“…In addition, it directs survivors' destructive anger outwardly towards the attacker instead of inwards (Berger, 2014; Gollwitzer & Denzler, 2009), providing the survivors with some degree of emotional closure (Haen & Weber, 2009) and, above all, draw the line between what is right and what is wrong, who is responsible and should carry the blame and who should not. In the latter sense, a desire for revenge is self‐protective, stabilizing the psyche and transforming the victim's behaviour from passive to active, thus, regaining a sense of control and self‐esteem which is required for recovering (Iordanou, 2019; Strelan et al, 2020). Creative tools such as drawings are useful techniques for expressing socially unacceptable desires such as the desire for revenge, encouraging verbalization and enriching the narratives, which may promote recovery (Lev‐Wiesel et al, 2020; McInnes, 2019).…”