This article talks about work we do when we are ready to work on clearing the influence of betrayals from our minds and emotional systems. It is about recovering our feelings of safety in the world and moving forward to create better and happier lives. Those of us who are still battling our betrayers, still clarifying our feelings of outrage or still developing our self-defensive skills may feel outraged by the very idea of forgiving. And so they should. Forgiving is something we do “at our leisure,” later when we have the time to think about restoring our emotional systems to a pre-warzone state. Ultimately we want to be positive, creative, optimistic people — without ever forgetting the lessons we learned in our histories. This article is about what we do, when we’re ready to put it all behind us. — Kathy
“Forgiveness is a dangerous passage.” This is a quote from an unknown source on the white board on my office. It’s been there for years and every time I think about cleaning it off, I think “oh not yet.” The temptation to forgive for the wrong reasons is something I don’t want to forget.
In this tenth article of this series on recovering from traumatic relationships, we will discuss the process of forgiving. It is a bridge between the grieving/letting go and the rebuilding phases.
Why bother?
A lot of people have a lot of opinions on forgiveness. Most religious or spiritual disciplines will tell us that forgiving is essential to our spiritual health. On a more mundane level, we may we aware that our friends and supporters are losing patience with our extended healing process, or may be pressuring us to get over it. On a more personal level, we may want to reenter the world without all this emotional baggage that makes us so hyper-conscious of potential threats that we have a hard time seeing or taking advantage of opportunities for good experiences.
In my mind, the only reason to ever consider forgiving is that we want to free out minds of the residue of anger that hangs on after we grieve and let go. There are other benefits we get out of forgiveness, but the first motivation has to be to improve the “quality of life” in our own minds. It’s a matter of our relationship with ourselves.
In addition, I believe there are a few prerequisites to really forgiving anything. The most important of them is that our suffering is fading. (That doesn’t mean that we’re not still dealing with repercussions of some sort, but that the level of pain has diminished to the point where it’s less important than our desire to get over it.)
The other one is that we have the stability and presence of mind to know that we can forgive without getting back into the situation that caused us all this pain in the first place. If we’re still attracted to that situation or others like it, we’re leapfrogging ahead to forgiving before we’ve done the preliminary work of getting angry at our betrayers, developing defensive skills, and facing the fact that there are things we just cannot fix or change.
What is NOT a good reason for forgiving is some sort of social expediency, because we have to deal with our betrayers or with other people who are not sympathetic or pressuring us to get over it. There are other ways to handle that situation.
Here are some of the things we may be thinking as we approach forgiving:
• These angry or frightened feelings don’t have any place in my life anymore. I want to move on.
• I’m ready to find more interests than this bitterness
• I want to clean up my emotional system so I become more positive and optimistic
• I’m starting to remember how I felt before all this happened, and I want to recover some of that joy of life.
• This just isn’t worth the energy I’ve been giving it
But to forgive, we have to overcome one major obstacle. Fear. Forgiving is actually part of overcoming fear. But we have to face it head on too.
Fear and forgiveness
The progress of healing involves us becoming more and more real about what happened and how we feel about it. In anger, we get closer to recognizing our fear, but our reaction is to throw things at it — blame, threats, vengeance, work on fixing things so it never happens again. In grieving and letting go, we accept the specific losses that we have endured. While that is good work, it also clarifies our vulnerability to random events or to specific threats in the world. We may work on accepting that vulnerability, along with our other losses, but it doesn’t change the fact that it exists.
And so now, our increasing awareness of the costs of our vulnerability raises a new issue. How do we live with the fear?
This question makes sense of all we’ve been through to process the trauma. We may have dabbled with fear in our processing. Asking ourselves “what if” this or that. What if no one ever loves me again? What if I am really too stupid to live? But we never sat down to really look it hard in the eye.
Because fear is an extremely uncomfortable emotion. In fact, if we look at all the so-called negative emotions, including shame and guilt, and do enough digging down, we find fear at the bottom of them. Other than love, it is the most fundamental emotion. And it is the antithesis of love or connectedness. We literally can’t feel love and fear at the same time. One will overtake the other.
