Unresolved harm sustains imbalance.
Unresolved Harm Sustains Imbalance
Category: Tsm’syen Law Page status: Working
Purpose
This entry affirms that harm left unresolved continues to produce imbalance within relationships, houses, and the Nation. Unresolved harm does not fade with time; it remains active until responsibility and restoration occur.
Core Principle
Unresolved harm sustains imbalance.
Nature of Unresolved Harm
Harm is unresolved when:
- It is denied, minimized, or concealed
- Responsibility is avoided or deferred
- Required acts of restoration are incomplete
- Resolution lacks witnessing or public memory
Unresolved harm remains present even when discussion has ended.
Effects of Sustained Imbalance
Sustained imbalance may result in:
- Ongoing conflict or mistrust
- Repetition of harm
- Erosion of relationships between parties or houses
- Weakening of community cohesion
- Distortion of memory and responsibility over time
Imbalance may surface later if not addressed when it occurs.
Relationship to Time
Time alone does not resolve harm.
Without acknowledgment and restoration:
- Harm persists across generations
- Memory may fragment or harden
- Responsibility may shift unfairly
Delay increases the difficulty of restoration.
Relationship to Responsibility
Responsibility is the pathway through which imbalance is resolved.
When responsibility is refused:
- Harm remains active
- Standing cannot be restored
- Resolution cannot be completed
Avoidance of responsibility prolongs imbalance.
Possibility of Restoration
Unresolved harm does not eliminate the possibility of restoration.
Restoration remains possible when:
- Harm is later acknowledged
- Responsibility is accepted
- Appropriate acts of repair are undertaken
- The outcome is witnessed
Law responds when responsibility resumes.
Continuity
By recognizing that unresolved harm sustains imbalance, Tsm’syen law ensures that justice remains attentive rather than avoidant. Continuity is preserved when imbalance is addressed rather than ignored.
See also: