Destructive by Nature — Some People Build While Others Destroy
Construction and destruction — constructively dealing with people bent on destruction

Have you ever met that person who seems to swing around like a wrecking ball?
The ones going around laying their claws into anything and everything in hopes of mass destruction?
I know you have met that person. You may even be them.
Regardless of whether you are a constructive or destructive person — because the choice is yours — it is valuable to be aware that we are all constructing and destructing all the time.
No-one creates one hundred percent of the time, and there is always a time and place for destruction.
Everything built must, someday, be torn down — less it eventually rots away. We try to preserve some constructs for symbolic and historical purposes. But in the end, it will all be destroyed — eventually.
Everything is one day destroyed, whether by human intention or slowly melting into dust. Many times, though, we do not leave things to rot.
In a functional community, hazardous old houses and wastelands are destroyed and discarded. The constructs in our respective personal and professional lives are just like houses. Sometimes they must be torn down to make space for new ones — better ones.
Constructively, we destroy unhealthy relationships, careers we hate and things that do not serve us. We use this destruction for construction. We destroy to create, to re-build and to refine — no different than being born to die or vice versa.
In this regard, destruction is not inherently destructive — but necessary for construction. Life is a great paradox, though, and every aspect of human nature is a double-sided coin.
The wrecking balls we speak of are people who are bent on destruction. These are people who constantly destroy — the ones who tear things down but never build things.
These are the people that go around watering weeds instead of seeds.
Everything they do and say is in the spirit of destruction.
If you find that you are destroying more than you create, do not be hard on yourself. It is not your fault. It is a symptom of the human condition that I would dare to say all humans have experienced at some moment in their life — no matter how brief.
If you are dealing with destructive and negatively focused people, you can utilize their destruction by looking at it constructively.
When we change the way we look at things, the things we look at change. — Wayne Dyer
When handled with great care, you can use the destructive nature of others to build. You can use their destruction for your construction.
Those bent on destruction are this way because of what is inside them, not what is inside of you. Nothing you could do or say would be enough to stop someone addicted to drama — or satisfied by viciousness — from being who they currently are. Hurt people hurt people. What comes out is what’s inside.