The Sun (Lowell)

Forgive? Absolutely. Forget? No, never forget

- Wil Darcangelo HOPEFUL THINKING Wil Darcangelo, M. Div., is the minister At First Parish UU Church of Fitchburg And of First Church of Christ, Unitarian, in Lancaster, And producer of The UU Virtual Church of Fitchburg And Lancaster on Youtube. Email wild

Whose bright idea was it to forgive and forget? It’s been an idiom of the English language for over 600 years, yet is it really good advice? I ask because when we’re being recommende­d to forgive, forget seems to be the very next word we all think of.

Yet, I think forgetting is only in the best interest of the person who has done the wrong in the first place. I’m sure they’d love for you to forget what they did.

I’m guessing it was a guilty party who first invented the phrase to get themselves off the hook. Not so fast. Rememberin­g is accountabi­lity. For instance, we should definitely remember U.S. Confederat­e history. That’s not the same thing as honoring it. We have special places for things we want to make sure we don’t forget. They’re not the same places we put things we wish to honor. We will have to forgive our past in order to come to terms with it. But we won’t accomplish it by forgetting. Some history just needs its proper place and context.

Just as there’s a difference between rememberin­g and honoring, there’s a difference between forgetting and forgiving. Forgiving is about letting go of the anger, resentment and hurt we experience as a result of someone else’s actions and no longer allowing those emotions to have power over us. It’s not letting them off the hook. It’s about letting go of the poisonous aftereffec­ts of our experience. They no longer serve a purpose except to hold us back.

Our continued emotional hold on our pain only helps them keep winning every time our hurt is remembered afresh. As long as we don’t forgive, their knife is still in the wound, doing its damage. Only they don’t have to do anything except go on with their lives.

We’re the ones now holding the knife in place. You can take it out now.

It’s time to heal. Which can’t happen fully if we forget about what hurt us in the first place. We can’t learn from our trials if we forget about them. Rememberin­g while forgiving is the key, as well as the hardest thing of all to do.

It’s easy to maintain forgivenes­s when we’ve forgotten the hurt. Sadly, that’s how history repeats itself, when we brush our past under the carpet. But we can separate the two. We can work through and heal the emotional pain while retaining the historical fact. This is the basis of all trauma therapy.

It’s understand­able to say something like, “Well, I’ll never forgive them for what they did as long as I live.” Forgiving is not condoning. You can forgive someone whom you still plan to prosecute. But it will be easier to create solutions that will actually change things for the better, rather than just perpetuati­ng the old cycles of vengeance. This is the difference between retributiv­e justice and restorativ­e justice. One just punishes; the other wants to know why it happened and take steps to heal the original wound so it never happens again.

Notice the difference between anger and rage. Anger is motivating, sometimes even productive. Rage is only destructiv­e. If you feel rage, even rightfully so, it means the situation has moved you into a state of reduced effectiven­ess toward your goal. You’ve allowed it to go too far. Take steps to correct it.

The practice of forgivenes­s on a daily basis for ourselves as well as others begins, as all things do, in small ways. Notice your feelings. Don’t judge them, just notice them. Passively observe them as if you had a mini-stenograph­er sitting on your shoulder taking notes. See if you notice a pattern in the types of things that upset you most. If you see a pattern, there may be something in you being triggered by things having nothing to do with the present situation. Be curious about them.

Make sure you understand your triggers and not let them negatively impact the present. Sometimes we’re more hostile than we mean, or than the moment required. Was our outburst all for the person who just upset us? Or was some of the excess leftovers from the past? That’s when the rubber really hits the road in the life practice of forgivenes­s. We have to open up the cans of worms we’ve been avoiding. There’s always a stack of old things waiting to be let go. Chip away at the pile one thing at a time. You’ll be surprised at how quickly it goes, once you start.

Notice what you do when you get mad. This is so important. If you’re a person who brags about how no one wants to get on your bad side, or if you take pride in holding on to grudges, you may have some work to do in this area. If you believe that no one can be trusted, and that you trust no one as a matter of principle, you definitely have some forgivenes­s work to do. And it won’t be easy. But it will change your life. Start small. Avoid revenge at all costs, even if it means swallowing your pride. Don’t worry, you won’t choke on it.

Choose to see the dignity and humanity in those who’ve hurt you and treat them as such. They will still be accountabl­e for their own actions, but you will no longer be a victim of theirs.

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