Transmuting the Wound of Injustice 6/6

What It Is

Injustice is an emotion triggered by perceiving a situation as unfair.
Our mind sees something as contrary to what we believe is equitable or deserved.

Where Does It Come From?

Like the other wounds we’ve explored, the wound of injustice stems from repeated situations where you felt victimized, judged, blamed, or unfairly guilt-tripped.
It arises from a fundamental imbalance between your expectations, values, and lived reality. This creates frustration, anger, or inner pain. The impact on your self-confidence and motivation can hinder your growth until you transform it into strength.
This pattern, born from repeated situations and associated emotions, persists until you work on yourself to make it truly constructive.
To clarify: I’m not saying these situations are your fault, but that by doing the inner work, their impact on you changes. This doesn’t guarantee these situations will stop happening.

Why Is It There?

Like other wounds and emotions, we take it as a signal. It tells you:
Detach your worth from others’ perceptions and judgments.

What Is Its Power?

It shines a light on the following:

  • The world often looks for someone to blame, and sometimes, you’ll be the scapegoat.
  • Don’t take others’ judgments, choices, decisions, or behavior toward you personally.
  • Your ego is still tied to the value others assign to you.
  • You, and you alone, remain the master of your choices and decisions.

Examples:
At Work
During a meeting, a mistake is made on a project, and without real evidence, you’re held responsible in front of your colleagues. Initially, you feel a deep wound of injustice: frustration, anger, and self-doubt.
You quickly realize this hasty judgment doesn’t reflect your worth or effort. By choosing not to take the blame personally, you regain control of your emotions, calmly clarify the facts, and turn this ordeal into an opportunity to assert yourself.

In a Relationship
After a disagreement, you feel your partner doesn’t acknowledge your efforts or intentions, leaving you with a strong sense of injustice.
This wound can breed resentment and distance.
But by stepping back, detaching your worth from their judgment, and calmly expressing how you feel, you open the door to authentic communication. You reclaim control over your emotions and transform this difficult moment into an opportunity to build trust and intimacy.

What It Teaches

It teaches you that:

  • You are capable of resilience -you have the tools, but are you aware of them?
  • You are your own savior -what are you waiting for?
  • Recognizing your worth is painful but necessary.
  • Others don’t treat you based on how you treat them; they treat you how they treat themselves.
  • Your authenticity is your most powerful weapon -wield it wisely.

Why Transmute It?

By transmuting it, you shield yourself from emotional invasion in such situations. Your assertive, authentic stance empowers you to no longer tolerate the unacceptable. You access an inner freedom you could never have imagined before.
You cleanse your auric field and fully free yourself from others’ gazes.

How to Transmute It?

  • Welcome these situations as teachers that help you grow, without resistance.
  • Don’t resist -make the most of these situations, as doing so is a bet on yourself, bringing out your best.
  • Affirm in front of a mirror: “I am the embodiment of justice, goodness, love, and light. Everything I touch turns to gold.”
  • Stop judging situations or people in binary terms: good/bad, right/wrong, kind/cruel, etc.
  • Love yourself by embracing your own light and integrating your shadows. For more, explore the “Transmuting Your Wounds” series.

Lotha


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