Inclusion should never come at the cost of someone else’s safety. But lately, women and Survivors are being told to prove our goodness by staying sil
Inclusion should never come at the cost of someone else’s safety.
But lately, women and Survivors are being told to prove our goodness by staying silent. To sacrifice our boundaries to avoid being called hateful. To tolerate our own discomfort—for the comfort of others.
That’s not inclusion.
That’s pressure.
That’s erasure.
Here’s what real inclusion looks like:
✅ It protects the vulnerable—all of them.
✅ It listens when women say, “This doesn’t feel safe.”
✅ It doesn’t require Survivors to relive trauma to be taken seriously.
✅ It creates options—not ultimatums.
✅ It values boundaries, lived experience, and instinct.
✅ It allows hard conversations—not just agreeable silence.
You can be inclusive and still say:
“Girls need female-only sports and spaces.”
“Survivors deserve rooms where they can fully exhale.”
“Boundaries don’t mean hate. They mean safety.”
We can hold multiple truths. Our world is filled with multiple truths. Our personal backgrounds are multiple truths. Our lives are multiple truths.
Yes—protect people from being bullied, dehumanized, or erased.
And also—protect girls from being watched, followed, or silenced.
Protect women from spaces that no longer feel like ours.
Protect Survivors who are told to suppress instinct in the name of progress.
Inclusion without safety isn’t inclusion at all.
And no one should have to prove they’re kind by abandoning themselves.
You can include others without erasing the needs of women, girls, and those who have already survived the unthinkable.
That’s real inclusion. That’s real justice. That’s love with boundaries.
🕊
– Tonya GJ Prince
WeSurviveAbuse.com | SurvivorAffirmations.com | RosasChildren.com
Share if you feel safe and ready—your voice might be the lifeline someone else needs. And if you do share, remember to cite the messenger. Words carry legacy.