Forgiving Yourself - How Dare One Even Think It!
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Forgiveness is such a
difficult topic to deal with and has so many complicated
dynamics. Either it is almost an impossibility for people to
grasp, or maybe it is so simple, we simply don't get it. It's
probably both.
Most of the time we
focus on either being forgiven by others, which has it's own
dynamics, or trying to figure out how to forgive those that hurt
or offended us. Everyone has both kinds forgiveness going on and
so it can get complicated at times. We often are motivated by
the idea of “well, I guess I have to forgive them because they
said they forgave me...how dare them, damn it.” Even the Bible
encourages Christians to forgive simply because they were
forgiven by God, through Jesus. It even says that God forgave
us, not for our sake, but for Jesus sake, which seems a bit like
missing the intended mark. I want to be forgiven for my sake for
Jesus sake!
Frankly, most don't
really forgive but rather let it go to a point of trying not to
think about it and yet it simmers on the stove, always available
to continue in some form of drama or painful memories to throw
back and forth like lawn darts trying to hit the ring right in
the middle and claim points over.
I have people in my
life who I hope in time would forgive me and I have issues with
some for which I need to keep growing toward a more complete and
genuine forgiveness. I am at a stage where I am able to look
back and see that sometimes what seems such an insult is really
an opportunity to grow past something where things can work out
better than it ever could have without the push. It is not
always this way, of course, but can be if we look for the good
in the “bad,” which often lurks there grinning at us.
I'd like to talk a
bit about the one kind of forgiveness that seems the most
difficult of all. That would be forgiving YOURSELF. Forgiving
yourself is something that is the final issue to be resolved
when offenses have occurred for which forgiving or being
forgiven has run it's course. We either can forgive others, and
we do it over time and in degrees, or we can't. We are either
forgiven, again over time and to various degrees, or we are not.
We can control the pace of the one, forgiving others, but not
when, if or how others forgive us. That is their issue, not
ours, even though we wish it could be given in such a ways as to
feel genuine and perhaps open some new doors to reconciliation
in any way.
But forgiving
yourself feels almost impossible. Why? First of all, there is
that funky part of our nature that feels our forgiving ourselves
is contingent on being forgiven FIRST by others for our
offenses. Once they do that, then MAYBE, one can think of
forgiving themselves. The problem is you might wait until hell
freezes over before you are given permission of this kind to
forgive yourself. If you forgive yourself without being forgiven
by others, there tends to be a voice in your head that says,
“How dare you forgive yourself. We have not forgiven you yet.
What are you thinking!” It is followed by, “when we get around
to forgiving you, we will let you know and then you can play at
forgiving yourself, you jerk.”
You see , forgiving
oneself seems to others a some form of denial or that you don't
take what has happened very seriously. To forgive yourself is to
send a message that you are rather shallow or oblivious to the
pain caused, when in fact, only you know that it is the depth of
the pain that makes you want to be able to forgive yourself and
move on. NO ONE can be harder on me than me. That is my own
experience. I am the monkey on my own back when I cause pain to
others. Perhaps others don't know this, believe this or even
want to think this as it might take away some of the sting they
can inflict if they choose to, but it is true. Most sensitive
people, who even care about this topic are way ahead of their
accusers in self condemnation and knowing the pain they have
caused that they seek forgiveness for. There are flippant types
who hurt others and seem oblivious to it. I do not speak of this
type of person, nor is that who I am.
Secondly, as
mentioned, we feel that if we forgive ourselves, even if there
is no forgiveness extended to us, we are not taking the drama
seriously enough. I felt and can feel guilty if not careful for
even enjoying life as that might prove I don't take things
seriously enough on this topic of forgiveness. “No I won't
forgive you. You don't seem miserable enough yet.” So often,
being forgiven includes requirements and proof you are really
sorry for the offense and prove it day and night, over and over
by being miserable, practically forever...amen.
Sometimes the
requirements that one must meet to be forgiven are just
impossible to comply with. Sometimes there is a temptation to
comply just to feel forgiven, but it won't last as the two
really can't be connected. Forgiveness is a clean experience
that allows everyone to be who they really are and think as they
really think, no apologies. Anything less is mere compliance for
a time and then of course, on go the masks until the next time
they fall off. Messy forgiveness is the obligatory kind usually
enforced by a fear that if we don't, then Jesus or God or some
Deity might just not forgive us of our picky little sins, that
we really have very few of.
So in order to
forgive ones self, one has to not connect the forgiveness with
performance as proof. I can only speak for myself, and I am sure
this would be a point of contention, but when I cause the need
to be forgiven, I was doing the best I could at the time of the
perceived problem. We always do our best at any particular
moment which is different from doing better as others might wish
us to do to come up to standards they feel are more correct, in
their view. But doing better is a future thing. Doing our best
is what we always do at any moment we do what we do, or we would
do better!
Finally, it is hard
to forgive ourselves because we tie being able to do that with
fixing that which we are needing to be forgiven for. I am a
fixer and caretaker by nature. That is how I am wired. ENFP
according to
Meyers and Briggs. That is Extrovert, Intuitive,
Feeling and Perceptive. People like me become ministers,
counselors, negotiators and of all things, massage therapists.
So I have not strayed far from how I was wired at birth. We are
negotiators because we tend to see both sides of all stories and
the points that both sides make for their views. But the
downside to this is that we can get stuck in views and not make
decisions. If we can't fix it, we can't move on. If we can't fix
it, then we don't mean it. If we can't fix it, then we are
shallow and gutless. The fact is that some things just don't
fix. That is painful but true. All things broken cannot be fixed
and if forgiveness of the self is based on first fixing that
which is broken, or different, or changed or one sided, then you
can't forgive yourself and never will. And so you spin. Damned
if you do and damned if you don't. Stuck between rocks and hard
places, heaven and earth, the devil and the deep blue sea.
But, fixing is not a
criteria for forgiving yourself. It can't be because we can't
always fix that which is broken but we must forgive ourselves as
a part of real living.
So examine how things
came to be.
Know that you
probably were doing the best you could under the circumstances
at that time and that is not the same as doing better, but these
are two different things.
Don't base your need
to forgive yourself on whether anyone else on the planet
forgives you for what you have done, not done or said you wished
you could do.
Realize that, of
course, you have taken this all very seriously. This might be
proven by, oh say, the tears, the anxiety, the doubt, the head
banging against the wall, the depression, which is anger turned
inwards. It might be the shame you feel which is a perception
that you have not lived up to tribal or religious expectations,
as if most do, or the guilt over breaking the taboos of the
group. Only you need to know how seriously you take that which
happens in life and do not let your forgiving yourself depend on
whether others give you permission to do so.
And finally, some
things don't fix. Just getting back into some box that doesn't
work is not a fix. Patching is not fixing and trying to be what
others expect as the only way to fix is patching and masking.
Often things don't fix because one is not accepted for what they
are, how they think or what they believe. This is why many with
marital problems separate for six months, return, separate for
three months, return and then separate for one week , return for
their socks and can't fix it.
Forgiveness is not
something to take for granted, but a healthy life includes the
ability to see through this topic in practical ways and forgive
YOURSELF as well, and maybe even first of all.
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