Dmytro Telushko on emotional intelligence. Why anger keeps you in toxic relationships. MriyaRun psychological tools to break the Victim-Rescuer cycle.
The Trap of "Holy Anger": The Anatomy of Role Switching in Codependent Relationships
(Excerpt from a Future Book on Emotional Intelligence)
By Dmytro Telushko
We are used to viewing conflicts as linear events: someone hurt us, we got angry, we responded. But in psychology, especially when it comes to intimate relationships, things work differently. Most couples experiencing a crisis live not in reality, but in a script known as the Drama Triangle (Victim — Rescuer — Persecutor).
In my practice and during the development of MriyaRun psychological tools, I constantly encounter the same phenomenon: people confuse the energy of anger with the energy of freedom. It seems to them that if they get angry enough and slam the door, the script will end. But the text I am currently working on, and the experience of generations of psychologists, prove the opposite: anger without awareness is just fuel for the next act of the drama.
Let's examine this under a microscope using the example of a classic couple — let's call them Mykola and Olena. This is a collective image in which many will recognize themselves or their acquaintances.

The Trap of "Holy Anger": The Anatomy of Role Switching in Codependent Relationships
Act 1: The Insidious Sweetness of Rescuing
Mykola is a "good husband," but he has a problem. Every evening he returns home, stops by a bar or a store, drinks "a couple of bottles to relax," and turns into a passive, helpless creature.
Olena is a responsible woman. She sees this and instantly switches into the role of the Rescuer.
What does she do?
- Cooks dinner while he sleeps in front of the TV.
- Calls his boss in the morning, inventing a legend about the "flu" when Mykola has a hangover.
- Searches for his lost keys and phone.
- Suppresses her irritation so as "not to escalate."

the role of the Rescuer
Outwardly, this looks like care. But inwardly, it is an act of psychological violence. By rescuing Mykola, Olena broadcasts a powerful unconscious message to him: "You are worthless. You cannot take care of yourself. Without me, you are lost."
During this period, Olena feels like a "Holy Martyr," and Mykola like an infantile Victim. But the problem with the Rescuer role is that it always, inevitably, leads to burnout. No one can carry responsibility for two people forever. To track this moment of overstrain before the explosion, we use special emotional and self-reflection diaries, which help notice the imbalance before it becomes a catastrophe.
Act 2: The Inevitable Explosion and "Righteous Anger"
The energy spent on rescuing demands a return. When Olena does not receive gratitude (and the Victim never sincerely thanks the Rescuer because deep down they feel humiliated), she explodes.
Olena decides she has had enough. She reads an article about needing to use "tough love." She pours the alcohol down the sink, throws a massive tantrum, threatens divorce, or even starts an affair to "teach him a lesson."
This is the critical moment of error.
Olena thinks she has exited the triangle. She feels power, adrenaline, anger. But in the coordinate system of emotional intelligence, she has simply flipped the switch to the role of Persecutor.
Mykola instantly falls into the role of a pure Victim. He suffers. He doesn't understand why he is being punished so severely. His suffering is so genuine that Olena starts to feel guilty. And guilt is the glue that brings her back to the role of Rescuer.
"Well, maybe I went too far. He's not that bad when he's sober," she thinks, and the cycle closes.
Act 3: Why Does the Victim Become the Executioner?
There is another nuance that is often kept silent. When Mykola, under pressure from Olena's threats (as Persecutor), quits drinking for a week, he does not become happy. He feels humiliated and cornered.
His sobriety becomes his weapon. He begins to persecute Olena:
"I quit drinking, so why didn't you quit smoking? Why is the house messy? You wanted a perfect husband — here I am!"
Now he is the Persecutor. Olena, exhausted by his nitpicking, turns into the Victim. She cries, complains to her mother, and... waits for him to start drinking again so she can return to her familiar, comfortable role of Rescuer, where she will be "good" again in comparison to him.
Without tools to analyze the situation, such as metaphorical associative cards (MAC) or workbooks on belief systems, couples can walk in this circle for decades, changing only the scenery.

accepting total responsibility for YOUR part of the game
What Does a Real Exit Look Like? (The Path to Adulthood)
The real exit from the triangle is not escape, not revenge, and not anger. It is accepting total responsibility for YOUR part of the game.
For Olena to truly change her life, she must do a paradoxical thing. She needs not to blame Mykola for his drunkenness, but to apologize to him for her Rescuing.
A healthy conversation scenario looks like this:
- Acknowledging the Fact: "I realized that for a long time I played the role of your mother. I solved your problems, covered for you, and controlled you. I did this to feel important, but in reality, I humiliated your ability to be an adult man."
- The Apology: "I apologize for not believing in your strength to handle your own life."
- Setting Boundaries: "From now on, I will not rescue you. I will not buy you alcohol, I will not call your boss, and I will not scold you. I will take care of myself. If your behavior threatens me, I will be forced to distance myself, but not to punish you, but to protect myself."
This is the position of an adult. There is no anger here. There is sadness, there is respect for the other (even for their right to ruin their life), and there is respect for oneself.
Why Is This So Hard?
Because it is scary. To stop being a Rescuer means meeting your own emptiness, which we filled with other people's problems. We have to learn to accept ourselves, find our own meanings, learn gratitude for what we have, and build effective synergistic relationships with people who do not need saving.
- Mriya.run: Space for Conscious Change. Learning, Practice & Tools
- Tools & Resources
- The Anger Trap: Escaping the Drama Triangle. Dmytro Telushko
