BEING HUMAN MEANS A SIMPLE LIFE WITH GOOD FAITH AND ACTION
The defining book on forgiveness was
written
by Everett Worthington and suggests
the
REACH process:
Recall
Remember the incident as clearly and
objectively as you can. Don’t think
about
motives or evil or right vs. wrong,
just describe
what happened as neutrally and
factually as
possible. Visualize the event.
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Empathize
Try to imagine what the other
person’s
perspective might have been. Imagine
if the
transgressor was asked to explain
him/herself,
what he or she might say. Consider
that people
are most likely to hurt others when
they feel
attacked or threatened, or when
they’re afraid,
worried, or hurt themselves. They
often don’t
mean to hurt others and don’t think
about
what they’re doing; they just lash
out in
attempt to protect themselves. That
doesn’t
make it right, but it may make it
make sense.
Altruistically give
forgiveness
Remember a time when you hurt someone
but
were forgiven. That was a gift. If
you can give
this gift to your transgressor, it
will mean that
you are rising above the hurt and
anger and
being a truly generous person. That
is not
easy. If you can truly do it from a
generous
heart, it will set you free.
Commit yourself to this
forgiveness
Write a letter to the transgressor,
tell your
friends, or just write yourself a
note—
something to make the forgiveness
official.
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