Every woman I know has a chapter she’s never read out loud.
Some of those chapters are deeply personal, about love, loss, shame, or survival. Others are professional, about what’s happened at work that left us doubting our value or questioning our future.
And while this story often carries a woman’s face, the truth is most of us—regardless of gender—know what it’s like to hold something we’ve never said out loud.
In Charmaine Wilkerson’s Black Cake, one woman’s life is shaped by what she never told. No one knew her whole truth while she was alive. People knew bits and pieces, but she alone carried the entire story. Only after her death does the complete picture emerge, and it changes everything for those left behind.
That story might be fiction, but it reflects real life in a way that’s uncomfortable, especially for women navigating both personal and professional worlds.
According to The Secrets We Keep, a two-part series in Psychology Today (June 2022), research by psychologist Michael Slepian found that the average person carries around a dozen secrets at any given time.
Some empower us. Others erode us.
It’s not simply the keeping that hurts; it’s the mental replay—the quiet rumination—that drains our energy and dulls our light.
And at work, those unspoken truths can be just as heavy:
- The boss who takes credit for your work.
- The harassment you endured but didn’t report for fear of retaliation.
- The pay gap you discovered but couldn’t risk naming.
- The microaggressions that chip away at your confidence over time.
We don’t tell because we fear backlash or being labeled “difficult.” Too often, the system protects itself before it protects us.
But the silence doesn’t just protect others—it slowly reshapes us.
The research suggests that some secrets can affirm your strength. But the ones tied to injustice, shame, or harm? They take a toll. They shape how we show up, how we advocate for ourselves, and how much of our brilliance we allow the world to see.
So here’s the question worth sitting with:
What’s the cost—to your career, your health, your spirit—of not saying what most needs to be said?
I’m not suggesting you throw every truth onto the table without care. Sometimes strategy matters more than speed. But maybe it’s time to find one safe way, one trusted space, to lay a small part of it down.
Because, as Black Cake reminds us, truth has a way of surfacing eventually.
And as The Secrets We Keep makes clear, the most dangerous truths are the ones that quietly run our lives.
Whether you’ve called that silence protection or survival, we all know what it costs to carry a story alone. Maybe the real shift begins when we stop letting unspoken truths define who we get to be.