BIPOC Women’s Mental Health and the Cost of Being ‘The Strong One’

Black woman's mental health

For generations, BIPOC women have been celebrated for their strength. This, however, is often at the expense of their softness, rest, and emotional well-being. The expectation to always be the “strong one” creates an invisible burden that deeply affects BIPOC women’s mental health.

From cultural norms to generational survival strategies, many women of color have internalized the belief that strength is a non-negotiable. For Black women specifically, this often manifests in the form of the strong Black woman stereotype. This stereotype is a deeply entrenched and uniquely racialized expectation to be unwavering, emotionless, and endlessly self-sacrificing.

This blog explores the emotional cost of these expectations and makes the case for why softness, rest, and emotional freedom are necessary acts of healing. Centering mental health for women of color starts with giving ourselves permission to be more than strong.

The Myth of the 'Strong One'

The idea of being the “strong one” has roots in many communities of color. Whether it’s the eldest daughter taking on all of the family responsibilities, the immigrant woman who suppresses her needs to support others, or the woman navigating racism in the workplace while smiling through discomfort, these dynamics are all too familiar.

For Black women, this myth takes on a particularly heavy load in the form of the strong Black woman stereotype. This identity is shaped in survival but often weaponized against them. It demands emotional stoicism, tireless caregiving, and silence in the face of injustice.

While the details may vary across cultures, the message is similar: you are expected to endure. But strength without softness leads to burnout and neglects the fullness of BIPOC women’s mental health needs.

The Emotional and Mental Toll

The constant pressure to perform strength can have significant consequences. Many BIPOC women experience:

  • Chronic stress and physical tension
  • Anxiety and depression that go undiagnosed
  • Difficulty expressing emotions
  • Reluctance to seek support

Hyper-independence and emotional suppression can be responses to racism, cultural pressure, and generational trauma. While they may look strong on the outside, they often mask suffering within.

Stereotypes: The Angry Black Woman

For Black women, emotional expression is especially hard due to the pervasive “Angry Black Woman” stereotype. Assertiveness, grief, or even boundary-setting can be misconstrued as hostility. This often leads to dismissal or punishment in professional, social, and even medical settings.

These misinterpretations are often rooted in implicit bias. This bias can result in Black women being labeled as “aggressive” for behaviors that would be seen as confident or assertive in someone else. It also influences how mental health symptoms are interpreted (or overlooked) by providers, employers, and peers.

Read more about implicit bias here.

This makes vulnerability feel risky and scary. To protect themselves, many Black women filter or silence their emotions, further reinforcing this stereotype.

While this is specific to Black women, other BIPOC women also face harmful tropes such as being “too emotional,” “too passive,” or “too difficult” that discourage authentic expression. These dynamics further compound the challenges facing BIPOC women’s mental health.

Black woman in therapy

The Right to Be Soft

Softness is a birthright, not a flaw. For BIPOC women, embracing softness means reclaiming the parts of ourselves that were suppressed in the name of survival. It means:

  • Resting without guilt
  • Crying without shame
  • Asking for help without fear
  • Choosing community care over self-sacrifice

Softness does not erase strength. Instead, it deepens it. And when mental health for women of color is centered, softness becomes a tool for healing, not something to hide.

Rewriting the Narrative

To challenge harmful narratives, we must start with our own internalized beliefs. Here are a few steps to help reclaim softness:

1. Reflect on the origin of your “strength”
Are you being strong out of choice or obligation? What would softness look like today?

2. Reject the binary
You can be strong and need help. You can lead and take breaks. Multiple things can be true at once.

3. Seek culturally affirming support
Whether through therapy, friends, support groups, or storytelling spaces, surround yourself with those who validate your experience.

4. Create micro-moments of softness
Even a few minutes of intentional rest or emotional check-in can disrupt the pattern of over-functioning.

Reclaiming softness helps protect and sustain BIPOC women’s mental health while modeling new ways of being for future generations.

You are more than your ability to hold it all together.

While strength may have helped you endure, softness can help you become whole. By naming the unique burdens placed on BIPOC women—especially the impact of the strong Black woman stereotype—we can begin to imagine a future where strength is not demanded, but chosen.

Read more about holistic health.

Mental health for women of color deserves more than survival; it deserves softness, rest, and care.

Softness is not weakness. It’s wisdom, power, and radical self-love.

 


Do you want to explore being the strong one with a therapist? Reach out to myTherapyNYC to find out which of our therapists would be a good fit for you!


What are ways you have allowed yourself to be soft? Join the conversation in the comments below!

Ashley Bethea

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