5 Key Lessons from the Study of Forgiveness - Robert Enright Ph.D.
Growth in the moral virtues has been de-emphasized in philosophy and in psychotherapy.
Yet when clients are given the opportunity to forgive those who have hurt them, this new therapeutic approach can be very healing for clients.
Perhaps it is time to re-examine the ancient tradition of encouraging people to grow in the moral virtues, particularly forgiveness, when hurt.
How to Love Yourself More - Tchiki Davis, Ph.D.
Research suggests that having positive feelings about yourself may be a crucial ingredient for happiness and success.
Self-love can feel uncomfortable at first. Gradually easing into self-love strategies can help.
Practicing self-compassion, loving kindness, forgiveness, and self-gratitude can help people learn to love themselves.
What Is Forgiveness? - Shireen Jeejeebhoy
Healing the wound in a healthy way is necessary for forgiveness.
The absence of peace and buried pain undergirds so much of what’s wrong with society.
How to Deal With Shame - Tchiki Davis, Ph.D.
Shame is a self-conscious emotion that arises from the sense that something is fundamentally wrong with oneself. When we have shame, we often feel inadequate and full of self-doubt but these experiences may be outside of our conscious awareness. That makes shame hard to identify and deal with.
The Power of Forgiving Yourself - Dyanne Brown
Why you need to free yourself from emotional debts.
Why We Can’t Forgive Ourselves - Annie Tanasugarn, Ph.D.
How toxic shame keeps us stuck in the rabbit hole.
Why We Can’t Forgive Ourselves - Annie Tanasugarn, Ph.D.
Is It Guilt Or Shame?
These two words get used interchangeably but are very different. Guilt is something most of us have experienced at one time or another as long as our moral compass is in tact. Shame is what is taught in childhood from traumatic, abusive or neglectful environments.
Guilt: “ I made a mistake.”
Shame: “I am a mistake.”
Stop Trying to Control Everything and Focus on What You Can Change - Amanda Dodson LCSW
It is natural for us to avoid pain, but this only intensifies our suffering.
Radical acceptance is the practice of accepting the difficult parts of life.
Once you make peace with what you cannot change, you can focus on what is within your control.
Why Forgiveness Is So Hard (but Important) - Ilene Strauss Cohen Ph.D.
Humans are programmed to avoid danger or anyone who has proven to be untrustworthy.
When people expect their lives to resemble fairy tales, they don’t equip themselves with the proper tools to deal with conflict effectively.
Letting go invites peace and the release of unresolved conflict, and can boost mental health.
The Path to Unconditional Self-Acceptance - Leon F. Seltzer, Ph.D.
When we're self-accepting, we're able to embrace all facets of ourselves—not just the positive, more "esteem-able" parts. As such, self-acceptance is unconditional, free of any qualification. We can recognize our weaknesses or limitations, but this awareness in no way interferes with our ability to fully accept ourselves.
The benefits of self-forgiveness - Katie Shumake
Holding onto resentment and being unforgiving increases our stress levels and takes a toll on our well-being. The good news is that we can learn skills to become more constructive and effective in accepting and rectifying our errors -- and, in the process, grow as individuals.
When Forgiving Yourself Is the Hardest Kind of Forgiveness - Andrea Brandt Ph.D. M.F.T.
If someone else had wronged you, you’d want an apology, and then you’d decide whether or not to forgive them.
But when it’s you who’s done wrong, the steps are less clear. Maybe you don’t believe you deserve forgiveness, or you do but don’t know how to self-forgive. Either way, you feel awful.
The secret to happiness? Stanford professor says it’s forgiveness
Here’s a prescription for better health and happiness: Forgive.
The Critical Inner Voice and Addiction- Lisa Firestone Ph.D.
Every person possesses an internal enemy that feeds them a stream of self-critical and self-destructive thoughts. This internal enemy fills our heads with self-doubt and self-hatred, attacking us in various areas of our lives, be it our careers, our relationships, our identity, or our very sense of self-worth.
Our critical inner voice preys on our setbacks and questions our successes. It may fill our heads with thoughts like, “You’re so annoying. No one misses having you around.” “You’re constantly messing up. How stupid can you be?” “You can’t handle all this stress. You’re too weak.”
Master Self-Forgiveness With These 5 Questions - Rhett Power
To err is human, and with error comes a need for forgiveness. But how often do we seek forgiveness from ourselves? If you are struggling to release the guilt and emotional pain from a past mistake, start by asking yourself:
Can anything be done to change what happened?
Do I allow myself to make mistakes?
Have I done everything possible to make things right?
Why am I holding on to this?
How can I use this as an opportunity to grow?
Healing Your Shame and Guilt Through Self-Forgiveness - Beverly Engel L.M.F.T.
Shame is responsible for a myriad of problems, including but not limited to:
Self-criticism and self-blame
Self-neglect
Self-destructive behaviors (abusing your body with food, alcohol, drugs, cigarettes, self-mutilation, being accident-prone)
Self-sabotaging behavior (starting fights with loved ones, sabotaging jobs)
Perfectionism
The belief that you do not deserve good things
Intense rage (frequent physical fights, road rage)
Acting out against society (breaking the rules, breaking the law)
Continuing to repeat the cycle of abuse through either victim behavior or abusive behavior
Forgive Yourself - Rick Hanson Ph.D.
More broadly, there is a kind of inner critic and inner protector inside each of us. For most people, that inner critic is continually yammering away, looking for something, anything, to find fault with. It magnifies small failings into big ones, punishes you over and over for things long past, ignores the larger context, and doesn't credit you for your efforts to make amends.
Therefore, you really need your inner protector to stick up for you: to put your weaknesses and misdeeds in perspective, to highlight your many good qualities surrounding your lapses, to encourage you to keep getting back on the high road even if you've gone down the low one, and — frankly — to tell that inner critic to Shut Up.
3 Steps Towards Improving Your Self-Esteem - Claire Jack, Ph.D.
So, how do you raise your self-esteem?
Do things from a goal of self-care and self-love
“Am I doing this because I love myself and want to take care of myself”?
Or,
“Am I doing this because I want to make myself more lovable and acceptable?”
Explore the roots of low self-esteem