882 view

40+ Women don’t owe you pretty quotes by Florence Given

Explore empowering “Women don’t owe you pretty quotes” by Florence Given in this collection of 40+ inspiring and thought-provoking statements. Discover a powerful perspective on self-worth and beauty that challenges societal norms with Emily E. Garrison!

Top women don’t owe you pretty quotes by Florence Given

Top women don't owe you pretty quotes by Florence Given
Top women don’t owe you pretty quotes by Florence Given

Discover empowering “Women Don’t Owe You Pretty quotes” by Florence Given. Uncover inspiring words that challenge societal norms and redefine beauty standards. Explore the wisdom of top women who embrace their authenticity and inner strength.

  1. “But remember that anyone who tells you you’re “too” anything is using the word because they are threatened by your capacity to grow, evolve and express your emotions.” ― Florence Given, Women Don’t Owe You Pretty
  2. “Choosing yourself will always disappoint some people. The sooner we accept this and make peace with it, the better.” ― Florence Given, Women Don’t Owe You Pretty
  3. “Temporary discomfort is an investment in your future self. Accept a small and uncomfortable transition now, for a lifetime of growth and self-development.”
  4. “Stop breaking yourself down into bite-sized pieces. Stay whole and let them choke.” –” ― Florence Given, Women Don’t Owe You Pretty
  5. “You are not a source of energy for others to take. This is your table, you set the standards and you choose who gets a seat. Start turning away people who have the audacity to show up in your life with crumbs, because crumbs can’t feed you. Find someone who brings you a whole cake.” ― Florence Given, Women Don’t Owe You Pretty
  6. “Promise yourself to stop buying into people’s potential. You’re not a start-up investor.” ― Florence Given, Women Don’t Owe You Pretty
  7. “The world owes you nothing, and equally you owe it nothing.” ― Florence Given, Women Don’t Owe You Pretty
  8. “Imagine all of the past versions of yourself, standing right in front of you. They are all smiling, looking back at you. They are so proud of you.” ― Florence Given, Women Don’t Owe You Pretty
  9. “uncomfortable and liberating – exactly what growth is supposed to feel like.” ― Florence Given, Women Don’t Owe You Pretty
  10. “Does this person value your time? Time is another important boundary and a real eye-opener when it comes to how people value their relationship with you. If they always show up late, cancel last minute, and only drop in your life when they need you, they do not respect your time. This is not a reciprocal relationship. You are being used for your energy! Don’t give any time to people who don’t have time for you.” ― Florence Given, Women Don’t Owe You Pretty
  11. “No one’s approval is ever worth compromising your own boundaries and abandoning your own beliefs for.” ― Florence Given, Women Don’t Owe You Pretty
  12. “If you have to perform a level of “prettiness” in order to be chosen by someone, they are choosing you based on your objective beauty. I get that you crave to be chosen by someone based on more than how you look. You want to be chosen for your entire self. Darling, as long as you spend your years chasing male validation, you will exhaust yourself all the way to your grave. Because male validation is a bottomless pit. It won’t ever see you how you deserve to be seen. Stop chasing it. Stop trying to attract it. Stop trying to mould yourself into a palatable Floss. It will consume you and spit you back out once it’s done using you. Your main goal in life is not to be “chosen” by a man anyway. It’s all a big lie. You don’t actually need men for anything. Or at the very least, not in the capacity you’ve been made to think you do.” ― Florence Given, Women Don’t Owe You Pretty
  13. “Growth can feel isolating. Everything you thought you knew about yourself and the world shifts right before your eyes.” ― Florence Given, Women Don’t Owe You Pretty
  14. “Up until now we have been bombarded with the same stories that either make us subconsciously hate ourselves or hate others. It’s time to change the narrative, and the power lies in your hands. Consume diverse content. Reinvigorate those tired taste buds.” ― Florence Given, Women Don’t Owe You Pretty
  15. “It’s not their bullying that “made me the person I am today”, but my own resilience that enabled me to adapt.” ― Florence Given, Women Don’t Owe You Pretty
