The Oprah Podcast - Your Brain on Revenge with Oprah and James Kimmel, Jr.
Episode Date: January 20, 2026Is revenge the root of all forms of violence? Oprah sits down with James Kimmel, Jr., a revenge and violence researcher and lecturer in the psychiatry department at the Yale University School of Medi...cine and the bestselling author of the eye-opening book, The Science of Revenge: Understanding the World’s Deadliest Addiction - and How to Overcome It. From bullying to school and mass shootings to terrorism and even war, James Kimmel Jr’s 20-year research argues that the root cause of all human aggression and violence in the world is the one universal human emotion: revenge. After being bullied as a teenager, James Kimmel, Jr shares the horrific moment he almost became a mass shooter himself, and why that became the catalyst for his life’s work. James Kimmel Jr shares a research study that could reveal just how prone you might be to seeking revenge. He has also created The Non-Justice System & The Miracle Court App, a 5-step scripted virtual courtroom where a person who has been wronged can play all the roles in a simulated trial - victim, defendant, judge, jury, and warden. Oprah and James Kimmel Jr also hear searing stories from the audience including a woman whose neighbor shot and killed her dog, a woman who got revenge on a boyfriend who cheated on her, a wife and mother whose intense revenge addiction landed her in the hospital. And how a mother, who lost her precious 6-year-old son to gun violence at Sandy Hook Elementary, came to forgive her son’s killer. BUY THE BOOK! The Science of Revenge https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/739999/the-science-of-revenge-by-james-kimmel-jr-jd/ https://books.apple.com/us/book/the-science-of-revenge/id6670186929 00:00:00 - Welcome James Kimmel, Jr. author of “The Science of Revenge” 00:04:00 - James Kimmel share his story of revenge 00:10:15 - Lawyers sell revenge to the masses 00:13:15 - How revenge is an addiction 00:16:00 - Understanding how revenge leads to crimes 00:17:30 - When revenge becomes addiction 00:27:00 - Woman shares her desire for revenge 00:28:20 - Types of forgiveness 00:37:55 - How can we speed up forgiveness 00:39:30 - How this man resisted getting revenge 00:43:30 - Mother of son killed at Sandy Hook 00:50:50 - Recovering revenge addict 00:57:00 - The motive is revenge 00:59:00 - The power of forgiveness Additional Resources: https://www.revengeanonymous.org The Non-justice System: miraclecourt.com What's Your Revenge Score? https://www.jameskimmeljr.com/quiz Connecticut Violence Intervention and Prevention - https://www.ctintervention.org/ Choose Love - https://chooselovemovement.org/ Follow Oprah Winfrey on Social: https://www.instagram.com/oprahpodcast/ https://www.facebook.com/oprahwinfrey/ Listen to the full podcast: https://open.spotify.com/show/0tEVrfNp92a7lbjDe6GMLI https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-oprah-podcast/id1782960381 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Did you have a waiting to exhale moment?
You put all his clothes in a pile and burn him?
I did.
Oh, you did?
I did.
Yes, I took all the clothes I bought him.
Listen to you grown up people in here.
This young woman, you're applauding her burning up his clothes.
Perfect illustration of revenge-seeking and revenge addiction.
You can control it.
Now, let's hear what were the negative consequences for you?
None.
None?
Okay.
So you have zero.
on the Oprah podcast.
Welcome to the Oprah podcast.
We're in New York City with an audience of our listeners.
And I so appreciate all of you and all of you who tell me that you're getting information,
enlightenment from our podcast, that it's comforting to you.
You get a lot of ahas.
I'm so happy.
You're going to have a lot of ahas today.
Because the truth is we are living in a complicated and complex time.
and it is my hope to continue using my life in such a way that we can create conversations
that can help you kind of take the lens and zoom out to see the bigger picture of a lot of subjects
and zoom in to understand what's really underneath so many of the challenges that we all
are facing as humans together here on the planet.
And one of the things about the human condition that has always troubled me,
and I know many of you here and who are listening and watching us too,
is the senseless violence from domestic violence to school shootings.
Remember when Columbine just shocked us and now nobody shocked anymore
to riots and all the way up to war?
So my guest today says at the root of almost all violence is one universal human condition.
I want to know, those of who don't know,
the show's about today. What do you think that condition is?
Insecurities.
Insecurities. Fear.
Definitely.
I would also say anger. Anger?
Hatred. Hatred. Okay? Yes?
I would say vengefulness or revenge.
You won!
Actually, I thought all of the answers were appropriate.
Did you see the book before? It's the science of revenge.
Revenge. He says, you say it's revenge. It is revenge, but every person here was right because
revenge is always triggered by a grievance, a perception of being wronged or mistreated. And in all
of those instances, we're talking about grievances. The grievances flow one direction, and that
is to create this motivation and desire to retaliate and hurt the people who hurt you.
So this is James Kimmel Jr. is a revenge and violence researcher and lecturer. And lecturer
at the Psychiatry Department at the Yale School of Medicine.
Thank you for coming all the way from Yale today to be with this.
And his book was called, I didn't know until I read it.
Actually, I read an article that you wrote.
And then that prompted me to get the book
and ask the producers about let's doing this show
on the science of revenge,
because it never occurred to me that there was a science of revenge,
understanding the world's deadliest addiction
and how to overcome it.
And I want to say quickly that when we put,
posted about this particular topic on the Oprah podcast Instagram page, we received nearly 10 times
the response we normally do. So there's a lot of people holding revenge out there. And I'd like to
start with your personal story. Tell us how you came to be a scientist of this, to study this,
the incident that you experienced as a teenager. So when I was a young boy about 12 years old,
my folks moved my brother and I from a suburban home, small suburban home,
onto my great-grandfather's farm in central Pennsylvania,
which at the time was the most fantastic thing that could ever happen to me as a 12-year-old boy to be on a farm.
But when I got there, one of the things that I first set out to do was to befriend
and learn about and hang out with the other kids on the surrounding farms
that were at great distances from our farm.
And so I reached out to them,
and I found pretty quickly that I wasn't welcomed into their community.
And when they sort of rejected me,
my response was to try even harder.
The harder I tried, the more they pushed back,
and the shunning moved on into bullying.
