IFC - Championship Round: "FORGIVENESS"

in ifc •  6 years ago  (edited)

"Yesterday is gone and its tale told. Today new seeds are growing." ~ Rumi


This topic came quite organically through the deep heart discussion between friends - baring our wounds for all the world to see here on Steemit. The word 'forgiveness' was brought up in the context of parental abandonment. A particularly deep wound for anyone to carry in life. Are some wounds too deep to forgive? I am quite apt at forgiveness but I had to admit, I wasn't entirely sure where I stood or how much I really understand about forgiveness in relation to something like this.

I always find this particular topic very difficult to discuss with other people. Indeed, I hold this pain close to me very tightly as an almost protectionism that still permeates my being out of my love and compassion - being the ever loving daughter/empath that helps, not hurts. Or perhaps it is my inability to understand the un-natural comportment unbecoming of a mother that is incapable of 'love'- and while I am still (and probably always will be) in the process of healing and understanding, the meaning for this is lost to me within the turbulent struggle to find that safe harbor of wisdom.

As I often do, I capture my deepest moments in writing. A most potent moment in the process of facing truth, raw and unedited, unapologetic clarity in motion:

A clean page in which to spill the soils of my emotional debris...

I sit here swimming in tears, I wonder:

What would life be like had I a mother that truly loved me. Is it even responsible of me to entertain this thought? Does it even matter what could have been rather than what is?

I tumble through the memories on a daily basis, trying to find a morsel that proves that love existed. I listen intently, observe and wait for hope to somehow present itself in my mother's eyes, in her words and in her actions. I cling to superficial moments that resemble love and caring - I recognize my role as daughter....I recognize the ideal of our roles as mother/daughter we are playing out but somehow never real enough to hold onto. Inevitably, each moment leads to mis-placed hope in something that charades itself as love but in reality, it's shadow. And while I have spent my entire life, chasing love's shadow (unknowingly), I am left with an empty cup stained with the tears of love's longing. And you, my dear mother, left with no cup at all.

This was written two years ago, just prior to my mother walking out of my life. There is no reasoning in this other than my mother has never been well - something that is a bi-product of her own childhood. However, she has broken and walked out on so many people that I have loved over the years - two of which died as a result. That's really hard to absorb. I always thought that I could heal her with love (after all love heals all), but love has to have a place to grow and not everyone has this capacity.

No, none of this is fair or right. It is the ultimate betrayal and through these two years I have entered into many stages of grief, sadness, anger because of it. Writing down the reflections of my soul in order to find some semblance of meaning and peace. And then one day, it happened - not exactly what I expected or the happy ending I had hoped for....but the process of writing through one of my painful moments, what my hand wrote out was "acceptance".

That was a big moment for me and I knew it at the time. Is acceptance one of the first steps to forgiveness?

Why I chose the topic of Forgiveness

There are many reasons why I chose this topic. Not only did I think it might help me understand it more for my own life, but I run into a lot of wounded people - too many. I cannot count how many times I have met complete strangers that have poured out similar stories to me just needing someone to listen or give them a hug and say, "I am sorry that happened to you."

Honestly, I believe we are all just a little bit wounded if only for the fact that we live in a world that is often times on fire. For those of us that are empathetically inclined, we tend to make it our mission to save others in an attempt to save ourselves, to make things right. The tragedy is that we can't really save the ones we love - this is a personal passage that everyone must walk on their own. It's a choice.

In fact, the world is full of sad songs that make us cry - this lyrics we call life is played in our hearts and minds for as long as human beings have existed on this planet. This sad song that makes us ache only because we are in constant search for that happy ending. When in fact, the ideals that we hold sacred, we never truly measure up to. Therefore we must first acknowledge the tragedy and frame that sad moment by saying, "IT HAPPENED". It's a proclamation that says, "we exist and we felt something". To feel, is to be human.

I think the world could use a lot more 'forgiveness' because without it, we are destined to self project and continue down this path of unrealized happiness, compassion...love.

With statistics for suicide reaching 800,000 a year, there is obviously a need for us to address these underlying issues. As well, why our ideals of happiness don't quite match up with the world that we have created.

Here's another disturbing statistic: ACEs ( Adverse Childhood Experiences Study) exposure is widespread in the US, one study from the National Survey of Children’s Health reported that approximately 68% of children 0–17 years old had experienced one or more ACEs. Source

We seem to spend more of our energy on cleaning up toxicity in the environment, and yet the toxic emotions we carry inside go largely unattended to. And obviously with statistics like these, it 'matters'.

However, there isn't anyone that knowingly doesn't choose happiness. But if we don't understand what makes us happy, then that pursuit for happiness becomes meaningless. Happiness becomes merely a word we tell ourselves as if just saying it will trick our minds into thinking it is true.

But the heart knows differently...

What truly makes us happy is expansion in our lives: growing and experiencing something new, learning something that stretches the boundaries of our own limited thought/emotion. Without this, we continue to play the same story in our minds and become stagnated. We can't continue brushing our unrealized thoughts and feelings under the rug. Ultimately, this is what forgiveness offers us - an opportunity to break free from that internal narrative and the chains that bind us. It offers us freedom to move on and be all that we can be in our lives.

And just to be clear - I still believe in 'happy endings' ;)

What I hope will come of exploring Forgiveness with you:

It is my intention that by exploring the deeper meaning of forgiveness for myself that it will also inspire others to join me in this journey. It is my hope that by the end of this, we all understand a little bit more and give greater value to the process of forgiveness so that we can in turn make the world a better place.

I am also including some art I created in the process of this post - it is a new tool for me which I am learning to use to express what sometimes words do not.

Ready?

"If you want to see the brave, look to those who can return love for hatred. If you want to see the heroic, look to those who can forgive." ~ Bhagavad Gita

What exactly is Forgiveness?

The common and most misinterpreted version of forgivess:

Contrary to popular belief, forgiveness is NOT about condoning or accepting the act that led us to our suffering and it is NOT about forgetting. Oh yes, we've had it all wrong!