  16. “You’re right, it isn’t. But it happens. Because when women choose to behave outside of our appointed, prescribed gender roles, it unravels centuries of oppressive structures and some people can’t handle their reality being challenged. In the name of preserving this “tradition” they use the tool of shame to keep us in our place. An example is how women are called “bitches” for being assertive, setting firm boundaries or standing up for themselves. Most of the time, it’s not even men who call women bitches. When we turn against each other, it’s patriarchy’s very sneaky way of continuing our oppression – because it gets other women to do its dirty work, so it doesn’t look guilty of being the reason we are taught to compete with and hate each other in the first place.” ― Florence Given, Women Don’t Owe You Pretty
  17. “Exactly, it’s not your problem. A lot of straight men don’t actually know who they are if they aren’t able to “provide” for women. You might find yourself subconsciously doing all kinds of ridiculous things to fluff their egos. For example, pretending you don’t know a lot about a subject, just so he can explain it to you. Society rewards women who don’t have to be told to stay in their lane. It loves women who just readily accept their gender roles and conform, the ones who don’t challenge its regime. Doing little things to please men will afford you a lot of advantages.” ― Florence Given, Women Don’t Owe You Pretty
  18. “Crumbs can’t feed me. I want the cake.” ― Florence Given, Women Don’t Owe You Pretty
  19. “Your character is not to be judged by the mistakes you make – but your ability to hold yourself accountable, interrogate your actions and come back with the correct behavior.”
  20. “I don’t owe anyone my trauma.” ― Florence Given, Women Don’t Owe You Pretty
  21. “They’re just a distraction. Carry on as you were.” ― Florence Given, Women Don’t Owe You Pretty
  22. “Women who don’t have kids are called “selfish” and made to feel that their life is a waste. Women in heterosexual relationships who earn more than their partners are labeled “controlling” or “bossy”. Women who reject sexual advances are called “frigid”, yet that same accuser will call a woman who enjoys casual sex a “slut”. When people make autonomous decisions about their bodies and their lifestyles they are met with a whole spectrum of resistance and this is particularly true for marginalized people. Anything that deviates from the narrative society has written for and about you is shamed and unaccepted.” ― Florence Given, Women Don’t Owe You Pretty
  23. “Colors don’t have a gender. We placed gender onto them, because gender was socially constructed, it is an idea.” ― Florence Given, Women Don’t Owe You Pretty
  24. “But remember that anyone who tells you you’re “too” anything is using the word because they are threatened by your capacity to grow, evolve, and express your emotions.” ― Florence Given, Women Don’t Owe You Pretty
  25. “A lot of people are reluctant to ask for consent because they feel like asking “kills the mood.” But you know what really kills the mood? Sexually assaulting someone.” ― Florence Given, Women Don’t Owe You Pretty
  26. “It’s not fair on your mind to compare your lowest moments to another person’s highlight reel.” ― Florence Given, Women Don’t Owe You Pretty
  27. “I often wonder what my life would look like if I had learned that my body belongs to me, and me alone, first; that the way my body looks, and its purpose, is not to please others.” ― Florence Given, Women Don’t Owe You Pretty
  28. “I’ve come to learn how loaded the term “bitch” is when used as an insult. Once I realized how often I’d used this to describe women (who were actually just assertive, and reminded me of my own lack of boundaries and my inability to say “no”),” ― Florence Given, Women Don’t Owe You Pretty
  29. “Rub your clit as a private act of resistance.” ― Florence Given, Women Don’t Owe You Pretty
  30. “Knowing you have been unintentionally causing harm and benefitting from unfair systems is uncomfortable. But think about how uncomfortable it must be existing on the flip side of that privilege.” ― Florence Given, Women Don’t Owe You Pretty
  31. “As a result of the rigorous beauty standards that we are so harshly held up against, we inevitably find a disturbing amount of comfort in tearing down women who reflect our own insecurities back to us. The drive to become “more beautiful” for male consumption (and capitalist profit) creates a toxic competitiveness among women. How can we happily exist in a world that is built on systems that seek to tear us down?” ― Florence Given, Women Don’t Owe You Pretty
  32. “most of the time the attention that my “prettiness” garnered meant that men viewed me as an object, and men don’t respect objects. After all, objects are something we use without reciprocity; it’s a one-sided relationship. It’s why they didn’t handle my rejection well and called me “frigid”—because objects aren’t supposed to have their own desires and motivations.” ― Florence Given, Women Don’t Owe You Pretty
