Why I Don’t Use the Word ‘Forgiveness’ in Trauma Therapy

Downcast girl sitting on fenceIf the title of this article threw you off a bit, it’s OK—I understand why it would. After all, forgiveness is quite the hot topic. Religious leaders, spiritual gurus, and even some mental health professionals emphasize the importance of forgiveness as a part of finding true happiness and freedom. I get where they are coming from. I can understand how forgiveness could be beneficial in some circumstances. For example, if a loved one says something uncharacteristically harsh in the heat of an argument, and you would like to keep that person in your life, it may be beneficial to understand that we all sometimes say things we don’t mean when we are upset and to forgive him or her in order to move forward in the relationship.

I work with people who have experienced horrific traumas at the hands of other people. These traumas include acts of sexual abuse, rape, exploitation, and physical and emotional abuse. Some of the perpetrators are relatives and some are not. Regardless, the degree of trauma in each of these cases is significant and has had a major impact on their lives and well-being.

The people I work with in the therapy room are resilient and courageous. They are able to work through their traumas, but many get caught up on one point: They believe they are supposed to forgive the perpetrator but can’t seem to get there.

This is what I tell them: You don’t have to forgive in order to move on.

Understand that if a person comes in and finds that the word “forgiveness” resonates, I do not discourage it. We roll with it. But often people struggle with this word, and rightfully so. They do not want to imply what happened to them was in any way OK. They don’t want to excuse the perpetrator’s behavior. They feel the perpetrator is not deserving of forgiveness. The worst thing I can do as a therapist is to talk people out of the way they feel.

Emotions are important and automatic. When we can acknowledge and appreciate even the darkest, most negative-feeling emotions, they often soften and release. As soon as I say, “You don’t have to forgive,” the person usually breathes a sigh of relief.

Once we have determined that forgiveness is not necessary, we work on finding a word that will be more congruent for the person in his or her trauma work. I like the word unburdening.Once we have determined that forgiveness is not necessary, we work on finding a word that will be more congruent for the person in his or her trauma work. I like the word unburdening, which is something I first heard in Richard Schwartz’s book Internal Family Systems Therapy. I understand unburdening as a letting-go process. That is, letting go of the power the trauma has over a person, expressing and releasing anger and other strong emotions about what happened without criticism or expectation of what needs to come next. This includes allowing a person to have as much time as is needed to feel whatever he or she is feeling. This may include rage, hate, and resentment, among other emotions.

It is equally important for others to refrain from pushing someone into forgiving a perpetrator. Even if the intention is coming from a good place, trying to get someone who has been violated to forgive can feel like being victimized all over again. Instead, it is more helpful to validate that the person is entitled to his or her feelings. Being a listening ear instead of trying to fix the issue is much more supportive and healing. The person needs to be able to have a voice and express what he or she is feeling and thinking without the fear of judgment.

The brain and body are so intelligent. It is important to allow the natural process of working through trauma to happen and to remove any barriers that may get in the way. This includes the belief we aren’t supposed to feel “negative” emotions or that we have to forgive. Once we remove that expectation, the natural process moves through. Even if someone doesn’t get to a place of forgiveness, he or she can still move on, unburden themselves, and thrive.

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  • Maisie

    January 20th, 2016 at 9:09 AM

    We should all try to be a little better at unburdening OURSELVES, realizing that no matter what is going on with any trauma, most of the time it is not your fault.

  • CC

    September 6th, 2016 at 9:07 PM

    I love this article and I hate the word forgiveness in relation to the trauma I experienced. This term is often used as a battering ram to tell me to get over the abuse, that to forgive is for “my sake” and I will not move on until I do. “My sake” does not need to forgive my mother for sexually abusing me or a nursery school full of adults who chose to ritually abuse. I need not forgive a family that either continued to perpetrate sexual abuse or deny in the face of undeniable truth that these horrors occurred. I need not forgive an institution that chose to not believe me though I begged them to understand, nor hospital personnel who chose to ridicule me after I finally attempted suicide because I just could not figure out how to be the bigger person and forgive them all. “My sake” needs me to hate them all for a little while. “My sake” needs me to grieve MY losses not forgive THEIR behaviour, and my sake sure as hell doesn’t need someone from the outside telling me what I need to do to heal. There may come a point where I choose to see where their pain played into their actions, and there may not. I may choose to never, ever use the word forgive and they are certainly not OWED that gift. And being who I am as a person I may one day see it differently. But that is MY choice having lived MY hell. Not yours or anyone else’s to decide. There is one person and one person only I must forgive–and that is me. For ever thinking it was my job to undo the damage others did. There is forgiveness to be given here–it is theirs to offer, though even I know that will never be forthcoming.

  • Esther

    September 7th, 2016 at 10:02 AM

    CC – I totally agree with what you wrote. Wow, you went through masses and it upsets me how people and society in general respond to folks who have been totally crapped on (for want of a better word). No one has the right to tell anyone what to do. And if religion comes into it, well I always remember someone once powerfully reiterating that Jesus came to LOVE and Not judge. :-)

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