『Does Forgiveness Mean You Have to Reconcile? What Research Actually Says | Dr. Suzanne Friedman | Ep. 282』のカバーアート

Does Forgiveness Mean You Have to Reconcile? What Research Actually Says | Dr. Suzanne Friedman | Ep. 282

Does Forgiveness Mean You Have to Reconcile? What Research Actually Says | Dr. Suzanne Friedman | Ep. 282

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概要

Does forgiveness mean you have to reconcile with the person who hurt you? NO. And that misconception keeps so many people stuck. In this episode, I'm joined by Dr. Suzanne Freedman, professor of human development at UNI and leading researcher on the psychology of forgiveness with over 30 years of experience. We're untangling what forgiveness actually is, why acknowledging anger isn't a failure of forgiveness (it's often a prerequisite), and how forgiveness can restore agency, energy, and self-trust. Here's what we're covering: Why forgiveness ≠ reconciliation (forgiveness is an internal transformation)How women are socialized to suppress anger (and why that quietly impacts wellbeing and leadership)The 4-phase forgiveness process (it took incest survivors an average of 14.3 months—it's not overnight)Why you can forgive without an apology (and why waiting for one keeps you trapped)How carrying anger is like wearing a heavy backpack full of rocksWhy seeing the "monster" as a whole human being is actually empowering The Big Misconceptions About Forgiveness: Myth 1: Forgiveness = Reconciliation NOPE. Forgiveness is an internal transformation. You can forgive someone and never speak to them again. Reconciliation requires the other person to change. Forgiveness doesn't. Myth 2: Anger = Failure to Forgive NOPE. Anger is a normal, natural response to being hurt. It's what you DO with anger that matters. Women are taught anger is "bad"—but anger is often the first step toward forgiveness. You can't gloss over pain and jump to "feeling good" toward someone. Those feelings will leak out in other ways. Myth 3: Just Say "I Forgive You" and You're Done NOPE. For deep hurts, forgiveness is a PROCESS. Dr. Friedman worked with 12 incest survivors—average time to forgive? 14.3 months. It's not one-and-done. Myth 4: You Need an Apology to Forgive NOPE. Waiting for an apology keeps YOU trapped. You're saying "I can't heal until I get something from the person who hurt me." That doesn't make sense. You can choose to forgive for YOUR wellbeing without ever receiving an apology. The 4-Phase Forgiveness Process: Phase 1: Uncovering (Dealing with Feelings) Phase 2: Decision (Choosing to Forgive) Phase 3: Work (Reframing & Compassion) Phase 4: Deepening (Transformation) The Empowerment Piece: Forgiveness gives you AGENCY. You don't have to treat someone the way they treated you. You don't have to wait for an apology. You don't have to reconcile. You get to CHOOSE what forgiveness looks like for you. Dr. Freedman's Wisdom: "Forgiveness is not weakness. It comes from recognizing you deserve to respect yourself and you don't want to carry anger around anymore." And: "No one wants to be judged for their worst offense." For Your Bold Goals: If you're carrying workplace hurt, childhood wounds, or broken trust, forgiveness isn't about letting someone off the hook. It's about giving YOURSELF permission to heal, to trust again, and to lead without that heavy backpack. Mentioned in this episode: Dr. Robert Enright: Forgiveness is a ChoiceLewis Smedes: The Art of ForgivingMark Brackett: Permission to FeelViolet Oaklander: Windows to Our ChildrenJulius Lester Connect with Dr. Suzanne Freedman: Email: freedman@uni.eduGoogle her name for published articles Connect with me: Email: support@plangoalplan.comFacebook Group: Join HereWebsite: PlanGoalPlan.comLinkedIn: (I post most here!) www.linkedin.com/in/danielle-mcgeough-phd-🗓️-b673334 Ready to begin? Schedule a chat about Simply Bold at plangoalplan.com
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