  33. “As women we don’t want to admit that we have “pretty privilege” because we have been taught that we should be unaware of our beauty, and to respond to compliments with self-deprecation like, “No, I’m not, look at my . . . [points to ‘flaws’]!” ― Florence Given, Women Don’t Owe You Pretty
  34. “Men don’t look at pretty women on the street and think, “She’s pretty, so I won’t sexually harass her or follow her home.” It’s the opposite. I walk through life with constant vigilance—anxious about the next man who’ll stick his head out his car window and shout something at me, who’ll spike the drink that my “prettiness” encouraged him to buy for me, or who’ll force me to stop in a shop before I go home to make sure I’m not being followed. Keys between my fingers, heart racing, checking over my shoulder, strategizing my safest route home even if it means spending money on a taxi—this is what navigating public spaces looks like for a lot of women. I can’t tell you the amount of times I have contemplated shaving my head to reduce sexual harassment. But to do so would be giving in to the idea that it’s my responsibility to prevent this harassment, not theirs.” ― Florence Given, Women Don’t Owe You Pretty
  35. “Stop breaking yourself down into bite-sized pieces. Stay whole and let them choke.” ― Florence Given, Women Don’t Owe You Pretty
  36. “Growth can feel isolating. Everything you thought you knew about yourself and the world shifts right before your eyes. You’ll start to notice unhealthy and toxic qualities in your friends as well as yourself.” ― Florence Given, Women Don’t Owe You Pretty
  37. “I was taught how to count calories, have boundaries with, and say “no” to food as a young girl, before I learned about the importance of having boundaries with and saying “no” to other people.” ― Florence Given, Women Don’t Owe You Pretty
  38. “YF: Okay, I think I get it. What you’re saying is that, either way, no matter what I do as a woman, I can’t win? There’s always going to be compromise? OF: Yes. YF: That sucks. OF: Not if you change your perspective. YF: How do you mean? OF: Well, if you’re going to be punished either way, tell me, what option does that leave you with? YF: To do whatever the fuck I want? OF: Exactly.” ― Florence Given, Women Don’t Owe You Pretty
  39. “An example is how women are called “bitches” for being assertive, setting firm boundaries or standing up for themselves. Most of the time, it’s not even men who call women bitches. When we turn against each other, it’s patriarchy’s very sneaky way of continuing our oppression – because it gets other women to do its dirty work, so it doesn’t look guilty of being the reason we are taught to compete with and hate each other in the first place.” ― Florence Given, Women Don’t Owe You Pretty
  40. “It’s difficult when someone you love is saying something wrong and you don’t want to correct them in case you come off as too “political” or “sensitive”. But these are exactly the discussions you need to be having to change the world.” ― Florence Given, Women Don’t Owe You Pretty
  41. “Do you even want kids? Or do you feel a pressure to have them because, as well as her ability to be beautiful, a woman’s worth in this society has also been based on her ability to reproduce? You are not a failure if you do not have children” ― Florence Given, Women Don’t Owe You Pretty
  42. “No more watching your subconscious drive your life around for you while you sit in the passenger seat as it unfolds. You’re going to take the wheel and drive it your damn self. Because silence and complacency in situations of injustice make you complicit in the violence. Speak up. Say something. Your words have the power to change the fucking world.” ― Florence Given, Women Don’t Owe You Pretty
  43. “It does not make you morally superior to grow out your body hair, and you’re not any less of a feminist for shaving.” ― Florence Given, Women Don’t Owe You Pretty
  44. “Promise yourself to stop buying into people’s potential. You’re not a start-up investor.” ― Florence Given, Women Don’t Owe You Pretty
  45. “Make a promise to yourself to stop investing in people’s potential. You’re not a start-up investor.” ― Florence Given, Women Don’t Owe You Pretty
  46. “Gender roles are socially constructed and we are allowed to behave as closely, or as far away from them, as we wish.” ― Florence Given, Women Don’t Owe You Pretty

> Related post: 150+ Never hit a woman quotes: Motivational, Life-changing

Florence Given’s collection of “Women don’t owe you pretty quotes” is a testament to the importance of embracing individuality and self-love. These quotes serve as a reminder that women are not obligated to conform to external standards of beauty, but rather, they should define their own worth and beauty on their own terms.

5/5 - (1 vote)