brokenpony
Gold Member
lately i’m thinking about self-compassion and self-forgiveness. therapy introduced me to both concepts and i feel i haven’t made progress on the latter. i’m curious about how you approach this. i understand self-compassion as a concept, but i am still confused about what to do with the guilt and shame for having put myself in bad situations and made myself vulnerable. i feel like i made so many bad choices and it’s hard to see past that but the rational side—the side that would comfort a hypothetical friend who this happened to—keeps saying that it’s not my fault people abused me, it’s their fault. that feels like self-compassion. but then i get to the concept of self-forgiveness and get stuck because then i’m suddenly back to feeling at fault, because you only forgive for wrongdoing, and if i need to forgive myself i need to accept my fault, however small. i said in therapy that i was having trouble forgiving myself; my therapist kept focusing on my choices and that he thinks i want a better life and can change. he also said that “we all play a part” and asked me if i could tell others about my “decisions” as a step toward opening up to my family. i think it triggered me. i see that as poor therapy i think, or poorly worded maybe, but if i didn’t actually play a part then why is self-forgiveness a goal for sexual abuse survivors? i don’t know if this is making sense. it just feels on one end that we need to work toward undoing the feeling of fault that we’ve carried for years, and then on the other accepting the part we played and self-forgiving. how do you define and work toward self-forgiveness? or do you even? or am I misunderstanding completely?