Tagged: “Forgiveness Education”

As just one more follow-up question, if I start to forgive on my own, I like your self-help book, Forgiveness Is a Choice. Would you recommend that I start there?

Yes, that book has been empirically supported, as its principles have been applied successfully in research on forgiveness interventions. If you decide to seek the help of a mental health professional, you could bring a copy of that book to this person, and both of you could discuss the contents of the book as you work on forgiveness.

If I try to minimize in my own mind the extent of another person’s injustice against me, this tends to lower my anger.  Is this approach all right in your view?

No, actually, it is not, because it denies what happened.  This denial will not necessarily lead to a more lasting reduction in the anger. For example, weeks later, you might have a thought that is more accurate regarding the extent of the injustice against you. You then will have to deal with that. If, on the other hand, you once again reframe the injustice with the distortion that it was not so bad, the more realistic appraisal likely will resurface later once again. It is better to see reality as it is so that you can see the extent of the injustice, the extent of the anger within you, and then deal constructively with this.

You talk frequently about the negative aspects of anger. My question is this: Are all forms of anger unhealthy? In other words, do I have to avoid anger at all costs?

When we talk about anger, for example, in the book, Forgiveness Therapy, authored by Dr. Fitzgibbons and me, the emphasis is on deep and abiding anger, what psychologists call resentment and psychiatrists call irritability. This kind of anger can lead to compromises in emotional health, such as an increase in anxiety and depression. Yet, short-term anger can be good because you know an injustice has occurred, and you further realize it is unfair.  The key is not to let the anger dominate and linger for weeks, months, or years.