When Words and Actions Don’t Match: Why Women Must Trust What People Do, Not Just What They Say

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When Words and Actions Don’t Match: Why Women Must Trust What People Do, Not Just What They Say

For years now, a message has echoed across schools, workplaces, and social media campaigns: Be kind.Be nicer.Be more understanding.Be m

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For years now, a message has echoed across schools, workplaces, and social media campaigns:

Be kind.
Be nicer.
Be more understanding.
Be more compassionate.

On the surface, kindness is a beautiful value. Many women already live by it. Women raise children, care for elders, nurture communities, volunteer, mediate conflicts, and hold families together.

Yet something strange happens when we look closely at who these campaigns are aimed at.

The message so often lands squarely on the shoulders of women and girls.

Women are told to soften their tone.
Women are told to be more patient.
Women are told to give people the benefit of the doubt.

Meanwhile, a simple reality sits quietly in the background:

Across nearly every country on earth, males commit the overwhelming majority of violent crimes — including homicide, assault, and sexual violence.
This is documented consistently in global crime statistics.

And yet the cultural pressure continues to fall on women to be nicer.

Not safer.
Not wiser.
Not more discerning.

Nicer.

At some point, women begin to notice the gap between what people say and what people actually do.

Words are easy.

Behavior tells the truth.

This is the wisdom behind the feeling so many women carry when they hear songs like “I Can’t Believe What You Say.”

Because every woman eventually learns the lesson hidden in that lyric:

Sometimes a person’s mouth tells one story, while their actions tell another.

And when that happens, actions deserve our attention.


Watching Actions Instead of Apologies

Women have long been trained to listen to explanations.

He didn’t mean it.
He’s just stressed.
He’s going through something.
He didn’t understand.

But explanations cannot erase patterns.

A pattern of disrespect.
A pattern of intimidation.
A pattern of manipulation.
A pattern of violence.

Kindness should never require women to ignore reality.

True kindness begins with truth.


A Different Kind of Kindness

Women are not the least compassionate people on earth. Quite the opposite.

But compassion without boundaries becomes permission.

And permission is exactly what harmful people rely on.

So perhaps the message women need is not “be kinder.”

Perhaps the message is:

Be wiser.
Be observant.
Be rooted in truth.

Kindness that protects life is sacred.

Kindness that silences women is something else entirely.


Affirmations Inspired by I Can’t Believe What You Say

Let these words settle where they need to.

• I trust what people do, not just what they say.

• I honor the wisdom that rises in my body when something feels wrong.

• My awareness is not cruelty. It is clarity.

• I no longer confuse politeness with safety.

• My discernment is a form of protection.

• Words without consistent action no longer persuade me.

• I am allowed to step back when behavior contradicts promises.

• I recognize patterns early and respond with wisdom.

• I am not responsible for maintaining comfort around harmful behavior.

• My kindness will never require me to abandon my safety.

• I listen carefully to actions, because actions reveal truth.

• My intuition has survived more than doubt ever will.


A Quiet Shift

Something powerful is happening in many women right now.

A quiet shift.

Women are beginning to observe more carefully.
Listen more closely.
Trust their instincts sooner.

Not because they have become less kind.

But because they have become more awake.

And awakening always begins the same way:

A woman stops arguing with reality.

She watches.

She notices.

And she finally believes what she sees.


Closing Reflection

When words and behavior disagree, the truth is never hiding in the sentence.

It is always visible in the pattern.

And women everywhere are learning to read those patterns with clear eyes.

Survivor Affirmations
WeSurviveAbuse.com

….I am closed to any prompting, pushing, or persuading around “being kind”.

I am a kind person who LOVES doing for others, but people prompting or trying to persuade me, is now officially a red flag.

Go sell it on a big male mountain somewhere. They could use more kindness campaigns over there.

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