Fear is designed to stop everything else until it is resolved. It generates the noises of anxiety and need for immediate relief, while blocking or compromising our ability to see into the future, our ability to fully recognize and enjoy what is around us, and our ability to take the normal risks involved in forward movement in our lives. It eats up our energy in a million ways and drives us toward behaviors that are about nothing but self-protection and relief from the mental noise.
This is why facing and acknowledging the fact that we are afraid can be such a powerfully transformative thing, all by itself. It is a form of clearing away all the intermediate structures of trauma-processing and getting down to the center of it in a totally authentic way. So we are no longer lying to ourselves or pretending. So that we are no longer trying to talk ourselves into irrational ideas about being stronger or safer than we are. So that we are finally clear about the fact that the universe whacked us and we don’t know when it will whack us again. It is out of our control.
This is tough stuff, the toughest of the entire grief process, and until we are ready for it, we can’t do it. Our minds won’t let us. We will slip and slide away into denial or bargaining or anger or another round of grieving and letting go, all the things that we know made us feel better than the stage before. And that is fine. Our minds have their own wisdom, and we face this issue when we have the structural underpinning in place to do this. It’s why the healing process is progressive.
But one way or another, when we come to think about forgiving, we’re going to run into this issue. How can I safely forgive if I really don’t know when I’m going to be facing the same thing again, or something worse? Or vice versa, how can I experience my fear if I’m relaxing my angry alert and protection systems by forgiving?
This trauma was nothing compared to the first one
The experience of trauma is built into our emotional histories. In a way, every trauma we experience is a replay of the primal trauma that every child experiences, the transition from life inside the womb to life out of it. It is the fundamental “expulsion from the Garden of Eden” which transfers us from a situation where we are fed, warmed, held, connected to our source to a new situation in which we are separate and dependent for our survival on things that are out of our control.
The developmental activities of the first four years are actually about the child navigating that separation to acquire certain basic intellectual perspectives and emotional skills necessary to healthy personality formation. It is our first experience of trauma processing. It occurs both on a macro level of gradual emotional acceptance of separation from the “source” and on a detail level of dealing with separate events that trigger fear, disappointment and uncertainty. If all goes well, we maintain steady bonds with our caretakers that allow us to ease into independence, self-soothing skills and the beginnings of empathy.
So we “know” what trauma means from a very early age. One way of describing trauma is that it is an unexpected breach of the rules we took for granted. Or the rules we depended on for our survival and sense of security in the world.
A whole series of emotional reactions to this breach are reasonable and normal. All the emotional stages we discuss in trauma processing, as well as others that we have not discussed in depth, such as feelings of betrayal, rejection or shame. If we go back to the nature of the first trauma, it makes sense that we would feel offended. One day our life is one thing; the next thing it’s another. What are we supposed to think? At minimum, it would be reasonable to think we are being unreasonably screwed with.
This brings us back to the primal argument. Because who, ultimately, is screwing with us? To cut a long discussion short, our big argument is not with any one persecutor in this world, not our parents, not our selfish lovers, not with the truck that hit us. It’s with God or the universe, or however we look at the overall intelligence that organizes this place. Because clearly that big intelligence has forgotten that we were previously important enough to have the suite at the center of the universe, and for reasons not made clear, we have been demoted to just one small, helpless life form in this place full things and life forms that clearly do not recognize our centrality.
Welcome to the first time we felt the fear of being vulnerable and alone. And to the basic human challenge of living with those feelings at the same time we experience love, trust, some kind of internal dignity, and the ability to risk moving forward with our lives.
There is no human being who has not been through this. And there is not one of us who doesn’t live with this challenge on a daily basis in some part of our consciousness.
It’s important to know this, because as we move forward with dealing with our own fear, we also know that some people have found ways of managing it more effectively than others.
The cost of doing business.
