Hi everyone, Shalom Aleichem!
Good afternoon GanSist everyone!
In the Superwoman Series, we have repeatedly discussed strong women from four sides, namely physical, mental, social and spiritual. The common thread is always the same, that women are not just born strong.
In psychology, difficult experiences can give rise to two possibilities that run side by side, namely permanent psychological wounds, or growth after trauma (post-traumatic growth). This growth does not mean that the pain is small, but rather that there are positive changes in the way we interpret life, relationships and personal strength after going through great pressure. Many women look “normal” on the outside, but inside they are carrying a burden that not everyone can bear. This general picture is also often seen in people who have experienced severe stress, namely being more alert, more empathetic, more selective in friendships, and sometimes appearing emotional because they have certain emotional triggers.
Thread Superwoman SeriesThe 120th invites Sista to reflect, of the 8 life tests below, which one is Sista?
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1. Being cheated on by your husband or lover: When Trust Collapses
Being cheated on is a unique kind of wound, because what is destroyed is not only the relationship, but also a sense of security. Many women feel their self-esteem collapse, question their own shortcomings, and even feel guilty even though they are victims. In romantic relationships, betrayal often triggers severe stress because it disrupts the belief system. The person who should be a place of return becomes a source of threat.
In this phase, mental toughness does not mean immediately “moving on”, but rather having the courage to face the mixed emotions of anger, sadness, disgust, loss and shame that can be present all at once. Women who have gone through tough trials often become more selective in building trust, sometimes even appearing to always be prepared for bad possibilities, because their bodies are in fight or flight mode. This is normal as a self-defense mechanism.
What strengthens Sista is not only the ability to hold back tears, but also the ability to recover, reorganize boundaries, seek support, and make healthy decisions for the future.
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2. Betrayed by a loyal friend: Pain in the Social World
If being cheated on hurts the intimate area, being betrayed by a friend hurts the social area, namely the feeling of being accepted and understood. A friend’s betrayal often feels more painful because during this time you may reveal secrets, show your vulnerable side, and feel safe.
The impact can be long-lasting. Sista finds it difficult to trust new people, lazy to expand friendships, or chooses a small circle that is completely safe. This pattern often appears in people recovering from difficult emotional experiences, where they are more comfortable with safe, limited relationships. This is not an arrogant attitude, this is a form of psychological trauma.
A strong sista is not the one who has lots of friends, but the one who dares to filter which friends are sincere and which friends are only there when needed.
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3. The person you helped actually hurt you: Sincerity Rewarded by Wounds
There is a test that makes the mind the most tired, namely when breast milk is replaced with tubal water. Whether it’s being cheated, taken advantage of, dropped, or made a laughing stock. At this point, many women start to feel hurt.
This test forces Sista to level up in social strength, learning to differentiate between empathy and people pleasing. Kindness is still important, but it needs limits. Correct empathy does not turn cold, but remains warm with strong boundaries.
Psychologically, people who have been injured often become very sensitive to reading signs of evil because experience teaches them that small signals sometimes mean great danger. If Sista is now more sensitive or more quickly suspicious, maybe it’s not something strange, maybe it’s the result of a forging that strengthens Sista.
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4. Strange rumors: When a Good Name is No Longer in Your Own Hands
Gossip is cruel because it often doesn’t need proof. What is attacked is not physical, but reputation. Women are often the target of gossip about morals, relationships, appearance, and even life choices.
What makes gossip difficult is the feeling of helplessness. Sista can’t control people’s mouths, but has to bear the consequences. Reactions that seem “excessive” in some people who have experienced gossip can actually be related to emotional triggers, where past experiences cause the body to quickly enter fight or flight mode. So, if you feel like getting angry just because you hear whispers, that doesn’t mean you’re emotional, it’s a survival response.
Mental strength here is the ability to sort out what needs to be clarified, what should be ignored, what environments are still healthy, and what environments should be avoided.
