Monday, May 4, 2026

Feminist betrayal


A false abuse claim between women is its own kind of violence. It takes the sacred language real survivors fought to be believed in and turns it into a weapon. It does not just wound the woman accused. It poisons the well for every woman who will have to tell the truth after her.


And that’s the part I can’t get past.


Because this isn’t just about a bad breakup. It isn’t just about hurt feelings, bruised egos, or two people walking away with different versions of what happened. People are allowed to be hurt. People are allowed to say, “That relationship damaged me.” People are allowed to grieve, rage, collapse, and rebuild. Nobody gets to define another person’s pain for them.


But there is a line.


And falsely calling another woman abusive crosses it.


That is not healing. That is not truth-telling. That is not feminism. That is character assassination dressed in therapy language. It is a lie wearing the clothes of survival. It is taking the most serious words we have for power, harm, control, fear, coercion, and violence, and using them as a public relations strategy after love goes wrong.


And when one woman does that to another woman, the betrayal is especially filthy.


Because women fought for decades to have abuse believed. Women lost families, reputations, homes, children, jobs, safety, and sometimes their lives trying to say, “This happened to me.” They were called dramatic. Crazy. Vindictive. Bitter. Unstable. They were told they provoked it, imagined it, exaggerated it, invited it, or misunderstood it. They were told to keep quiet for the sake of the family. For the sake of the children. For the sake of appearances. For the sake of the man. For the sake of everybody but themselves.


So when a woman reaches into that sacred language and uses it falsely against another woman, she is not just hurting one person. She is robbing the women who needed that language to survive.


I know what real abuse does.


I know the story of the sister who was sexually abused by her brother, then further abused by her parents ignoring the abuse, and then walked into adulthood carrying wounds nobody protected her from. And because nobody protected her, because nobody named it clearly enough, because nobody stood between her and the damage, she kept finding herself in the orbit of people who harmed her again. Partner after partner. Pattern after pattern. Not because she was weak. Not because she wanted it. But because unhealed abuse teaches the nervous system a terrible language. It teaches danger as familiarity. It teaches neglect as normal. It teaches love as something you earn by enduring.


That is abuse.


That is the real thing.


That is the kind of story that should make every decent person stop talking and listen.


So when someone uses that same language because a relationship ended badly, because they do not want to look at their own behavior, because it is easier to cast themselves as the wounded party than admit they participated in the wreckage, it is obscene.


It is a disservice to real survivors.


It makes their truth harder to carry into the room.


Every false claim hands ammunition to the very people who already did not want to believe women in the first place. Every counterfeit wound gives the cynics a reason to smirk. Every borrowed bruise makes the next survivor explain herself twice as hard. It does not stay contained inside one relationship. It spreads. It stains the language. It turns sacred testimony into suspect performance.


And yes, I know the predictable response.


“You don’t get to define my pain.”


Fine.


I don’t.


But you don’t get to falsely define me as your abuser just because you are in pain.


But what makes the claim even more exposing is when every means to walk away was available at all times.


Physical. Mental. Familial. Financial.


She had support. She had options. She had somewhere to go. She had people who would have received her, defended her, helped her, and believed her. She was not trapped in the way real victims are so often trapped. She was not isolated from the world. She was not financially dependent. She was not physically restrained. She was not being held inside the relationship by children, housing, threats, poverty, or fear of survival.


She had every exit.


And still, after the fact, she reached for the language of captivity.


That matters. Not because every person with resources is safe. Not because abuse only counts when someone is poor, dependent, or locked in a room. Abuse can happen inside wealth, education, mobility, family support, and respectable neighborhoods. But when someone had every practical means to leave and later describes herself as powerless, trapped, bullied, and abused, the story deserves a harder look.


Because sometimes that language is not confession.


Sometimes it is strategy.


Sometimes it is not the truth of what happened.


Sometimes it is the costume a person puts on so she never has to answer for why she stayed, what she did, what she wanted, what she controlled, and what she broke.


And let’s be honest about another thing: some people mistake intensity for danger.


I use my voice effusively. I talk with force. I talk with feeling. I come from a world where emphasis is not automatically aggression, where a strong voice does not mean a violent spirit, where passion is not the same thing as threat. Some people hear volume and call it yelling. Some people hear urgency and call it bullying. Some people hear emotional force and decide they have been attacked.


But being overwhelmed by someone’s intensity is not the same thing as being abused by them.


There is a difference between a voice that fills the room and a voice used to control the room. There is a difference between expression and domination. There is a difference between being uncomfortable and being unsafe.


And adults have a responsibility to know that difference before they put a word like abuse in their mouth.


You don’t get to take your heartbreak, your shame, your disappointment, your resentment, your projection, and build a gallows out of it. You don’t get to call yourself a survivor if what you survived was being disappointed by someone who would not keep playing the role you assigned them. You don’t get to weaponize feminist language because you need the breakup to leave you morally spotless.


Pain does not make every story true.


Trauma language does not make every accusation righteous.


And being hurt does not give you permission to destroy another woman’s name.


That’s the part people do not want to say out loud anymore. We have become so afraid of doubting a claim that we have forgotten false accusation is also a form of harm. And when the accusation is abuse, the harm is not small. That word changes the air around a person. It follows them. It enters rooms before they do. It turns mutual friends into judges. It makes silence look like guilt and self-defense look like proof. It puts the accused woman in an impossible position: deny it and sound defensive, stay quiet and look guilty, explain it and get accused of manipulation.