Yet, it is interesting that society expects us to 'forgive' based on this misconception. "You must forgive and forget", this is the message that we're typically given immediately following a traumatic event in our lives. I would add that grieving is handled with the same constraints. The urgency for forgiveness puts a lot of un-necessary pressure on people to forgive when they are still processing the hurt. It's important to have that time to process the hurt. You might actually find yourself proclaiming your 'forgiveness' in order to measure up to what is expected of you or what you have perceived as 'rational' behavior - "Yeah, I should forgive and let go" because this is the right thing to do. However, what this actually does is teach you how to stuff all that unfinished hurt inside. And guess what? That will eventually revisit you and bite you in the butt!

Something else that forgiveness isn't is a quick fix or short cut to healing. And no, absolutely not, "Learning to Let Go and Be Like Water" is not going to cut it when it comes to 'real forgiveness'. This is the packaged version of forgiveness you'll find on the internet and self help books but this will lead you no where and certainly won't help guide you through forgiveness.

In actuality, it might take some moving through the hurt in order to even take that huge step of considering forgiveness. There is no time-line here - forgiveness is a process that you work toward. It might take months, years or a lifetime. And even still, it might never completely be reached - especially if the hurt is too deep. And that is 'okay', too.

FORGIVENESS IS A 'GIFT' WE GIVE OURSELVES.

In truth, forgiveness has nothing to do with the person that harmed or betrayed us. It's for YOU and has everything to do with setting ourselves free and choosing to no longer define ourselves by the act that was done to us. It is saying, "My life matters and while I know what you did, and it's not okay, I recognize that YOU are more than that and I no longer want to hold us captive to this anymore. I am capable of healing myself and I don't need anything from you." How does this feel to you to say? Pay attention to that.

Understand that this is not an easy place to reach. It is comparably a milestone in a long process that begins with a great deal of pain, bitterness, resentment, anger. That is where forgiveness grows out of...when we realize the price of holding onto this story is too much of a burden to our lives that we choose to free ourselves from it in order to move forward with 'life'. And it is worth every single tear! However, it is not for the faint of heart.

One can even say that remaining stuck in this story we have built around the main character, the villain of our pain, is far easier than breaking free of it. We become intertwined with the story we have created in our minds mulling it over and over until it becomes a familiar part of us and our identity. All because of that one moment, one day, one event - destined to live in the pain/anger/sadness for an eternity. We become tethered to that person, dragging them with us through the years, choosing to do so at our own detriment.

Entering into Forgiveness

One of the key components of forgiveness is actually 'compassion'. Forgiveness and compassion are both very intimately related. Having compassion and forgiving someone that has betrayed or hurt you deeply is sometimes very difficult to even think about, let alone 'do'.

One of the things that has helped me over the years is the realization that human beings do very human things that are not always perfect or right (not exactly reflective our our true self). And because we are mostly all wounded in some capacity, we tend to carry this around with us, self projecting what we feel on the inside to the outside world. It's kind of like a haunting and unawareness that we hap-hazardly act out from such a small piece of ourselves (although, unfortunately, made to be a significant importance).

When we understand that the world around us is nothing less than a mirror from which we have become from within, you realize that most of what we experience from other people isn't really 'personal' - making it a lot easier to feel a sense of compassion without getting trapped inside the story.

A personal example:

I once had a very gifted poet friend that wrote the most beautiful poems...very deep and pure, very wise. Every once in a while he would go on a rampage of poetic suicide, punishing everyone in his path for his own inner darkness. I couldn't tell you what was going on in his personal life but I could tell he carried a lot. It was always so upsetting to me and everyone else to witness this. In fact, this very last time, he had pushed the limits of the community so much outside of the lines that he was on his way to being banned.

Ironically, he never spoke in regular sentences, he only spoke in prose - an odd bird, indeed, but he had many times pushed me to the edges of my own human understanding and provoked some of my best poems. There was a respect between us spoken only in the language of poetry that I felt compelled to send him off with a poem to leave him with some vestiges of grace.

To Be Human

I hold you in great esteem
no matter the mood

It is not important whether your words
slight daggers of painful knowns

Or if they swell up in tears of
laughter and joy

It is all the same beautiful day
lest light or dark, dawn or dusk

For in this ever present state,
one is drawn to truth

And oft the weary traveler,
the dedicated soldier of life,
will lay down his head and cry tears of contempt

Not to stir the darkness but to lay waste what he holds dear -
to tempt what he does not understand inside himself

It is then that he receives the greatest miracle of ALL
It is then that the silence becomes filled with what his soul understands

So that he may proceed into Greatness.

As his last gesture, for the first time in four years, he spoke in normal language, "Thank you for this, I am humbled."

This is what self projection looks like when we hold onto the endless ocean of suffering to which we are unable to carry the full measure of that sorrow within ourselves. This affects 'everyone' as the circles of connection between us as a human family are very linked by the lives we lead.

Therefore, forgiveness becomes an honorable practice

Again, forgiveness does not mean that we condone what happened in the past. It's not forgive and forget. It can also mean having the resolve to never let this happen again.

It does not mean that you have to speak to or relate to a person either. It's really NOT about 'them'. It is a deep process of the heart just as grieving is.

Forgiveness is about living out of the beauty of your soul and the willingness to fulfill your life. It is a commitment you make to yourself.

There are a couple ancient traditions of forgiveness that I have always found to be thought-provoking and inspiring, but I'd like to share this one in particular because it gives an added emphasis on the power of forgiveness and how it affects others (and ourselves):

Ho'oponopono - An ancient Hawaiian practice of reconciliation and forgiveness

In many Polynesian cultures,it is believed that a person's errors (called hara or hala) caused illness.

"Hoʻoponopono" is defined in the Hawaiian Dictionary as:

(a) "To put to rights; to put in order or shape, correct, revise, adjust, amend, regulate, arrange, rectify, tidy up make orderly or neat, administer, superintend, supervise, manage, edit, work carefully or neatly; to make ready, as canoemen preparing to catch a wave."

