Welcome. You are in the right place. I am sorry your friend is not able to support & validate you with understanding. I'll say one thing. When I first started going to therapy to put my head on right, my first T -- hella experienced, did DDR in Rwanda. Knew what he was talking about. Knew what I was talking about.
Not a hack or quack. I respect him a great deal. He did ask me, have you considered forgiving them? and we went back and forth on forgiveness and he said, forgiveness is about letting go. So in a sense, he did ask me, have you considered letting it go?
&& it was actually a very useful question. At first I was fairly angry because he knew and yet he still had the audacity to ask me that? But as I've considered it and processed it and worked it through, I've come to realize that there is value in letting go. Of some things. Not everything.
Forgiveness is an important goal of mine, because I want to let go of the anger. The rage. The heartbreak. The grief. The confusion and fear and devastation and hopelessness and despair and terror and anxiety and inhumanity. The violence, aggression, disgust, filth, torture, ruin, depravity. I would like to let go of those things within me, because they are a roadblock to peace.
But what I don't want to let go of, what I would like to honor, is the very real magnitude of all that did indeed happen. Because it was egregious. Because it was a crime against the human spirit. Because it was wrong and because it is something that continues to occur globally in perpetuity, and that is not something I am ever going to be "OK" with "letting go."
For me, and for the other victims as well. Letting go of suffering doesn't mean erasing it. It winds up being two-fold, at least for me. Yes, there can be letting go. Yes, there can be peace. There can be acceptance. There can be joy, and light, and hope. But there cannot be letting go without honoring yourself and your experiences, wholly and completely.
Unfortunately, I know your friends very likely do not mean their statements in this way. They probably just mean, "why can't you just get over it?" and the answer to that is very easy, at least for me.
The harm that comes when human beings do violence to one another should not be something to "just get over." It should not be something to consign to the darkness and ether. We must honor that it damages, destroys, harms. We are whole worlds onto ourselves, and trauma takes us from ourselves and debases us and devastates us.
Suffering cannot be alleviated until it is acknowledged and the human person is elevated up out of it.
Only then can we take the necessary steps to ameliorate our society.