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*this is from Johnny Chang's daily devotions (not my own words ya'll) @johnnychanglive “Heaviness in the heart of man maketh it stoop: but a good word maketh it glad.” Proverbs 12:25 (KJV) ================================ Many people struggle to tell the difference between venting and trauma dumping. And because of that, both the speaker and the listener often walk away feeling worse. On the surface, they can look the same. Both involve pain. Both involve honesty. Both involve sharing something heavy. But the heart posture behind them is very different. Venting is about release. Trauma dumping is about relief at someone else’s expense. Venting says, “I need to express this so I can process it.” Trauma dumping says, “I need you to carry this so I don’t have to.” Venting still respects the other person. Trauma dumping bypasses consent. One asks, “Do you have the space to hear this?” The other assumes space is owed. That difference matters. Trauma dumping is often unintentional. It usually comes from unresolved pain, fear of being alone with thoughts, or desperation to be seen. But intention does not cancel impact. Pain unloaded without boundaries transfers weight instead of healing it. That is why trauma dumping often leaves the listener feeling overwhelmed, anxious, or responsible for fixing something they were never meant to fix. And here is where the gospel gives clarity God never designed people to be saviors for one another. You are meant to support. Encourage. Listen. But you are not meant to absorb what only God can carry. Venting becomes unhealthy when it replaces surrender. Pain is repeatedly spoken but never brought to God. Sharing becomes rehearsing. Honesty becomes identity. Biblical venting moves pain toward healing. Trauma dumping keeps pain circulating. Venting leads to clarity. Trauma dumping reinforces chaos. There is also a difference in direction. Venting eventually points upward. Trauma dumping keeps everything horizontal. One invites prayer, wisdom, or perspective. The other seeks emotional regulation through people. And Scripture warns us about this gently. Heaviness in the heart is real. But relief comes from the right word, not endless release. Step by Step: How to Tell the Difference Check consent Did you ask if the other person had the capacity to listen? Notice the pattern Is this a moment of sharing or a cycle with no movement? Examine the goal Are you seeking clarity or emotional offloading? Watch the fruit Do conversations lead toward peace or leave everyone heavier? Bring pain to God first People are helpers, not healers. Share with purpose Speak in a way that invites healing, not dependency. Healthy venting still honors boundaries. It allows space for response. It leaves room for God to work. Trauma dumping often ignores all three. Not all honesty is healing. Healing honesty moves pain toward God, not just into people. PRAYER: Lord, help me speak honestly without placing weight on others that they were never meant to carry. Teach me how to share pain in a way that leads to healing and surrender, not dependency. Give me wisdom to know when to speak, when to pause, and when to bring my heaviness directly to You. Amen. Blessings, Johnny Chang