(b) "Mental cleansing: family conferences in which relationships were set right (hoʻoponopono) through prayer, discussion, confession, repentance, and mutual restitution and forgiveness. Source

Excerpt From 'Zero Limits' By Joe Vitale & Dr. Hew Len:

Two years ago, I heard about a therapist in Hawaii who cured a complete ward of criminally insane patients--without ever seeing any of them. The psychologist would study an inmate's chart and then look within himself to see how he created that person's illness. As he improved himself, the patient improved.

When I first heard this story, I thought it was an urban legend. How could anyone heal anyone else by healing himself? How could even the best self-improvement master cure the criminally insane?

It didn't make any sense. It wasn't logical, so I dismissed the story.

However, I heard it again a year later. I heard that the therapist had used a Hawaiian healing process called ho 'oponopono. I had never heard of it, yet I couldn't let it leave my mind. If the story was at all true, I had to know more.

I had always understood "total responsibility" to mean that I am responsible for what I think and do. Beyond that, it's out of my hands. I think that most people think of total responsibility that way. We're responsible for what we do, not what anyone else does. The Hawaiian therapist who healed those mentally ill people would teach me an advanced new perspective about total responsibility.

His name is Dr. Ihaleakala Hew Len. We probably spent an hour talking on our first phone call. I asked him to tell me the complete story of his work as a therapist. He explained that he worked at Hawaii State Hospital for four years. That ward where they kept the criminally insane was dangerous. Psychologists quit on a monthly basis. The staff called in sick a lot or simply quit. People would walk through that ward with their backs against the wall, afraid of being attacked by patients. It was not a pleasant place to live, work, or visit.

Dr. Len told me that he never saw patients. He agreed to have an office and to review their files. While he looked at those files, he would work on himself. As he worked on himself, patients began to heal.

"After a few months, patients that had to be shackled were being allowed to walk freely," he told me. "Others who had to be heavily medicated were getting off their medications. And those who had no chance of ever being released were being freed."

I was in awe.

"Not only that," he went on, "but the staff began to enjoy coming to work. Absenteeism and turnover disappeared. We ended up with more staff than we needed because patients were being released, and all the staff was showing up to work. Today, that ward is closed."

This is where I had to ask the million dollar question: "What were you doing within yourself that caused those people to change?"

"I was simply healing the part of me that created them," he said.

I didn't understand.

Dr. Len explained that total responsibility for your life means that everything in your life - simply because it is in your life--is your responsibility. In a literal sense the entire world is your creation.

Whew. This is tough to swallow. Being responsible for what I say or do is one thing. Being responsible for what everyone in my life says or does is quite another. Yet, the truth is this: if you take complete responsibility for your life, then everything you see, hear, taste, touch, or in any way experience is your responsibility because it is in your life.

This means that anything you experience and don't like--is up for you to heal. They don't exist, in a manner of speaking, except as projections from inside you. The problem isn't with them, it's with you, and to change them, you have to change you.

I know this is tough to grasp, let alone accept or actually live. Blame is far easier than total responsibility, but as I spoke with Dr. Len, I began to realize that healing for him and in ho'oponopono means loving yourself. If you want to improve your life, you have to heal your life. If you want to cure anyone--even a mentally ill criminal--you do it by healing you.

I asked Dr. Len how he went about healing himself. What was he doing, exactly, when he looked at those patients' files?

"I just kept saying, 'I'm sorry' and 'I love you' over and over again," he explained.

Now, you can certainly take this with a grain of salt, but I can tell you that I have experienced similar outcomes with the power of prayer when done with the intensity of the heart. And science is learning that this is not so far-fetched. I can think of more than a few examples in science where this is given relevance:

  • The Placebo Effect
  • Dr. Emoto's experiments with water crystals Source
  • Dr. Tiller's large body of work involving human thoughts/emotions on its environment Source
  • Dr. Radin's groundbreaking work with the double slit experiment (how the observer affects the outcome)
  • Dr. Rupert Sheldrake's studies and experiments with morphic fields and resonance Source and there are many, many more to dive into to further support that something like prayer or thought or strong emotion does in fact affect not only ourselves, the world but also those around us.

Hmmmmm Imagine the possibilities!

Forgiveness spans many ancient texts and cultures, too:

Judaism

In Judaism, one must go to those he has harmed in order to be entitled to forgiveness. [One who sincerely apologizes three times for a wrong committed against another has fulfilled their obligation to seek forgiveness. (Shulchan Aruch) OC 606:1] This means that in Judaism a person cannot obtain forgiveness from God for wrongs the person has done to other people. This also means that, unless the victim forgave the perpetrator before he died, murder is unforgivable in Judaism, and they will answer to God for it, though the victims' family and friends can forgive the murderer for the grief they caused them.

Christianity

Forgiveness is central to Christian ethics and is a frequent topic in sermons and theological works. It is considered a duty of Christians to forgive unconditionally

Bahá'í Faith

"Love the creatures for the sake of God and not for themselves. You will never become angry or impatient if you love them for the sake of God. Humanity is not perfect. There are imperfections in every human being, and you will always become unhappy if you look toward the people themselves. But if you look toward God, you will love them and be kind to them, for the world of God is the world of perfection and complete mercy. Therefore, do not look at the shortcomings of anybody; see with the sight of forgiveness."

Buddhism

"In contemplating the law of karma, we realize that it is not a matter of seeking revenge but of practicing mettā and forgiveness, for the victimizer is, truly, the most unfortunate of all."

Buddhism places much emphasis on the concepts of Mettā (loving kindness), karuna (compassion), mudita (sympathetic joy), and upekkhā (equanimity), as a means to avoiding resentments in the first place. These reflections are used to understand the context of suffering in the world, both our own and the suffering of others.

Hinduism

Forgiveness is considered one of the six cardinal virtues in Hinduism. Forgiveness in Hinduism does not necessarily require that one reconcile with the offender, nor does it rule out reconciliation in some situations. Instead forgiveness in Hindu philosophy is being compassionate, tender, kind and letting go of the harm or hurt caused by someone or something else.

