Episkevology – Intention vs Impact: Why the Difference Matters

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Episkevology

Intention vs Impact: Why the Difference Matters

Most harm in relationships doesn’t come from malice. It comes from the gap between what someone meant and what actually happened. Intention is internal—what a person believes they were doing. Impact is external—the effect their behavior had on someone else.

When we focus only on intention, we end up protecting the person who acted. When we focus only on impact, we risk losing sight of the fact that most people are not trying to cause harm. Healthy repair requires holding both truths at once: “I didn’t mean to hurt you” and “You were hurt.”

The moment we collapse intention and impact into the same thing, accountability becomes impossible. Someone can insist they “meant well” forever, and the person who was harmed is left carrying the emotional weight alone. Repair begins when we stop defending our intentions and start listening to the impact.

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