That is not accountability.


That is a social execution.


And for what?


So someone can leave a relationship without examining themselves?


So they can turn their own cruelty into self-protection?


So they can recast the other woman as dangerous and herself as brave?


No. That is not bravery. That is cowardice with better vocabulary.


A feminist betrayal happens when a woman takes the collective struggle of women to be believed and uses it as a shield for her own dishonesty. It happens when she knows the culture is more prepared now to hear words like abuse, trauma, narcissism, gaslighting, coercion, and harm, and she uses those words not because they are true, but because they work.


That is the ugliest part.


The words work.


They are designed to make people pause. They are supposed to. They carry weight because real people suffered under the things those words describe. They carry the voices of women who whispered into police reports, therapists’ offices, courtrooms, kitchens, hospital rooms, shelters, and late-night phone calls. They carry the dead. They carry the women who were not believed until it was too late.


So to use those words falsely is not just lying.


It is theft.


It steals credibility from real survivors. It steals safety from the next woman. It steals dignity from the accused. It steals the moral seriousness from the conversation. It turns feminism into a weapon of convenience instead of a discipline of truth.


And I am inside this story.


I am not watching from some distant, intellectual place. I am not writing about a hypothetical woman in a hypothetical breakup. I know what it feels like to be falsely cast in a role that does not belong to me. I know what it feels like to have someone try to make herself cleaner by making me monstrous. I know what it feels like to have the language of abuse pointed at me like a gun.


And I do not see how being falsely accused of abuse is some minor inconvenience compared with other kinds of harm.


It changes your body. It changes your sleep. It changes how you walk through the world. It makes you review every conversation, every text, every moment, looking for the place where the lie found its costume. It makes you want to defend yourself and disappear at the same time. It makes you furious because the accusation is false, and sick because the accusation is serious.


There is a special kind of helplessness in being accused by someone committed to her own innocence.


Because the story is already built.


She is the wounded one.


You are the danger.


And once those roles are handed out, the truth has to fight its way uphill.


I am not saying real abuse claims should be doubted by default. I am saying false ones are not harmless. I am saying we have to be mature enough, honest enough, and brave enough to hold two truths at once: real survivors deserve to be believed, protected, and heard, and false accusations are a profound violation.


That should not be hard.


That should be the foundation.


Because feminism that cannot tell the difference between truth and performance is not feminism. It is branding. It is tribal protection. It is a costume rack where anyone can grab the outfit that gets them the most sympathy.


Real feminism does not require women to lie for each other.


Real feminism does not require one woman to be sacrificed so another woman can avoid accountability.


Real feminism does not mean every accusation is holy.


Real feminism means telling the truth even when the liar is a woman.


Especially then.


Because if we cannot say that, then we are not protecting survivors. We are protecting narratives. We are protecting whoever gets to the microphone first. We are protecting the person most fluent in the language of harm, not necessarily the person most harmed.


And real survivors deserve better than that.


The sister who was abused by her brother, ignored by her parents, and then abused again by future partners deserves better than that. She deserves language that has not been cheapened by people using it to win breakups. She deserves a world where her story lands with the gravity it deserves. She deserves to be heard without the shadow of someone else’s lie standing behind her.


That is why this matters.


Not because every breakup needs a courtroom.


Not because pain needs to be measured with a ruler.


But because some words are sacred because of what they cost.


Abuse is one of them.


Survivor is one of them.


Violence is one of them.


And when a woman falsely uses those words against another woman, she is not just telling a lie.


She is betraying the women who bled to make those words believable.

Sunday, May 3, 2026

Store Dread

I only need blueberries,

maybe eggs,

and something green 

to make me feel like a citizen.


But my palms hear “grocery store”

and immediately file a complaint.


My bowels,

dramatic little union workers,

call an emergency meeting.


Apparently we are not

“running errands.”

We are entering

a fluorescent battlefield

with carts that wobble and shriek,

children that shriek and wobble,

and one man blocking the tomatoes

like he’s never seen one.


I haven’t even found my shoes yet

and my body is already

writing its will.


“Tell the birds I’ll miss them,”

says my stomach.


“Wear some underwear,”

says my colon.


Meanwhile my brain is trying to be reasonable.


It’s just a store.

You’ve been to stores.

You know how stores work.


Yes, says my nervous system,

but have you considered

the parking lot?


Have you considered

the person who stands

in the exact middle of the aisle

reading ranch dressing labels

like they contain prophecy?


Have you considered

the cashier asking,

“Find everything okay?”

when the answer is obviously,

“No, Brenda,

I lost my will to live

somewhere near the cauliflower.”


Still, I go.


Brave as hell.

List in hand.

Credit card tucked away.

Face arranged

into something that says

stable adult woman

and not

raccoon entering Aldi

during a solar flare.


I buy the bananas.

I buy the eggs.

I buy the green thing.


I forget the one item

I actually came for.


Naturally.


But I make it home,

which counts.


The palms calm down.

The bowels cancel the strike.

The nervous system removes

its helmet.


And there I stand

in my kitchen,

victorious,

holding parsley

when I needed cilantro


thinking:


close enough,

you little goddess of survival,

close enough.