Even Apollo felt "Moral Injury" when he hurt someone else

Paco Dennis

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Mid-Missouri
While falling asleep this evening I remembered something that happened in my past. It was very similar to this story of Apollo.

"Apollo was among the most beautiful and virtuous of all the gods. He was an amazing athlete. He had the gift of prophecy. He was a poet and a musician.

One of his favorite lovers was a mortal, a handsome prince named Hyacinth. One day they were playing in the fields and Apollo’s discus veered off course and hit Hyacinth in the head. Apollo ran to him and tried to save him, but he couldn’t. And Hyacinth died in his arms."

It hurts to hurt someone

The difference was it was my girlfriend/wife, hard thrown softball, direct hit to the left eye.

So, I lay there wondering how to describe the HORRIBLE feeling after it happened. I could not find the words. I thought of horror, deep remorse, shock, very sad, and helpless and a combination of all of those feelings mixed together.

Here is a professionals take on this phenomena:

"It hurts to hurt someone. When we wound another person without meaning to, whether those wounds are emotional or physical, we feel wounded as well

Psychologists and clergy use the term “moral injury” to describe the distress that we feel when our behavior fails to live up to our moral standards. And because most of us do fall short on occasion, most of us are familiar with that churning combination of guilt and shame and self-condemnation with a big hefty dose of defensiveness thrown in.

The worst part of moral injury, though, is the loneliness. Human beings have an innate need to feel accepted and valued. And when we unintentionally hurt someone, that comfortable sense of belonging that we mostly just take for granted slips. And instead we feel cut off from other people and separate.

This lonely alienation at worst can be nearly immobilizing, and it gets in the way of making peace with the person we hurt, the wider community, and ourselves."

How would you describe the feelings when this has happened to you? If serious enough it can change people's lives in a big way.
 

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The worst part of moral injury, though, is the loneliness. Human beings have an innate need to feel accepted and valued. And when we unintentionally hurt someone, that comfortable sense of belonging that we mostly just take for granted slips. And instead we feel cut off from other people and separate.
The 'loneliness' and lack of belonging does not resonate with me at all. The part about feeling terrible and feeling like we haven't lived up to our self expectations I can agree with. I don't remember hurting people except once as a young kid I thought I was being clever pretending to be asleep and then surprising my mom, except she'd leaned over to wake me so when I sprung up my head banged her nose, and I guess it must have made me feel awful to hurt her because here I am remembering it so many decades later.
 

The 'loneliness' and lack of belonging does not resonate with me at all. The part about feeling terrible and feeling like we haven't lived up to our self expectations I can agree with. I don't remember hurting people except once as a young kid I thought I was being clever pretending to be asleep and then surprising my mom, except she'd leaned over to wake me so when I sprung up my head banged her nose, and I guess it must have made me feel awful to hurt her because here I am remembering it so many decades later.
But did you also feel she might love you a little less, or that you deserved to be loved less because you injured your mom? That's what that "lack of belonging" bit is referring to. I agreed with you that it didn't ring true until I thought about it.
 

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