Native American

Jack Kornfield, a world-renowned psychologist, author, and teacher, refers to the Lakota in their practice of dealing with grief: Grief was valued. It brought a person closer to the Gods. For when a person had suffered great loss, and was grieving they were considered the most wakan (the most holy) due to the openness of their heart and the intensity behind it. Because of this, the community gives their prayers to the grieving with the belief that they would be especially powerful.

What does Medicine and Science say about Forgiveness?

As I mentioned earlier, the state of the world is that depression, anger, resentment, suicide are at such a high. Perhaps, we as a collective whole, have reached that the brink of our capacity to carry the full measure of our sorrows within ourselves and this is spilling out in a world in such a way that it is being reflected back to us.

Science and Medicine think forgiveness might actually be good for you

Individuals with forgiveness as a personality trait have been shown to have overall better physical health. In a study on relationships, regardless if someone was in a negative or positive relationship, their physical health seemed to be influenced at least partially by their level of forgiveness.

Individuals who make a decision to genuinely forgive someone are also shown to have better physical health. This is due to the relationship between forgiveness and stress reduction. Forgiveness is seen as preventing poor physical health and managing poor physical health.

Specifically individuals who choose to forgive another after a transgression have lower blood pressure and lower cortisol levels than those who do not. This is theorized to be due to various direct and indirect influences of forgiveness, which point to forgiveness as an evolutionary trait.

"I am who I think you think I am." - Charles Horton Cooley"

Charles Cooley was a philosopher that came up with the Looking Glass Self Theory: We come to be through the interactions with other people by making models of the other person's mind. In other words, I am not who I think I am, I am not who you think I am, I am who I think you think I am - putting ourselves in this role and playing it out in our lives. In other words, we live in a construct of our own making.

As to what course of forgiveness practice to use, I think we are all very different and have different needs, therefore I think this is a personal choice that you will have to make.

Ironically, through the process of writing this, I discovered that my 'happy ending' wasn't outside of myself but within ME. That's pretty cool!

It is within us all to create our happy ending in life. And it begins with freeing ourselves from that story that never really served us well.

By freeing ourselves, everyone benefits.

The Medical Effects of Forgiveness:

Dr. Davidson, of the Waisman Clinic at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, has discovered many benefits of forgiveness, including:

  • Lower blood pressure
  • Stress reduction
  • Less hostility
  • Better anger management skills
  • Lower heart rate
  • Lower risk of alcohol or substance abuse
  • Fewer depression and anxiety symptoms
  • Reduction in chronic pain
  • More friendships and healthier relationships
  • Greater religious or spiritual well-being
  • Improved psychological well-being

In a study published in the US National Library of Medicine 2016, "Understanding the Relationship Between State Forgiveness and Psychological Well-being: A Qualitative Study" forgiveness becomes center stage as the key component of not only reducing depression and anxiety, but also the key facilitator of general cognitive, emotional and social well-being outcomes. Source

Non-forgiveness Effects:

  • Negative effect on mental health
    Felt emotionally disturbed, depression, stress
    No sense of peace, fear, guilty, lack confidence
    Depletes energy, Felt static, worse, bitter, worthless
    Blood rushing through body
    Rage, darkness
  • Negative effect on mental health/cognitive
    Inability to think clearly, suicidal thoughts
    Thoughts of harming others
  • Barriers to growth
    Stops you from moving on, freezes mind, less dynamic
    Stuck in a rut
    Lack of meaning and purpose in life
    Unable to form new relationships
    Transferring anger/bitterness into new relationships
    Constant falling out

Forgiveness Effects:

  • Reduction in negative effect
    Anger, hatred, rid of burden, animosity, bitterness
    Irritation, depression, conflict
  • Positive effect
    Peace, content, joy, love, felt better, calmer, freedom from fear, happy, uplifted, inspired, compassion, positive, felt normal, confidence, vitality, autonomy
  • Positive relationships
    Accepting other (positive attitude; accepting good and bad qualities), loving other, caring for/helping other, understanding, closer, value people, tolerant, less breakups, meaningful relationship, reconciliation, less reactive, more open, pleasurable, healthier for kids, moving forward, healed relationships
  • Personal growth
    Spiritual transformation, meaning and purpose to life
  • Sense of empowerment
    Stronger, independent, confident, hopeful, calmer, in control

Some tools for healing and beginning the practice of forgiveness:

  • EFT (Emotional Freedom Technique)
  • Meditation
  • Creative expression like art, music, writing
  • Observing your reactions to life situations and following them to their source
  • Surrounding yourself with non-toxic people that support a positive attitude about life and others

Sources:

Science Studies on the effects of forgiveness:
Van Oyen, C. Witvilet, T.E. Ludwig and K. L. Vander Lann, "Granting Forgiveness or Harboring Grudges: Implications for Emotions, Physiology and Health," Psychological Science no. 12 (2001):117-23

S. Sarinopoulos, "Forgiveness and Physical Health: A Doctoral Dissertation Summary," World of Forgiveness no. 2 (2000): 16-18

Ed Diener1 and Martin E.P. Seligman2 (2002-01-01). "Very Happy People". Pss.sagepub.com. Archived from the original on 2015-12-14. Retrieved 2015-12-23.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forgiveness

As you can see, there is a lot more to forgiveness than most of us realize or have been made aware. It is the cornerstone of a healthy society with profound effects on our emotional, physical and psychological well-being.


I hope you found this added knowledge as helpful and inspiring as I did diving deeper into this important topic.

All the drawings used were drawn by me in graphite pencil with a lot of love specifically for this post. I am new to art and just started exploring this part of me, so it was a true joy watching each drawing reveal itself during the writing process. I found it very healing, too!

THANK YOU to the @IFC and all those that have put so much love and time into this community - from @apolymask and those part of its foundation to the participants, the judges and readers.....THANK YOU!

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A long and very informative read, and your artwork is astounding. Forgiveness in not an easy thing to speak of or about, and as you showed there is a lot more to it than just "Forgive and Forget" mentality.

