Tuesday, November 19, 2019
Forgiving is hard, but not forgiving hurts more  set yourself free
Forgiving is hard, but not forgiving hurts more â" set yourself free Forgiving is hard, but not forgiving hurts more â" set yourself free Let bygones be bygones. Forget and move on. Kiss and make up.Forgiving is easier said than done.Most people believe that forgiveness means condoning an event. But itâs not. Blame ties us to the past and makes our heart and mind smaller - both literally and metaphorically. Forgiving, on the other hand, means realizing that resentment and hatred add more pain.Science shows that forgiving is good for your health.Forgiveness doesnât mean forgetting. Itâs not accepting, justifying or overlooking an event either. Itâs choosing to let go of resentment or the need for revenge - we eliminate the suffering, not the wrongdoing. The offender might not deserve your pardon, but you deserve to be at peace.When you forgive, you set yourself free.Forgiving is hard, but itâs healthyâForgiveness does not change the past, but it does enlarge the future.â - Paul BoeseThereâs a causal relationship between forgiveness and your health, according to science.Unforgiveness causes us addition al harm. When we donât forgive, we release all the chemicals of a stress response.You canât change the past. Thereâs nothing you can do to remove the harm others might have caused you. However, not forgiving damages our mood - we see our lives through a lens of vengeance, hostility, resentment, anger, and sadness.Forgiveness was traditionally seen as a religious ideal; science has turned it into a skill that everyone can (and should) develop. From 1998 to 2005 the number of empirical studies on the topic have increased from 58 to 950. Thereâs been a lot of progress understanding the science behind forgiveness.Holding a serious grudge raises our blood pressure and increases our chances of a heart attack. Unforgiveness intensifies mental problems, such as depression, anxiety, and post-traumatic stress disorders.A fMRI study by Italian researcher, Dr. Pietro Pietrini, showed that anger and vengeance inhibited rational thinking. Conversely, the tasks involved in the process of forgiveness activate the areas of our brain linked to problem-solving, morality, empathy, and cognitive control of emotions.Forgiving is not easy - the need for taking revenge is hardwired in our system. In the past, thatâs how we prevented other people from causing us harm. Revenge activates the same brain area than our desire for chocolate or sex - thatâs why it tastes sweet.However, forgiveness is equally innate - reconciling after a fight is something most mammals do, not just humans. Reconciliation has an upside too. Research by the Stanford Forgiveness Project shows that forgiving elevates our mood and increases optimism.You can choose between instant gratification or long-term healthier living.Set yourself freeâTo forgive is to set a prisoner free and discover that the prisoner was you.â - Louis B. SmedesUnforgiveness is engrained on blame - we let a past event define our present.Blaming is a way of running away from the truth. By not forgiving, we focus on the p erpetrator instead of facing the event. We get stuck feeling a victim rather than accepting what happened and moving on.Iâve learned through time and experience that resentment gets us nowhere. I usually donât hold a grudge on people - I donât want to be a prisoner of someone elseâs behavior.I understand if you feel skeptical.Researching for this article, I stumbled upon some powerful human stories. Some people went through the hardest experiences you can imagine. Yet, they were not only able to forgive but actually came in good terms with their wrongdoers.Eva Kor, an Auschwitz survivor who publicly forgave the perpetrators who killed her parents and two older sisters at the camp. Eva even traveled to Germany and embraced Oskar Gröning, one of Auschwitz officials.Phyllis Rodriguezâ son was killed in the World Trade Center attacks on September 11, 2001. Aicha el-Wafiâs son was convicted of a role in those attacks and is serving a life sentence. In hoping to find peace, these two moms have formed a powerful friendship born of unthinkable losses.Back in 1995, Azim Khamisaâs son was killed in a gang initiation ritual. The deadly encountered sent him and Plex Felix, the grandfather of the murderer, down paths of meditation to forgive and be forgiven. In time, they became friends.Unforgiveness is fueled by rumination - we keep rehashing sad experiences. We get stuck on delated emotions. Resentment, hatred, hostility, fear, and