And the bullying, as it often starts,
it started verbally at first,
and then that moved on into a much more aggressive form of bullying,
as we got older. So from age 12 till now I'm moving into age 16 or 17 even. And this is still going on.
And it moved into kind of physical attacks in hallways, getting on and off the bus.
You feared them. I feared them. This was just kind of something you had to solve for yourself or just,
you know, shut up and taller. Did you tell your parents? Did you tell your parents?
You know, I think a little bit, but there was just sort of a, yeah, that's too bad. That's what happens.
And so then what happened? Well, so.
Late one night, my family are asleep.
And we were awakened to the sound of a gunshot.
And, you know, jumped out of bed,
raced outside to look and see what was happening outside our house.
And I saw outside a pickup truck that had been owned by the one of the guys who was bullying me,
speeding away.
Okay.
And we searched around the house, didn't see any damage, went back to bed.
The next morning, one of my jobs was to wake up and go out and take care of all of our animals.
the cows, the pigs,
and also a sweet little beagle hunting dog
that we owned named Paula.
And when I went out to feed and water her,
I found her lying dead
in a pool of blood with a bullet hole in her head.
They had shot her.
They shot her.
So my folks called the police.
They felt bad.
They took a report.
So about two or three weeks later,
I found myself home alone at night.
And I heard a vehicle come to a stop in front of our house again.
So as I was getting up to look outside and see what was going on,
I saw this pickup truck, the same one.
And then there was a flash and an explosion.
And the pickup truck took off down the road again,
and our mailbox had blown up.
And with that explosion,
went the rest of my self-control.
After all of these years,
I ran and I grabbed a loaded revolver.
from my dad's nightstand, and I tore off after these guys.
I jumped in my mother's car, and I'm flying down the road in the middle of the night,
just shouting in rage at the top of my lungs to try and catch up with.
How old are you?
I'm about 16 or 17.
Okay.
So I do catch up with them, and I corner them by a barn.
And so the scene is their pickup truck is sort of pointed into their barn wall.
My vehicle's behind theirs.
I have my brake beams on, and I see three or four heads in the way.
window of the pickup truck, backs of heads. And they slowly start to get out and they're turning
around and they're squinting through my headlights to see who had just come flying down their one-lane
country road. And what was clear to me in that moment was that they were unarmed. None of them had a
weapon in their hands. Maybe they had weapons in the truck, but not in their hands. The other thing that was
clear to me is they couldn't have known that I was armed and they wouldn't have necessarily known
who I was. They might have recognized.
my mother's car, but there's no way for me to know. So I knew at that moment I had the complete
element of surprise. And it would be a pretty safe and fast path to doing what I wanted to do.
What did you want to do?
What did you want to do? Shoot them all? Shoot them all. Which was finally to balance the scales
on, you know, five years of abuse and the murder of my dog and our mailbox and all the
humiliation. So I opened the door and I grabbed that gun from the passenger seat.
and I, you know, put my leg through the door and I started getting out.
And at the last second, I had this very brief insight that if I went through with what I wanted to do,
the guy who drove down that road that night would not be the same guy who drove back.
It would be an irreparable and life-changing moment for me.
That's just a split second.
It was a split second that I almost like saw into my future for just a second.
And there wasn't a lot of debate.
there wasn't a lot of insight. It was just
that will be, you will have to know yourself as a murderer
if you survive, if you survive.
And that was just enough at that last second
to cause me to pull my leg back inside the car
and put the gun down because I had known
at that moment, I wanted revenge badly, but I just
wasn't willing to pay that high of a price
to get it. For the revenge? For the revenge.
But did they at least see you with the gun?
Good question
I don't think so
I didn't brandish it
Did they know
Little James Kimmel was packing
I mean
So do they
Do they continue to harass you after that
Or did the harassment change in your mind
No
In a pretty amazing way
The abuse stopped that night
Maybe because
they recognized that as potentially my mother's car.
Maybe they thought my mother had chased them down the road.
Maybe they realized that they had pushed things so far
that they themselves were within two seconds like I was
of changing their lives.
But it stopped.
There was no exchange of words,
and I know I didn't forgive them either.
You didn't forgive them?
I did not forgive them.
I drove home wanting revenge even more,
but just going, but not at the...
But not the price.
Not the price. And then you ended up becoming a lawyer.
You described lawyers as selling revenge to the masses.
Yeah.
Isn't that good, y'all?
I know y'all.
Y'all are my people.
I know you'd love that.
You are selling revenge to the masses.
I just, I love the candor of that, the honesty of that.
It is true.
I mean, we sell legalized form of revenge, and I was selling revenge.
legalized revenge, which we sell under the brand name justice,
just the way that doctors, you know, are selling opioids under the, you know, the name
Oxycontin, and that's okay.
But if you sold it under the name heroin, you could not do that.
That would be illegal.
And so lawyers are kind of engaged in a similar addictive process, and it's highly lucrative, right?
So we sell this.
Selling revenge to the masses.
and we make the legal profession.
I'm talking about we make a lot of money in that exchange.
Okay, so this is what you write in the introduction to the book.
You say, revenge is the author of tragedy
and the destroyer of peace and happiness.
It is the root motivation behind most forms of human aggression and violence,
including intimate partner violence, youth violence and bullying,
street and gang violence, mass shootings, riots, police brutality, arson, violent extremism,
terrorism, genocide, and war. Revenge destroys individuals, families, romantic relationships,
fortunes, communities, nations, and empires. And yet, we want revenge when we've been
physically or emotionally harmed. So why is it that we want to hurt the people who hurt us?
that's a brain thing, right?
That is a brain thing.
It's an evolutionary thing, actually, is where it starts,
but that is resident in your brain.
I mean, primarily it's human beings
that have this intense desire
to hurt the people who hurt us
or their proxies.
It turns out that revenge seeking
is not only focused on the targeted person
who wronged you.
You may target someone else
that's a much easier to get targeted,
still getting revenge.
And that's what they do.
what they end up doing. You write that your intention over the course of this book that you've
written, the science of revenge, is to convince us that compulsive revenge seeking is an addiction
and a brain disease and that it matters. Now, I read the book and I'm like, is it an addiction
or is it just you become obsessed with it? I mean, why do you think it's a disease? Because it is,
it meets all the criteria of addiction.
So the neuroscience, so for the last 20 years,
neuroscience is your brain looks the same way.
