A safe space to share & grow: Discover support, healing, and hope—together.

To Think A No Means Yes Survivor's Poem, Taylored Grace Support

To Think A ‘No’ Means ‘Yes’

Posted by:

|

On:

|

Black and White Photo of Woman Sitting on Grass Reflecting on Healing and Boundaries
(Photo By Renzu Media LLC)

Trigger Warning: This poem contains references to sexual coercion, boundary violations, and childhood abuse, which may be distressing for some readers. Please take care of your heart while reading, and step away if you need to.

Featured Survivor’s Poem on Confusion, Conditioning, Coercion, & Consent

This poem explores the complexities of consent and the internal conflict that can make a firm “no” feel unsafe or uncertain for survivors of abuse.

May this survivor’s poem remind you that your experiences matter and that there is strength in speaking your truth. Healing takes courage, and every step toward reclaiming your boundaries is a step toward your freedom.

To Think A No Means Yes

Do I turn you on

The depth beneath my eyes

When I stare at you straight on

Is it an invitation

Does no mean yes

Is it the fear my father instilled

When he restrained my arms

When I was crying out to escape

Is it the way I rest my head

On your bed

Is it the demons submerged between our skin

Is it your biological nature

To think a no means yes

Is it my mothers empathy

That sees the good in others

The maternal need to soothe pain

Is it the softness that is your seduction

My naive inner child that laughs at the game

When no fades to okay

julez.r.forever

Let’s Talk

After reading this brave survivor’s poem let’s reflect…

What insights or practices have supported you in rebuilding trust in your own ‘no’ after experiences that made it feel confusing or unsafe?
I’d love to hear from you in Community Voices discussion.

Want to share your own writing or story?

Submissions are open—feel free to send in your work (poetry, letters, prayers, reflections, or survivor stories).
You can remain anonymous or include your name if you’d prefer the credit, whatever feels most comfortable.

Email me at contact@tayloredgrace.org

With love and grace,
Madison Taylore

Posted by

in