
How Women Can Speak Up Against Abuse and Seek Help
While every survivor’s journey is unique, breaking the silence can be the beginning of healing, justice, and recovery.
Understanding Abuse Beyond Physical Violence
When many people hear the word abuse, they often think only of physical violence. However, abuse can take many forms, including emotional, psychological, financial, verbal, sexual, and digital abuse.
A person may be experiencing abuse if they are constantly intimidated, threatened, isolated, manipulated, humiliated, controlled, or harmed by another individual. In many cases, the signs are not visible to others, making it even more difficult for survivors to seek support.
Recognizing abusive behavior is often the first step toward reclaiming personal safety and dignity.
Why Many Women Remain Silent
One of the biggest challenges in addressing abuse is the culture of silence that surrounds it.
Many women remain silent because of:
- Fear of retaliation
- Financial dependence
- Social stigma
- Family pressure
- Fear of not being believed
- Concerns about children
- Emotional attachment to the abuser
- Lack of awareness about available support systems
Some survivors are repeatedly told to endure suffering for the sake of maintaining relationships, family reputation, or social acceptance. Unfortunately, such advice can place women at greater risk.
No individual should be forced to choose between personal safety and societal expectations.
Speaking Up Is an Act of Strength
How Women Can Seek Help Safely

Seeking help may feel overwhelming, especially during difficult circumstances. However, there are practical steps women can take to improve their safety and access support.
Reach Out to Someone You Trust
Confiding in a trusted friend, family member, mentor, religious leader, or counselor can provide emotional support and guidance.
Survivors do not need to face abuse alone. Sometimes a single conversation can open the door to meaningful assistance.
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Document Incidents When Possible
Keeping records of abusive behavior may be useful when seeking professional support or legal intervention.
This may include:
- Written notes
- Text messages
- Emails
- Photographs
- Medical reports
Documentation can help establish patterns of behavior and strengthen reports where necessary.
Contact Support Organizations
Numerous organizations and advocacy groups work to support survivors of abuse through counseling, legal assistance, shelter services, and awareness programs.
Organizations focused on women’s rights and survivor protection can provide valuable information and resources tailored to individual situations.
Seek Professional Counseling
Abuse often leaves emotional wounds that may persist long after physical harm has ended.
Professional counselors and mental health specialists can help survivors process trauma, rebuild confidence, and develop coping strategies for recovery.
Healing is not a sign that the abuse never happened; it is evidence that a survivor is choosing to move forward.
The Role of Communities in Ending Abuse
Addressing abuse is not solely the responsibility of survivors.
Families, communities, institutions, religious organizations, schools, workplaces, and policymakers all have important roles to play in creating safer environments.
Communities can support survivors by:
- Listening without judgment
- Believing survivors
- Promoting awareness
- Reporting abuse when necessary
- Encouraging access to professional support
- Challenging harmful cultural norms
Creating a culture where women feel safe to speak up requires collective action and long-term commitment.
Empowering Women Through Awareness
It is through education that it has been proven that society can also play the biggest part in curbing the abuse of women.
Women know their rights and how to spot an abuse, when this awareness reaches women, they are less likely to suffer or allow their sisters, friends or even neighbours to be abused.
The programs of raising awareness, advocacy groups, community awareness and public enlightenment activities, still play and continue to play an enormous role for women in every section of the society.
And so advocates like Foluke Daramola will continue to use their celebrity and influence to generate discourse that tackles the culture of silence.

