The brain on revenge, seeking revenge,
is the same as a brain on drugs.
In brain scans, your brain on revenge
actually looks like your brain on drugs.
So a grievance, as I said at the beginning,
is the activating switch.
It is the cue.
It is the triggering event.
When you feel wronged,
you experience deep psychological pain inside your brain,
and that activates the brain's pain network, the anterior insula.
Yeah.
So deeper, deeper.
It activates that pain network, and your brain doesn't like pain.
And it wants pleasure to rebalance itself and cover up that pain.
That's why the woman who said anger or rage or that is also true,
that something is ignited in there with the rage and the anger and the fear.
and it changes your brain?
It activates inside your brain the pain network and the brain wants pleasure.
And to get pleasure, it activates the pleasure and reward circuitry of addiction,
the go circuitry, the very same part of your brain,
the nucleus of cummins and dorsal striatum that activate for drug addicts
when they feel anxiety or see a place where they've taken drugs
and begin to start to want or crave the narcotic of their choice.
This happens with people who have been wronged and want revenge of their choice.
And you say researchers haven't found a close relationship, actually, between serious mental illness and violence or mass murder.
Everybody always wants to say the person is a monster.
They did this because they were a monster because they were mentally ill.
But research hasn't actually proven that to be true.
The reason for that, though, is the question is somewhat put wrongly.
Do people who commit acts of violence have a mental,
mental illness. Most of the time, the research has shown that's not the case. People with
serious mental illnesses even are not at a significantly higher risk of committing acts of violence
than the rest of us. But the issue is, is what do you define as a serious mental illness?
And that definition is very narrowly written in the magic most important book for doctors
in how to diagnose mental illnesses, which is called this thousand-page diagnostic and
statistical manual, the DSM for your familiar.
with a lot of people are. And in the DSM, serious mental illnesses are things like schizophrenia
and severe bipolar disorder, severe depression. Those do not drive violence. But what is missing
from the DSM is the desire for revenge that it becomes compulsive and addictive. That is an addictive
meaning. Because a person then can't stop thinking about it. They just can't stop thinking about it.
They are driven. Anybody relate to what we're talking about here? Like you just can't think about it.
So the signs of revenge you say about your research,
and I just want to make you all aware of this,
that Mr. Kimmel is saying,
we're not doing this to excuse or justify the crimes of mass murderers.
We're doing it to understand how their real and imagined grievances
are converted inside their brains and into the desire to kill large numbers of people
so we can prevent such crimes in the future.
So how do we then use this knowledge, the science of revenge, to prevent violence?
So we use it by understanding that, let me put this way, almost 100% of people want revenge when they've been wronged.
If you do a study of a group of people and say, if you had any recent revenge desires, almost 100% will say yes.
But when you ask the question, have you acted on those revenge desires, only about 20% of the people say yes.
And that 20% is an important number because that's about the same number of people who try alcohol or narcotics who become actually addicted to alcohol and narcotics.
So 80% of people who try narcotics do not become addicts.
They're able to control.
And it doesn't become a compulsive behavior for them.
It doesn't ruin their lives.
Only about 20% experience that.
And that seems to be the case.
It hasn't been fully studied yet for revenge.
But that same number seems to be the number of people who move on to an addiction.
state of revenge seeking, and let me explain what that means. It's very simple. Addiction can generally
be thought of is an inability to resist a craving or desire. Despite the negative consequences.
And revenge just fits that to a T. Yeah. But you were able to do that. You were able to recognize
in that moment with the gun, the negative consequences and put the gun down. That's correct.
But somebody who has been obsessed with revenge may not recognize the consequences,
or is willing to pay the price for those.
Which is to accept the negative consequences.
They think they're willing in the moment.
So there's another part of your brain.
The last part of your brain that's relevant to this whole thing
is your prefrontal cortex, right where you were pointing.
That's the one that needs to be active and available to you
to stop you from doing things that hurt yourself or other people.
If that area isn't, if it's been inhibited or hijacked as it is an addiction,
then you actually have an addictive process.
If it's working, you only have revenge desires. And as I said, we've all evolved to have them. That's perfectly normal. That's not the disease part. The disease part is when it becomes compulsive and you can't control it and it's hurting you or other people.
Okay, listeners, time for a quick break. Up next, a research study that could reveal just how prone you might be to seeking revenge. Plus, their neighbor's anger turned deadly. Would you want revenge? That's next.
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Oprah podcast with James Kimmel Jr.
He's a revenge and violence researcher and lecturer in the
Psychiatry Department at the Yale School of Medicine.
His book is called The Science of Revenge.
When I first started reading a book, I was thinking, well, I'm not a person who holds
revenges.
I can't think of anybody.
I really would want to have revenge against him.
Then I read this story, the story of Billy, who was keeping the dog.
Okay?
And the woman went away and she comes back in the dog.
Will you share that story with our audience?
Yeah, that's a story that we use to conduct research on this non-justice system forgiveness process that I've developed at Yale.
And it's a way that we teach people about revenge seeking.
So it's the grievance story.
And as I said, with revenge seeking, it always starts with a real or imagined perception of having been mistreated, treated unjustly, or victimized.
And in the Billy's story, for instance, in the book, I invite everyone that reads it to experience what,
our study participants did during our studies at Yale.
You go through this story in which you own a dog.
Imagine that you own a dog.
You were called away for a weekend,
and you have to entrust the dog to someone,
and you entrust it to your neighbor.
And your neighbor says, great, I'll take care of it.
You come back, the dog's missing,
and you go to your neighbor, Billy, and say, hey, where's my dog?
And Billy says, I'm sorry that, you know, he ran away while you were gone.
But I hope you're mad at Billy.
Yeah.
Aren't you mad at Billy?
Yeah.
But do you want revenge against Billy in that moment?
No, not yet, no.
I'm asking them.
I'm sorry.
Okay.
You're mad at Billy, right?
You're like, and you're also mad at yourself
because you would have thought,
why did I leave that dog with Billy?
And I trusted Billy, so you're upset with Billy,
but you don't yet have revenge with Billy.
Continue.
That's a great, it's a great insight.
Thank you.
Thank you, Ms. Winfrey.
Okay, okay.
But he says, but I'm willing to help you to find your dog.
Your dog's name is Harley.