We have these bodies. They have their own intelligence and they want to survive. Our spirituality has its intelligence. Our intellect has its intelligence. Our emotional system has its intelligence. (See Daniel Goleman’s books on various forms of intelligence for wonderful discussions of this topic.) They are all integrated and mutually supportive, but the body is the instrument and the house where it all plays out, and one of the body’s primary vocabulary words is fear.
We cannot get away from this, but we can decide what we’re going to do about it. And that is where forgiving comes in.
There are a lot of dictionary definitions of forgiving, but for our purposes in this article, we are going to experiment with a new one. That is, making a decision about how much energy we want give to a certain source of fear in our lives.
This is not about minimizing the damage or our struggle to get over it. It is not about condoning other people’s bad behavior or the real dangers we face in the world.
Rather it is about recognizing something about ourselves. We have done all reasonable work to identify the problem, to protect ourselves in the future, to let go of what we have discovered is now gone, and to face our fear. We know what we are afraid of. Now, we consider a decision about reclassifying the issue as something we may or may not run into, something that is (to some degree) out of our control. We begin to consider whether or not we are served by continuing to let fear of this thing drain resources that could be spent on positive forward movement.
Forgiving is not the same as denial, because we make this decision with full awareness of our losses and our future risks. It involves no forgetting. We respect all the information we have gathered, in case we need it again. We respect all the feelings we have gone through, because they are part of the truth of this experience. We just decide to start withdrawing our energy, turning off that faucet, and shifting our attention to other things.
What forgiving is and isn’t
Forgiving is a decision we make and then gradually follow through, adapting that decision to our own comfort level. It is a decision we make from a position of power over the one thing we truly have power over, our own choices. Especially that supreme choice of where we place our attention.
Forgiving is something we do, knowing that we cannot totally control fear, because our bodies have their own agendas and they will generate fear if they feel it is necessary. So it also involves a deal with our bodies that we will listen to their fear, that we will not become airy-fairy pseudo-Buddhists who try to stuff their fear because they think it’s unfashionable. But we make a deal with our bodies that it’s better for the entire organism if we manage our fear, reducing our investments in fear about things we already know about, and saving our big extravaganzas of fear and anxiety for the surprises.
Forgiving is about trust at two levels. First, trust that certain bad things will happen. We can look at this statistically, if we’re inclined. A certain fraction of people we meet will be destructive emotional cripples. A certain fraction of things we buy will turn out to be unusable junk. A certain number of conversations with our relatives will include uninvited comments about our choices, our characters or our weight. Trusting that these things will happen eliminates the surprise factor and enables us to plan around these statistical likelihoods.
Second, forgiving is also a kind of trophy we get for doing the work and coming out the other side of the trauma processing. In that sense, it is about renewed trust in ourselves and in the universe. What was once a huge deal is now fully digested and just a learning experience attached to some unpleasant memories. We are whole again and on generally good terms with the big intelligence that runs everything.
In all of this, you’ve probably noticed how little I’ve talked about the perpetrator. And I’m sure you understand why. Because this is really something between the various forms of intelligence in ourselves, and it is something between us and the big intelligence that runs everything.
But still we need to get down some practicalities too. So here is what forgiveness is NOT:
• It is not condoning or acceptance of anything we find hurtful, unethical, uncaring or anything else that is bad for us. (We may find ourselves releasing negative feelings about something, when we come to understand why it happened, but we don’t have to. This is not ultimately about them. It is whether we’re ready to move on.)
•It is not about compartmentalizing or denial. We are not “stuffing” it or pretending it never happened. We’re not trying to convince ourselves that we haven’t just been through a battle or deluding ourselves that we’re more powerful than we are. We are just gradually shifting our attention away from it, as we feel comfortable doing so. We are gradually reclaiming our interest in other things.
• It is not a reason for re-involving ourselves with people or situations that hurt us. We don’t forgive so we can jump into that pool again. The only reason we would do that is if we have evolved past the point of being hurt by what hurt us before (something that doesn’t often happen) or if the person or the situation has gone through some kind of cosmic surgery and is now something else. Remember, forgiving comes AFTER we have learned self-protection in the angry phase and let go of whatever got us into this situation. If we forgive because we want to do the same thing all over again ”¦ well, you don’t need me to tell you what you’re volunteering for.
