How Many Times Does Someone Have to Say " I'm Sorry?" Should You Forgive Already?
By Yangki Christine Akiteng, Love Doctor
Forgiveness has been on my
mind lately. No, I am not hurting. And I have forgiven all I
need to forgive, and hopefully have been forgiven for all
the wrongs I've done to others. Hearing about and seeing so
many relationships destroyed by emotional hurt and so many
good and loving people kept apart by the struggle to forgive
the other, may be the reason I am thinking a lot about
forgiveness.
Asking for forgiveness (apologies, regrets, and expressions
of sorrow) for the things we have said or done (or not said
or done) you'd think is as natural as breathing, eating,
sleeping, going to the bathroom and death, but it's not.
Saying "I'm sorry" or anything that requires forgiveness
comes less easily to a majority of people
A friend of mine joked about how in our world today, it's
easier to ask for permission to be rude, curse, look at
porn, use demeaning words, or be mean to someone else, than
it is to ask for forgiveness.
And even when psychology and spirituality studies reveal
that physical health, particularly in cardiovascular health,
is better in those who forgive than those who do not, most
of us prefer to hold onto our RIGHT to hurt, to resentment,
to negativity, to anger, and to hate.
Part of this, I believe is that many of us were raised to
believe that forgiveness is a "gift" that one gives to the
undeserving perpetrator or wrong doer. Remember when you
were young and that so-and-so did something that really hurt
you, but your parents or teachers told you "Say I am sorry
to so-and so. Now shake hands/hug" and you felt like
something that was RIGHTFULLY YOURS had been taken from you
and given to so and-so?
It's no wonder many of us struggle to give this "gift of
forgiveness" because we only give gifts to people who are
good to us and to people we like, love, appreciate or want a
favour from. For many, giving this "gift of forgiveness"
amounts to saying to the undeserving perpetrator or wrong
doer, "Thank you for hurting me this bad." That just goes
against their rational sensibilities. Gifts are free and
deserved. The person who has wronged us must "pay" for his
or her actions before we even consider giving him or her a
"gift".
For others, this "gift of forgiveness" means condoning,
excusing, cutting the other person some slack or forgetting
the wrong doing -- or sinful action. Many worry that if they
"forgive" someone who is not truly repentant, how sure are
they that person won't do something just as horrible
tomorrow. Some people even refuse to accept an apology
because according to them, "it wasn't sincere". They hold on
to this "gift" until they know for sure that the undeserving
perpetrator or wrong doer really feels the weight and
suffers the guilt of his or her wrong doing -- or sinful
action.
And because most of us don't like "sinning" or feeling that
we have brought hurt and pain into the life of another by
our words or actions (or lack of) we're not particularly
thrilled about asking for forgiveness. Asking for
forgiveness means admitting guilt, imperfection or
vulnerability. Admitting that we're imperfect means that
others won't see us in a favourable light (and won't love
us). Admitting that we're vulnerable means others will take
advantage of us -- and even hurt us. Who wants to be in such
a position?
The irony is that the person unable to forgive or refusing
to ask for forgiveness ends up with emotional constipation,
emotional insomnia and in emotional death.
Forgiveness -- giving it and receiving is one thing: A GIFT
YOU GIVE TO YOURSELF.
When you ask for forgiveness or forgive another, you do it
for you, not for the other person. It's great feeling if the
other person comes to you and asks for forgiveness but the
reality of life is that sometimes some people will never do
that.
Do it for yourself! Free yourself from emotional prison --
resentment, negativity, holding a grudge, bitterness, anger,
and hate. The hurts won't heal until you forgive!
Do it for yourself! Choose not to live in the fear of your
own fallibility, fear of your own vulnerability and fear of
what you might lose, but rather surrender yourself
completely to the many emotional, physical and spiritual
rewards that forgiveness brings into your life.
Do it for yourself! Turn this around and use the hurt as a
tool for learning how to deposit compassion, generosity of
spirit and love into you own love account. There will come a
time when you need to withdraw from this account, make sure
you have plenty when you need it.
Do it for yourself! It's the path to emotional healing,
spiritual purity, love, peace and happiness.
It is not easy to say, "I am sorry" but it gets easier with
practice and with mindfulness. But what if you are the
wronged party, how many times should you forgive someone?
E-V-E-R-Y S-I-N-G-L-E T-I-M-E. Remember you are doing it for
yourself, not for the other person.
All it takes to begin this journey of forgiveness is saying
to yourself, "I forgive.... for...." and just sit there
listening to your emotions. If tears flow, let them. If you
feel anger don't try to make it go away -- suppress it or
rationalize it. Accept that you are hurting -- it's okay to
hurt, and it'll probably hurt for a while -- but you are not
going to let the person who wronged you keep you in that
emotional prison anymore. You are giving yourself this
precious gift of forgiveness because you deserve it -- after
all that's been done to you!
You may not have the power to choose what you forget but you
have the power to choose to forgive. It's your gift to give
to yourself!
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