So you and Billy start looking around for Harley, put up posters, Harley doesn't appear.
Two weeks pass.
But then you learn from Billy's friend.
Billy comes, the friend comes knocking on your door.
The friend comes knocking on your door.
Yeah.
He's just kind of like drunk or high and he knocks on your door and he says, hey, you know,
can you get me a bait dog like you did for Billy?
And you're like, what do you mean a bait dog?
What is that?
And why would I get you one?
And this guy, Sean, is his.
his name, reveals that Billy and Sean are part of a dog-fighting ring and that they use
weak scrawny dogs like your dog, unfortunately, to train this massive killer dog king
how to become a very dominant and lethal dogfighter.
And they did that with Harley, your dog, and king killed Harley.
and they threw Harley in a dumpster.
And...
Now, how are you feeling about Billy?
How are you feeling about him now?
How are you feeling about Billy?
So now you go to Billy.
But now how are you feeling about Billy?
Billy's got to go.
Billy's got to go.
All right?
So you got your feelings about Billy,
and now she goes to Billy.
Again.
Now she goes to Billy and confronts him and says,
did you, you know, did you do this to Harley?
And he denies it at first.
You persist.
You ask him again and again, what happened.
She's making you matter and matter.
And we say she, but it's you.
I mean, it's in the story you play the role of this dog owner.
And eventually he confesses.
He says he did it.
He has no apology at all.
He's happy about it.
And he threatens you if you go to the cops.
So what do you do?
You go to the cops.
You say you still go to the cops.
And how does this help us
acknowledge or
acknowledge our sense of revenge
or our desire to have revenge,
this story? Yeah, so
in the next step of the trial now,
now that you, this is a way
to infect an entire group of people
as we've done just here with the same
shared grievance so that we're not
all in our own heads with our own personal
grievances, but now we have one grievance.
We all know what it is and we
all want revenge for it. But we all
you'll experience if we had had
the time, we'd find that different people want different forms of revenge, different forms of
punishment, different forms of justice.
But some of us want the ultimate.
Some of us want Billy torn to shreds.
I've done this with a room of over 100 psychiatrists over at the Javitt Center in New York
City during a convention, and almost the entire room wanted Billy as a punishment to be put
in a cage and torn to shreds by dogs.
I mean, these are people who shrinks to make you feel of it.
These are the people who are supposed to help you think through your issues.
And they all want Billy in the cage to enter shreds.
Really? That really surprised me.
Because it's a natural, it's an intense and natural emotion.
And then I would go through the steps of putting Billy on trials.
So it developed, and we've tested at Yale, this non-justice system or miracle court approach.
You can all try it on an app.
It's a free app called the MiracleCourt app available at MiracleCourt.com.
It allows you to put anyone on trial who's ever wronged you, whether they're dead or alive, whether they're here or not.
And it's called the non-justice.
The non-justice system, but it's the Miracle Court app.
Okay.
And it's a role play trial in which you can put anyone on trial who's ever wronged you, but you play during this trial all the roles.
So you testify as the victim, but then you also testifies the perpetrator, the defendant.
You become the judge and jury deciding guilt or innocent.
and the punishment.
And then in the last step,
you're given the opportunity
to become the judge of your own self
and decide for yourself
whether getting this form of justice,
which you crave so badly,
is making you feel better or worse,
and whether there might be a stronger response
that could actually heal you.
And the good news of the research
that has happened over the last 20 years
that I talk about in the book
is that just as we are hardwired to get revenge,
we are also hardwired.
to heal ourselves through the process of forgiveness.
When you even imagine forgiveness,
you shut down that pain network
rather than covering it up with a dopamine hit
and you reactivate your prefrontal cortex.
Forgiveness, it turns out, is a wonder drug
or a human superpower that we don't really even know
almost anything about and we've dismissed it
and thought of it as something that's soft
and something that is re-victimizing.
And none of this is true.
forgiveness benefits you as the victim.
It's the only powerful way to self-heal.
Okay.
I have been saying this for years that forgiveness is giving up the hope that the past could be any different,
that I understand that forgiveness is the path forward.
But I know a lot of people are still stuck in that.
Forgiveness means I let you off the hook.
Right.
And that's why it's so hard to do.
Because I don't want Billy left off the hook at this point.
I don't.
I want him to suffer in some way.
I don't want to put him in a cage and see him pull the shreds.
But I feel like there should be karmic justice somehow.
Okay.
Anna is here.
You can relate to this story.
So what happened, Anna?
So my neighbor actually shot my dog.
And for a whole week, we did not know what happened to the dog.
Oh, my God.
That looks like my dog, Lou.
It's a white golden?
She was a great Pyrenees.
Oh, my God.
She was the nicest dog ever.
She wandered onto his property because he was building a garage.
And she did not do anything.
She sniffed the ground, literally, and he shot her.
And we had this on a camera.
So we were able to see where it came from.
And it was horrible.
We were very scared that he is going to come and shoot us.
next. And we have young kids, and it was very stressful, and we definitely had bad thoughts
towards him. But we would never act on them. We wanted justice, whatever that means.
We pursued at least that he was, you know, shamed and known for what he has done to us.
But I hear you and your husband can't get over the desire for revenge. I understand that.
I would feel the same way about my dogs.
We loved the dog, and it was so senseless.
You know, he never apologized.
And I think that's a part of it.
It seems like forgiveness.
But even if you apologize, what would that do?
Maybe, you know, he would seem more human.
Like, he understood that what he did was wrong.
But we never got that sense.
That he even cared that he did it.
Yes, exactly.
Yeah.
Just like the boys who shot his dog.
Yes.
They didn't care.
They didn't care.
And so when you come to this point of forgiveness,
is it that you must accept the fact that he didn't care?
He shot the dog and he didn't care.
You don't even need to come to that acceptance.
What you need to do with forgiveness, there are two types.
There's a decisional forgiveness and there's emotional.
That's the more involved in complex where you're trying to repair a relationship.
So with decisional forgiveness, the easier one,
it's something that you do internally to yourself.
And when you do this, as I say, it shuts down the painful grievance that you've held.
It shuts the pain from it.
It doesn't eliminate it.
You're going to remember.
But when it shuts that down and it shuts down the craving and reward circuitry, it begins to free you from the past.
Now, I think I understand from your story, police correct, correct, right of my wrong, but you still live next to this person.