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5. Work hard until you are exhausted for the sake of your family: Physical strength that is often invisible
Many women become brutal fighters who never stop between working, taking care of the house, taking care of children, taking care of parents, taking care of everyone’s emotional needs, and then it is considered normal. Physical fatigue turns into mental fatigue, and over time becomes fatigue of faith, namely feeling empty, feeling empty, feeling like life is just running endlessly from the pursuit of pressure.
Stress arises when someone assesses the demands of life beyond the resources they have to deal with them, and stress can attack biological, psychological and social reactions. In the context of women, multiple roles and the pressure of expectations often amplify that burden.
Sista’s strength is not only being strong enough to work hard, but having the courage to rearrange the rhythm of life, ask for help, divide roles, set priorities, and make room for rest. From a faith perspective, the belief that human burdens have limits is an important reminder that humans still have limits to their strength, and these limits need to be maintained.
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6. Being bullied for not being beautiful enough: When physical standards become weapons
Insults because of beauty are often considered trivial. In fact, the impact can last for years, especially on self-esteem and psychology. Women can grow up with false beliefs, such as feeling unworthy of love, unworthy of appearing, and not worthy of fighting.
This exam tests mental and social strength. Some become too hard on themselves, some withdraw from society. Some people who have been through a lot of stress can seem alert or sensitive to small comments because the brain remembers embarrassment and social threats.
Being strong doesn’t mean you have to be confident all the time. Being strong means continuing to walk even though you are sometimes sick, choosing an environment that respects you, building an identity that is broader than appearance, and realizing that self-worth is not determined by other people’s standards.
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7. Being blessed with a child with special needs: Love that demands energy, time and faith
This exam not only changes life schedules, but changes the map of the future. Many mothers face a mixed phase of shock, sadness, denial, guilt, fear and exhaustion. At the same time, he must continue to function, such as looking for surgery or speech therapy, dealing with costs, dealing with people’s comments, and continuing to care patiently.
Under long periods of stress, stress easily arises when the demands feel greater than the capabilities and support available. Therefore, women’s strength here is not just patience, but also management such as building a support system, collaborating with those closest to them, and maintaining mental health so that it doesn’t run out before the child grows up.
In terms of faith, many women find new meaning about gratitude and surrender. Resilience of faith does not mean not being sad, resilience of faith is continuing to love while continuing to learn.
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8. Death of family, husband, or friend: Grief that Changes the Structure of Life
The death of someone close to you is not just sadness, but a change in identity. You not only lose the people closest to you, but you lose your routines, roles, plans and the future you imagined together.
In times of grief, some people appear strong on the outside, but fragile on the inside. There are also those who find happiness in small things after going through difficult times, not because the wounds disappear, but because they learn to appreciate everyday breath as a gift. This process is different for each person and cannot be standardized.
Being strong in grief means giving yourself time, accepting that recovery is not instant, allowing yourself to miss, but also keeping life going. Safe social support, namely people who are non-judgmental, becomes an important support system.
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CLOSURE
If you experience one test, or even several tests at once, remember one thing, that toughness is not a race. Superwoman is not a woman who never falls, but a woman who falls and then learns to read herself, rebuild boundaries, and rearrange the meaning of life.
This series is connected to the common thread of the Superwoman Series from the start. In the end, the question is not “How strong are you?”, but rather “How well do you want to rise after life’s tests?”
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SOURCE
One Hundred Percent Male Y*ut*be Account (but adapted for women)
Gusniarti, U. (22 December 2025). Becoming a strong woman: The art of managing stress from an Islamic perspective. Faculty of Psychology, Islamic University of Indonesia, Syi’ār, 1(2).
Hanifah, A. (11 March 2026). 11 characteristics of women who have gone through many life tests according to studies.HaiBunda.
Sarafino, E. P., & Smith, T. W. (2011). Health psychology: Biopsychosocial interactions(7th ed.). Wiley. (Quoted in Gusniarti, 2025).
