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4 min read

The Power of Forgiveness, Part I: What It Means to Forgive Others

The Power of Forgiveness, Part I: What It Means to Forgive Others

 

Over the past few episode's we've covered a number of fascinating and thought-provoking topics meant to propel us to living a life beyond our default:

  • Maintaining a healthy relationship with our own ego, good ego vs. bad ego, and what to do if we let our ego get the best of us.

  • How important it is to be mindful of the language we use to talk to ourselves about ourselves, and how this can directly impact how we move through the world.

  • Reshaping the role fear plays in our lives based on our unique experiences, so it doesn't become a destructive force.

  • The importance of the relationship we cultivate with ourselves, as well as the relationships we cultivate with others.

What's interesting about these topics is that, although they are distinct topics – each very much deserving of their own dedicated and focused conversation – George and I noticed a pattern emerging as we talked through them.

⚡ Go Deeper: What does it mean to live Beyond Your Default?

At some point, your personal journey tackling each of these opportunities and challenges will involve some element of forgiveness — whether that means we need to forgive someone else or, most of all, we need to forgive ourselves.

For instance, the language we use to talk about ourselves to ourselves can skew in a deeply negative way if we don't view ourselves worthy of self-compassion or forgiveness. On the other hand, the quality of relationships with cultivate, nurture, and maintain with others will almost always inevitably require us to forgive others.

Because of the complexities of the topic of forgiveness, it's impossible for us to cover it in a single episode. So, over the course of the next two episodes, we will be exploring both sides of forgiveness coin in depth.

We begin our adventure into the land of forgiveness a conversation of what it means to truly forgive others, why the forgiveness of others matters, and what it looks like in practice.

Questions We Explore

  • Why is our ability to forgive others tied so deeply to our ability to live a life that extends us beyond our default?

  • How has George's relationship with forgiving others changed over the years?

  • What are the benefits each of us have realized in our lives as we've integrated a more forgiveness-forward mindset?

  • What disparities do we see between what the true definition of forgiving others and how most folks tend to define it?

  • What makes it's so hard for some of us to truly forgive others?

  • How do we approach sensitive situations (trauma, abuse, etc.) where victims can embrace a forgiveness mindset without needing to absolve or engage with bad actors in their lives?

  • What are the most important questions someone should ask themselves if forgiving others is an area of their lives in which they struggle?

 

Key Points

  • Forgiveness doesn't mean absolution. You can forgive without reconciling with someone who has caused you harm. It's about finding empathy and understanding while maintaining healthy boundaries to protect yourself.

  • Forgiveness begins with self-reflection. By asking key questions like "Is it really all that I thought it was?" and "What part did I play?" you can gain valuable insights into your reactions and behaviors. These questions help you reprogram your responses and choose forgiveness as a way forward.

  • Forgiving someone isn't always easy, especially when emotions run high. It often involves a mental tennis match with your inner self, challenging your beliefs and biases. But when you choose forgiveness, you take a step towards freeing yourself from the weight of anger and resentment.

  • Forgiveness goes hand in hand with empathy. It's about understanding the human experiences and flaws that drive people's actions. By practicing empathy, we can navigate complex situations with grace and compassion, fostering healthier relationships and personal growth.

Inspiring Forgiveness Quotes

  • "We must develop and maintain the capacity to forgive. He who is devoid of the power to forgive is devoid of the power to love." — Martin Luther King Jr.

  • "Forgiveness is above all a personal choice, a decision of the heart to go against natural instinct to pay back evil with evil." — Pope John Paul II

  • "Always forgive your enemies – nothing annoys them so much." — Oscar Wilde

  • "The weak can never forgive. Forgiveness is the attribute of the strong." — Gandhi

  • "To be a Christian means to forgive the inexcusable because God has forgiven the inexcusable in you." — C.S. Lewis

  • "Forgiveness is an act of the will, and the will can function regardless of the temperature of the heart." Corrie Ten Boom

Research + Resources

Forgiveness can improve mental and physical health (APA)

"Many people think of forgiveness as letting go or moving on. But there's more to it than that, says Bob Enright, PhD, a psychologist at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, who pioneered the study of forgiveness three decades ago.

True forgiveness goes a step further, he says, offering something positive—empathy, compassion, understanding—toward the person who hurt you. That element makes forgiveness both a virtue and a powerful construct in positive psychology.

