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Why Forgiveness Isn’t About Them — It’s About Freeing Yourself

There are few words more misunderstood than forgiveness.

For some people, forgiveness feels weak.
For others, it feels impossible.
And for many, forgiveness feels like letting someone “off the hook.”

But true forgiveness is none of those things.

Forgiveness is not saying what happened was acceptable.
It is not pretending pain never existed.
It is not forgetting, excusing, approving, or becoming vulnerable to further harm.

Forgiveness is something far more profound than that.

Forgiveness is freedom.

And perhaps one of the greatest realisations we can have as human beings is this:

Unforgiveness does not imprison the other person — it imprisons us.

The Emotional Cost of Holding On

Many people live carrying emotional wounds they don’t even realise are shaping their lives.

Resentment.
Bitterness.
Old anger.
Betrayal.
Pain from childhood.
Pain from relationships.
Pain from rejection, abandonment, criticism, or loss.

Over time, these unresolved emotional experiences become internalised within the nervous system.

The mind keeps replaying them.
The body keeps reliving them.

And eventually, emotional pain stops becoming something we experienced and starts becoming something we identify with.

We become emotionally braced against life.

Guarded.

Defensive.

Hypervigilant.

Disconnected.

And whilst this may feel protective at first, it comes at a cost.

Because the body was never designed to live permanently in emotional conflict.

Chronic resentment and emotional stress can affect:

In other words, unresolved emotional pain quietly becomes a prison.

Forgiveness Is Not Weakness — It Is Strength

One of the biggest misconceptions around forgiveness is that forgiving someone means they “won.”

But forgiveness is not surrendering to another person.

It is reclaiming yourself.

It is saying:

“I no longer choose to carry this pain inside my body.”

Forgiveness is an act of emotional liberation.

And importantly, forgiveness does not always mean reconciliation.

You can forgive someone and still maintain boundaries.

You can forgive someone and never allow them access to your life again.

You can forgive and still recognise that harm was done.

Forgiveness simply means you choose peace over prolonged suffering.

Why We Struggle to Forgive

Many people unconsciously believe that holding onto anger keeps them safe.

Others feel that if they forgive, they somehow invalidate their own pain.

And many fear that forgiveness means vulnerability.

But underneath these fears is often something deeper:

The nervous system has become emotionally attached to the wound.

The identity begins forming around the hurt.

“This happened to me.”
“This defines me.”
“This proves I’m unsafe.”
“This proves people cannot be trusted.”

And so the mind keeps replaying the pain in an attempt to protect itself.

Yet ironically, constantly reliving emotional pain keeps the nervous system trapped in the very state it is trying to escape.

Forgiveness interrupts this cycle.

Forgiveness allows the nervous system to stop fighting the past.

The Transformational Power of Forgiveness

Something remarkable happens when people genuinely begin forgiving.

Their body softens.

Their breathing changes.

Their emotional reactivity reduces.

Their relationships improve.

They stop carrying so much internal tension.

They begin feeling lighter.

Softer.

Freer.

More connected.

And perhaps most importantly:

They begin reconnecting with themselves.

Because unforgiveness disconnects us.

Forgiveness reconnects us.

Not only to others…

but to peace within ourselves.

Forgiveness, Transformation and RTT (Rapid Transformational Therapy)

In RTT, we often discover that unresolved emotional pain sits underneath many of the issues people struggle with:

Through hypnosis and subconscious work, RTT helps people identify the deeper emotional roots behind these patterns and begin releasing them safely.

Forgiveness work within RTT is not about forcing positivity or bypassing pain.

It is about helping the subconscious mind let go of emotional attachment to suffering.

Because healing happens when the mind and body finally feel safe enough to release the past.

Forgiveness Is Ultimately About Peace

At its core, forgiveness is not really about the other person at all.

It is about your relationship with yourself.

Your nervous system.

Your emotional freedom.

Your ability to experience peace.

And peace is not weakness.

Peace is power.

Because when you are no longer emotionally chained to the past…

you become available for life again.

Available for connection.

Available for joy.

Available for love.

Available for calm.

Available for yourself.

A Free Guided Hypnosis Recording on Forgiveness

To support this process, I’ve created a free guided hypnosis recording exploring the transformational power of forgiveness.

This recording is designed to help you:

You can listen in a quiet space, before sleep, or anytime you feel emotionally overwhelmed or stuck.

🎧 Listen to the free recording by clicking here:    

Final Thought

Forgiveness does not change the past.

But it absolutely changes your experience of the present.

And often…

that changes everything.

Because forgiveness is not about losing.

It is about finally becoming free.

 

Dorian Stoodley
Clinical Hypnotherapist & Advanced RTT Practitioner
Inspired Minds

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