Being hurt and hurting others are essentially the same movement. When we are hurt, we carry the wound within us, and sooner or later we treat others through that wound. This is the natural response of unprocessed energy. It is not that we intentionally want to hurt others, but when we are hurt and do not know how to process the energy, it becomes stuck. And when energy is stuck, it expresses itself through reaction.
In this sense, once I am hurt, I will unconsciously hurt others. It feels almost beyond our control. It is not something we consciously decide. After being hurt, a conclusion quietly forms inside us:
“I am not worthy of love.”
But where does this thought come from?
Who is this “I” that is not worthy of love?
If we continue to inquire, we will discover it is the injured self — the part of us that was hurt and never truly seen or healed.
This injured self begins to create conflict. It picks fights, misunderstands others’ good intentions, and interprets situations in ways that confirm its belief. In the end, we “prove” to ourselves that we are indeed not good enough and therefore what we fear becomes reality. This is the paradox: the mind is incredibly skillful at creating suffering. Whatever belief we hold unconsciously, life seems to organize itself around it.
When we are caught in injury, we lose the distance needed to observe it. Without awareness, the wound becomes our identity. And from that identity, we continue the cycle.
All of this is created by the mind — until awareness gently steps in.
By Suzhen Liu
If you enjoy Suzhen Liu’s writings, please check out her new book, “Discover Love Within—Release Your Suffering” available on Amazon.