If the wounds are too fresh and the thought of forgiving the person who abused and upset you hurts too much, honor that. There is no shame in not being ready. It is normal and everyone’s timeline is different. Close the article for the time being or read it for nothing more than future reference, with no pressure or expectations. Allow yourself to feel all that you do, the pain included, with as much passion and purpose as possible. After a while, come back to it. Examine what you have gained, rather than concentrate on what you have lost, even if what you have lost is significant. The hope is that your personal growth is also significant and that the positive things you come to learn about yourself are far greater. Believe it or not, the day may come when you are not only able to forgive, but thank the person who brought you here, but that is all in time…
Forgiveness can be a tough subject to broach when the ones we are considering forgiving are the psychopaths who harmed us. Eventually, however, we should try to find a way to do it.
Why we should forgive
Resentment and anger eat away at us. Even though we may have been seriously wronged by the psychopaths who crossed our paths, holding on to those feelings hurts us, not them. Nelson Mandela once said, “Resentment is like drinking poison and hoping it will kill your enemies.” While it seems like an easy enough concept to grasp, putting it into practice may prove more challenging. While in the midst of the anger, confusion, and disbelief that almost always accompanies our brushes with psychopathy, it’s tough to imagine forgiving the person who tried to hurt us. But forgiveness is a funny thing. The reason it must occur has less to do with our wrong-doers, and more to do with us. Forgiving helps us heal.
What does the process look like?
This will not come easy or fast. In fact, it would be wrong to rush it. We must honor each of the stages of the grief process in order to fully heal. But eventually, we have to let go of any remaining ill feelings so that we can grow and move forward. The psychopaths’ acts may have been truly horrible, so we need not excuse them, but we can learn not to allow them to damage us further. As long as we are caught in negative feelings, our offenders are still winning. Hopefully, we can come to the place where we re-empower ourselves and re-gain control of our lives.
Forgiveness does not need to mean forgetting. We should not forget what happened to us or behave as if it never occurred. Rather, we should remember what we went through so that we don’t allow the evil back in or repeat our pasts with others in the future. Further, we need not expect anything from those who did us harm. In cases such as ours, they either enjoyed what they did or to us or were merely using us for their own “advancement.” There are no sincere apologies coming from them….ever, so do not look for one. This is about us and our peace and we can do this without seeing them or exchanging any words. For once, it is actually all about us.
What we come to feel
Recently, someone new to the struggle asked me how I feel about what happened to me and how I feel about the person in my situation. I had to think for a moment, but finally decided that I feel “nothingness.” Where I was once consumed with emotion, I now see this person as a void. It is almost like a chapter of my life that did not exist, in spite of the fact that it was extremely significant.
I know that the situation was real and awful. I care about and acknowledge what occurred, as the storm I weathered hit with a tsunami-like force. However, I lived, learned, and somehow, grew. I think I became a better person along the way, as a result. Without the experience, I don’t think I would have realized that I was only living half alive, realizing only a portion of my potential. I would not have known the strength I was capable of, without this test.
I believe that when we no longer allow them control over us, we come to feel “even” again. At that point, what once existed as love, hate, anger, and sadness disappears, becoming “nothingness.” We come to see our perpetrators as insignificant, even if their acts were not. It is then that we can forgive because what was, no longer matters.
We can move toward the future for ourselves and those we care about. For the first time, probably in a long time, the psychopath takes a permanent back seat, regardless of any residual antics. It takes time and the road is long, but eventually, we can release the demons and thrive. The rewards will come. They may not be concrete or quantifiable, but we will begin to recognize them when we feel them.
Expression of hate a Red Flag that immediately should disqualify anyone from entering your relationship circles, be they romantic or platonic. Hate is the sole realm of the sociopath and is one of the outward symptoms of their disorder.
My x-spath hated is father and showed contempt for a former boyfriend. These expressions intuitively and deeply bothered me, but I dismissed them.
Normal people do not hate. We all have issues with people in our lives, but we do not hate. I do not hate my x-spath. I do not hate my sociopathic former employer. I do not hate the people there who manipulated me and used me as a scapegoat…
blue eyes, don’t you think many people who think of themselves as normal or good hate the Ku Klux Klan, and Stalin and Hitler and Pol Pot, and Bernie Madoff… neonazis, arms traffickers, Josef Fritzl, Saddam Hussein and his sons, Joe Paterno and Jerry Sandusky for different reasons, Quentin Tarantino perhaps even? Are you talking about use of the word “hate” or some other expression of it? Some of these things people express various kinds of hatred for almost in connection to their sense of their own virtue. I understand most of it. I do fear it when I don’t trust the haters’ reasonableness or intelligence/understanding.
