When Pain Demands Payback
There’s this thing that happens. When someone hurts you—really hurts you— it’s not always sadness that shows up first.
Sometimes, it’s fire. This unbearable urge to lash out. To hurt them the way they hurt you. To shake something. Break something. Say that one thing that will land like a slap.
And in that moment, it feels like the only way to breathe again. Like if you don’t release it—this rage, this ache—you might explode.
So maybe you do. You say it. You do it. You let it out.
And for a moment… relief. The heavy cloud lifts. The pain shifts. You feel powerful. Not the helpless one anymore.
But then comes the silence. The echo. The guilt. Now you’re not just the one who was hurt— you’re the one who caused hurt too.
And it’s a sickening trade.
People don’t always talk about this part of us. The part that wants payback. That wants someone else to carry the pain for a while. That wants to stop feeling like the victim and start feeling like the one in control.
But that version of control—it lies. Because the pain doesn’t go away. It just changes address. You mail it off to someone else and hope it won’t come back. But it always does. In guilt. In shame. In regret.
And just like that, you’re no longer the wounded. You’ve become the weapon. But even then… it doesn’t heal anything. Only hides the wound deeper.
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