely? Did she say pretty please? Did she show some thigh?
Wait. Is she willing to put everyone else on her back and carry them too? Even if they never do it for her?
Is she beautiful, desirable, thin, or soft enough to be worth protecting?
These are the ancient tactics of delay and dismissal.
We reject them all.
â 1. How âFeminineâ We Look
Whether a woman looks âsoft,â âcurvy,â or âdelicateâ has nothing to do with whether she deserves safety.
Safety is not reserved for those who look the part of someone elseâs fantasy.
Femaleness is a biological reality ânot a costume.
Safety doesnât come with approval. Itâs something you deserve simply for being human.
â 2. Hair Length, Texture, or Volume
Women with short hair, afro hair, braids, bald heads, or natural curls do not need to perform a particular aesthetic in exchange for protection. Black women and girls are still policed for wearing our hair naturally.
From scalp to strand, no woman should have to manipulate her identity to receive protection.
Hair is not a safety requirement.Â
â 3. Her Skin Tone
Colorism has long influenced who society views as innocent, respectable, or in need of saving.
But light-skinned, dark-skinned, acne-scarred, freckled, skin disorder,âit makes no difference.
No girl should be left unprotected because she isnât âmarketableâ to a specific group of people.
â 4. Her Weight or Body Type
Fat girls are bullied. Fat women are denied medical care. Thin women are disbelieved.
Centerfolds, body builders, and models have been beaten, raped, and murdered (see the numerous writings and documentaries)
All of it is violence rooted in misogyny.
Safety should not be reserved for women who fit into someone else’s beauty algorithm.
â 5. Her Tone of Voice
Women who whisper are ignored. Women who scream are punished.
Whether calm, blunt, poetic, or pleadingâwe will not be tone-policed while trying to survive.
â 6. How Attractive She Is to Men
We will not base a womanâs access to justice on whether or not men find her attractive.
Many women are hurt by the very people who once desired them.
Desirability is not the doorway to dignity.
â 7. Her Relationship Status
Single women, divorced women, childfree women, teen mothersâall deserve protection.
Having a manâs last name doesnât make a woman more human.
â 8. Whether She “Fits In” or Follows Social Norms
Girls who speak out, ask questions, or defy groupthink are often targeted.
But we werenât made to blend in.
We were made to surviveâand protect others who canât speak yet.
â 9. Respectability Politics
It doesnât matter if sheâs in a church dress, a hoodie, or hospital gown.
Women have been raped in uniforms, in high heels, in head wraps, and in sweatpants.
There is no outfit that protects you from abuse, assault, violence and misogyny.
â 10. Whether Sheâs âEasy to Listen Toâ
Weâve been trained to make our messages more palatable. To apologize for causing discomfort.
But you know what?
Weâre done softening the truth so others can digest it.
đŤ Safety Is Not a Performance
You do not need to be:
âPretty enoughâ
âLight enoughâ
âQuiet enoughâ
âForgiving enoughâ
âAgreeable enoughâ
to be free from harm.
The only thing that should matter when discussing safety, justice, and well-being is:
đđž She is a female human being. A group that has never been protected enough.
And that fact, on its own, has never been enough for this world to listen.
But itâs more than enough for us to fight, defend, and demand change.
We are not a backdrop for male-centered politics.
We are not footnotes in someone elseâs identity journey.
We are girls and women who bleed, birth, break, and build.
And our safety is not up for negotiation.
đĽ Final Word:
Women do not have to perform beauty, compliance, or gentleness to be worthy of protection.
We are speaking of:
Safety.
Health.
Dignity.
Justice.
Life and death.
We donât have time for distractions. We donât have space for derailments.
We will not negotiate our survival based on anyoneâs approval.
đŞˇ
Share if you feel safe and readyâyour voice might be the lifeline someone else needs.
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