What happens when
no one listens?

When they don’t listen to me, dangers multiply. I am not on the map. I am not in their reports.

When the world looks away, risks grow stronger, not just for me, but also for my family, my community, and the generations that follow.

Every time I’m overlooked, cycles of poverty, violence, and inequality tighten their grip.

When I’m left behind, the whole world misses out on what I could become.

I lose social support.

When my voice is not heard, I am isolated. I lose the chance to laugh with my friends, to gather safely, and to be part of something. In crisis, family units break apart. Girls like me are separated from siblings, parents, and caregivers. The support systems that hold us up are fractured or disappear entirely.

My education is disrupted.

When school is gone, so is my escape. Without education, my world becomes smaller, my future dimmer. Conflict shuts the doors that I should walk through, leaving me with fewer choices.

My movements are restricted.

If I’m not seen, I can’t move freely. My world is a handful of rooms and guarded paths. I don’t go to community gatherings, the health center, or the market. I am cut off from the life I could have had.

My gender puts me at risk of violence.

In times of crisis, danger feels like a shadow I can’t outrun. When no one sees me, I am more vulnerable to trafficking, exploitation, and abuse. Programs that should protect me don’t know I’m here. I am left to navigate the threats alone.

My childhood is cut short.

Without a way out, marriage becomes my family’s survival plan. Before I have a chance to grow, I’m a wife. I become a mother before I become a woman. The burden of early parenting falls on me.

I am pushed into poverty.

When my childhood is disrupted, I lose my chance to grow. Without skills or support, I am pushed into poverty that will follow me into adulthood. My children will feel it too: fewer opportunities; fewer choices; the same closed doors.

As a girl, I am not treated equally to boys.

Even before the crisis, I was expected to stay quiet and stay inside. But when disaster strikes, inequality grows bolder. Boys go to school. Boys get the food. Boys walk freely. I disappear.