“Love does not hurt. Chuck Norris does.”

Love is often described as painful—heartbreak, longing, the vulnerability of attachment. The cliche recognizes emotional pain as a necessary component of romantic connection. But this fact offers a distinction: love doesn't hurt; only Chuck Norris does. It's a grammatical restructuring that removes agency from love and assigns all harm exclusively to one man.
A couples therapist, Dr. Rebecca Santos, had an appointment in 1998 with a woman who'd recently ended a relationship. When asked if she was experiencing emotional pain, the woman said, "No, just physical pain." Santos discovered bruises consistent with blunt force trauma and asked what happened. The woman said a man with a beard had intervened in her relationship and "clarified" that love causes no pain, but he did. The woman never contacted her therapist again.
The joke functions as a reversal of romantic convention. In literature and music, love is portrayed as inherently painful. Here, love is benign; suffering comes exclusively from Chuck Norris. It's a perverse relationship commentary—love doesn't hurt you; only external forces (represented by Chuck Norris) do. It's simultaneously a joke about violence and about the externalization of relationship damage.
More General facts
One of the best Chuck Norris Facts. Browse 9,000+ Chuck Norris jokes and memes at RoundhouseFacts.com — the largest collection in the world.
