Discover unconditional love this Valentine’s Day with Solace’s Ten Green Flags of Love campaign, encouraging kindness and respect.
Solace, a leading charity dedicated to supporting women and girls experiencing domestic abuse and/or sexual violence, is marking Valentine's Day by launching a campaign called Ten Green Flags of Love.
The Ten Green Flags of Love
- They celebrate your successes
- They support you when you fail
- They love to watch you flourish
- They are kind to the people you love
- They listen & empathise
- They don't expect perfection
- They lift you up
- They respect your boundaries
- You feel safe with them
- You are your true self with them
The campaign aims at inspiring people to celebrate the true essence of love by highlighting the positive qualities that should be sought in a partner. It seeks to challenge the common misconceptions about romance, emphasizing that love goes beyond flowers, gifts and dramatic romantic gestures.
Instead, it focuses on the qualities that create a nurturing and supportive relationship. These green flags include celebrating your successes, providing support during failures, promoting personal growth, kindness towards your loved ones, active listening, empathy, embracing imperfections, lifting each other up, respecting boundaries, and fostering a sense of safety and authenticity. As a charity that supports over 23,000 women and girls annually across London, Solace Women’s Aid understands the importance of promoting healthy relationships.
“We’re highlighting the positive qualities you should look for in a partner,” says Nahar Choudhury, CEO of Solace. “So often, people think romance is about passion and yearning and sexual tension, but real, lasting love is about supporting and nourishing each other.”
The Ten Green Flags of Love campaign aims to raise awareness about the qualities that contribute to healthy and fulfilling relationships, uplifting individuals and encouraging them to seek partners who inspire and nurture their best selves. By emphasizing these green flags, Solace hopes to empower individuals to make informed choices and create lasting, positive connections.
‘We want all women and girls to recognise these positive signs in a relationship and also to understand if their relationship is abusive.’ Nahar Choudhury adds, ‘For those women and girls in London who are experiencing abuse, we want them to know that support is available and that Solace is here for them.’
Solace
Solace provides lifesaving support to more than 22,000 women, children and young people each year, working to end violence in whatever form it comes - from rape to trafficking to relationships based on psychological or financial control.
Visit the Solace website to find out about its services and how you can help its work by donating or setting up a fundraising campaign.