For years I have been trying to forgive and I can't. Know why? Because my body simply won't let me! It does not FEEL GOOD or natural to entertain this notion of forgiveness...because I think I have been trying too hard to force it before its own due time.
I wholeheartedly agree that forgiveness IS a personal thing and should never be dictated or suggested by someone else...to do so is being presumptuous and self-righteous.
Noted author and (forward-thinking) therapist, Susan Forward has this to say about forgiveness:
Article/Blog:
Forgive and forget: It's not always good advice
Cinderella may have lived happily ever after, but she would have had to overlook Prince Charming's inevitable midriff bulge and his roving eye.
Day-to-day survival can take the shine off any relationship, especially if a couple hasn't learned to overlook the annoying little mannerisms and personality quirks that make each of us human.
And what about those indiscretions or infidelities, before and after the relationship was established? Which ones are forgivable? Alan wrote us that after his wedding, his bride gave him herpes. "I would have left her when I found out," he said, "except we discovered she was pregnant."
He stayed in the relationship for his child's sake but never forgave his wife "Every time I have a herpes flare-up, I find myself looking at her with anger and fantasizing about who gave it to her ... and when."
According to the Judeo-Christian ethic, "To err is human, to forgive divine."
Not so, according to Susan Forward, Ph.D., author of "Emotional Blackmail" and "Toxic Parents." Forward maintains that it isn't necessary to forgive in order to feel better about yourself and to change the direction of your relationships.
"As a therapist, I began to wonder if attempting to forgive someone could actually impede the emotional healing process rather than enhance it," says Forward. "That's because there are two facets to (the concept of) forgiveness. Giving up the need for revenge, and absolving the guilty party of responsibility.
"On the one hand, letting go of your negative need for revenge is difficult, but it's a healthy step in the right direction and frees you to go on to other more productive emotions. On the other hand, absolving a person of responsibility may be a trap.
"Absolution is really another form of denial," says Forward. "If I absolve you of responsibility, we can pretend that what happened wasn't so terrible."
"The most dangerous thing about forgiveness, in the traditional sense, is that it keeps you from being angry at the other person. How can you be angry with someone you've already forgiven? What happens is that when you can't send your angry feeling outward unto the offending person, you may end up turning your anger inward ... onto yourself. How could I have been so stupid not to have recognized my partner's failings?"
Forward suggests that it is possible to forgive an offending partner, but adds: "A person should do it at the conclusion -- not the beginning -- of his or her own emotional house-cleaning."
Who is really responsible? Ultimately, we're all responsible for our own actions and each of us makes mistakes along the way. The secret to an acceptable and happy life is to strive not to make the same mistakes over and over again.
Andy's wife may not have known she had herpes when she married him. And she certainly didn't ask for the disease. They are both victims of a virus and the inconsiderate behavior of the person who gave it to her. Together, they need to stop diminishing or discounting the damage done to them both, and to openly confront their intense feelings of outrage, grief and fear.
Acceptance of a reality is the first step to letting it go once and for all. It's entirely possible to be angry with a situation, circumstance or event, without continuing to harbor anger toward the person involved. Pity -- and mercy -- should play a role in any relationship.
"Forgiveness is the exercise of compassion," claims Joan Borysenko, Ph.D., author of "Guilt is the Teacher, Love is the Lesson." It is both a process and an attitude.
Borysenko suggests that the process toward forgiveness is to take personal responsibility for your role in a particular outcome. Discuss how each of you could have done things differently. Look for the good points in your partner and accept his or her past as part of a learning experience. We all have weaknesses. The way we grow is to learn from our mistakes.
Be willing to make amends where possible for any pain you may have caused. Look for help from whatever source you respect and then share what you've learned with others.
Compassion is contagious.
Jaine Carter, Ph.D., and James D. Carter, Ph.D., write for Scripps Howard News Service. The can be reached on line at cartercarter.com.
Source:
http://members.shaw.ca/pdg/need_we_forgive_them.htmlFor me perhaps the most telling sentence in all of that is this:
"Acceptance of a reality is the first step to letting it go once and for all."
Yup. It is what it is.
Hey! Wanna hear somethin' funny that's giving me goosebumps right now? I'm listening to Comcast music channel right now..."The Blues" station and as I was typing the last sentence....guess what plays? "It Is What It Is" by Hard Believer 2009. WOW!!!!! IS THAT WEIRD OR WHAT!!!!!
Note: I don't necessarily agree with everything that Borysenko has to say ~
on edit: attempted to establish paragraphs for easier viewing.