Lianne Raymond, M. Ed. is a certified life coach, educator, and yogini. She also has been called a free spirit, a ruthless questioner, and a giver of delicious hugs. In her coaching, her teaching, and her life, she is guided by the question What if you let your heart move you instead of living a life of forcefulness? She lives in the wild beauty of Vancouver Island with her husband of 26(!) years and delights in being Auntie to her nieces and nephew.
Connect With Me
Lianne on Facebook Lianne on Facebook subscribe to Wild Abandon email Lianne

Want to get notified by email when I write something new?
Subscribe to My Newsletter
Search

Lianne Raymond

Hi. I'm Lianne. I appreciate you stopping by.

 

I'm on a mission - there's a good chance you landed here because you are, too. Whether you are longing to love yourself more, yearning for more fulfilling relationships or hoping to feel more enchanted with your life - you have found a home for those desires.

Danielle LaPorte doesn't call me Her Majesty of Questioning Just About Everything for nothing.  It is becoming obvious that the old paradigm just ain't cutting it anymore. Like fish that are unaware of the water they are swimming in, our culture is still swimming in outdated ideas that are dragging us down. These ideas are permeating your life in ways you aren't even aware of. But you're feeling it, aren't you? Like an itchy sweater you are wearing to a formal dinner you didn't even want to attend. I question it all so you can change into something comfy. And the big, juicy question I love to ask  is...

What is it to let your heart move you instead of living a life of forcefulness?

If you're not even sure what I mean by that - well, that just gets me even more excited. Cause I can't wait to show you.

More Philosophizing Ahead →

 

« when love washes over you | Main | a love-lift for my website »
Thursday
Feb162012

forgiveness is not a charade

We are so afraid of the shadow emotions in our culture - anger, sadness, grief, fear - that the message is always about how to hurry up and make it go away.  Don't be mad or sad for too long, please, you are making me uncomfortable.  Can you get over it already, thankyouverymuch?

Don't do it.

Don't get over it.

Enough skating on the surface of things.

Get messy - get into it instead of over it.

If you truly want to forgive someone - you need to feel your anger, feel the hurt, feel the betrayal. Otherwise your forgiveness is a joke, an act, a spiritual put-on of holier-than-thou with nothing whole about it. It's a denial. If there is no hurt, there is no need to forgive. If you have "let-go" of your anger, then the call for forgiveness is gone.

True forgiveness doesn't happen when I let go of my anger. It happens because I am angry. Forgiveness is the action that allows me to experience my anger - to be in my anger and and in my love at the same time - to hold the paradox of being hurt by someone we trust. 

To forgive without anger is like thinking commitment means "I will do this as long as it feels good."  No, commitment says "There will be moments when I don't want to do this, and yet I will." Committment is what carries us through the times that don't feel so good.

Likewise, forgiveness is what carries us through the hurt of betrayal. We forgive because we love, forgiveness says, "I am in great pain right now and yet I love you." or "I am in great pain right now and yet I see your humanity."  And because we can be in that place of mixed emotions, we will be able to journey through the pain. Forgiveness is that journey. It is not a point of arrival. I do not forgive once and it is over.  I am in a process of forgiving.

If you are here: "I don't know if I can ever forgive, I still feel so angry/hurt/betrayed."

Good.  Dance with your anger and hurt. And dance some more. And see if somewhere in the dance you find yourself feeling the rhythm of forgiveness.

And then just keep feeling your way through.  xox

 

 

Reader Comments (2)

Very true - just as there is no courage without fear. The true meaning of these difficult experiences is to go through them, not around them.

February 29, 2012 | Unregistered CommenterJill Smith

Exactly, Jill. Courage is not necessary if one is fearless. Courage demands we acknowledge our fear. Thanks for coming by. xox

March 3, 2012 | Unregistered CommenterLianne

PostPost a New Comment

Enter your information below to add a new comment.

My response is on my own website »
Author Email (optional):
Author URL (optional):
Post:
 
Some HTML allowed: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <code> <em> <i> <strike> <strong>