• Likewise, it is not a social cure. If we’re forgiving because we’re embarrassed about being such a bore, or because our bad feelings are alienating our families, or because we want to get along better with people who just don’t get it, we victimizing ourselves all over again. We’re giving away our authority over our own feelings, and trying to force ourselves to feel something we don’t, in order to be accepted. If it’s really important that we not communicate the full force of the outrage or grief we’re dealing with – like in a work situation or in court — we can do that. We can selectively choose where, when and how much we share, while we continue to work through our trauma privately. The ability to do this — letting some people in and keeping others out — is good practice in developing the skills of conditional trust.
• There is no reason that we have to forgive people to their faces or even let them know about it. In fact, if we’re really ready to stop wasting energy, we probably won’t. We don’t just stop bothering with them in our heads; we stop bothering with them in real life. We avoid engagement. If we have to spend energy on some kind of mop-up or dealing with continuing drama from their side, we handle it with an eye toward ending all of it, because we want to be done with it.
Finally, forgiving is not an all-or-nothing thing. Nor is it a carved-in-stone solution. We don’t say, “Oh, I’ve decided it’s not worth caring anymore about what he (or she) did to me, and now I have to not care about the new thing he (or she) is doing to me.” It doesn’t work that way. Forgiving is a way of allocating our own resources. If new circumstances require us to grab a sword and slay a few dragons before dinner, then we do it. After we come home and shower, we can decide whether we’re ready to forgive the loss of our afternoon, or if we need to spend more time processing that little irritation.
And if we absolutely feel like we must announce our decision to forgive to the sociopath, here’s a suggested forgiveness note:
I’ve decided not to give you any more attention. I’m not going to track you down, hire a hit man or sue you for theft or mental suffering. I’ve dealt with my losses by myself. But don’t confuse this with weakness. The next time you show up, it won’t be such a pleasant or profitable experience for you. I also advise you to you grow up, for your own sake. Not everyone is as forgiving as me. As Henry the XV said to a murderous friend, “I pardon you, but I also pardon whoever kills you.”
In the next article, we begin on the wonderful topic of becoming who we want to be.
Namaste. The wise emotional accountant in me salutes the wise emotional accountant in you.
Kathy
Again i am stucked at night and it left just few hours for rest before i start new working week. I am also having medical tests, i am affraid so.
Wish u all good night/day and peace with urselves
Thornbud,
thank you for sharing your story. Your story, was like a fable for me. It helped me see the common thread in all of our stories: empathy.
The details are horrific, but unfortunately, the basis of your story is the same as that of everyone else here: WE HAD TOO MUCH EMPATHY. it’s like we crave something to do with all this empathy we carry around. The moment a P shows up, we feel relieved that we’ve found someone to dump our empathy on.
Please forgive yourself. You were not aware of the burden you carry of being too empathetic.
But you are now.
I don’t know the answer. I’m working on figuring it out.
I can tell you one thing though. some P’s don’t know what they are doing, but mine does. He asked me why I had no EMPATHY.
everyone – i only caught a piece of this radio show about forgiveness, but the interviewer, sook yin lee, always does interesting shows. there is a diversity of ideas presented in the piece I caught.
i am going to email the link to Donna also – maybe she’ll post it as its own thread.
http://www.cbc.ca/dnto/
bitter weighs so much. i could get much past the first paragraph of this post – too overwhelmed – but the frist paragraph is a good one to contemplate:
‘ This article talks about work we do when we are ready to work on clearing the influence of betrayals from our minds and emotional systems. It is about recovering our feelings of safety in the world and moving forward to create better and happier lives. Those of us who are still battling our betrayers, still clarifying our feelings of outrage or still developing our self-defensive skills may feel outraged by the very idea of forgiving. And so they should. Forgiving is something we do “at our leisure,” later when we have the time to think about restoring our emotional systems to a pre-warzone state. Ultimately we want to be positive, creative, optimistic people without ever forgetting the lessons we learned in our histories. This article is about what we do, when we’re ready to put it all behind us. Kathy’
i wish miss hawk still posted more and that she had been more honest with me months ago – saying ‘call anytime’; then ignoring my email and saying there wasn’t really anything to respond to was messed up. she is a good writer, and she is VERy good at contextualizing experience in a positive way for people – she reframes mud to verdant soil.
