Showing posts with label forgiveness. Show all posts
Showing posts with label forgiveness. Show all posts

July 25, 2008

More on Forgiveness



If you have not found a way to forgive which works for you, you might try this. Every day, ask God to bless the person you are resenting. Keep doing it until you experience a shift. You will discover that you've totally have forgotten why you are asking for this blessing. :-)
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In the long run, it's not a question of whether they deserve to be forgiven. You're not forgiving them for their sake. You're doing it for yourself. For your own health and well-being, forgiveness is simply the most energy-efficient option. It frees you from the incredibly toxic, debilitating drain of holding a grudge. Don't let these people live rent free in your head. If they hurt you before, why let them keep doing it year after year in your mind? It's not worth it but it takes heart effort to stop it. You can muster that heart power to forgive them as a way of looking out for yourself. It's one thing you can be totally selfish about. Doc Childre and Howard Martin


The remarkable thing is that we really love our neighbor as ourselves: we do unto others as we do unto ourselves. We hate others when we hate ourselves. We are tolerant toward others when we tolerate ourselves. We forgive others when we forgive ourselves. We are prone to sacrifice others when we are ready to sacrifice ourselves. Eric Hoffer


I worry about fast forgivers. They tend to forgive quickly in order to avoid their pain. Or they forgive fast in order to get an advantage over the people they forgive. And their instant forgiving only makes things worse...People who have been wronged badly and wounded deeply should give themselves time and space before they forgive...There is a right moment to forgive. We cannot predict it in advance; we can only get ourselves ready for it when it arrives...Don't do it quickly, but don't wait too long...If we wait too long to forgive, our rage settles in and claims squatter's rights to our souls. Lewis B. Smedes - The Art of Forgiving


July 24, 2008

On Forgiveness

Forgiveness is not about the other person, nor is it about pretending that you were not wronged. It is not about forgetting. It is about removing a burden from yourself. If this is a new concept for you, it may be the most difficult thing you have ever tried to do, but it is well worth it and it will become easier with practice. Your self-righteous ego will fight you....but, do it anyway, so you will be free. It is worth it! It is very worth it.
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Forgiveness is not a moral issue. It is an energy dynamic...
Forgiveness means that you do not carry the baggage of an experience.
When you choose not to forgive, the experience that you do not forgive sticks with you.
When you choose not to forgive, it is like agreeing to wear dark, gruesome sunglasses that distort everything, and it is you who are forced every day to look at life through those contaminated lenses. Gary Zukav

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Forgiveness does not mean that we suppress anger; forgiveness means that we have asked for a miracle: the ability to see through mistakes that someone has made to the truth that lies in all of our hearts. Forgiveness is not always easy. At times, it feels more painful than the wound we suffered, to forgive the one that inflicted it. And yet, there is no peace without forgiveness. Attack thoughts towards others are attack thoughts towards ourselves. The first step in forgiveness is the willingness to forgive. Maryanne Williamson




The incoherence that results from holding on to resentments and unforgiving attitudes keeps you from being aligned with your true self. It can block you from your next level of quality life experience. Metaphorically, it's the curtain standing between the room you're living in now and a new room, much larger and full of beautiful objects.

The act of forgiveness removes the curtain. Clearing up your old accounts can free up so much energy that you jump right into a whole new house. Forgiving releases you from the punishment of a self-made prison where you are both the inmate and the jailer. Doc Childre and Howard Martin