Why the one who was hurt still becomes the one who heals

A reflection on healing, accountability, and the strange weight of being the one who chose to grow.
Something Nobody Says Out Loud
There’s a question that lives quietly in the chest of almost everyone who has ever sat in a therapist’s room —
or in the honest dark of their own making.
It doesn’t always have words.
But if it did, they might sound like this:
“Why am I doing all this work…
when I didn’t break it?”
The Inversion
Somewhere along the way, something got turned around.
The one who was harmed
is the one examining themselves.
The one who caused damage
is often untouched by it.
Unquestioned.
Sometimes comfortable.
Sometimes completely unaware
that there was ever anything to examine.
And the one who was hurt
is asked to understand.
To heal.
To forgive.
To be the bigger person —
“As though the wound were a promotion.”
As though suffering were something you applied for.
It is a quiet, persistent kind of irony.
And it is more common than we admit.
These moments rarely arrive all at once… they show up in fragments,
in the quiet ways we leave ourselves behind… the paper-cuts we barely notice at first.
What I’ve Come to Understand
Healing was never assigned to the one who deserved the work.
It fell — quietly, unfairly — to the one
who chose not to stay where it hurt.
Not because they were responsible for the breaking.
But because they were unwilling to remain broken.
That is not justice.
That is something else entirely.
Something more like courage —
the kind that doesn’t even know it’s courage yet.
There comes a moment when something in us begins to see it… not to fix it, not to rush it… but simply to witness it for what it is.
Two Paths. Not Always Walked Together.
Accountability and healing are not the same road.
Accountability asks:
“What did I do? What did it cost someone else? What do I owe?”
Healing asks:
“What happened to me? What do I carry? What do I lay down?”
Some people walk one.
Some people walk both.
Some walk neither —
and build entire lives
in the comfortable avoidance between.
You cannot force someone onto a path
they haven’t chosen.
And waiting for them to choose it
before you begin your own
is its own kind of imprisonment.
A Tender Truth
If you are the one doing the work —
reading, reflecting, sitting with what is uncomfortable,
choosing growth over the quiet comfort of staying the same —
that is not evidence that you were wrong.
It is evidence that you were willing.
Healing doesn’t ask:
“Did you deserve this responsibility?”
Healing is a belief — quiet, stubborn —
that you deserve to set it down.
“You deserve to be free from it”
Those are very different things.
Worth holding.
Worth knowing the difference.
Reflection
Who in your life were you waiting to see change,
before you gave yourself permission to?
And what would it mean to begin —
not because they did,
but because something in you is ready?
In Tenderness,
A. J. Ashé | Being Human
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