Lupita added an eight-step Forgiveness procedure on her 'Detachment' thread. Detachment and forgiveness are obviously related and one may argue that forgiveness is conducive to detachment (and vice versa).
However, Lupita, your eight steps seem most appropriate for minor upsets, ranging from someone not having flushed the toilet (AGAIN) to a single incident of infidelity (depending on how that flies with you).
Forgiving people who have crushed or maimed your spirit, hurt you physically, severely neglected you - leaving life-long impairments,
especially if they were responsible for raising you is much more complicated IMO.
Many philosophers have written about forgiveness. I've been especially impressed with the work of the French philosopher Vladimir Jankélevich, who wrote from the perspective of Holocaust survivors. Crimes against humanity are obviously the most serious crimes, but what he said about forgiveness is also applicable to survivors of crimes against children. This is, in a nutshell, what he said about the subject:
- Forgiveness is not necessary (not from a metaphysical point of view nor with a view to personal healing - although he certainly wouldn't have used such a new age term, lol )
Forgiveness is impossible if no forgiveness has been asked (basically because, according to him, it would be meaningless)
Until I read Jankélevitch I thought I 'had' to forgive at some point, in order to get well. I also felt some rush or compulsion into forgiveness when dealing with my parents. I now believe that that was a 'rush' into denial, in an attempt to escape pain. I read the phrase 'flight into forgiveness' somewhere, and it seems apt to me. 'Forgiveness' can be an attempted short-cut and as such it won't work. You won't feel better.
Another thought on forgiveness: the process can be broken down into two steps -
- Renouncing revenge
- Resuming contact
as if the offense/abuse has not happenedIt is perfectly possible and healthy to restrict forgiveness to the first step, i.e. the renouncing. It's not easy. It means more than giving up the idea that the perpetrators will be punished some day, it also means giving up hope. The hope that one day they'll fully recognize what they've done, the lingering hope that one day they'll be the people/parents we so desperately needed them to be.
Whatever we do, I believe forgiveness has to come out of our strength, not our weakness.
These are some of the thoughts I've been guided by. I would really like to hear from others what their ideas on forgiveness are.
Bee