
When your creativity and hard work become their paycheck
(By Hella Ahmed) The worst people to get involved with in any kind of relationship are those who place enormous value on their own time but treat yours like it’s worth nothing. The hours you give them go straight into feeding their selfishness and toxic narcissism. We have to choose carefully, because double standards are the favorite tools of parasitic minds. They fuel the egocentrical schemes of villains—some of whom wave around empty good intentions just to turn everyone into their obedient servants.
It’s been 12 years now that I’ve been creating my own original content—my essays, of course, no indecent recycling or rehashing like the plagiarists and fraudsters who’ve been at it for countless years—and sharing it with the public (plus one extra year for my podcasts). What do I get back in the wrong places? Nothing. Some environments are simply toxic, and you shouldn’t pour yourself into them. Unfortunately, I stubbornly refused to face the dead end for far too long, and I wasted precious time. Unscrupulous people snatched the fruits of my energy, and the money I invested.
Some places make you feel like your life is already over, even though you’ve worked incredibly hard, made every sacrifice, and were just waiting for it to truly begin. Whiny people aren’t productive, but when you’re productive and your only remaining choice is to speak the truth—about how certain selfish, protected abusers leeched off you for their own gain while calmly finding ways to fight back against your resistance and rejection of their behaviour like lunatics who are perfectly at peace with hurting you—then you’re trapped in a world where everyone gets a chance except you.
Strangely enough, some people believe intellectual property rights only apply to them—to what they produce, often after plagiarizing it first. There are quite a few of them, well known for their arrogant naïveté and lack of integrity. Anyone who isn’t part of their pampered, publicly funded clique—funded without the public ever really choosing it—supposedly doesn’t deserve respect or protection for their original work. What nonsense, right? Glorifying that abusive mindset means missing the bare minimum of respect for people’s intelligence. “What’s mine is mine—you’re not going to make money by stealing from me just because your need to share something good with the public comes from the heart! Have a little self-respect and look elsewhere when you’re asked to stop the violation and deal with your plagiarism addiction.”
There are millions of creators and writers on this planet, yet obsessively targeting one single person with persistent, sneaky violence—that’s psychopathy. Go read, learn, and for once stop fixating on stealing from and taunting that one someone you’re fixated on. Get some fresh air, get help for that shameful perversion. Grow up.
Is it normal to openly claim other people’s successes as your own, even smirking while you do it? Well, no—it’s not normal to behave so dishonestly, especially in public, if we define “normal” here as “ethical.” And yet some find it perfectly fine to vampirize other people’s intellectual property to get paid. Not just anyone’s—mine—because I’m capable, creative, and independent. Being so proud and cheerful while committing this normalized, sneaky, profit-driven violence is tragic. They even find it funny, when it’s actually sadistic and pathetic.
Just be yourself—everyone else is already taken! Copycat stalkers and plagiarists aren’t nice people looking for inspiration; they’re fraudsters and energy vampires who steal your identity and content to get promoted and make money. They don’t put in honest effort, they don’t collaborate fairly or pay creators for their work to improve a product or themselves—they abuse, fake it, and get ahead by any despicable means. Let’s not be like those parasites. Let’s have integrity.
You confront what they’ve done, and they just keep smiling calmly, like venomous snakes staring you down—making your emotions, your feelings, your rights seem irrelevant. It’s their sadistic, perverted pleasure to push your buttons and smirk.It’s psychopathic, because they’re convinced no one can stop them. Pure evil, something to cut out of your life if you don’t want to get poisoned.
Narcissists also always pull out some past hardship to hide behind whenever you call out their crooked behavior. They switch the subject, bring up their suffering, their kids, anything to paint themselves as saints—which is ridiculous. But the public only sees the carefully constructed image designed to fool them, and hiding behind kids, the youth or positive emotional speeches is a great trick for making money while dismissing the awful truth of what was done, simply discarding the obvious reality.
Hella Ahmed 2025 © All rights reserved – Find my books on Amazon