Thank you so much, @bashadow

No, forgiveness is not an easy one to speak about - that is for sure. I think what made this easier for me was connecting with what is possible in regard to what forgiveness offers us as a whole. In my life, I have had to forgive 'a lot' and I think because I was able to do that (and hold on to love), I didn't break under the weight of it all nor go down the path of being angry at the world. I had a few examples of this in which to view and I thought, "I don't want to live life with that".

I am always inspired by those stories where people overcome the worst in life and often that main catalyst in changing the outcome is always reflection, determination of the human spirit and the ability to forgive. Those are the greatest stories ever!

Great writing and amazing artwork! I had never tried to put my thoughts on forgiveness into concrete words, but what you have written does resonate with me very much!

Thank you, @bengy I am so happy to hear that - my whole point of writing this.

Thank you for writing on this topic. The part about the dr. healing others by healing himself! That is amazing, and i believe it's a real thing personally. I too have been thinking on that level with my son, trying to heal me to heal him. I appreciate this post very much, thank you!!!
Since you've started entering the ifc contests you alone have opened my eyes to many subjects.
i love how you not only share your thoughts on a topic, but you take us to school on the subject! This is definitely @curie worthy!!! Congrats on yet another curie!!! also your artwork is wonderfully placed in this post and beautifully drawn!!! Keep up the awesome writing! Good luck @youhavewings!!!

You're so very welcome, @charisma777

I must admit, I was carrying you and quite a few others with me as I wrote this piece.

I too have been thinking on that level with my son, trying to heal me to heal him.

This is so beautiful and special and I have no doubt that you will do it because love is the driving force. He is so lucky to have you as a Mom.

Thank you for all of your beautiful words and the connection.

Much love to you

@youhavewings : Great piece you've written here - a lot of great personal anecdotes and referenced sections. Really like this passage:

"In actuality, it might take some moving through the hurt in order to even take that huge step of considering forgiveness. There is no time-line here - forgiveness is a process that you work toward. It might take months, years or a lifetime. And even still, it might never completely be reached - especially if the hurt is too deep. And that is 'okay', too.

FORGIVENESS IS A 'GIFT' WE GIVE OURSELVES."

@apolymask : This is the piece I'm selecting

Thank you so much, @mdf-365

Wow! Very deep, indeed.

I agree. Forgiveness is key.

I think you will like this:

https://steemit.com/blog/@jaichai/ijch-how-dare-she-out-of-desperation-i-learned-how-to-forgive

Namaste, JaiChai

Hey there, @jaichai!

I was kind of hoping that I'd get a comment from you because I remembered a most profound statement you made to me on a particularly difficult day about it being okay to love and forgive remotely - remember that? That really meant the world to me on that day and exactly what I needed to hear.

I read every word of your post on forgiveness ;) And yes, I liked it very much and enjoyed taking that journey with you through your thoughts and feelings/memories. Life truly is interesting, isn't it? I love your ending, too - perfect.

I agree, forgiveness is key.

Namaste

Thanks so much for those kind words.

Namaste, JaiChai

This is a deep post, I thought it should get a Curie vote before I even saw the comment down. Thanks for the quoted references, I learnt from them and feel like everyone should see them.

I think our ability to forgive somehow have to do with our individual backgrounds. Some people are so used to holding on to hurts, even perceived petty things. I see such around me and really, it's a huge load to carry around. And of course even those who forgive more easily come to certain situations that really really test their character.

We all must cherish the ability to forgive as its chief benefit is to us.

Thank you, @boladayl

So, so true. I think you are right in a lot coming from our backgrounds and how comfortable someone feels in navigating their internal landscape. With the addition of social media, I think that complicates things more.

We all must cherish the ability to forgive as its chief benefit is to us

It truly is

Have a beautiful day, @boladayl and thank you for taking the time to share your wonderful thoughts

Sometimes the heart is heavy and it has nothing to do with what one has done and everything to do with harm coming from others. Forgiveness is to be able to cope with the darkness in other’s hearts or the clumsiness of their ways.

@edouard So true. I always take the analogy that despite the fact something unpleasant was done or given to you, once it is received it becomes yours. It is ultimately your choice as to what to do with it.

  ·  6 years ago (edited)

And just like with a plastic bag or a piece of styrofoam, there is no good way to get rid of it. You can use a grocery bag until it falls to shreds , that still doesn’t excuse its entry inside an animal.

https://ministryofhemp.com/blog/why-isnt-hemp-plastic-everywhere/

and look into biodegrading 'enzymes'

and fungi to clean our air, water and soil

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Simply beautiful. I would love to see this publication in Spanish and be able to share it with a wider audience.

Personally, I think you have hit the nail on the head by mentioning acceptance as a first step: we have to accept that we are human, and that this obliges us - unlike animals - to think about our behavior, attitudes and their repercussion in our lives and on that of others. The first requires - at least so I think - a MINIMUM of empathy with itself. Yes, we need to take time to evaluate how we feel, to listen to us, to dialogue with our being. It sounds easy, but in an era full of stimuli like ours, taking time for yourself almost seems embarrassing. The second requires equal effort and maturity, because it makes us swing between dissimilar positions such as the indolent "forgive and forget" and revenge.
I live in Venezuela, the political / economic situation that exists here is not secret for anyone; all that is very well documented. What is not often read is about the resentment that has been rising in recent years, not only those who hold power (which is usually the most common, not justifiable), but those who have ever expressed or that express a minimum of empathy for the current prevailing system in the country. You hear things on the street like: "you have to kill them all", or "you better go to Cuba" or "damn chavistas", etc. This worries me a lot because it does not differ in any way from the policies of a government that declares publicly that its actions are the result of a deep rancor. As you can see, it's a self-destructive spiral.

I deeply hope that this is the result of our lack of objectivity, the product of the heat of being inside hell itself. Maybe we just need the time to separate ourselves emotionally and be able to act with more reason. For the moments while I wait for that to happen, today I go out to the street happy to have found someone who has shown me that if it is possible to reflect on something that is so lacking in this world.

Greetings (And I apologize for my bad English).

