The Violence You Turn Inward

There’s a version of yourself you don’t talk about.

The one who appears when you feel exposed.

When you make a mistake.

When you disappoint someone.

When you fall short of what you believe you should be.

That version doesn’t comfort you.

It attacks.

Not with kindness.

Not with perspective.

Not with “you tried your best.”

With cruelty.

With punishment.

With a harshness you would never direct at another person.

And if you’re being honest…

you already know that voice.

You’ve heard it before.

What you haven’t fully admitted

is how far it goes.

Because sometimes the attack isn’t just verbal.

Sometimes… it’s visceral.

Your mind doesn’t just speak.

It shows you things.

Flashes.

Punishment.

A kind of internal violence

that doesn’t make sense when you slow it down.

Not because you want to hurt yourself—

but because somewhere along the way,

your system learned something very specific:

Mistakes must be punished.

And if you do it first…

you stay in control.

You get ahead of the disappointment.

You prove you’ve already taken responsibility.

You make sure no one else has to do it for you.

So your mind becomes both—

the judge,

and the one carrying out the sentence.

It doesn’t wait.

It doesn’t pause.

It doesn’t ask if this level of punishment is necessary.

It just… reacts.

Fast.

Automatic.

Unquestioned.

Because in your mind,

if you hurt yourself first—

no one else gets to.

And for a long time, that felt like protection.

But look at what it turned you into.

The one who attacks—

and the one who absorbs it.

The one building the case—

and the one being broken down by it.

And no one else is even there.

No audience.

No accuser.

Just you…

replaying the same punishment

over and over again.

And the most unsettling part?

It feels justified.

It feels deserved.

It feels like discipline.

Like accountability.

Like “this is what keeps me sharp.”

But if you slow it down—just for a second—

you’ll notice something uncomfortable:

The intensity doesn’t match the mistake.

It never did.

This isn’t correction.

It’s conditioning.

Something in you learned

that being human comes with consequences.

That getting it wrong means

you become something wrong.

So you learned to act fast.

To correct hard.

To punish quickly.

Not because you’re cruel—

but because you thought it would keep you safe.

But it didn’t.

It just made you afraid of yourself.

Afraid of your own mistakes.

Afraid of your own reactions.

Afraid of what your mind will do to you

the moment you fall short.

So now you don’t just fear failure.

You fear what comes after.

The silence.

The replay.

The voice that doesn’t let it go.

And if you’re really honest…

you can feel it even now.

Not loud.

Not dramatic.

Just… there.

Waiting.

For the next moment you slip.

The next thing you get wrong.

The next reason it gets to speak again.

And maybe that’s the part

that deserves your attention.

Not how to silence it.

Not how to fix it overnight.

But simply this:

Noticing

that the voice you’ve been obeying—

was never actually trying to understand you.

Only control you.

And maybe, slowly…

that changes something.

Not all at once.

But enough to create space.

Enough to pause.

Enough to question

what you’ve been calling “normal” this whole time.

Because you are allowed to make a mistake

without becoming the enemy.

And you are allowed to exist

without being at war with yourself.

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