There is great value in every act
of forgiveness. You can forgive
yourself, you can forgive others, and you can forgive even when you don’t know
exactly who to forgive, because forgiveness is not about who is to blame or who
is at fault. It is about letting go,
completely and permanently within yourself.
Forgiveness is recognizing the
reality that what has happened has already happened, and that there’s no point
in allowing it to dominate the rest of your life. Forgiveness refreshingly cleans the slate and
enables you to step forward. Here are
five unique ways to make this step possible:
1. Stop
trying for a while.
If you’re trying hard and
haplessly making zero progress, stop trying.
Stop trying and start being.
When you see yourself as trying –
to do something else or get somewhere else – you don’t interpret what you have
and where you are as being good enough.
This perception of constantly trying makes living seem like an endless
struggle.
There is great value within you
right here, right now. Allow it to come
out, willingly and without a struggle.
Instead of trying to get to some other point in your life, give your
full attention to doing your very best with the life you are living now. Instead of believing that you are not there
yet, be grateful that you are right where you are meant to be at this moment.
Yes, by all means set goals and
take steps in the right direction, but don’t disregard the steps as you take
them – these steps are your life’s story.
Let go of all the needless trying and let yourself take these steps
peacefully and mindfully. Let go of the
judgments, forgive the past, and let this moment be as incredible as it is.
2. Be
the watcher of your thoughts and emotions.
In his bestselling book, The Power of Now, Eckhart Tolle tells us
to be the watcher of our thoughts. What
he suggests is that instead of trying to change our thoughts – via gratitude or
deliberate forgiveness, for example – we need to simply notice our thoughts
without getting caught up in them.
You are ultimately the sole
creator of your own feelings. When
negative thoughts arise based on past experiences or future worries, as they
sometimes will, realize that these are simply issues your mind (not you) is
working through. Pause, be present and
pay close attention. Think about these
thoughts and emotions consciously, almost as if you were a bystander looking
in. Separate yourself from your mind’s
thinking.
Perhaps after you study your
thoughts and emotions you will think to yourself, “Wow, am I really still
working through that?” And guess
what? Over time, your negative feelings
and emotions will lessen and genuine awareness, love and acceptance will grow
in their place. You will begin to
realize that your mind is just an instrument, and you are in control of your
mind, not the other way around.
By not judging your thoughts or
blaming them on anyone else, and merely watching them, there will be a big
shift within you – your sense of self worth.
It’s not like you won’t get upset
anymore or never feel anxious, but knowing that your thoughts and emotions are
just fleeting feelings that are independent of YOU will help ease your tension
and increase your positive presence, allowing you to forgive and let go.
3. Love.
Feeling sorry for yourself and
sabotaging the present moment with resentful thoughts of the past won’t make
anything better. Hurting someone else
will never ease your own inner angst.
If you’re disappointed with
yourself or frustrated with someone else, the answer is not to take it out on
the world around you. Retribution,
whether it’s focused on yourself or others, brings zero value into your life.
The way beyond the pain from the
past is not with vengeance, mockery, bullying or retaliation, but with present
love.
Forgive the past, forgive
yourself, forgive others, and love the present moment for what it’s worth. There are plenty of beautiful things to love
right now; you just have to want to see them.
Loving is never easy, especially when times are tough, yet it is easily
the most powerful and positively enduring action possible.
If you’re feeling pain, don’t
take action that creates even more pain.
Don’t try to cover darkness with darkness. Find the light. Act out of love. Do something that will enable you to move
forward toward a more fulfilling reality.
There is always something good you can do. There is always love to give. Fill your heart with it and act in everyone’s
best interest, especially your own.
4. Seek
positive revenge by living well.
Are you contemplating
revenge? You know that’s negative
thinking getting the best of you.
However, there is a way to seek revenge positively.
How? Forget about them. Remember you.
Working on a better you is more fulfilling than hanging on to contempt
of others. Let it all go and hold on to
your growth and kindness instead. If you
train yourself to consistently be more loving in thoughts and actions, your
positive energy will attract more positive results into your current reality.
Be unlike the person or situation
that hurt you. Let go and grow past your
pain. Carry on living well in a way that
creates peace in your heart. The energy
you would spend trying to get real revenge can be better spent creating an
amazing future for yourself.
The bottom line is that the best
revenge is happiness, because nothing drives your adversaries more insane than
seeing a fresh smile on your face.
5. Let
go of the need to forgive every mistake.
Mistakes are the growing pains of
wisdom. Most of the time they just need
to be accepted, not forgiven.
There is an obvious shift in your
heart and mind that happens when you go from feeling hurt and upset to peaceful
and loving, but it’s not necessarily forgiveness that’s taking place, it’s just
the realization that there was nothing to forgive in the first place.
To help you wrap your head around
this concept, try to look at your situation from 40,000 feet. Imagine a more seasoned, wiser and more
compassionate version of yourself sitting at the mountaintop of life, looking
down and watching as the younger minded, current version of you hacks your way
through life.
You see yourself holding on to
false beliefs and making epic errors of judgment as you maneuver through life’s
many obstacles. You watch the children
of the world growing up in challenging times that test their sense of
self-confidence, yet they push forward bravely.
You see the coming generation radiating with passion and love as they
fail forward, learning through their mistakes.
And you have to wonder: Would this wiser version of yourself conclude
that everyone in their own unique way was doing their very best. And if everyone is trying to do their best,
what needs to be forgiven? Not being
perfect?
Perfection doesn’t exist. Forgiveness is oftentimes the simple
realization that there is nothing that actually needs to be forgiven. |
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