So that is not helpful. And often not based in reality of what the parents did to the child.
Oh it's definitely not helpful to be told that...and by your friends as well. I've had that said to me and I couldn't say anything. Anytime I did try and explain he would just say stuff like "what have YOU got to grieve about?" without even knowing anything about my history.
He was obsessed with feeling guilty about having so much in the western world, compared to people in the third world, adn felt guilty about EVERYTHING.
Apparently, just because I live in the first world, it means I have nothing to complain about and should just shut up because nothing I've been through even compares to what millions of children are going through right now in Sudan and Ethiopia. Totally invalidating my own experience because HE felt guilty.
Why is it that friends and family are so abysmal at this, and strangers seem to be so good at showing real compassion? It's confounding.
There really needs to be proper research done to see if people actually do find peace if they are able to forgive them. And I don't mean those normal day to day mistakes that people make.
But I think that is what people are comparing abuse to when they say stuff like this. They have no idea so they just think of what they consider to be forgivable and go from their own experiences, without really putting themselves in other peoples shoes.
I don't agree with anyone saying those words to people in pain. If the individual comes to that decision in time, then it is up to her/him.
If your friends are trying to force you to "inner piece" outside of your own healing process, then what needs does it meet within them to have you slot in to the 'forgiveness model'. I think that these are important questions to ask.
Yeah, I agree.
I think that often, because everyone is so self-obsessed and self-absorbed, especially in adulthood, seeing someone in pain reminds them of their own pain and parental issues, and it's too hard for them to look, or they don't want to, so they just revert to the age old thing that everyone had told them whenever they have tried to speak openly about their own pain.
And that is where the abuse of other people's reality and life story comes in. It is also where people do themselves in when they try to cut off parts of themselves to fit in to the "forgiveness model" and I have seen it used to convince people not to take police action. So it a real worry.
Again, I think this is a different definition of what forgiveness means here. I think I said that a while back.
I don't think of forgiveness as being something to be used in such situations, but I know that many people DO think that, and will advise their friend to "give him one more chance...make it work..."for the children's sake":rolleyes: