The Irish Mail on Sunday

The proof revenge is a dish best served cold

- By Roger Dobson

REVENGE really is a dish best served cold – as people who feel wronged by someone else can take up to a year to exact retributio­n, according to new research.

Instant retaliatio­n is uncommon, say Dutch psychologi­sts, who found that only about one person in 10 strikes back immediatel­y after being offended.

Of the two-thirds of men and women who admit to being vengeful, nearly 40 per cent have carried out acts of score-settling, from playing loud music and obstructiv­e parking to infidelity and spreading gossip.

The researcher­s believe the timing of retributio­n suggests it is not done simply to punish offenders but to restore the avenger’s own self-esteem and sense of power over the situation.

‘Our results show that revenge takes place after some time,’ said study co-author Maartje Elshout of Tilburg University. ‘Real-life revenge is not so much focused on deterrence, but on restoring selfesteem or a sense of power. The act of revenge does not need to be instantane­ous nor proportion­al.’

In the study, published in the Journal Of Social Psychology, Dr Elshout and her team quizzed nearly 2,000 people aged 16 to 89 about their experience of revenge, including the time it took to seek retributio­n and what they did.

Two-thirds of the volunteers had experience­d feelings of wanting to take revenge, and 37.6 per cent had actually taken revenge at least once. Some had carried out up to four acts of revenge.

Results show that 14.4 per cent took revenge immediatel­y, within a minute. About 36 per cent took up to a week, with 23 per cent striking one to four weeks later. Some 21 per cent hit back between one month and a year later, and around five per cent took more than a year to get their own back.

‘Our findings suggest that revenge is typically delayed,’ says Dr Elshout.

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