I know I have to move on for me. The more time I think of it that time is lossed. I am not sure what I have learned. I know I am not alone, which is a little sad because of all the damaged lives that the Sociopath has done. What I have read, meny here are right the Sociopath hates us because we feel, love and care for each other. My ex employer and so called friend will never have that. He did get everything he wanted through being evil. He may feel better about himself but he lives life as a lie.
This is a good subject. The author says that forgiving frees us from the poison of resentment, but she also says, “We come to see our perpetrators as insignificant, even if their acts were not. It is then that we can forgive because what was, no longer matters.”
Why bother to forgive at that point? If the perpetrator comes to be insignificant and what happened no longer matters, then resentment doesn’t seem to be a problem. Forgiveness is just one more thing a survivor “should” do…but if they’ve gotten to the point where it’s insignificant, I’d say there isn’t anything else they need to do. The perpetrator has become irrelevant at that point.
For those still experiencing distress, there IS an option other than forgiveness or resentment, and that option is “reconciling with harm.” I will give the link to this excellent piece below. I hope people here will read it, because it provides a way to heal without having to “pardon” or “absolve” the perpetrator.
For those still within the stages of resentment and even despair, reconciling with harm offers a mindset that aids healing and creates strength. It helped me a great deal.
“Reconciling with Harm: An Alternative to Forgiveness and Revenge” Nancy A. Stanlick, University of Central Florida
http://philosophy.cah.ucf.edu/fpr/files/10_1/stanlick.pdf
An excerpt:
“Reconciling with harm…is not “giving up” nor is it condoning a wrong done; it is not the reaction of a powerless victim who lacks ability or courage to seek vengeance or the magnanimity to forgive. Neither is reconciling with harm identical to reconciling oneself TO harm. To do the latter is to give up and to let harm continue to rule one’s life. To reconcile WITH harm, on
the contrary, is to recognize oneself as harmed…but it is also to aspire to a vision of oneself as a person who is much more than simply harmed. One who reconciles with harm seeks and develops a conception of and for herself as a good, complete person, a valuable member of a moral community who accepts that she is harmed and empowers herself to achieve a kind of moral renewal of herself.”
I hope this will help others here. Thanks to all of you for making this site such an excellent source of support.
BBE,
You’ll love this:
http://www.colbertnation.com/the-colbert-report-videos/423269/january-28-2013/the-axis-of-evil-of-the-week—north-korea
Steven Colbert tells North Korea, “We loathe you, we’re just not IN loathe with you.”
“We loathe you, we’re just not IN loathe with you.”
Perfect, Skylar! That sums it up for me.
We can only truly forgive ourselves; no one else.
Forgiveness is “for giving” ourselves love.
No bitterness, just wisdom.
What happened, still happened.
xxx
BBE, I think you are right.
I think we all felt at some point a spike of hatred. I felt it a few times while with the spath and in the relationshit. It’s a feeling I simply could not bare feeling. I felt it once for another person who betrayed me. I needed to take a shower and wash the putrid feeling off of me. All in all, the few times I felt it, I couldn’t keep it up for over a few hours.
I have felt angry though, with just cause, and I was never so livid as with the spath. As you know, I channeled that anger mentally by imaginging him appearing in front of me and me throwing imaginary china plates at him, and every shattered china plate symbolized a dealt reason of anger with him. But that wrath and anger was never hatred. The rage was therapeutic and cleansing, kinda like burning karma away or something. Hatred felt extremely ugly, putrid and disgusting. It made me feel ill. I had to rid myself of it asap.
I can’t imagine much of a person surviving if they would carry on hating in such a way.
Same goes for envy. Felt it once, on my second birthday, combined with other emotions. I decided then and there that envy was the worst of the feelings, and to never feel it again. Never have. The spath tried to make me envious or jealous sometimes or work on that. It always had the opposite effect. If he told me he’d sleep with other women if such and such, I told him he was free to pack his stuff, give me back my key, and go sleep wherever he wanted.
Both hatred and envy are total spath territory for me and the worst feelings anyone can feel for themselves. Healthy emotional people I think cannot feel those feelings for a long time imo. And actually for me both hatred and envy are emotions one chooses to feel or not. They are not primal or instinctive emotions, not even secondary ones, but tertiary ones. They follow from the rationale, not the heart or the pit of the stomach.
I realized at some point,that my spath husband WANTED me to express anger and hatred.He wanted me to become bitter,with a persecution complex!He wanted to DESTROY me and my good qualities…..he wanted to watch me become him!That’s when I ‘woke up’ to what was happening!
I think Steven Colbert was communicating that he and is ilk loathe North Korea’s dear leaders. I don’t think this means he is not normal, or in spath territory, nor are any of the people here who are on board with him.