One common but mistaken belief is that forgiveness means letting the person who hurt you off the hook. Yet forgiveness is not the same as justice, nor does it require reconciliation, Worthington explains. A former victim of abuse shouldn't reconcile with an abuser who remains potentially dangerous, for example.

But the victim can still come to a place of empathy and understanding. 'Whether I forgive or don't forgive isn't going to affect whether justice is done,' Worthington says. 'Forgiveness happens inside my skin.'"

Additional Insights from this Research

  • "(Toussaint) found (in his research studies) that when forgiveness rose, levels of stress went down ... Toussaint's research has also found that for religious people, prayer can boost forgiveness."

  • "They found, as expected, that people who had greater levels of accumulated lifetime stress exhibited worse mental health outcomes. But among the subset of volunteers who scored high on measures of forgiveness, high lifetime stress didn't predict poor mental health (Journal of Health Psychology, 2016).

  • The power of forgiveness to erase that link was surprising, Toussaint says. 'We thought forgiveness would knock something off the relationship [between stress and psychological distress], but we didn't expect it to zero it out,' he says."

In summary, the ability to forgive others not only feels good in an abstract sense, but it also has measurable mental and physical health benefits.

Scripture

"Let all bitterness, and wrath, and anger, and clamor, and evil speaking, be put away from you, with all malice: and be ye kind one to another, tenderhearted, forgiving one another, even as God for Christ's sake hath forgiven you." Ephesians 4:31-32

[00:00:00] George B. Thomas: Only me being able to make the decision to drop out of high school, which listen, if there's a way not to start your life for me, like that was a way that, man, dude, why would you do that? Why are you that stupid? Like, why would you let somebody else impact your life now? What are you going to do? Like you can't even read or write like your grammar sucks.

Like you're bad at math. I'm purposely. Running through narratives that would, like, go through my brain for years and years and years. And I was like, I can't live in this, like, mental waste dump. And so, I've started to realize, like, to move forward, to gain traction, to become Unstuck in this just toxic waste dump of mental bullcrap.

Like, how do I do this? Right? How, how do I go? Where do I go? And it actually was a pastor of a Nazarene church. Um, he was the pastor of my grandparents church. Um, I had a conversation with me about forgiveness, uh, forgiving the math teacher, but also forgiving myself for the actions, because here's the very interesting thing.

My math teacher hurt me once. I continue to hurt myself over and over and over again.

[00:01:28] Liz Moorehead: Welcome back to Beyond Your Default. My name is Liz Moorhead, and as always, I'm joined by George B. Thomas. How are you this morning? 

[00:01:35] George B. Thomas: I am doing really good. I'm excited, Liz, to see where this conversation goes, because while I have done what we're talking about, I don't know if I've ever unpacked that I've done what we're talking about.

[00:01:51] Liz Moorehead: And you know, what's interesting for me about this is that this is something I have actually prioritized as one of the top things in my psychological sphere that I've been working on this year is the forgiveness of the self. Let's go ahead and loop the listeners in, right? So this is part two of our conversation about forgiveness.

If you missed last week, I would encourage you to go back and listen to it, but you certainly don't need to listen to it to start with this one. But as we shared in our last episode, we noted a distinct and organic trend emerging through some of our previous topics. And it didn't matter if we were talking about good ego versus bad ego or cultivating relationships in our lives or wrestling with fear.

You and I noticed that there was some element of forgiveness that was required to move through either these opportunities or challenges to truly create that pathway forward in terms of living beyond your defaults. Now, in that 1st, part of our conversation on forgiveness. We started with the external expression, right?

Like what it means to forgive others. And what does it look like? What doesn't it look like? Why it's so important? What are the benefits we reap? And so on and so forth. But today for the second part of the conversation, we're turning this conversation inward to reflect on the importance of forgiving ourselves, as well as what it looks like in practice and how it helps us propel forward.

So yeah, this is something where I am very interested in this conversation, not only on behalf of our listeners, because like I said, forgiveness is incredibly important, but this is also something I'm working on as well. And I think it's something we all have to work on to some degree. George, let me start our conversation today with a question.

When did you first realize forgiving yourself was part of the package deal, so to speak, when it comes to living a life beyond your default? 

[00:03:50] George B. Thomas: First of all, Liz, let me just say that I also believe that I'm probably going to be teaching myself today. One of the fascinating things about this podcast is things will come out of my brain and I'll have to re listen or think about what I just said.