@nelsinho I am just so moved by your comment and so grateful that you shared such an intimate look at what is going on in your country. This is so very important for others to see and read.

I have spent time looking into what is going on in Venezuela over several years and it has broken my heart. Then still, there were discrepancies in the reporting on it that I wasn't sure of the true situation - only that it was very bad. So, I am very grateful that you have shared your personal accounting and also the state of mind while witnessing and absorbing the current environment. I truly am so sorry for what your country is going through and if there is anything I can do to help I will.

You did a suburb job with your English ;) I will look into translation to Spanish.

Much love to you and Venezuela

Thanks for your words. Of course you can help, you just have to keep doing what you've been doing: write about these topics. It's evident that it's something very healing for you, and it's good that you know that it's also for those who read it :)

PS: you are being very modest with my english ... thank you for that hahaha

Hi @youhavewings. Looks like I just missed out on the opportunity to upvote your post. This is an incredible doctrine on forgiveness and very candid in your sharing of personal experience. I'm sorry I haven't been able to keep up with your writings within and outside of the contest. Good luck!

Thank you, @jbreheny It is a very difficult topic ;) But I think a very important one.....Imagine a world with forgiveness....hmmmm We could do great things together, the world would be a much happier place in which to thrive.

Have a wonderful day!

Awesome post! I liked how it was from the heart and a personal post for the final.

Hi @dynamicgreentk!

Thank you so much! Hey....the heart is where it's at ;)

It was a risky topic for the finals but I thought it was the perfect opportunity to bring this topic to more people - had to share a little of the personal in order to get there. I didn't want it to be negative though - I wanted it to be inspirational, comforting and useful as well as a creative journey - after all, where does creativity come from? I got some very heart-felt private messages that made it all worth it - a couple of them made me cry. That's the beauty of sharing such a topic - the heart connection.

Hope you have a beautiful, feel-good day ;)

I will come back and read in quiet this text. It sure is promising already. Meanwhile I am hopefully allowed to copy this text dividing styling design of yours. :) Until later! Love, E.


You opened up one layer after the other. I like how you thought about the "buts" as an instant reply to a passage and then answered them.

Also it's good that you showed the different theological approaches to forgiveness. It opens even more up to the whole context of forgiveness.

Sticking to the feelings one event caused which lasted only some seconds or minutes certainly keeps the suffering alive. The only chance is to re-ingegrate what ones hates about oneself. It's the weakness we all accuse ourselves of that gives nutrition to not letting go what wants to be forgiven. I agree very much to the notion that it's not the other one I have to forgive, but myself. As the "self" actually is not so solid and changes ever so often it could be seen as something fleeting.

Really difficult for all of us. It must be practiced continually in order to be "trained" in forgiving.

One should start with the easy things which do only bother us little to dare to come eventually to the difficult stuff. Like when a bus-driver was impolite to us. Thinking of incidents where we ourselves were in a hurry and being rude and thankful for the fact that people actually let us act and not bothered with a rude response. ... Actually, the difficult stuff will turn out to be not so difficult any more when we increase the little steps as a light habit throughout ordinary life.

"I was simply healing the part of me that created them," he said.

That sounds.

In general people suffer too much and do forget to attain a playful attitude to life itself. It's always a time for playing and also another one for praying. We should not waste so much time on praying for the world to heal when the world we live in right now does offer us so many opportunities to see what we already got.

;-)

I am already excited to hear your wisdom, @erh.germany

Much love

In general people suffer too much and do forget to attain a playful attitude to life itself. It's always a time for playing and also another one for praying. We should not waste so much time on praying for the world to heal when the world we live in right now does offer us so many opportunities to see what we already got.

I was going to make a video for this post as well ;) LOL And this was the major theme of it - the outgoing message - that we need only 'open our eyes' to the love and beauty all around us. I think most people desire happiness.

Are you in pain dear??????
Why are you painting such emotional paintings. A real heart touching painting.
Awesome post.

You always write so in depth! By the time I'm finished reading your posts, I have learned so much and find myself looking to see how I can impliment these things in my life.

I wish I could write more, but I fear I will say too much. Just know that you have touched my soul very deeply.
Ren

Thank you so much, @xcountytravelers

.....I always say too much ;) hehe

You're an authentic person and I deeply respect that in you.

Hope you're taking care of yourself and enjoying your evening with that little cute furry of yours

xo

  • hug *

@youhavewings as @curie said; "Exceptional content" is a very fitting description of this post. Many times do I count myself lucky that my father disappeared when I was a baby, but the what if's remain. To me personally forgiveness leads to gratitude, as I would never have become what I am today if I was not forged in the very trying conditions of life! Blessings!

Oh yes, @papilloncharity Gratitude is definitely one of the gifts forgiveness offers :) Absolutely wonderful point to bring into this conversation. Thank you for that!

I would never have become what I am today if I was not forged in the very trying conditions of life! Blessings!

Ah.....That is very beautiful understanding the seed of your charity more. And of course, it would have to be something so important and personal to have dedicated so much of your heart to it. Love this so much! Thank you for sharing that piece.

Much love and blessings, @papilloncharity

I upvoted your post.

Best regards,
@Council

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Wow!!!! That was so powerful and expressive (and your art is beautiful!!!!) I found myself nodding throughout the reading! Withheld forgiveness only eats away at the individual and pushes you farther from the healing they themselves seek. I'm so proud of your Curie!!! :) and I hope that you win the IFC championship with this one!!!!!!! Great job!!!

Thank you, @dreemsteem

Yes, I agree...we are all better off with forgiveness.

Forgiveness itself is a never ending journey, with each day that passes by, the need to forgive someone (or even something arises). One thing I have learnt over the years is that, forgiveness doesn't mean giving that person that hurt you another chance to hurt you again, it is not a service to the person but to our own selves.