she said – ‘Those of us who are still battling our betrayers, still clarifying our feelings of outrage s…. think about restoring our emotional systems to a pre-warzone state.
still clarifying our feelings of outrage – yup. see the edges at least and i am pretty freaking outraged. and biiiiter.
still battling our betrayers – uh huh, but to some extent that is within my control. when i posted some inof about the spath – to let others know is was a scam the forum i posted on removed some of the text. x. effing scuze me! i am having to calm myself everytime i think of it. i had to post it – but now i have to make the decisions to protect myself from blowing a vessel. seriously.
‘Ultimately we want to be positive, creative, optimistic people without ever forgetting the lessons we learned in our histories. ‘
i feel so ugly, unworthy, and f&*king scrappy. again, i have to calm myself…i don’t like my self much, but i like myself more than i think i should considering how i hate just about everyone else. i see that i cannot be punished enough1?…for what? not sure yet – but seemingly it is endless – rather, ‘limitless’. well, i am challenging that – how ’bout i be hardcore messed with and stop messing with myself because i have been messed with. i kinda like pissy one step – not many do. i can’t afford to feel bad for every pissy thought – tooo many of them. i lack compassion for myself – bitter hard rock of heart is ti-ight. war-zone state.
tomorrow – hopefully it is a better day than this one was inside and outside. .
Had a revelation today about ‘forgiveness.’
first let me say, I do not routinely advocate ‘forgiveness’ for spaths.
sitting by the water today, in the damn cold wind, I realized that FORGIVENESS IS ABOUT ACCOUNTABILITY. TO FORGIVE SOMEONE YOU HAVE TO FIRMLY SEE THEM AS ACCOUNTABLE FOR WHAT THEY DID. TO FORGIVE FAILINGS THE PERP NEEDS TO BE SEEN AS HAVING FAILED AS RESPONSIBLE AND ACCOUNTABLE. This removes the taint of their actions from us. We cannot be responsible.
Forgiveness isn’t about compassion (in the case of the unforgivable), or seeing ‘everyone as having some good in them…blah blah), but about knowing firmly the other is responsible and breaking the connection to them by exonerating ourselves.
Hi One Joy,
It sounds to me like you are looking for a way to release the slime that the spath left you with. Perhaps you instinctively feel that forgiveness is the key. Having now reached the point where you have exhonerated yourself, does that mean you understand that you were not and are not responsible for the malice in the spath’s heart? That sounds very healthy to me. She wanted to make you feel responsible because that is what you do to a scapegoat, you place all responsibility on them. And of course all spaths have to have scapegoats.
A part of the pattern that I’ve noticed about spaths is that they do not want to be responsible for anything. It’s part of being childlike, since children are not responsible for anything, spaths don’t want to be either. My spath actually TOLD me that he never wanted to grow up. Another time, he said, “I shouldn’t have to work, I should just get paid to play, and someone else should take care of me” CAN WE SAY SPATH ANY LOUDER?
This pattern of irresponsibility is repeated over and over in the stories on LF, but they are so different that you might not notice the common thread of refusing to take responsibility – they do it in subtle and insidious ways. Several spaths have their wives blaming the OW instead of the spath. (even when the OW didn’t KNOW he was married). Oxy’s son blames her for being in jail even though HE is the murderer! it’s spathological.
