Tagged: “Forgiveness Process”

My husband has frequent temper tantrums. When I ask him to quiet down, he just gets angry. He says he has a right to these outbursts. So, my question to you is this: Could my forgiving him open the door for him to keep up this frustrating pattern?

You are aware that your husband has an anger problem needing work. Forgiveness does not directly address that issue. Forgiveness will help you to reduce your own anger at his anger. Your forgiving him may help him to quiet inside at least temporarily. Yet, he needs work on his anger in addition to your forgiving him. I suggest that you practice forgiveness, and then, when your feelings are calm, approach him when all is going well. Explain as calmly and directly as you can that he has a problem that needs to be addressed. Please point out that this does not mean you are condemning him or that he is a bad person. We all have our weaknesses, and anger outbursts are one of his. Support him as he adjusts to this truth. He and you together should examine what in the past has led to such anger within him. Perhaps he, too, needs to forgive someone (or more than one person). Your examining that and his forgiveness may work wonders for the control of his anger now.

If people deny their deep anger over a long period of time, might they forget that anger? If so, would this then lead to the situation where the forgiveness process is no longer necessary?

Note: This is the 2,000th Ask Dr. Forgiveness question and answer entry on our website!

If the injustices that led to the anger were serious and hurtful, the anger is not necessarily extinguished when the psychological defense of denial is in place. In other words, the anger can manifest in other ways, including internal compromises such as fatigue or other physical challenges. Also, anger can manifest indirectly toward innocent others as impatience, annoyance over small issues, and other disruptive behaviors. Forgiving is a protection for yourself and others as you move along your life’s path.

Can you give me one suggestion for introducing the concept of forgiveness to my family? I have learned to forgive, and I now see this as vitally important.

You can start slowly by finding the right moment to share what you have learned about forgiveness and its positive influence on you. If your family members, even eventually, respond positively, further steps might include trying to deepen family members’ understanding of what forgiveness is and is not, and trying to establish forgiveness as a positive norm in the family without pressure. Here is an essay from the Psychology Today website focusing on forgiveness and family issues: Is Your Family a Forgiving Community?, November 29, 2017

In the Process Model of Forgiveness, you begin the Work Phase by asking the forgiver to better understand the one who was unjust. I am a little worried about doing that. If I focus on that person and see all of his inner wounds, might this engender in me such sympathy for him that I conclude this: “Well, he is so hurt that maybe he really didn’t mean to hurt me.” Wouldn’t that be an open door to excuse what he did to me?

Understanding the one who offended is very different from excusing the persons behavior. We can accept a person as having unconditional worth and then hold fast to the truth that the behavior was wrong, is wrong, and always will be wrong, despite my understanding the person as a person. In other words, it is important to separate the person from the unjust actions. We try to welcome the person back into the human community as we forgive; we do not then accept the behavior.