“I was never too young to see clearly—and I honor the strength that rose in me anyway.” Võ Thị Sáu was a girl. Not grown.Not protected.Not given tim
“I was never too young to see clearly—and I honor the strength that rose in me anyway.”
Võ Thị Sáu was a girl.
Not grown.
Not protected.
Not given time to slowly become.
A girl.
And still…
She stood.
She lived in a time where danger was not abstract.
It was present.
Immediate.
Real.
She resisted anyway.
-
She was captured
-
She was imprisoned
-
She was sentenced
And at just 18 years old…
Her life was taken.
Let’s not rush past that.
Eighteen.
There are girls right now still being told:
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“You’re too young to understand”
-
“Stay out of grown matters”
-
“Wait your turn”
And yet…
History tells a different story.
🌿 What women recognize
In Vietnam, she is not just remembered.
She is honored.
Visited.
Spoken to.
Held close.
Because women recognize something in her:
👉 courage before permission
👉 clarity before validation
👉 strength before the world was ready to name it
🌿 Youth is Not the Protector that It Should Be
There are girls—and women—who:
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were never given the space to be “just young”
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had to understand things early
-
had to stand before they felt ready
And still…
They stood.
✨ Survivor Affirmations
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I honor the strength I carried, even when I was young
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I was never “too young” to recognize what was real
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My courage does not require permission
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I trust the clarity I have always had
-
I carry strength that others may not fully understand
🔥 A truth to carry
Some women do not wait to grow into strength.
They are called into it early.
And whether the world acknowledges it or not…
👉 it is real
👉 it is powerful
👉 it deserves to be honored
