Tagged: “forgiveness”

I have been ghosting a former friend, and, at the same time, I have been forgiving her from my heart.  Is ghosting a sign for me that I am not forgiving?

Your ghosting is a sign that you have not completed the forgiveness journey at this point.  Ghosting, or choosing to completely ignore a person even when the other tries hard to communicate with you, can be emotionally damaging.  Therefore, even though you may be on the road to forgiving in terms of your thoughts and feelings toward your former friend, the ghosting is a sign that you still are extracting revenge to some degree.  I would urge you to continue fostering the softness of forgiveness in your mind and heart, and then use these new developments to add behavior to the equation.  Try to alter your behavior so that you are showing mercy toward her.  If she is behaving in a way that is harmful to you, you need not enter back into the relationship, but you can break the ghosting pattern, for example, by a gentle email that she needs to alter behavior that has been harmful to you.

You often talk about forgiveness education for children.  How do you recommend that I go about this if I am naive about what forgiveness actually is and how to go about it?

We at the International Forgiveness Institute have age-appropriate forgiveness curriculum guides, professionally produced, that are meant for parents and educators.  If you follow the instructions for each lesson in any of these guides, you, along with your children, will be learning more deeply about what forgiveness is, its importance in our lives, and how to go about it.

I have an adult friend who currently is staying away from her mother because of continual harsh treatment.  Is this showing unforgiveness or something else?

It depends on what is in your friends heart.  If she needs some time away to heal from the emotional wounds, she can still be working on forgiving her mother during this time.  If, on the other hand, she is staying away to impose hurt on her mother, this could be motivated by revenge and not forgiveness.  In other words, the answer to your question depends on your friends motivation for staying away.

What is your opinion of parents who insist that the children forgive each other for the sake of a peaceful home?

The parent has to be careful here.  Sometimes a hurt child needs a little time to be angry about what happened.  If a parent hovers over the child and insists on forgiveness right now,” this might be a deterrent for the child, who then feels pressure about forgiveness.  It is reasonable to talk about forgiveness as a strong approach to a peaceful home, but this lesson may best be learned when there is not high tension caused by a recent unfairness in the home.  In other words, instructions on what forgiveness is and its positive consequences are important in their proper context.

I think that feelings of guilt, within temperate bounds, actually is healthy.  In other words, a person who feels guilty can take action to correct a wrong.  Given that this is the case, might my forgiving someone be ill-advised since I think those who do wrong should feel guilty?

When you forgive, you are not asking a person to feel no guilt because of the unfair treatment.  A healthy way to forgive is to offer mercy and then to ask for fairness.  This seeking fairness is not part of forgiveness, but rather is part of the moral virtue of justice, which can coexist with forgiveness.  Once the other person sees, acknowledges, and changes the unfairness, then it is appropriate to help the person reduce the guilty feelings.  Forgiving a person will not create a false sense of guilt reduction if you proceed with the request for fairness, in the hope the other responds positively to this.