Yes.
That is incredibly difficult.
And I would recommend moving as fast as I could.
I mean, I had the fortune of moving, you know, when my dog was lost,
I probably had to spend a year or two more,
and then I, you know, went off to college.
But being, have to be, having to live in close proximity
to a person who's done something so heinous to you
is going to be a daily, you know, triggering event almost for you.
Well, I think the point that you were making earlier
and that you make over and over again
in the science of revenge is that you forgive for yourself.
But this idea of having to feel like you're letting that guy off the hook doesn't feel right, does it?
No.
No, it doesn't.
No.
I mean, I think it was a decision.
But can you let it go for yourself?
Yes.
But you can do it for yourself.
That's why you would do it.
So I think that process of non-justice going through the trial,
in your own mind and playing every single part of the trial.
And what does that actually do to your brain?
So what that's doing for you when you go through that is it does a lot of things that are necessary
for all forms of trauma recovery and PTSD.
So it gives you several things.
It gives you one is an opportunity to be heard.
One of the things that we want after we've been traumatized is we want to be heard.
We want to share our story and we want to be validated that this terrible thing happened to me.
And if you can't get that.
You're telling it to yourself?
But you're telling it to yourself, and you might go,
well, that seems so ineffective and wasteful,
but it's not.
And here's why.
Because you are seeking justice for something
that doesn't exist in this world.
You don't need a courtroom
that's built of stone and judges that aren't you
and lawyers that aren't you.
What you really need is to go inside your head
where the pain lives and attack it at its root.
And when you do that,
and that's what we've been able to show in our studies,
when you go inside of your head
and you have this trial,
It would be really great if we could actually illustrate a trial.
People feel it.
They feel that they're testifying in a court.
And in truth, in the criminal and legal civil justice systems, trials rarely happen.
I mean, a very small fraction of the total number of crimes that are committed and civil cases that are filed actually go to a trial.
So you're never getting that anyway.
And hoping for that is a fruitless hope.
But here we can actually give you the trial that you want.
And when you experience that, you do get to be heard, but you get more than to be hurt.
Then you get to hold to account.
And holding to account is not the same as revenge.
When you hold someone to account, you're identifying them as the person who did the wrong.
And that's why I pointed out she's still living with the problem.
And that's why I said my strongest recommendation would be to move away as fast as I could from that situation if you possibly can to eliminate the pain.
unless you've gotten to a place of comfort
where you can live side by side
with this person who wronged you.
No. I mean, we built a fence,
which we were against.
Helpful. But we built a fence so at least we don't have to
see him on a daily basis.
And I refuse to allow him to, you know,
control my sense of comfort
and my sense of safety and move.
And that is such a strong personality trait.
A lot of people couldn't do that.
And I just, that's fantastic.
I really, that's a great.
I respect your right to do that.
Okay.
We're coming right back after a short break.
What if you found out that your partner was cheating on you?
Would you get revenge?
Would you want revenge?
Well, meet a woman who says she was so out of her mind
that she took revenge to the next level.
This is a wild story.
Next.
Thanks for joining me here and welcome back.
We're talking about the science of revenge
by Yale researcher James Kimmel Jr.
He's giving us plenty to think about
our own desires for revenge.
Let's get back to it.
So we have more people in our audience
who is struggling with their craving for revenge.
Courtney.
I'm a flight attendant, so I travel a lot for work.
I was in a relationship for the past year and a half.
We decided to move in together.
In February, I was moving into his house.
I came home two weeks ago to an empty house.
He told me he was spelling a night at his brother.
and something inside of me just was, it just, it didn't feel right.
So I went to the laptop, his laptop, and I looked through his email.
I didn't see anything at first, but I discovered Uber receipts,
and then I cross-checked it with my schedule.
Every time I was on a layover, every time I was on a girl's trip,
he was at this address.
Thanks to Google, you can see who owns its public knowledge.
And I saw that it was his ex-girlfriend.
place.
So, yeah, I was...
You got the receipts.
Sister girl got all the receipts.
You are ready.
The Uber receipts.
Okay, all right.
You're qualified.
We see.
You got the receipts.
So I went over there.
Within 15 minutes, he was coming out of her house.
So when we got to the house, he tried to lock me out.
It got into a very heated argument.
I decided to kind of just tear up the place because I was paying for everything for
the last six months.
He was unemployed.
I was taking care of him.
I was taking care of all the bills.
I was just working so hard
at a job that I don't necessarily love.
And what was me?
Did you have a waiting-to-exhale moment?
You put all his clothes in a pile and burn him?
I did.
Oh, you did?
I did.
I did. Yes, I took all the clothes.
I bought him.
I did.
Listen to you, grown-up people in here.
This young woman, you're applauding her burning up his clothes.
I had an incident like this in my 20s.
I didn't burn him.
I dropped them off at every bus stop in Baltimore.
I went from one bus stop.
So I know this feeling.
It makes me feel so much better.
Yeah.
I know this feeling.
It means you are out of control.
Yeah.
I was out of control.
The moment you get in the car and you go to look to see where he is,
you should be checking yourself in somewhere.
That's what I learned for myself.
Yes.
That's the moment you should be turning your own self in.
Yeah.
And I already knew that.
And so.
So I did. I tore the house up. I took everything I bought him, his clothes.
Then you put out posters, too?
I did. I put out posters with his face on. I made posters. It said...
This is a cheater.
Okay, okay. So you burned up the clothes. You put posters out all over the community.
You put posters out all over the community. And did you feel any better?
While I was doing it, I felt exhilarated.
I felt, especially when I got back into his building
and I was right by his door and I was like,
and I ran away and I was like in a little ninja blacked out outfit.
Yeah, it was exhilarating.
It's an addiction.
Yeah, now looking back, I don't feel great about my decisions,
but also like he destroyed my life.
And that's a little get back.
What you want to say to that, doctor?
Perfect illustration of, you know, revenge-seeking and revenge addiction.
You couldn't control it.
Now, let's hear what were the negative consequences for you of doing all of that?
None.
None?
Okay.
So you had zero.
I'm on the Oprah podcast.
Yeah.
That's very good.
I mean, no, I went to the doctor.
I'm on anxiety medicine now.
I have just riddled with anxiety, just ruminating
and how my life got here.
