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Many
times my clients have come to me asking for help in forgiving others
who have betrayed or hurt them in some way. They have heard
that forgiveness is a choice, and they begin to doubt themselves
and feel frustrated when they cannot forgive truly from their hearts.
I
have found in my practice and in my own life that forgiveness is
not a choice, but the change in perspective around the original
story is. Once my perspective changes, forgiveness naturally
flows as if there was nothing to be forgiven in the first place.
I have also seen that there are at least two different levels of
forgiveness. One stems from the human story and the other from
the soul's story. For spiritual seekers both must be addressed
before forgiveness can flow. Usually I see spiritual seekers
wanting to bypass their human experience and get right into the
soul's perspective in an attempt to avoid pain. Or, sometimes
spiritual seekers can fall completely unconscious and have no interest
in the soul's story, remaining angry victims. Lastly, some
clients are confused between forgiveness, which requires no participant
but the self, and reconciliation, which requires the other party.
As
spiritual seekers we're all familiar with the concept that how we
deal with the circumstances in our lives is completely up to us. This
does NOT mean that we are to blame for everything that happens to
us. We take responsibility for our own actions, and for our
reactions, and that is all. Spiritual seekers can get themselves
into trouble by taking too much responsibility for others actions'
and responses to us. While it is recommended that we look at
the patterns we might be enmeshed in so we are not open to a repeat, if
someone has cheated on us, lied to us, or stepped on a toe, that
is their action! It's completely appropriate to say, "Hey,
you stepped on my foot," so we can make sure that person is
aware of the mistake. Later we can look at how we tend to stick
our feet out in high traffic areas.
When
we are hurt, it is important to acknowledge the hurt that we actually
feel. Too many times I have seen spiritual seekers push their
hurts away, thinking that it is unspiritual to have been hurt. After
all, supposedly there are no victims. However, we are still
all human. We do hurt. We feel pain. Yes, on the
spiritual level there are no victims. But, we must deal with
our humanity first. That means honoring our physical and emotional
well being, including moving ourselves out of harm's way. One sure
way to know if we are in harm's way is if we have been harmed. The
fact is, to live here as spirit, we all must take care of our physical
and emotional health, or we will not have the energy to do our life
purpose. It is essential to create that safe space
for ourselves.
Other
common beliefs I have run into are that forgiveness should automatically
be given for the people closest to us, and we should always be willing
to work with them to come to a reconciliation. This belief
all by itself can cause major pain and heart break to all parties
involved. It is important to remember that Forgiveness at the
human level is always a gift. When forgiveness is required, it is
meaningless. Spiritual seekers must remember that relationships
are ultimately voluntary and temporary, whether we think they should
be or not. Common false beliefs are: Family should stick together
no matter what, Marriage is forever, and Close friendships are forever. And
if we don't make that happen in our lives, we have failed in some
way.
In my own life I
had a friend from a years long friendship lie to me repeatedly.
She had fallen into this habit out of a need to not disappoint others. Her
false belief was that telling people "no" could mean they
wouldn't love her anymore. So, instead of saying what she
needed in the moment, she would lie. Each time she did this
with me, I would explain to her that her lying was hurtful to me
and that I could deal with my disappointment when she said, "no."
I would rather she tell me what she truly wanted and needed than
try to make me happy.
However,
even though she said she understood, she continued to lie.
Finally I caught her lying to me over a trivial matter. I
realized she could not or would not change, and her lying was damaging
my emotional equilibrium. I decided to end my friendship
with her, despite the belief we both had that friends are friends
forever, and despite knowing her soul's story. While I had
compassion for what had led her into lying in the first place, I
needed to take care of myself.
Because
I had already repeatedly explained the problem to her, I didn't
bother explaining one last time. Instead I moved on with my
life without her. She eventually called me to ask what was
wrong. I told her that I had caught her lying to me yet again.
On her end, she was hurt that I had cut her off, and also wondering
how I could be so mean to her when all she was doing was trying
to smooth things over for herself and me by lying once in a while.
And, we were friends, and friends should be willing to work things
out. It was a shock to her that I wasn't going to operate
by those rules anymore, and that her behavior had finally cost her
our friendship.
When
she realized that I meant what I said, she saw that always telling
the truth with me was a condition of our relationship, even if the
telling was uncomfortable or would cause pain. She told me
that now she was truly willing to abide by that condition and, I
believed her. The strong boundary I had put in place was no
longer necessary. The anger and hurt dissipated. Truly,
there was nothing to forgive, and our relationship moved forward
renewed and restored. We have continued to be friends until
this day---a friendship that has lasted almost thirty years, with
six years of not a lie told between us.
It is
important to see that I broke off my relationship with her for my
own sense of well being, NOT to get her to change her behavior.
I was willing to give up the friendship for my own sake, for my
own emotional health. I had no expectations of her changing
her behavior in any way. Do not break off relationships thinking
that by doing so you'll cause the other to change. Do it only
for your own emotional or physical health.
Before
my friend called me, I was angry with her. Over the period
of days when we did not speak, I considered calling her and resuming
our friendship. But, my anger would always come back.
In this case, anger was acting as a signal that something essential
within me wouldn't allow that reconciliation. I could have
interpreted this as being Unforgiving or stuck in a victim stance,
but instead I chose to honor my inner signals around what anger
was telling me was right for me. Honoring our personal boundaries
by using anger as a signal can be frightening and challenging for
many of us.
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