this blog is something i’ve been sitting with for months, trying to articulate: it’s about taylor swift, our favorite pop sensation who can turn a breakup into a billboard hit, but also about so much more…

it baffles me that some women take issue with taylor writing about her relationships, her exes, the breakups, and choose to judge her negatively for speaking out. you’d think they’d be cheering her on for making millions off her heartache, but instead, there’s judgment, eye-rolling, and whispers that maybe she should just keep quiet about it.

that judgment? it’s not just about taylor. it’s about something bigger, something lurking in the shadows of our collective consciousness: internalized misogyny.

it’s part of a long history of silencing women, of telling them to keep quiet about their experiences, especially when it comes to relationships.

never be so polite you forget your power.

men have been writing about their exes since, well, forever. and when they do, they’re hailed as poetic geniuses, chroniclers of the human condition. but when taylor swift does it, suddenly it’s “oh, she’s so petty,” or “why can’t she just move on?” the double standard is glaring, but somehow, it keeps slipping under the radar.

it’s like this: women have been trained – by society, by culture, by history – to keep their emotions in check, to not make a fuss, especially over a man. when swift refuses to follow those unspoken rules, it ruffles feathers. and not just any feathers: women’s feathers. because deep down, many of us have internalized the idea that a “good” woman doesn’t make her private life public.

the best people in life are free.

here’s the thing: internalized misogyny is sneaky. it’s that voice inside that tells women to play nice, to not air their dirty laundry, to keep their emotions under wraps. so when taylor swift takes a bad breakup and turns it into a number-one hit, some women cringe. not because there’s anything wrong with what she’s doing, but because they’ve been taught women aren’t supposed to do that. they’re not supposed to make a scene.

and let’s be real, taylor is making a scene – a glorious, chart-topping, grammy-winning scene. but for some women, that scene breaks all the rules they’ve been taught to follow, and instead of questioning the rules (or their beliefs), they question her.

women love hunting witches, too.

this isn’t anything new. women have a long history of persecuting other women for doing things they aren’t bold or brave enough to do. taylor swift doesn’t just get flak for writing about her exes – she gets flak for having exes in the first place. the narrative goes something like this: if a woman has too many relationships, she’s somehow less. less respectable, less desirable, less everything. it’s a twisted, outdated idea that a woman’s worth is tied to her romantic history.

and who’s dishing out this judgment? often, it’s other women. it’s a textbook case of internalized misogyny – women absorbing the same toxic messages that have been used to control them for generations and then turning those messages on each other.

people throw rocks at things that shine.

here’s the kicker: in all the criticism taylor faces, how often do we talk about the guys she’s writing about? not much. instead, the spotlight stays on her, as if her reaction to their behavior is the real problem. the guy could have been a jerk, a cheater, or just plain absent, but somehow, it’s taylor’s response that gets all the attention.

this is classic internalized misogyny at work – shifting the focus from a man’s bad behavior to a woman’s emotional response. it’s a tale as old as time: blame the woman, excuse the man. and when other women buy into this narrative, they’re reinforcing a system that’s been holding them down for centuries.

i could build a castle out of all the bricks they threw at me.

so, what’s taylor swift really doing when she writes about her exes? she’s owning her narrative. she’s refusing to be silenced, to be shamed, or to play by anyone else’s rules. she’s turning her personal experiences into art that resonates with millions, and in doing so, she’s challenging the very norms that some women have internalized.

i don’t regret it one bit cuz he had it coming.

next time you hear someone say taylor swift should stop writing about her exes, take a second to think about where that’s coming from. is it really about her music? or is it about something deeper, something that’s been ingrained in us without us even realizing it?

internalized misogyny is a powerful thing. but the more we talk about it, the less power it has. and maybe, just maybe, we can start giving women the space to tell their stories – no matter how messy, emotional, or public they might be. because if there’s one thing taylor swift has taught us, it’s that there’s nothing more powerful than owning your story, no matter what anyone else thinks.

now, to the women rolling their eyes at taylor’s lyrics and turning up their noses at her success: it’s laughable, really. imagine getting mad at a woman for making millions off emotional labor while half the world suffers in silence. ladies, where is your business acumen? taylor’s out here signing record deals with her tear-stained stationery, while you’re busy clutching pearls over things you wish you had the guts to say yourself.

One thought on “i don’t cater to all these vipers.

  1. It’s almost hilarious how some women will be the first to sharpen their pitchforks when another woman dares to step out of line, especially when it comes to airing her heartbreak in public. Instead of standing in solidarity, they’ll circle up, huddle together, and whisper behind cupped hands like they’re at some Mean Girls convention. But let’s be honest, it’s not whispering. It’s full-on, high-volume judgment, with a dash of hypocrisy for good measure. Because, really, what’s more cringe-worthy: a woman publicly processing her emotions through a Grammy-winning album or the quiet clique pretending they’ve got their lives so together they’ve never so much as sent an angry text to their ex?

    These women act like they’ve been deputized by some invisible committee to police other women’s behavior. They’ll take one look at Taylor Swift singing about an ex and think, “Ugh, there she goes again,” as if they wouldn’t pull the same move if given half a chance. They’ve been spoon-fed this nonsense that a “respectable” woman stays quiet, doesn’t complain, and God forbid she express any real feelings that don’t fit in a tidy little box labeled “acceptable.”

    What’s truly rich is that these women think they’re better than the ones out there owning their emotions, putting them on display, turning them into art—or at the very least, a relatable Instagram post. They’d rather sit on their high horse, hurling side-eyes at anyone who doesn’t play by the outdated, patriarchal rules. Newsflash, your judgment isn’t righteousness; it’s insecurity with a mask on. You can almost hear their internal dialogue: “If she can talk about her ex like that, what does it say about me for keeping quiet?” And that’s it, right? The fear that maybe they’re the ones who’ve been doing it wrong. That maybe, just maybe, the real strength is in being unapologetically vulnerable. But instead of admitting that, they lash out. Classic.

    These women love to throw shade at Taylor or anyone like her, but if you handed them a microphone and an album deal, they’d be in the studio faster than you could say “revenge track.” Instead of turning their scorn toward the real problem—oh, I don’t know, the men who treat women like disposable emotional support systems, they aim it at the women calling them out.

    So, to the women who attack other women for being too loud, too emotional, too much – just admit you’re uncomfortable with women who refuse to shrink themselves to fit your fragile expectations. Maybe the real problem isn’t Taylor Swift’s breakup songs, but the fact that some of you still think being quiet, submissive, and “perfect” is the goal. Wake up. Being a woman doesn’t mean adhering to a script that’s been written by a society hell-bent on keeping us small. If you think a woman is “too much,” maybe you should be asking why you’ve been conditioned to believe you should be so little.

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