This oneâs been sitting heavy on my chest for a while. For most of my life, Iâve found myself in rooms full of guysâjoking with them, laughing with them, feeling like I belonged. But lately, Iâve started noticing the cracks in that comfort. This essay is about what itâs like being the only girl in the group, how easy that role can feel⌠until it doesnât. Itâs about misogyny hiding under the surface, the cost of calling it out, and the strange grief that comes with realizing not every friendship was what you thought it was. If youâve ever been âthe cool girl,â I hope this resonates.
Iâve been the only girl in a group of guys more times than I can count.
Itâs not always intentional. It just⌠happens. Itâs like wherever I go, I gravitate toward guys. And for most of my life, especially as Iâve gotten older, Iâve found that easier in a lot of ways. Simpler, sometimes. Less socially exhausting. More straightforward. Thereâs a kind of casualness in guy groups that can feel like a reliefâespecially when youâve spent your life being hyper-aware of every social cue, every shift in tone, every invisible expectation in a room.
That doesnât mean I donât love my girlfriends. I do. Fiercely. The bonds I share with the women in my life are sacredâlayered with honesty, softness, truth-telling, deep care. They hold space for things that guys often⌠donât. Or canât. Or wonât.
But still, I keep finding myself surrounded by guys. And until recently, I didnât question that much.
Now, I do.
Because the ease I used to feel? Itâs started to morph into something heavier. Iâve started to notice what I didnât beforeâbecause I didnât have the language or maybe the clarity to name it. I didnât notice how much I was tolerating. How much I was excusing. How much I was shrinking myself to keep the peace or stay “cool” or not make things awkward.
When youâre the only girl, and the guys feel safe enough to really talk around you, you start to hear it all. The jokes. The comments. The assumptions. The way they talk about women when they think no one is holding them accountable. And sometimes it’s subtleâlike a breeze that leaves a bruise you donât notice until later. Other times itâs just blatant. Disrespectful. Gross. Dehumanizing.
But you laugh.
Or you donât say anything.
Or you say it softly, with a little âhahaâ at the end so it doesnât feel like youâre that girlâyou know, the buzzkill feminist.
And hereâs the thing: lately, I have been that girl. Iâve started calling them out. Naming it. Saying, âHey, thatâs not okay,â or âYou donât get to talk about women like that,â or âThis isnât funny.â And the backlash? Itâs real. The pushback is intense. I get told to stop. They flat out deny it. Or laugh louder. Or say Iâm ruining the vibe. They hate you for breaking the illusion. They hate you for not playing along.
And hereâs the real gut punch: even when they respect you, youâre not exempt from the way they treat women. Because thatâs the system. Thatâs patriarchy. You might be the âcool girlâ to them, the one whoâs “not like other girls,” but youâre still a girl. And eventually, youâll feel it.
It also wasnât until just this past yearâafter several people finally said it out loud to me, and I finally let myself believe itâthat I realized something else: most of these guys wouldnât have even tried to be friends with me if they didnât find me attractive. And that truth? That wrecked me. Because itâs like, waitâso weâre not even really friends? Youâre just sticking around because Iâm pretty enough to look at?
It makes me question everything.
It makes me question every friendship I thought was real.
It makes me scared to just be myselfâbubbly, kind, open, warmâaround new guys, because what if theyâre not seeing me, theyâre just seeing someone they want something from?
What if theyâre not even listening, theyâre just waiting for a moment to turn friendship into something else?
That fear lives in me now. And I hate it. Because that warmth and friendliness? Thatâs just who I am. I like people. I love making new friends. I believe in being real and showing up fully. But now it feels dangerous.
I think I used to believe that if I could just be one of themâblend in, adapt, understand their worldâIâd be safer. Or maybe even more powerful. I didnât realize that sometimes, being the only girl in the group just means being the only one absorbing the full emotional weight of everything said and unsaid.
Iâm tired of laughing things off. Of translating misogyny into banter. Of pretending it doesnât hurt when they talk about women like objects and then look at me like I should be grateful they ârespect me.â
Thereâs a toxicity that builds upânot always loud, not always cruel, but heavy. Quiet. Constant. And Iâve finally started to feel it in my bones.
I donât have all the answers. Iâm not saying Iâm done having guy friends. But Iâm also not going to keep pretending that being surrounded by men doesnât come with its own kind of cost. I want my friendships to be honest. Accountable. Kind. And that includes calling shit out, not just keeping the peace.Because I deserve to be seen.
Not just accepted.
Not just âtolerated because Iâm hot.â
Seen. For real.
friendship, gender dynamics, feminism, emotional labor, patriarchy, neurodivergence, authenticity