anger guides our lives.Blame turns us into a victim - we feel helpless. If people who went through tragedies, as described above, forgave their offenders, why canât we?A meta-analysis of forgiveness research brings light to effectively moving on. It requires two key steps: Decisional Forgiveness: A behavioral intention statement to forgo revenge and avoidance (unless it is unsafe). Itâs releasing the offender from the social debt incurred by his/her wrongdoing. Emotional Forgiveness: The replacement of negative emotions with positive ones. It leads to a reduction in the uncomfortable or negative feelings associated with unforgiveness - it might even develop positive regard toward the perpetrator. Forgiveness moves us from being a victim to being valuable.As Buddhist Sakyong Mipham says, âWe can see that the person we are blaming needs help, and so we help him. Helping him reduces our desire to blame, and increases our desire to be of benefit.âAzim Khamisa and Plex Felix went beyond reconciliation. These two brave men tour the world teaching kids how to meditate - they are on a mission to prevent violence and hatred.To let go of resentment, we must stop seeing the other as our enemy.Forgiveness requires a methodTo forgive others, we require more than just the intention - we need a clear method to overcome blame and fixation to a past event.Dr. Frederic Luskin, the co-founder of the Stanford Forgiveness Project, runs a âForgiveness Trainingâ to help people develop the core skills. The first step consists in tearing apart âyour grievance storyâ - the expert believes that, when we blame someone, instead of holding them accountable, we get stuck in victimhood and in action.Another interesting challenge participants must deal with is to âfind the impersonal in the hurt.â Realizing that many others have experienced a similar offense, helps depersonalize the event. It doesnât remove the harm but trains our mind to not being attached to the incident.âForgiveness is a trainable skill, just like learning to throw a baseball,â writes Luskin in his book Forgive for Good.Robert Enright, a psychologist from the University of Wisconsin, is a pioneer on the study of forgiveness. Together with his colleagues, he developed a four-part Process Model: Uncovering anger: Through self-awareness and understanding, we learn how the wrongdoing has compromised our lives, and reveal the suffering and harm it caused. Deciding to forgive: You make an explicit commitment to forgiving. This doesnât your feelings are gone - itâs the first step toward moving on. Working on forgiveness: In this phase, we reframe our view of the offender. We focus on understanding their background and motivation. Once again, we are not condoning or justifying - we just want to understand the other personâs behavior and driver. The Deepening Phase: Discovery and release from the emotional prison. We start to find meaning in the suffering we experienced. We might feel the need to help others who went through similar experiences. We transcend our pain by turning it into something meaningful. Enright and his colleagues have observed positive results in drug rehabilitation participants, victims of domestic violence, and terminally ill cancer patients. Their approach decreased anger and resentment, providing a more positive outlook.Having a method makes forgiveness seem easier.Courage brings you peaceâI have always found that mercy bears richer fruits than strict justice.â ? Abraham LincolnTime can help us heal, but forgiveness interventions work better, according to multiple studies.There are three necessary goals to achieve true forgiveness: empathizing with the offender, committing to forgiveness, and overcoming feelings of unforgiveness.Forgiving requires understanding.Empathizing with the offender is good for you. It helps you repair the relationship with the event - though that doesnât mean rebuilding the bond with that person.Forgiving is an act of courage.Like any behavior change, it requires true commitment to succeed. The explicit decision to forgive someon e is a critical step to move toward overcoming negative feelings.Forgiveness sets you free from the past - you donât just make peace with the offender, you are at peace.Thatâs how Azin Khamisa wraps up this moving TED talk: âPeace is possible. How do I know that? Because Iâm at peace.âGustavo Razzetti is a change instigator that helps organizations lead positive change. Author, Consultant, and Speaker on team building and cultural transformation.This article first appeared on Medium.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.