Top Five Myths of Forgiving

I think it's clear that people generally WANT to be happy and at peace. 


Life experiences may train us to be comfortable with other states of existence, BUT in our most healthy and balanced state, we WANT happiness, joy and success.

So when I consider why people CHOOSE not to forgive themselves and others when all facts, information and inclinations point in that direction, I have to reflect on what took me so long to get smart about forgiveness.

I walked around for decades in the dark on the subject.  Well not completely.

I knew from a young age that I wanted to forgive the men who violated me.  I read up on love and forgiveness and really did try to walk the talk.

But there were beliefs buried in my thinking that stood in the way.

So here are my top 5 myths about forgiveness that I walked around with, stopping me from finding true and lasting peace. See if you can relate to any of them and if you have others, please share them below.

Myth # 1 

By forgiving someone you give them permission to hurt you again.  I didn't realize it but I did believe this.  Somehow I felt that by forgiving these horrible people I would be giving them OR OTHERS LIKE THEM permission to treat me as badly as they did.  I thought I'd be saying "what you did wasn't so bad, and I didn't really mind, so here do it to me again."  This is absolutely false.

Myth # 2 

Forgiving someone means it didn't hurt that much.  The damage done to my life is not that great. Very much like myth #1, I believed that the way I could show them and the world how much damage was done was to stay hurt, and and affected by the trauma. FALSE.

Myth # 3

Forgiving means reconciliation, we must be friends again.  I honestly believed that I would have to socialize with this person, allow him to greet me in the usual family like ways - hugs and kisses! - if I forgave him/them.  Not so.  Forgiving is to do with something done in the past and does not necessarily lead to reconciliation.  It can but does not have to.  That step is totally up to the person doing the forgiving.  I opted to forgive and begin to pray for my abusers but I didn't  remain in touch.

Myth # 4

Forgiving is something you do for someone else NOT for your self. I thought I was giving my violator a gift of love - which in a sense I was BUT it was first and foremost a gift to myself.  I was the one  who was immediately gaining a lighter spirit and the ability to move forward in my life.

Myth # 5    (?? - won't display same as others! )


By not forgiving I'm telling my abuser how much I hate him and how wrong what he did was: that somehow I needed to withhold forgiveness because otherwise he would think I loved him. I felt this more than thought it.  But it was real and stopped me from releasing all the baggage.

These myths, I came to find out were common.   When fear is driving our thinking, myths are easy to hang on to.  It takes courage to forgive and move on and when that courage is lacking we do tend to make things up to make sense of our present state of existence.

Forgiveness is an ongoing process. It is not a one time event.  This is actually another myth: that it takes just one decision and daily doses of forgiveness is not necessary.

It is after all a mindset, not just a one-time decision. It is a mindset that must be nurtured daily.  We also have to reflect on our beliefs (some are myths) to be sure we're thinking the thoughts that will create the outcomes we seek. (Think cause and effect; thoughts are the cause and our experience is the effect.)

Wishing you all the peace and joy and love you can muster!
♥♥♥
Julette

http://www.twitter.com/JuletteMillien

 

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