Revenge Of Others !link! Now

Sometimes, the most loving thing we can do is not to draw a sword for someone else, but to sit beside them and say: I see your pain. I will not add my fire to it. Let justice be cold and fair, not hot and blind.

Certainly. Here’s a short reflective text on the theme — exploring how seeking vengeance on someone else’s behalf can blur the line between justice and obsession. Title: The Edge of the Blade We Did Not Forge revenge of others

In seeking revenge for others, we risk two things: losing the trust of the person we meant to protect, and becoming someone we no longer recognize — a self-appointed avenger, carrying a grudge that was never whispered into our own ear. Sometimes, the most loving thing we can do

But here lies the danger: the original injury is not ours to heal. The anger, once borrowed, grows its own teeth. It feeds on secondhand stories, on sleepless nights spent imagining another person’s pain. Slowly, we stop asking the wronged one what they truly need. We become obsessed with a balance only we can see. Certainly