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Thursday, August 2, 2012

Forgiveness by Sandra Kring

Forgiveness. We all know of its value.  It’s the antidote for bitterness.  The hand that opens so we can let go and move on with our lives.  And it’s an easy enough state to reach when the transgression caused only temporary hurt feelings and was settled with the heartfelt words, “I’m sorry.” But what about the acts that cause much deeper wounds?  Acts so despicable that they crumble the very foundation upon which you stand, and cause you to doubt your worth, your safety in the world, and even your faith in God? What then?
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I was in my early thirties when I faced the depth of the physical, mental, and spiritual wounds I was carrying as a result of the severe abuse my mother inflicted on me when I was a child.  And there I was, grappling to accept that my mother would go to her grave without expressing any remorse for the PTSD and bouts of depression I was suffering from.  I was frozen in fear and hurt, staring at a lifetime of damage I didn’t know how to repair.  And already at this point, I was hearing the words, “But you have to forgive her.”
Forgive, as in forget? As in absolving her on her sins, even when she expressed no remorseThe very thought made me dig my heels into anger, and not even the gentle hints that God would only forgive me of my sins if I forgave her of hers could not budge me.  And as strange as it may sound, in hindsight I’m glad I let go of the notion of forgiving her. Because if I’ve learned anything from my long road to recovery—and later, from the women who suffered trauma as children in the groups I facilitated—it is that forgiveness is more than a word.  It’s a state of being.  One we cannot be guilted or shamed into feeling, by others or by ourselves, no matter how spiritually inept it makes us feel when we can’t quite get there.
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I spent the next seven years tending to my mental and physical wounds, allowing the anger and angst to seep from my pores.  I worked hard to help my mind and my body learn to react differently.  And finally, there I was, standing on new ground, feeling better, yet still left with a gaping hole that I knew could only be filled with spiritual healing.  And that, I knew, was a personal journey I would need to travel alone.  Little did I know, when I set out to heal my soul, that what I was seeking and what I would find, was the state of grace we call forgiveness.
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Viktor Frankl, psychoanalyst and Holocaust survivor, said, “Man is willing to suffer, as long as he can find meaning in his suffering.”  And the path of spiritual healing (where forgiveness patiently awaits us), is about just that: finding meaning in our suffering.  It’s what we choose to do with what’s been done to us after our wounds scar over.
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So I said goodbye to all I’d lost, and focused on what I’d gained--which was apparently a deep-seated understanding of the healing process.   I formed the support groups, and over the next six years I dedicated what time and knowledge I had to helping others heal.  And when the last woman felt she was healed enough not to need my support anymore, I looked at the gifts all my life experiences had given me: The courage to look suffering in the eye.  An understanding of human nature. A sense of humor. The courage to reveal what’s in my heart and on my mind. The ability to live hope and be inspiring.  And an incessant curiosity about the stories we all live.  I poured these gifts into my love of books, and worked to become a published novelist.  And from these actions, I transformed my suffering into something to give to others.  I found my purpose. 
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Recently someone asked me if I ever forgave my mother.  I have.  But  it’s a different form of forgiveness than the one I once envisioned as being synonymous with forgetting and the equivalent of absolving someone of their sins.  I cannot forget my past (it is a chapter in my life’s story) any more than I have the power to pardon my mother of her sins (that’s between her and her God.)  No, today forgiveness means something quite different to me.  It is the state of grace that comes after you tend to your wounds.  After you let go of the blame and the shame, and the notion that what you suffered through somehow makes you less—or more—than others.  It’s what happens after you take what’s been done to you and transform those things into something good you can share with others.  And it’s a state of being you cannot will yourself to reach any more than a child can will themselves to grow. One day you simply awaken to the realization that your compassion has softened the hard places, and you find yourself at peace. 

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