Forgive and forget?

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It’s not always better to forgive people who have hurt you. Here’s why that is

DATING & RELATIONSHIPS

Monica Karpinski is a writer and editor focused on women’s health, sex, and relationships. She is the founder of women’s health media platform The Femedic

THE MESSAGE IS drummed into us from childhood: forgive people who’ve wronged you, because it’s the right thing to do. Forgiveness is a virtue, we’re told—the only way for us to truly move on and heal, freed from the baggage of bearing ill will.

Call me unenlightened, but I’m not buying it. Forgiving someone can indeed be a beautiful thing, but it’s not always what’s best for us. In fact, if someone has hurt you deeply and the relationship isn’t healthy, trying to “fix” things can do more harm than good.

Most of us would probably agree that forgiving a wrongdoer means letting go of negative feelings—like anger and resentment—towards them. Often, there’s an expectation that we’ll put it all behind us and let them back into our lives, as if nothing happened.

Except that something did happen. And if we get the memo that, in order to be a good person, we should simply get over it and stop feeling hurt, it can make us feel that our experiences don’t matter. Or, at least, that they matter less than the situation being smoothed over.

This isn’t helpful. It pressures us to minimise our feelings and revise our boundaries—to say “it’s OK” when for us, it isn’t. While it’s not a good idea to fixate on negative thoughts, recognising and processing all of that pain is an important part of the healing journey.

And when someone doesn’t make us feel seen or safe, forgiving them can actually chip away at our self-esteem. A 2010 research paper published in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology called this the “the doormat effect”. It found that folks who forgave partners that didn’t make them feel valued had less respect for themselves, along with a diminished sense of self.

The same was true when people granted forgiveness to partners who didn’t try to make amends after causing them hurt. This is probably because the forgiving party felt like they’d failed to stand up for themselves, note the authors: like they’d let themselves be walked over.

Things can get worse if you keep on forgiving someone who’s done wro

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