There was this time that my family went through a really traumatic experience, it was my Mum and I that were at the scene and the first thing she said after that was that she has forgiven them, Even I thought it was the right thing to do (and even criticized myself for a few minutes for not thinking about that instantly, I thought I was bad for not thinking of forgiving them), we didn't give our selves chance to process all those emotions first. I don't know if her forgiveness was from the heart at that point (i doubt it was) but mine definitely wasn't. I was secretly (and unconsciously) nurturing hateful and toxic feelings within me (and was even slowly become toxic to the people around me) and if I had the chance, I probably would have hurt them back (I was only fifteen then). It was when we had to go through a healing process that I got the chance to really process those feelings (it did hurt more then when it happened because initially, I numbed myself from those pains), understand that this forgiveness is actually for me, not them and ultimately freeing myself from the bondage I created. It was a long and painful process but I was able to get myself back after that.

Forgiveness is beautiful, but its also hard to practice. It is healing but the process is painful. In the end, the whole process will be worth it, and it all starts with acceptance. How amazing it will be if we let ourselves go through this process of forgiveness...

I agree with our happy ending being inside of us, realizing that is what will bring about satisfaction and a happier life. We stop chasing it at the wrong places, because we know where it now is, and that it doesn't need to be chased, it just needs to be nurtured!

Your drawing is just so beautiful for someone who is starting out, I will so much love to be able to draw... I look forward to seeing the amazing pieces you will create once you get even better at it.

This post is well written and researched, definitely one packed with so much information (it can't be exhausted in one day), it is a keeper!

Oh well, lemme stop here already before it gets all bored!... Hahaha!

Forgiveness itself is a never ending journey, with each day that passes by, the need to forgive someone (or even something arises). One thing I have learnt over the years is that, forgiveness doesn't mean giving that person that hurt you another chance to hurt you again, it is not a service to the person but to our own selves.

So insightful, @audreybits. Yes, I do agree that it is a daily practice as well as reflection.

And I do understand what you are saying regarding never allowing another chance but differ in that it depends on the person and the situation. I have learned recently about higher compassion and this is similar in that you acknowledge that everyone is on their own path (just as you are) and by allowing them to learn what they need to learn for themselves, you are not interfering. But it is also important to take care of your boundaries and toxic people. It can be complicated.

There was this time that my family went through a really traumatic experience, it was my Mum and I that were at the scene and the first thing she said after that was that she has forgiven them, Even I thought it was the right thing to do (and even criticized myself for a few minutes for not thinking about that instantly, I thought I was bad for not thinking of forgiving them), we didn't give our selves chance to process all those emotions first. I don't know if her forgiveness was from the heart at that point (i doubt it was) but mine definitely wasn't. I was secretly (and unconsciously) nurturing hateful and toxic feelings within me (and was even slowly become toxic to the people around me) and if I had the chance, I probably would have hurt them back (I was only fifteen then). It was when we had to go through a healing process that I got the chance to really process those feelings (it did hurt more then when it happened because initially, I numbed myself from those pains), understand that this forgiveness is actually for me, not them and ultimately freeing myself from the bondage I created. It was a long and painful process but I was able to get myself back after that.

Yes, definitely - it sounds like you really went through some deep emotions and long healing process. And absolutely, numbness is often part of the beginning period of trauma. I went through this with my mother initially and didn't understand it other than perhaps it's our brain's way of helping us deal with it until we are capable of 'feeling' it. I have found that EFT is very powerful for this as well. I'm the kind of person that I often push things inside and go on with life not realizing that all that stuff gets trapped inside. So EFT is wonderful for drawing that out.

Forgiveness is beautiful, but its also hard to practice. It is healing but the process is painful. In the end, the whole process will be worth it, and it all starts with acceptance. How amazing it will be if we let ourselves go through this process of forgiveness...

Hurting is the difficult part - forgiveness shouldn't be painful - it should feel freeing and good but this often happens after we have dealt with the pain and yet sometimes its a mixture of walking through both in layers and eventually you get there.

I agree with our happy ending being inside of us, realizing that is what will bring about satisfaction and a happier life. We stop chasing it at the wrong places, because we know where it now is, and that it doesn't need to be chased, it just needs to be nurtured!

Awww I LOVE your words here - so beautiful and so true. The word 'nurture' is so fitting.

Your drawing is just so beautiful for someone who is starting out, I will so much love to be able to draw... I look forward to seeing the amazing pieces you will create once you get even better at it.

Thank you so much. Yes, it will be interesting to see this unfold. I need to be braver with 'color' LOL

Such great and thought-provoking comments, @audreybits - and I loved that you shared some of the personal in them, too. We all learn from one another.

Have a beautiful day!

Taking care of our boundaries definitely is important, but just as you've said, it can be complicated.

I have never heard of EFT until today (i just looked it up) and I think someone once tried it on me when I was still in the process of healing. Just like you, I do pretty well in comes to pushing all the emotions in and acting all "brave", (slowly learning that, that really, isn't "brave). It did help to get those some of those feelings out but I didn't really get what he was doing and I didn't bother to ask. I was this kind of person that once I bottle these feelings up, then they get impossible to come out and when it happened, I thought it was because I let my "guard" down for a second, didn't even suspect it being somewhat related to the finger-tapping thing he was doing or the fact that he told me to literally take my self back to that event. That's definitely something I should practice more often.

Forgiveness is freeing definitely but the process doesn't always make it seem so. Yeah, healing from the pains first makes it a whole lot better...

Yeah, we do learn from each other. I felt somewhat connected to it that I just had to share..

I really enjoy your comments and thoughts, @audreybits

So happy to have met you - hope we keep running into each other.

Have a beautiful day!

Thank you, it seems like we will be running into each other more often now...

Congratulations!!!

Wow! Just wow! That was intense! If you had been @curie fied, then is it worth the long read.. you had done a tremendous effort all in one post. The drawing and the researches you have done are superb and with proper credits..

Forgiveness is vague and fundamental. It is not easy to talk or discussed with. But you did it and saw it in all angles. Thank you for all the lovely insights and the hard truth you have shared..

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Thank you, @maquemali :)

Yes, it is an intense topic but an important one for everyone.

