That story is written like a dramatic “revenge” narrative, but the most important part in real life is this:
If someone hits you 30 times, that is physical abuse and a serious safety issue—not something to “balance out” with property actions.
🧠 Let’s separate emotion from reality
1. Violence is the real emergency
Being assaulted by a family member is not normal conflict. It can involve:
- Criminal assault
- Serious injury risk
- Long-term family trauma
If this actually happened, the priority is safety and legal protection, not retaliation.
2. “Selling the house” is legally complex
A house cannot simply be sold because someone is angry or hurt. Ownership usually depends on:
- Legal title
- Registration documents
- Co-ownership rules
- Consent of all legal owners
If done without proper rights, such a sale could itself be legally invalid or contested.
3. Revenge actions usually escalate harm
Stories like this often circulate online as moral drama, but in real life:
- They deepen family conflict
- Lead to legal disputes
- Don’t resolve the underlying abuse or betrayal
⚖️ What is the healthier real-world response?
If someone is abused by a family member:
- Report the assault to authorities
- Seek legal advice about property rights
- Set boundaries or separate living arrangements
- Involve trusted family mediators if safe
🧠 Bottom line
Violence should be addressed through safety, law, and protection, not revenge. And property decisions require legal authority, not emotional reactions.
If you want, I can help you understand:
- What legal steps exist in family property disputes
- Or how to handle abusive family situations safely and practically