Real Support Feels Different
There’s a difference between support that’s genuine and support that comes with strings attached. As women, we’ve all experienced both—the friend who cheers for you in private but competes in public, the colleague who “helps” but expects something in return, or the acquaintance who only shows up when it benefits her.
Real support doesn’t feel transactional. It doesn’t feel like strategy. It feels safe, steady, and sincere.
In a world where competition, comparison, and clout can quietly creep into our relationships, choosing to support other women without hidden agendas is a radical, powerful act. It creates trust. It builds community. And most importantly—it reflects integrity.
Let’s talk about how to actually do that.
What Hidden Agendas Look Like (Even When They’re Subtle)
Before we can support authentically, we have to be honest about what inauthentic support looks like.
Hidden agendas aren’t always obvious. Sometimes they show up as:
- Supporting someone publicly but criticizing them privately
- Offering help only when there’s something to gain
- Networking under the disguise of friendship
- Keeping score of who supports who more
- Feeling threatened instead of inspired by another woman’s success
- Check Your Intentions First
- You don’t feel resentful if the energy isn’t immediately reciprocated
- You don’t attach expectations to your support
- You don’t use your support as leverage later
- Celebrate Her Without Comparison
- “She’s doing well… but what about me?”
- “Why is she getting opportunities I’m not?”
- “I could do that too…”
- Her success is not your scarcity
- Her visibility does not erase your value
- There is room for both of you
- Support in Rooms Where She Isn’t Present
- Like her post
- Comment “yes queen!”
- Share her work when she’s watching
- You recommend her name in opportunities
- You defend her when she’s misunderstood
- You speak positively about her behind closed doors
- Don’t Turn Everything Into a Transaction
- “I’ll support you if you support me”
- “Let’s collab so we can both benefit”
- “What can I get out of this?”
- Sharing someone’s work because it’s good
- Encouraging her because she needs it
- Showing up because it matters
- Respect Her Journey (Even If It Looks Different From Yours)
- Agree with every decision
- Understand every move
- Relate to her timeline
- Subtle judgment disguised as advice
- Backhanded compliments
- Trying to “correct” her path
- “I’m proud of you”
- “I see you doing your thing”
- “Keep going”
- Be Honest, Not Competitive
- Giving constructive feedback when asked
- Being transparent without being harsh
- Telling the truth with care, not ego
- Trying to one-up her
- Diminishing her excitement
- Positioning yourself as better
- Heal Your Own Insecurities
- “What if she outshines me?”
- “What if I’m overlooked?”
- “What if I’m not enough?”
- You become confident in your own lane
- You stop competing for validation
- You start celebrating from a place of wholeness
- Show Up Consistently (Not Just When It’s Convenient)
- When she’s trending
- When she’s winning publicly
- When it’s easy to align
- When she’s rebuilding
- When she’s quiet
- When she’s struggling
- Let Go of the Need to Be Seen Supporting
- “The supportive friend”
- “The connector”
- “The one who put her on”
- No one gives you credit
- Your name isn’t mentioned
- Your role goes unseen
- Build Sisterhood, Not Strategy
- Safe
- Supportive
- Honest
- Reciprocal without being forced
- Integrity over image
- Community over competition
- Authenticity over advantage
- Claps when others win
- Speaks life into other women
- Supports without keeping score
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