Free toolkit

Free, Survivor-Centered AI Writing Templates for Stalking & Abuse

Practical, editable prompt clusters and publishing guidance for writing about stalking and abuse without re-traumatizing survivors. Use these templates to anonymize stories, prepare safe resource pages, and produce SEO-friendly metadata while prioritizing consent and professional verification.

Toolkit contents

What’s included

A curated set of prompt clusters and content blueprints you can copy and adapt in Google Docs, Word, Notion, or your CMS. Each item includes a clear human-review checklist and guidance on where to place helpline information and content warnings.

  • Survivor-first blog post template (800–1,000 words) with helpline callout and consent reminder
  • Short testimony anonymization and publication consent prompts
  • Plain-language legal explainers with citation prompts for jurisdiction-specific checks
  • High-level safety planning articles that exclude step-by-step evasion tactics
  • Resource directory generator for consistent service entries (phone, hours, verification notes)
  • Newsletter snippets, social carousel copy, and printable resource checklist prompts
  • SEO metadata pack: headline options, meta descriptions, H1/subhead suggestions
  • Content moderation checklist to flag PII, illegal advice, and consent gaps
  • Accessibility prompts: alt text and simplified summaries for screen readers
  • Translation and tone-shift prompts to adapt material for different audiences

Use cases

How this helps your team

Designed for survivors, advocates, journalists, legal aid writers, and nonprofit communications teams who need practical, low-cost ways to produce responsible content. Each template is paired with editorial cues and human-review steps so organizations can publish quickly without sacrificing safety.

  • Safely convert survivor accounts into publishable narratives while anonymizing identifiers
  • Produce factual, jurisdiction-aware legal explainers without offering tactical evasion guidance
  • Create accessible resource pages and printable guides for distribution in shelters or clinics
  • Optimize sensitive pages for search with ethical metadata prompts that prioritize helplines and attribution

Trusted references

Source ecosystem & verification

Prompts and sourcing guidance are designed to request and cite authoritative reference types: peer-reviewed research, government safety resources, established domestic violence organizations, and local legal-aid guidance. Always run legal or clinical claims past a qualified professional.

  • Suggested reference types: academic journals, DOJ/public-health resources, national/domestic violence organizations, local legal aid
  • Publishing platforms: copy-ready for WordPress, Medium, Substack, Drupal, or Wix
  • Collaboration & review: share drafts through Google Docs, Microsoft Word, or Notion with redaction steps
  • Distribution: newsletter, social, and printable PDF options with alt-text and readability checks

Ready-to-run prompts

Prompt clusters and example prompts

Concrete prompt skeletons tailored for different outputs. Each prompt includes explicit constraints (no tactical advice, anonymize PII, include helpline, add sourcing request) and a human-review checklist.

Survivor-first blog post

Compassionate 800–1,000 word post that avoids sensational language and ends with safety/consent reminders.

  • Prompt skeleton: 'Write a compassionate 900-word first-person blog post about [topic]. Use non-sensational language, include a helpline callout, add 2 resource links, and end with a safety/consent reminder. Do not include step-by-step evasion tactics.'
  • Editorial cues: content note placement, trigger warning examples, and recommended helpline prominence

Short testimony anonymization

Turn raw survivor text into an anonymized first-person statement suitable for publication.

  • Prompt skeleton: 'Rewrite this testimony in first person, remove or replace all PII (names, locations, timestamps), and add a consent statement for publication. Mark any content that requires further consent verification.'
  • Include: redaction checklist and a suggested consent checkbox copy

Legal explainer (plain language)

Summarize relevant stalking laws for a named jurisdiction and prompt for source citations.

  • Prompt skeleton: 'Summarize stalking laws in [jurisdiction] in plain language for a general audience. Add inline citation prompts and conclude with 'see a lawyer' callout.'
  • Editorial cue: flag areas requiring lawyer review before publication

Content moderation checklist

Automated prompt to flag PII, illegal advice, and required consent steps in drafts.

  • Prompt skeleton: 'Scan the following text. List PII, suggest redactions, identify statements that could be interpreted as tactical evasion, and recommend consent verification steps.'
  • Use: apply before sharing drafts with external editors or publishing

SEO metadata pack

Generate ethical headlines, meta descriptions, and recommended slug/H1 combinations that prioritize resource visibility and helpline prominence.

  • Prompt skeleton: 'Provide 5 headline options and 3 meta descriptions optimized for 'stalking abuse support resources'. Suggest an H1 and three subheads. Ensure helpline inclusion in at least one meta description.'
  • Publishing cue: review metadata to avoid sensationalized wording

FAQ

Is it safe to use an AI writer for stalking and abuse content?

AI can help structure sensitive content, but always combine generated drafts with human review from a trained editor or advocate. Use the toolkit's redaction and consent prompts before sharing drafts, and avoid publishing without survivor consent and professional verification of legal/clinical claims.

How do I keep survivors safe when publishing personal stories?

Anonymize or redact identifiers, obtain explicit documented consent, offer opt-out and revision options, and place helplines and content notes prominently. The toolkit includes specific anonymization prompts and a consent-statement template to use before publication.

Can the AI provide step-by-step safety tactics?

No. The templates explicitly forbid generating tactical evasion instructions. Instead, the toolkit offers high-level safety planning language and directs readers to professional services for individualized advice.

How should I cite legal or medical claims?

Ask the model to provide inline citation prompts and then verify every legal or clinical statement against primary sources—peer-reviewed studies, government resources, or qualified professionals—before publishing. Use the included citation-and-sourcing prompt to generate a starting bibliography for review.

What disclaimers and helplines should appear on pages about stalking?

Place a visible helpline number and local emergency advice near the top of the page, repeat in the footer or sidebar, and include a content note or trigger warning. The toolkit suggests daytime/nighttime helpline copy and sample placement options for web and print.

How do I remove PII before sharing drafts with collaborators?

Use the anonymization prompt to flag and replace names, locations, timestamps, and other identifiers. Maintain separate redacted and source files, use version control, and limit access to trusted collaborators with clear confidentiality agreements.

Are there editorial best practices for trauma-informed language?

Yes: avoid sensational verbs, center survivor agency, include trigger warnings, link to supports, and offer clear consent and revision pathways. The toolkit provides short editorial checklists and sample before/after tone-shift rewrites.

Can I use generated text in print materials or multi-channel campaigns?

Yes, but adapt language and accessibility features for each channel: use alt text for images, provide printable checklists, confirm local helpline details, and run a final human review for legal accuracy and survivor consent before distribution.

Related pages

  • About TextaLearn how Texta approaches ethical AI and content safety.
  • PricingExplore plans that include additional editorial review features.
  • BlogRead best-practice articles on trauma-informed content and editorial workflows.
  • ComparisonSee how Texta's safety-focused prompts compare to standard AI writing tools.
  • IndustriesExplore resources for nonprofits, journalism, and legal aid organizations.