An eye for an eye only ends up making the whole world blind.
Gandhi isn't simply warning us that revenge is bad—he's identifying something far subtler: the mathematical impossibility of evening the score through retaliation. Each act of vengeance creates a new injury that demands redress, an endless loop where the ledger never balances but only accumulates debt. Notice how he doesn't say "an eye for an eye is wrong"; he says it makes us *blind*, suggesting that those caught in cycles of retaliation lose the very capacity to see their way out. We glimpse this truth in families fractured by feuds, in nations locked in tit-for-tat escalations, where both sides lose track of what they're actually fighting for—they can only see the next wrong that needs correcting.
“The only way to have a friend is to be one.”
Ralph Waldo Emerson“He who has a why to live can bear almost any how.”
Viktor Frankl“Let yourself be silently drawn by the strange pull of what you really love. It will not lead you ast...”
Rumi“Your time is limited, so don't waste it living someone else's life.”
Steve Jobs