Updated for WeSurviveAbuse.com, 2025 Letās return to this uncomfortable truth: when victims of sexual violence recant, it is often not because th
Updated for WeSurviveAbuse.com, 2025
Letās return to this uncomfortable truth: when victims of sexual violence recant, it is often not because the crime didnāt happen.
Itās because the world theyāve been pushed into since reporting has become unbearable.
And if youāve never been in that position, let me lovingly say: you truly donāt know what youāre talking about.
š Truths We Still Donāt Say Enough
Victims recant because:
They are exhausted.
They want safety more than they want a courtroom battle.
They are being threatenedāsometimes subtly, sometimes violently.
Theyāre being pressured by family, employers, churches, schools, and even the people they called for help.
They were offered a deal that sounded easier: silence in exchange for survival.
Sometimes, theyāre made to feel like theyāve become the problem.
Their presence is a reminder.
Their pain is ātoo much.ā
Their pursuit of justice becomes an inconvenience.
So they choose the only path that feels like it offers some peace: they take it back.
š§Ø Letās Talk About Retaliation
Retaliation doesnāt always look like threats scrawled in blood-red paint on your door.
Often, itās quieter.
More insidious.
Harder to prove.
Itās the sudden cold shoulder from a support group.
Itās getting fewer work shifts.
Itās being left off that family invite list.
Itās losing custody of your children.
Itās being called āunstableā by the people who watched you break under the weight of trauma and legal red tape.
We donāt talk enough about institutional retaliationāhow the very systems that claim to help Survivors can also punish them for daring to speak.
ā³ The Process Is a Pressure Cooker
Even the strongest person can only take so much.
The interviews.
The exams.
The subpoenas.
The gaslighting.
The people asking, āAre you sure?ā for the tenth time.
The ones calling your abuser āsuch a nice guy.ā
The long waits.
The short deadlines.
The emotional landmines.
And the impossible, aching desire:
to just feel like yourself again.
š āThey Took It Backā Doesnāt Mean āIt Didnāt Happenā
So many Survivors arenāt given the space to be Survivors unless they follow a script. A script thatās written for someone elseās comfort, not their truth.
Cooperate fully.
Stay calm at all times.
Remember every detail.
Donāt cry too much. But donāt be too stoic, either.
Be ācredible.ā
Be āreasonable.ā
Be āperfect.ā
Anything less, and theyāre doubted.
Anything more, and theyāre punished.
No wonder so many decide they canāt do this anymore.
šÆļø Why Do Victims Recant?
Because they are tired of being a crime scene.
Because they are tired of begging to be believed.
Because they are tired of being touched, studied, doubted, picked apart.
Because they just want their life back.
Quick, fast, and in a hurry.
So the next time a Survivor takes it all backābefore we judge, question, or cast doubtāpause.
Ask yourself: What if this was the only way they could reclaim their humanity?
ā ļø For Those Still Watching the Case File…
TRUTH: a retraction is not proof that the original report was a lie.
A withdrawal does not erase the trauma.
We are in a time where our systems still fail to protect Survivors with consistency, with care, and with the dignity they deserve.
Until that changes, recanting will continue to be a survival tacticānot an admission.
ā ļø A Final Truth
Sexual violence is unlike any other crime.
And thatās exactly why it must be stopped.
Not just through tougher laws.
Not just through court proceedings.
But through a radical shift in how we respond to Survivors.
With belief.
With boundaries.
With justice.
And with the courage to change what isnāt working.
šÆļø Letās Get It Right This Time
We say we want victims to report.
We say we want the truth.
We say we want justice.
But if we want those things, then we must also want:
Survivor-centered support, even when the case is messy.
Trauma-informed processes that donāt retraumatize.
Laws that understand the nuances of sexual violence.
Systems that donāt expect people to remain broken and compliant in order to be believed.
Until then, many Survivors will take it all backānot because they were lying.
But because they were losing themselves.
And if youāve never felt that kind of loss, consider yourself blessed.
But do not assume that your distance gives you clarity.
It gives you comfort.
Thatās not the same thing.
š¬ If this moved you, please feel free to share it. Use your voice. Use your reach.
Because Survivors donāt need pity. They need power.