And he's still living rent-free in your head, right?
Yes.
And he'll, in like...
Oh, James called it.
He's broke, unemployed, and awful.
Thank goodness.
Yeah, and you will.
You're still very young.
I've been where you are.
Yeah.
Holding on to the bumper of a Dotson Z.
Okay?
I know.
It's embarrassing.
and holding on to the bumper for Dotson Z, dropping off the clothes at every different bus stop in Baltimore.
And then you realize, and then one day in my 40s, I was in the closet, crying for that woman.
Wow.
Crying for the woman who was so sad and pathetic that you thought you needed that person to make your life full.
Yeah.
So that is my prayer for you.
Thank you.
That you get to the point where you are not crying over him.
that you shed happy tears that you've evolved into the woman that you know you deserve to be
and that you have somebody who loves you the way you deserve to be loved
and that you are the master of your own fate and the captain of your own soul
and you're not depending on somebody else to give that to you
that's what this is here to show you this isn't even about him
this isn't even about him this is all about
about where you are in this moment.
But you don't get there.
You will get there.
You will get there.
You will get there.
So the question is, can we get you there faster?
And one of the ways of doing that, one of the most powerful and direct ways, is to forgive it as fast as you can.
Because to forgive it is to move him out of living inside your head and to leave him in the past and in the dust.
And so the question is, can we speed that process along and make it easier for people?
And when you go through all of the five steps of this process, you get that result.
You get to experience what I call methadone for a revenge addict, which is you get to really
imagine and experience what it's like to do the things you really want to do to him and punish those.
And then go, is that even that kicking him out of my head?
Is that making me feel better?
And the truth is you would find if we went through this process, it isn't.
and you would end up 20, what did you say, 40 years later?
Yeah.
Still.
Not 40 years.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
Yeah.
Well, 20, 40, 60, I didn't go to 80.
Okay, good, good.
In my 40s.
Yes.
Yeah.
In your 40s.
In my 40s, I came to the news.
But he was still there.
You hadn't completed the process.
Oh, yeah, I hadn't moved on.
I'd let him go, but what I read across all the letters I'd written to him and didn't send him.
So I realized.
So I realized, oh, that was never even about him.
That was about where I was.
It wasn't about him.
It was about me.
Thanks for listening.
We have to take a break.
Up next, maybe like me, you're wondering if the root of all violence we see in the world comes from revenge.
What are we to do?
James shares the antidote for revenge.
He says the good news is it is free and everybody can access it.
I'm back with Yale researcher James Kimmel Jr.
If you're learning as much as I am about the science of revenge, you can go ahead and share this link to this episode with somebody you think may be stuck in thoughts of revenge.
James writes about a man named Leonard who was suffering from revenge but was able to hit the stop button.
What happened, Leonard?
My parents moved up from Georgia to New Haven, Connecticut, to escape the south.
They were sharecroppers.
But they said when the youngest child graduates, they were going to move back.
So I was 17 years old, made plans to move back to Georgia.
And my oldest sister was dating a man, and she said, you know,
get your stuff right if you're coming with us.
He wasn't taking those steps, and he knew that she was going to leave him.
So he went to her job.
He was high to harm my sister.
And so it snowed that day.
So I went to pick up my mother from work.
So when we got back to my house, the police were there.
They said, get to the hospital.
And so welcome to Yale.
New Haven Hospital, the surgeon comes out and he says,
your sister was stabbed 20 times.
Whoa.
So I don't know if she's gonna live or die,
but I gotta get back in there and turn around and walked away.
You know, I was a good kid, I was in the church and everything.
But at that moment, me and my cousins went to the street
looking for the guy.
And then ultimately, I went back and a police officer,
not even then you went to hospital.
He says, Leonard, I said, yes, sir.
And he said, your sister's gonna live.
She has a punctured lung.
And I said, so he said, where's the gun?
So I just put my head down.
And he said, did you use it?
I said, no, sir.
He said, did you use it?
I said, no, sir.
He said, put it on the wheel well of my car up in the garage and walk away.
And so I did that.
He says, you're a good kid.
Don't trade places with him.
So unbeknownst to me, after he stabbed my sister, he cut his wrist and laid down next to her.
So he was up in the hospital anyway under police guard, but no one told us anything.
And so I risk a lot that day, you know, looking for him, trying to harm people trying to kill him.
He was already in the hospital.
But when the police officer said that your sister had lived, though, didn't that change something in your head?
It did. Not only that, that cop was great.
He says, if you're so protective of your family, be protective of your mother right now and go comfort your mother.
number one.
But the big thing he said that day was, do you have to kill him today?
Wow.
Can you wait?
And so that gave me a time to de-escalate, you know, to calm down and then to comfort my mother.
So that's something that I took and something I learned that I used today, you know, in the work that I do.
Really?
What is the work that you do?
At that time, I did go to college.
I worked in the prison.
I became chief probation officer, retired after 25 years.
And my specialties are working with violent offenders and youthful offenders.
And so I'm a football coach.
I'm a foster dad.
And I started a nonprofit in 2018, working with violent offenders and working with youth ages 13 to 24, shooters, so-called gang members, and also victims of community violence also.
So we have the nonprofit going in New Haven, Connecticut today.
And have you used that line that the police officer used with you?
Do you have to do it today?
Absolutely.
We respond to the hospital after community violence.
when, you know, a lot of times, you know, when you go to the hospital, the family's down there,
their friends are down there, everyone's emotional, and they want to get back.
And then that coupled with substance abuse, you know, when, you know, the emotions are heightened.
And that's, I always use that, you know, I'm going to get them, I'm going to get them.
And I said, listen, do you have to do it today?
Can you calm down?
Can you talk to your friends?
Can you go comfort mom, you know, the children, you know, the mother, you know, can you talk to
them, you know, right now, comfort them. Right now it's not about you. Can you comfort them but just
give it a little bit of time? And usually that's how we cut down on a lot of response. Wow.
You have to do it today. In the book, The Science of Revenge, James writes about, thank you so
much for sharing that story, Leonard. Wow. In the book, James writes about Scarlett, a mother who
lost her precious six-year-old son, Jesse, to gun violence. Jesse was one of the 20 children killed
during the mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary.
And Scarlett is here.
Scarlett, I read, you have forgiven the killer.
I have.
What was that process for you?
