For friends & family
When someone you love turns to you, how you respond matters.
If a loved one has confided in you about sexual violence, your steady, believing presence can be the beginning of their healing. This is a guide for showing up — with the right words, careful listening, and care for yourself, too.
How to help
Four ways to be there — with care and intention.
Listen without judgement
Allow them to speak without interruption until they are done. Thank them for trusting you with their story and assure them you do not doubt it. Remind them — gently and clearly — that this experience was not their fault. Offer to help them access resources, but let them decide what to do next, and support whatever they choose.
Choose affirming responses
Let them know you believe what they are telling you and that you do not blame them for what happened. A few phrases that help:
Offer ongoing support & resources
Do not make promises you may not be able to keep. If you’re not able to offer ongoing support, suggest other places they can turn. If you are able and willing to be part of their healing process, here are gentle ways to open that door:
When it feels right, encourage your loved one to contact our 24/7 Helpline at (410) 857-7322 — or to walk in for assistance.
Take time for self-care afterwards
Responses to avoid
Even with the best intentions, some responses can cause harm.
A supportive response can make an enormous positive difference. A hurtful one — even if unintentional — can be damaging or re-traumatizing. If you’ve responded in any of these ways before, you can still be supportive moving forward. Please reach out for yourself if you need it, too.
Do not try to take control away from the victim-survivor
Do not blame the victim
Keep the focus on them
Don’t share your own story at this time unless they specifically ask and you feel safe doing so. Don’t compare their experience to your own or to others you’ve heard of. Don’t press for more details than they choose to share. Don’t respond in an overly angry or upset manner — this puts pressure on the victim-survivor to manage your reaction on top of their own. Seek help for yourself at another time.
Avoid harmful language
Try to avoid
- “It couldn’t have happened that way.”
- “You have to report this and press charges right away.”
- “I’m so mad at them. I can’t believe they did that!”
- “I am devastated. This is an awful story to hear.”
- “Let’s talk about something else less upsetting for you.”
- “You just need to ______ and it will be fine.”
Try instead
- “I believe you. Thank you for telling me.”
- “Whatever you decide to do next, I’ll support you.”
- “I’m here. Take whatever time you need.”
- “Thank you for trusting me with this.”
- “Would you like to keep talking, or take a pause?”
- “What would feel most supportive right now?”
Support is available for you, too.
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