If you’ve ever turned a corner at night and felt your chest tighten at the sight of a single purple porch light, you’re not imagining it. That glow is not an accident. It’s a quiet signal, a soft rebellion, a silent confession of what too many endure behind closed doors. And once you know what it means, you can’t unse… Continues…
That purple light often begins as a simple change of a bulb, but for many people it becomes a line drawn in the dark. Outside of Halloween decorations and seasonal displays, a purple porch light is frequently a deliberate act of solidarity with survivors of domestic violence, especially during October’s Domestic Violence Awareness Month. It says, without words, “I see you. I believe you. You are not alone.”
Because abuse is so often hidden, public symbols like this matter. They turn private suffering into a shared responsibility. For someone living in fear, walking past a house lit in purple can feel like a lifeline—a reminder that their pain is real and that others care enough to acknowledge it. And as more porches glow with that quiet color, conversations begin, stigma cracks, and a neighborhood becomes just a little safer, simply because people chose not to look away.





