graceanne
iteroticalay urugay
- Joined
- Jun 22, 2004
- Posts
- 27,585
myinnerslut said:i havnt been on lit in the past few days do to the high holidays (im jewish), therefore i missed the majority of many threads that havebeen active for these past few days, including this one, so forgive me if i stumble over something that has already been discussed.
today was, for me, the holiest day of the year. yom kippur. also called the day of atonment. forgivness is the topic of the day. forgiving others for what they have done to us, and in turn being forgiven for things we have done to them.
i attended a meditation on forgivness this afternoon in between two of the multiple services that i attended today. in it we discussed ideas such as forgiving someone for thier sake vs. forgiving somone for our own sake.
while at first glance this last type of forgivness may seem selfish or meaningless, it is the type of forgivness that applies to major offenses. for example, i believe someone mentioned that they could not forgive someone who murdered thier child. in this case, forgiving that person for your own sake, while it may take time to do, is almost neccessary to kwwp from being poisened from the inside out over lack of forgivness. now, this does nto mean what that person did is ok, but in this case forgivness is a mean to let go of the anger and hatred that can stem out of horrible acts.
i just felt that this realization about the nature of forgivness, at least in this way which i hadnt taken much time to really consider before, was worth sharing.
I have done that, to some lesser extent. My dad abandoned me and my sister for two years. To this day he feels he was justified since my mom left him for another man, and he wasn't talking to her, so how could he talk to his daughters?
I had to forgive him, for me, not him.
