✊ Stop Victim-Blaming. Start Listening.
“What were you wearing?”
“Why didn’t you fight back?”
“Were you drunk?”
“Are you sure that really happened?”
These are not questions of support.
They are loaded with suspicion, often asked not to understand—but to discredit.
These questions are part of a systemic culture of victim-blaming, especially when the victim is a woman, a queer person, or someone who doesn’t “fit” what society imagines a “perfect victim” should be.
Victim-blaming is a silent accomplice to gender-based violence.
It tells survivors: “You could’ve prevented this,” instead of holding perpetrators accountable.
It isolates. It silences. It kills.
Victim-blaming is one of the most persistent and damaging attitudes in cases of gender-based violence (GBV). It occurs when the responsibility for the abuse is shifted from the perpetrator to the survivor, often through insinuations that they “asked for it” because of how they dressed, where they went, how much they drank, or how they behaved. This mindset is deeply rooted in patriarchal and misogynistic systems, and it thrives in cultures that normalize violence against women and LGBTQ+ individuals.
📊 1. Prevalence of Gender-Based Violence (Philippines and Beyond)
According to the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA), about 1 in 4 women aged 15–49 has experienced physical, emotional, or sexual violence from a partner. However, only 1 in 3 of these women ever sought help. Among those who did, most turned to family rather than the police or justice system, citing shame, fear of retaliation, or fear of being blamed as barriers to seeking legal action.
Source: Philippine Statistics Authority. (2023). 2017 National Demographic and Health Survey.
Globally, UN Women reports that more than 1 in 3 women has experienced physical or sexual violence in their lifetime, primarily by an intimate partner. In addition, fewer than 40% of survivors seek help, and less than 10% go to the police.
Source: UN Women. (2022). Facts and figures: Ending violence against women.
🧠 2. The Role of Rape Culture and Myths
Victim-blaming stems from rape myths—widely held but false beliefs about rape, such as:
"She was asking for it because of how she dressed."
"He didn’t say no, so it wasn’t really rape."
"People lie about being assaulted for attention."
These myths are not just ignorant—they are dangerous. They lead to survivors being doubted, mocked, or even retraumatized when they speak up. Worse, they allow perpetrators to go unpunished. In fact, in many cultures (including the Philippines), victims are often blamed more harshly than perpetrators, especially if they are women, LGBTQ+, or sex workers.
A 2021 study by the Center for Women’s Resources (CWR) in the Philippines revealed that:
Majority of reported rape victims were young girls and teenagers.
Many rape victims were blamed by authorities, questioned about their motives, or dismissed outright.
There was a pattern of impunity, especially in cases involving men in power (e.g., police officers, politicians, or family members).
💡 3. The Psychological Impact of Victim-Blaming
Victim-blaming contributes to secondary victimization—where the survivor experiences trauma not just from the assault, but from the reactions of those around them. This includes being blamed, dismissed, or disbelieved by the police, community, media, or even family and friends.
Survivors who are blamed are less likely to report their experiences, more likely to self-blame, and more likely to suffer from depression, PTSD, and suicidal thoughts.
According to a 2020 paper in the Asian Journal of Psychiatry:
Victim-blaming correlates with higher levels of psychological distress in survivors.
Cultural values such as hiya (shame) and pakikisama (keeping harmony) discourage Filipinas from speaking out, fearing judgment and ostracization.
🌈 4. A Gender-Inclusive Approach
Victim-blaming is especially harsh for non-cisgender and non-heterosexual survivors. Trans and queer individuals face compounded discrimination, where their identities are questioned and their stories doubted.
LGBTQ+ survivors are more likely to be ridiculed or invalidated when reporting abuse.
In cases of male victims, harmful gender norms (“Men can't be raped”) contribute to silence and stigma.
The Philippine-based organization Lunas Collective emphasizes the need for intersectional survivor support, especially for LGBTQ+ youth. Their anonymous online chats show that most victims are unsure whether what happened to them even counts as abuse—because no one ever taught them what consent really means.
📢 5. What Needs to Change
Victim-blaming won’t end through silence. It must be replaced with:
Comprehensive sex and consent education at all levels.
Survivor-centered language in media and legal systems.
Bystander intervention training in schools, workplaces, and communities.
Stronger legal protections and gender sensitivity training for authorities.
Safe spaces (both online and offline) for survivors to speak out.
By challenging victim-blaming and confronting rape myths, we move toward a society where survivors are believed, supported, and never made to feel at fault.
Clothes don’t cause assault. People do.
Consent must be enthusiastic, ongoing, and sober. Anything less is not consent.
Survivors do not owe us perfect stories. They do not need bruises to prove trauma.
No one “deserves” to be violated ever.
🌸 If someone shares their story with you...
Don’t ask what they were wearing.
Don’t ask why they didn’t scream.
Just say:
🫂 “I believe you.”
🫂 “It’s not your fault.”
🫂 “Thank you for trusting me.”
💡 Why this advocacy matters to me:
As a student of Gender and Society, I’ve come to understand how violence against marginalized genders is not just physical—it’s embedded in our jokes, our laws, our silences.
It happens in dorms, on campuses, in group chats, in homes.
This advocacy isn’t about one story—it’s about the hundreds that never get told.
Because shame and stigma keep survivors quiet.
I don’t want to live in a world where survivors carry their trauma and everyone else’s disbelief.
I want to live in a world where survivors are believed, not broken.
Don’t laugh at “rape jokes.” Call them out.
Educate your friends and family on consent.
Support survivor-centered organizations (like Lunas Collective, Women’s Crisis Center PH, Gabriela, and more).
Share stories. Share posts. Keep the conversation going.
Because when we stop listening, we allow violence to go unchallenged.
But when we speak up, share, and advocate—we change something.
Maybe not the world all at once—but someone’s world. And that’s enough.
📲 Reblog this. Talk about it. Share the truth. Help unlearn the lie that survivors are to blame.
💬 To everyone who has survived something they never asked for:
You are not dirty. You are not broken. You are not at fault.
You are brave. You are loved. You are believed. 💬
#StopVictimBlaming #GenderEquality #FeministPhilippines #ListenToSurvivors #ConsentMatters #TumblrActivism #GED109 #AdvocacyPost