Well, actually, I was introduced to James by Dan Jewess,
who was one of the lead investigators of the Sandy Hook tragedy.
Hi, Dan.
But it was amazing.
And yes, I forgave Adam Lanza.
He was the former student of Sandy Hook,
who came back.
to the same elementary school that he attended and perpetrated the crime.
There were several reasons.
I mean, I have a strong faith.
And I grew up understanding that you forgive so you're forgiven.
So right off the bat, I was thinking about it.
But, you know, I was a single mom.
I was the only single mom out of all the parents.
And I had a 12-year-old son, Jesse's older brother.
So I knew that I was modeling for him how to move through this.
And I wanted to do it with strength and grace.
You were able to forgive immediately?
I knew that somebody that could do something so heinous
must have been in a tremendous amount of pain.
They, actually the town brought,
one of the trauma specialists brought a mom
who had experienced losing her son to violence 20 years prior.
And at the time, I thought I was going to die.
It was a few days after.
And I was in so much pain.
that I remember looking at my arm thinking,
I can't believe there's blood running through it.
I just feel like I'm going to vanish.
And so I was really interested in this woman that they brought in.
She came into the room and I remember thinking,
she's 20 years out, I'm going to live.
And that was where I started.
And then she started telling me about her life over those 20 years.
And it wasn't, it was filled with revenge, anger,
hatred towards the person that had caused the harm.
And I thought, actually I said within about five minutes,
I put my hand up and I said,
thank you so much for coming in and letting me know that I'm going to live.
I appreciate it.
But in my mind, I thought that is not going to be my life.
I want to go on to have joy.
And I realized no one's going to bring in a roadmap for me
and say,
you want joy, then you have to make a left at gratitude and a right at forgiveness, you know,
that it was going to be my choices from that moment forward that would determine my future,
and I could have any future that I wanted. And I wanted joy. So I just started choosing
and forgiveness was the most powerful choice that I made in that moment towards my own personal
healing and setting an example for my son. Wow. Unbelievable.
You're walking the walk.
You're walking the walk.
You believe James's work is the breakthrough that we've been waiting for.
How so?
I absolutely do, because I've dedicated my life now.
You know, when your 60-year-old son, you find out afterwards,
has saved nine of his classmates' lives before losing his own.
It is a huge motivator.
Did you tell her that, Dan?
Is that what was part of you?
your research? That's what we found out. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Tell us about that. What Jesse had done,
yes. So Jesse was in the first classroom that Adam Lanza went in. They were still at their seats.
They were caught by surprise. And from the information we have that before Jesse was shot,
he was able to tell his classmates to run. And nine of his classmates were able to run out of the
classroom before they were shot. Two ended up hiding in a bathroom and unfortunately we lost
five of them and their two teachers in that classroom. And it sounds like Scarlett had a conversation
with Jesse about that earlier that probably led up to that. What was that conversation? Well,
they had had an active shooter drill three weeks before the tragedy and, you know, being a parent that
just, you know, I had a full-time job and I just assumed that when my child was at school,
that it was their responsibility. And I remember one evening right before he was shot,
he came into the dining room after we'd had dinner and I'm sitting with my mom having a glass
of wine. He comes up behind me and he says, mom, what would I do if a school shooter came into the
school. And I mean, never thinking that it would ever happen to me, obviously, because those
things don't happen to people like me. I remember sitting there swirling my glass. I looked over
my shoulder and I said, run zigzag. You know, I mean, like, if I could do it over, I would drop to my
knees. And I would say, why are you asking that? You know, but I just was so nonchalant, never thinking that
that that that would happen.
So, you know, you find something like that out about your son.
I immediately quit my job,
realizing that I would have to dedicate my life to being part of this solution
and started a nonprofit called choose love movement.org.
We, I decided looking at the pathway to violence,
which is what the Department of Homeland Security uses.
And this isn't just for school shootings.
It's for all violence.
It usually, almost always, starts with a grievance, just like James said.
But what I noticed was that everyone was focusing on the attack end.
Just like we do major issues in our society, we focus on the problem.
And what you focus on grows.
And so I decided there's a lot of people doing that.
I'm going to take the road less traveled.
I'm going to focus on the grievance end.
And I'm going to give kids the skills and tools they need to manage that grievance.
But here's the interesting thing.
I watch and read and study every single school shooting that comes along.
And a lot of times, including in Sandy Hook, we don't know what the grievances.
We can't identify the motive.
And if you don't know why, how can you fix it?
And Dan sent me this clip of James, and it rocked my world because I thought,
Oh my God. James has solved it. Now we know why. And now we can fix this. Wow. That's right.
Thank you so much, Scarlett. Belinda, Belinda is a pediatrician and you're here with your husband, Ben.
Hello? In your email, you said you're a recovering revenge addict.
Yes, I'm a recovering revenge addict. Hearing Scarlett's story should help you a little bit, right?
Yeah, everybody's story, actually.
Yeah.
I think growing up in a culture where you were told not to speak as a child
and you were disciplined and you were ashamed if you did wrong but not praised when you did well.
And then I was bullied all my life.
But I became like an overachiever to overcome that.
But I scored a 60 on your quiz, so I think I have a lot of work to do.
All right.
And I find when I get shamed or bullied or whatever or wrong, that it starts here in the chest,
and it goes like to my head.
And I have to kind of like breathe and whatever, take a hold of myself.
Well, I'll take you back almost a year ago.
My husband and I were celebrating our 26th wedding anniversary up in Lake George.
And I bent over to pick something up.
And I felt this like as if a fire hydrant opened up in my chest and shot in my head.
And as a physician, I knew I was having a ruptured brain aneurysm at that moment.
And so I told Ben, please bring me to the emergency room.
I started vomiting profusely.
And I told him once we were five minutes away that I don't know how long I'm going to stay lucid.
So you have to make sure they scan me, tell them I'm having the worst headache of my.
life, you cannot leave me in a corner somewhere because I don't know how much longer I have.
And luckily, they got me into the CT scan. They transported me to my alma mater, Albany Med.
I stayed there for almost three weeks in the ICU, three brain surgeries later, and I'm a living
miracle, honestly. But I attribute a lot of that to the fight or flight, the stress,
the rage, everything that is in my mind
when I feel something's not going right
or somebody wronged me.
