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Pressure of being strong all the time

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There is a quiet expectation placed on many women, that strength is not a choice, but a requirement.
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There is a quiet expectation placed on many women, that strength is not a choice, but a requirement. It is not the kind of strength that is celebrated loudly or rewarded generously. It is a silent endurance, a constant holding together of things that might otherwise fall apart. Over time, this expectation becomes so deeply ingrained that many women begin to measure their worth by how much they can endure without breaking.

Strength is not a negative quality. It can be empowering, grounding and necessary in moments of crisis. The problem arises when strength is no longer something a woman can step into and out of, but something she is expected to always embody.

 There is little room for softness, for uncertainty or for rest. Vulnerability becomes a luxury rather than a natural part of being human. From a young age, many girls are taught to be resilient. They are told to endure pain quietly, to prioritise others and to remain composed even when overwhelmed. As they grow older, these lessons follow them into adulthood. In workplaces, they are expected to perform without complaint. In families, they often become the emotional anchors. In communities, they are relied upon to give, support and sustain. The message is clear, even when it is not spoken directly. You must be strong, because everything depends on you.

What is often overlooked is the cost of this constant strength. Carrying emotional, social and sometimes financial burdens without pause can lead to deep exhaustion. It can create a sense of isolation, where a woman feels she has no space to express her struggles, because she is always the one others turn to. Over time, this can erode mental and emotional well-being. The pressure to remain strong can make it difficult to ask for help, even when it is desperately needed.

There is also a danger in how society romanticises this kind of endurance. Women who push through pain without complaint are praised as inspiring. Their struggles are admired from a distance, but rarely lightened. This admiration can become another layer of pressure, reinforcing the idea that showing vulnerability would somehow diminish their strength. It is this very expectation that traps many women in cycles of silent suffering.

The idea that strength must be constant also ignores the full range of human experience. No one is meant to be unbreakable. Emotions like fear, sadness and uncertainty are not signs of weakness. They are signals that something needs attention, care or change. Denying these emotions does not make them disappear. It only pushes them deeper, where they can grow into burnout, resentment or even despair. There is a growing need to redefine what strength looks like. True strength should include the ability to rest, to say no and to acknowledge when things are too heavy to carry alone. It should make space for honesty, for moments of collapse and for rebuilding. Strength is not just about endurance. It is also about self-awareness and self-preservation.

Creating this shift requires both personal and collective change. On a personal level, women can begin by questioning the expectations they have internalised. It is not easy to unlearn the belief that one must always be strong, especially when it has been reinforced for years. However, small steps can make a difference. Allowing oneself to feel without judgment, asking for support and setting boundaries are powerful acts that challenge this narrative.

On a broader level, society must also reconsider how it supports women. This means moving beyond admiration and offering real support, whether through equitable workplaces, shared responsibilities at home or accessible mental health resources. It also means normalising vulnerability, so that women do not feel they must hide their struggles to be respected.

The pressure to be strong all the time is not a badge of honour. It is a weight that many carry in silence. Recognising this is the first step towards change. When strength is redefined to include rest, honesty and support, it becomes something that sustains rather than depletes. In that shift, women are given the space not just to survive, but to live fully and authentically.

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