"Acceptance is the first step to forgiveness" this phrase has enchanted me and it resounds in my head.
Everything you wrote here makes a lot of sense, I really liked the way you wrote the story using personal experiences and real statistics .. A true quality post. Many congratulations for the vote curie very deserved .. You have left me without words, a hug @youhavewings !

Thank you so much, @naideth

I love the fact that there are so many people from all over joining in on this discussion.

Yes, acceptance seems to be a plateau before doing the hard work of healing.

Thank you so much for all your kind words and I am so happy that you found the post informative.

Hugs back to you, @naideth

Yes @youhavewings, forgiveness is not easy to speak about, this is so true, its a little challenge.

But it holds a gift ... I have learned through life that it makes no sense to search for the source ... the spring ... try to get there to receive fresh water ... while still having muddy hands.

xx

But it holds a gift ... I have learned through life that it makes no sense to search for the source ... the spring ... try to get there to receive fresh water ... while still having muddy hands.

Drinking fresh water with muddy hands - wow the visual with that, @anutu Yes, keep the inspiration flowing - just beautiful

Thank you!

Thank you so much for your kindness <3 Forgiveness is for sure one of the best gifts everybody can make her- or himself ...
Have a beautiful Friday!
xx

so well done, @youhavewings

Thank you so much, @bluefinstudios

This post has been selected for curation by @msp-curation by @clayboyn and has been upvoted and will be featured in the weekly philosophy curation post. It will also be considered for the official @minnowsupport curation post and if selected will be resteemed from the main account. Feel free to join us on Discord!

Thanks for sharing your journey of forgiveness. I also found that by forgiving people for their weaknesses I was set free from my own little prison!

Yes, so true, @dianadee :) It is a much happier place.

  ·  6 years ago (edited)

Wow that's amazing. Seems like an amazing doctor.

Just saying I'm sorry and I love you over and over again to ourself can heal other people? Or do we have to say it to those we are thinking of?

Last year I went to a certain session (I forgot the term for it) with some mind exercises activity. There was this lady I got partnered with who saw a "vision" of me and her in the perhaps ancient past and she said she kept apologizing to me in her mind because of what "happened in the past". I didn't see any vision at all but her tears were falling the whole time and all I could think of was say sorry and that she is loved and all that.

I'm not sure if it did me and her any good, that was a one time session. It sure weirded me out a bit. 😅 I mean, I'm pretty into non-conventional stuff myself but that's the "weirdest" of it all.

And, too bad I only saw this now when it's almost seven days...

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I'm trying out my comment mana, @artgirl Hopefully this won't bring me down to 27% again! LOL

Thank you for sharing your personal experience with 'some kind of healing technique' :) I always take these things with a grain of salt unless I experience something myself (but I remain open-minded). Who knows! I'm a strange combination of very analytical vs anything is possible (and it is!). I think there is much more to life than what we are aware and I look to those that have seemingly done the impossible as guideposts to what is possible for all of us. There is an experiment that was done many years ago called the 'consciousness experiment' where monitors were set up all over the world...hours before 9/11 these monitors spiked meaning that people 'knew' something was about to happen whether they were in this country or not. Indeed, many, many people had dreams about it prior to as well as strange intuitive responses. Animals are interesting in that they seem to be aware of this all the time - I've always found that to be so intriguing - Is something turned off in our brains that allow this extra information in and why does it surface when we are in danger (with goosebumps or weak knees)? It's all so very interesting.

Hey - barely budged my mana! Commenting is okay!

Oh my, finally Steemit seems to be normal now.

Well if they had been able to see stuff abt 9/11 then maybe they could have warned the people? I dunno how that works so... Maybe we've become too materialistic that we can't sense as much as we should.

Of course there are real psychics and all that but I dunno how anyone would believe them if they don't announce anything... Or something...

Maybe if I go to Hawaii I will look for that doctor. 😂

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Hi there @artgirl!

I happened to find that Princeton experiment (ongoing). This is what was set off hours before 9/11:

The Global Consciousness Project collects random numbers from around the world. These numbers are available on the GCP website. This website downloads those numbers once a minute and performs sophisticated analysis on these random numbers to see how coherent they are. That is, we compute how random the random numbers coming from the eggs really are. The theory is that the Global Consciousness of all Beings of the Planet affect these random numbers... Maybe they aren't quite as random as we thought.
princetondot.png

Source

Just click on the source to take you to the real-time data.

If you ever have an experience with Dr. Len, I would be so interested in that. He seems like a very gentle person.

  ·  6 years ago (edited)

Cool. Thanks will check. :)

Well... I checked on the site a bit however I'm not much of a fan. It is interesting though.

Muy bonita

Thank you @aleks27

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Hi youhavewings,

This post has been upvoted by the Curie community curation project and associated vote trail as exceptional content (human curated and reviewed). Have a great day :)

Visit curiesteem.com or join the Curie Discord community to learn more.

This is an intense post. Forgiveness is really a powerful word. Some people understand what the meaning of the word but they do not know how to practice it. I personally experience it, sometime it really hard to forgave someone hurt you deep inside. Although I always told myself, forgive and move on. This will make my life happier. However, everytime when you think about it, you still have that sense of sadness. I found that you forgive a friend is much more easier than forgive your family. I don't know why, is it because we so close to each other and they have no right to hurt us? or because we see each other everyday and it brought out all the hurtful thing? I like your article although it took me sometime to digest and finish it.

Yes, that's right @oliviackl The sadness can remain. Sadness is a part of life, too just as happiness. I think your family is a much deeper, long-term love and you expect to trust them because they are your family so it is more painful and more complicated because our identities/stories are so intertwined together. I do think that families often times take their problems out on those closest to them, too whereas this behavior in other relationships might not be tolerated as much.

Thank you for your thoughtful comment.

I do think that families often times take their problems out on those closest to them, too whereas this behavior in other relationships might not be tolerated as much.

I agree with you on this. Yes, maybe it more like people always said Take thing for granted. Closest family always think that they can do it and without think of the consequences. They always thought that they would be forgiven because they are family. But they didn't realize that they hurt the most would be their closest family and nobody else.