You feel like somebody wronged you?
Somebody wronged me.
I mean, it's not only that,
but it has a lot to do with that.
So were you wronged as a child?
Did something terrible happen to you?
Nothing terrible.
It's just very, you know,
being a firstborn, Asian girl and a family,
I was basically a third parent,
but an invisible third parent.
And there was a lot of, a lot of pressure put on me.
I do a lot of work with women that are from my culture.
And I see this a lot, which is another reason I was going to ask,
this is culturally related because there's a lot of women that harbor this kind of rage and anger.
But it's pent up from years of, you know, strict discipline, high standards,
and really just not being able to speak your mind, I think.
So you've been repressed
All these years
You've been repressed
Ben you're shaking your head
Because you have to deal with that
Yes
Yeah I mean
At the end of the day
It's just heartbreaking
Because I see
The blood boiling up inside her
Sometimes just directed at me
And most of the time deserved
But whenever it is
Whether it's her family or friends
or anyone that may have wronged her,
I do think that I notice a big difference now,
post-life quake, as we call it.
Yeah.
You know, I see her catching herself
and making the choices in those moments
to not, to steer left instead of right
and try to avoid that blood boiling.
And I'm so proud of her for that
because I think that she recognizes
that that's about her health at this point.
Yeah, yeah.
I don't want to see my family go through what they went through those past three weeks in the in the ICU with my sons, our sons at my side.
And I just, my health just means so much more than that boy.
But you realize you are a revenge addict.
Oh, yes.
You realize you see yourself in his book.
Yes.
Yes.
Yeah.
Much more in my 20s and my 30s.
But now, like, especially after this life quake, I'm like, it's not worth it.
It's just not worth it.
it's not worth it for any of us is what you're saying in the science of revenge no it's it's not um
as i as as i say we know from studies that revenge is the primary motivation for not only all forms
of human violence but also for all forms of nonviolent forms of revenge that it that afflict us you know
you're not a violent person but you're seeking nonviolent revenge right on a irregular or maybe you
are and and i didn't pick that up
I try not to be.
Try not to be.
And that's good.
But we do engage in other forms of revenge seeking that are not violent and that are almost
as destructive of families, communities, schools, workplaces, workplace sabotage.
In schools, we have, you know, teacher-student and student-student battles and bullying that is almost
as hurtful as physical violence is the psychological harm that we inflict on each.
other. And all of this is motive. You have to go to why do you want to hurt other people? It's not the
grievance. When, you know, when we go to ask the police, what was the motive behind the shooting?
Often the answer is we don't know yet. If there is an answer, the answer is the result of a search to
identify the grievance. That's not the motive. People hate other people and people feel injured in all
sorts of ways and most of them don't act violently. So clearly the grievance isn't the motive.
The motive is what the grievance does inside your brain to activate this desire to retaliate.
And that we don't have our police looking at. And quite correctly, and we don't need them to.
We know what the motive is in almost every violent act. When you see it on TV in the news tonight
or tomorrow and you see an act of violence and you go and you see the reporter go, what was the
motive? Do you have a motive yet? You can just answer. Scream back at the TV and go, it's revenge.
almost always revenge, the desire for revenge that's been activated by the grievance.
If we focus on the desire for revenge and look at that as an addictive process,
we can use all of the addiction strategies that we've developed for the last 20 to 30 years.
It's not just the grievance. It's not the grievance at all. That's just the activating event.
It's the switch that turns it on. Right. We have, there are as many grievances in the world as there
are people times the number of things you can imagine are grievances, times the number of things
that might be actual grievances,
and then times the number of seconds in a day.
In other words, almost infinity.
Okay.
Wow.
So it's not the grievance.
It's the thing that activates.
It's the one thing that grievances activate,
which is that is what activates
the brain biological revenge,
what I'll call the revenge circuitry,
which just happens to be the addiction circuitry.
And when we know that, we can fix them.
So is that some people and not all people?
That's correct.
It's some people and not all people.
All people, almost all people want revenge,
only about 20%.
as I was saying are people who can't control the urge and end up seeking revenge in ways that
harm themselves or other people. That's when it becomes a disease. Revenge seeking itself,
not a disease. Everybody wants revenge. It's like, think of this way, everybody gets high on opioids
and everybody can get intoxicated from alcohol. That's 100%. But only a small percentage of people
become alcoholics or a drug addicts. Yeah. Yeah. If you're looking in your lives for a living miracle,
it's sitting right here.
It's right in front of you.
Scarlet.
Right here.
Scarlet.
That's in a miracle.
I don't know how you did that, Scarlet.
And here.
I mean, we're seeing the power of forgiveness
to actually heal the most significant wound
that any human being could experience.
Leonard, did you forgave the guy?
He just said,
we were looking at a miracle that's you.
Did you forgive the guy?
It took some time.
So I actually went to the jail to see him.
Yeah.
So I could get answers because they were talking around me.
No one would give me answers.
And my family turned on me.
They said, you got your answer.
Don't forgive him.
Don't feel sorry for him.
I don't feel sorry.
I want answers.
And then ultimately, I went to college and came home and I saw him.
And I cut him off on the sidewalk.
I drove up on the sidewalk.
I got out of the car and I didn't know what to do.
But I think if I could have talked to him,
I would have been more prepared, but I didn't react.
He profusely apologized.
I didn't mean to hurt you, your family.
I'm sorry.
I was high.
I was feeling that loss that I was going to lose her.
And then he was already punished, but he did occupy space in my head, my entire undergrad in college.
And that's the part that I didn't even forgive myself for, you know.
Yes.
But you let him take up so much space in your head.
I let him take up so much space.
But I did read the book.
did do some work together, and I do utilize the practices of the non-justices.
Absolutely.
Well, you have given us, sir, a lot to think about here today.
Really?
There's much more fascinating ground covered in the book that we couldn't get to today.
James Kimmel Jr.'s book is called The Science of Revenge, Understanding the World's Deadliest
Addiction and How to Overcome It.
It's available wherever books are so.
Thank you all for being.
so candid. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. I know this conversation is giving you a new
way of thinking about revenge. And thank you audience and listeners. Thank you for your valuable time.
So let's meet up again next week. Go well, everybody. Go well. Thank you.
You can subscribe to the Oprah podcast on YouTube and follow us on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen.
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