If youâve ever had to convince someone that what hurt you was actually wrong⌠this is for you.Some people donât deny that harm happened.They just
If youâve ever had to convince someone that what hurt you was actually wrong⌠this is for you.
Some people donât deny that harm happened.
They just go straight to justifying it.
They excuse it.
They minimize it.
They spin it until you feel like youâre the one whoâs âtoo sensitive,â âoverreacting,â or âbeing negative.â
This is called harm justificationâand itâs a powerful tool used by abusers and the systems that protect them.
đ§ What Does Harm Justification Sound Like?
âThey didnât mean it like that.â
âWell, it couldâve been worse.â
âThatâs just how they are.â
âYou have to understand what they were going through.â
âItâs in the pastâwhy are you still bringing it up?â
âYou should be over it by now.â
âYouâre making them out to be a monster.â
âNobodyâs perfect.â
âThey were just trying to help.â
âWe donât need to ruin someoneâs life over this.â
â ď¸ Why This Is Dangerous:
It shifts the focus from the harm to the harm-doerâs feelings or intentions.
It pressures the Survivor to explain, justify, or minimize their own pain.
It trains communities to protect the abuser, not the person who was hurt.
It makes future harm more likelyâbecause nothing was interrupted or named.
đ Signs That Harm Justification Is Happening:
You feel like youâre âthe problemâ for bringing it up.
Youâre being told to âsee their sideâ before yours has even been heard.
Youâre expected to care more about the harm-doerâs reputation than your own safety.
Youâre asked to âmove onâ before thereâs been repair, restitution, or truth.
Youâre made to feel âdivisiveâ or âunforgivingâ for simply telling the truth.
đĄď¸Truth
Naming harm isnât cruelty.
Wanting accountability isnât revenge.
Wanting to be safe isnât selfish.
Needing to heal isnât âholding a grudge.â
Refusing to excuse someoneâs violence isnât an overreaction.
Youâre not being âtoo muchââyouâre being honest in a world that lies to keep the peace.
đ§ Reflection Questions:
When was I made to feel wrong for naming harm done to me?
Have I ever been pressured to âunderstandâ someone who hurt meâbefore anyone understood me?
What justifications do I hear most often in my community or culture?
Who benefits when harm is explained away instead of confronted?
What would it feel like to stand in the truth without shrinking it to protect others?
𪡠Closing Reminder:
“Share if you feel safe and readyâyour voice might be the lifeline someone else needs.â đŞˇ
And if you do share, remember to cite the messenger. Words carry legacy.