SC, posted a link to an earlier LF thread, I can’t remember the topic but the first comment was by Mr. Green who is a spath, and he said that perhaps the solution is to care less about what happens, in other words, be MORE LIKE THE SPATH. That is just another example of how they “blame the victim” for caring too much. Then they can say that it’s your fault for being victimized. From what I know about your spath, I think she very carefully set you up to feel like this only happened to you because you fell for it, because you cared too much – AS IF THAT’S A BAD THING! That’s spaths circular logic – spathological!! It’s slime. Their ultimate goal is to convert us into them, like vampires do.
HELL NO! WE WON’T GO! 🙂
I once read that Love is another word for responsibility. That would explain the inability of the spaths to love.
Forgiveness is a tough concept for me when it comes to spaths. So I looked it up. This link is filled with different concepts but the ones that makes the most sense to me are the Bahá’à Faith and the Buddhist Faith explanations for forgiveness. Basically they are saying, step back, look at the big picture, don’t take it personally because we don’t know everything. In other words, use humility to defend AND heal ourselves from injuries.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forgiveness
Thanks for posting your revelation, it gave me so much to think about!
Forgiveness is giving up the hope that the past could of been any different.. So they are what they did…I participated in that ‘hope’ that he would be what he said he was..it never happened…. hope lingered long after he was gone…hope that I was wrong about it all….. hope that some miracle would happen …..giving up the hope that the past could of been any different…
Hens, how well expressed those feelings.
That mortal hope…for a miracle. It’s pure poison.
I started feeling it but i saw it was a trap.
I think i’ve been in contact with more psychopaths in my life and this is the reason i scaped so fast from my personal psychopath.
I wonder when i will be completely vaccinated against them. I think i’m close but who knows. I thought so when i said goodbye to the german God and now i have to deal with this spanish monster who believes he’s the biggest God.
ONE/JOY,
YOU GET IT!!! FINALLY YOU GET IT ABOUT “FORGIVENESS”—YOU EXPLAINED IT PERFECTLY!!!!!! Yea, TOWANDA!!!!! Oh, my gosh, gal, you get it!!!!!!! That is exactly what it is, holding THEM accountable for what they did and it is NOT US……I wish I had thought to say that that way, you said it perfectly!!!! That is getting the bitterness out of our hearts….they are accountable. They are responsible. We are no longer bitter and feel horrible because of what THEY are responsible for doing!
I hereby dub One/Joy SANE and…well, can’t think of another word to go with that, you are just SANE my dear, you get it. I am so proud of you, I am so happy that you have broken through the barrier! TOWANDA!!!! (doing a little joy dance!!!)
Oxy – the thing that i understood for many years about forgiveness was that it freed the forgiver. But, as everything was blown wide open by the experience with the spath, and the axis of the earth tilted for me, I have had to re-examine EVERYTHING. And forgiveness is on the table, as what she did is unforgivable.
What i am realizing with the spath experience is that my tool kit has to expand. For example: I can’t just respond to all situations with compassion, some situations require firearms. And so it is with forgiveness.
In some cases we forgive because the person has acknowledged that they have hurt us, promised to try to better (and follows through with this), and we forgive as part of renewing trust. In other cases we forgive because we can clearly see that the other person tries hard, but is not capable of doing better. We see that to release them through forgiveness is to take our energy back. In this case we forgive and either accept that the relationship will always be very limited, or we move on; either way we release the expectation that they could have or will ever do any better. And then there are the spath…..
….who we have to wholy and squarely BLAME and hold accountable for their actions, who we forgive to release ourselves from thinking we had anything to do with their horrible actions. We recognize that they will never be anything but what they are and will never do anything but what they do. This is not the same as dealing with someone who is dysfunctional – there is a difference between lost and evil; spaths aren’t trying hard. In fact they are reveling in the havoc they wreck without remorse – and therein lies the evil. For me, blaming her, holding her accountable is forgiving me, recognizing my own innocence.
In the first two case scenarios we recognize the innocence or return to innocence of the other, and with the spath we recognize their guilt and our innocence as primary. We need to return to innocence to heal – we are NOT at fault for their evil. period.
We are the knowing ones now. We have been through the fire, and we return to innocence, wiser people.