Now, to your question. I realized it at a very young age, but there's a difference between realizing something and implementing something. Okay. So when I say young age, I'm talking like 1920, right? Because unfortunately I had a very interesting beginning of my life. And as I've told a couple of times on this podcast, the story of my math teacher and telling me I would never amount to anything and me, the only me being able to make the decision to drop out of high school, which.

Listen, if there's a way not to start your life, for me, like, that was a way that, man, dude, why would you do that? Why are you that stupid? Like, why would you let somebody else impact your life? Now what are you gonna do? Like, you can't even read or write. Like, your grammar sucks. Like, you're bad at math. I'm purposely running through narratives that would, like, go through my brain for years and years and years.

And I was like... I can't live in this, like, mental waste dump, and so I've started to realize, like, to move forward, to gain traction, to become unstuck in this just toxic waste dump of mental bullcrap. Like, how do I do this? Right? How do I go? Where do I go? And it actually was a pastor of a Nazarene church.

Um, he was the pastor of my grandparent's church, um, had a conversation with me about forgiveness, uh, forgiving the math teacher, but also forgiving myself for the actions. Because here's the very interesting thing. My math teacher hurt me once. I continue to hurt myself over and over and over again. Ooh, and Yes, like when, and when you realize that right there, like a lot of what we're going to talk about is going to be predicated on what I just said of like, when you don't forgive yourself and you rerun the narrative, you are punching yourself in the face or the gut repeatedly.

Even though the other person, and by the way, sometimes there isn't another person in the scenario, in my case, there was another person and there has typically been, but sometimes I just do bad stuff to my, like, just try and make bad decisions. I don't know if you humans out there make bad decisions.

Sometimes I do this, but like, the thing is, and I, again, going back to your question is the realization of and trying to do. And doing the best that I could along the way, but I still don't know if I'm a master at what we're talking about. I think I've gotten really good at it. I think I've shortened the length of time it takes me.

But again, with practice comes, you know, greatness. High school dropout, um, I've been through a divorce. Like, I've just made a lot of bad decisions. I put myself in places where I don't belong. And one of the capsulating moments, actually, if you think what I was talking about, like 18, 19, 20, the education of understanding that you have to forgive yourself to about a year and four months ago, at this point, when you Liz asked me, what does it look like if you show up as a whole ass human, that was kind of an unlock moment for me of like, I know these things I've tried to achieve these things.

But you know what? It's just time in my life to actually do this thing fully to forgive myself fully to accept who I was and who I am and who I will be in the future. But I can only be who I will be in the future. If I'm not weighted down, if I'm not stuck in that toxic waste dump, and last week, by the way, the peanut butter of this jelly episode, last week I talked about the 1 percent that can turn into a flame and just combust when you don't forgive others.

I feel like I need to run the narrative for people's brain is if you don't clean up 100 percent of the toxic waste dump, it will still drip through and corrode other portions of your brain that you're not paying attention to. 

[00:08:21] Liz Moorehead: You know, what I find fascinating about what you're saying here. It aligns with, quite frankly, the parallel I drew while I was helping us prepare for this episode and doing the research.

I noticed that there was a direct correlation between one's ability to forgive oneself and our ability to speak well to ourselves about ourselves. Now, for those of you who have been listening, we've done a previous episode on this on the importance of the language we use to talk to ourselves about ourselves, because our thoughts and the way we talk to ourselves about ourselves conditions us to perceive reality in a certain way.

But there was this particular quote that jumped out at me that I wish I could remember where I found it. I was scrolling on Instagram and I just happened to see it and I just really just hit me in the face. You will always be limited by the story you tell yourself about who you are and what your identity is.

And I've noticed in times of my life where I have really struggled to forgive myself, the story I then tell myself about myself is drastically colored in a very, very negative light. So what will happen is that you will create artificial limitations in your life about who you are, what you're capable of, and more importantly, what you're deserving of based on whether or not you can just look at yourself in the mirror and be like, Hey, yeah, I kind of screwed that up.

I kind of screwed that up and I have to be able to move through that. 

[00:09:52] George B. Thomas: Well, and I think part of that, Liz, piggybacks on the fact you're doing that based off of artificial futures that you've put inside of your brain. Meaning, if I didn't do that thing, I could be here. If I didn't do that thing, I could be over here.

And one thing that I know as humans, the grass is always greener on the other side. And so instead of living your reality or living your truth, being able to fantasize about these false futures that you could have had is one of the worst things that you can do because you can't go back. And I love that you brought up quotes, because by the way, I just have to say, I love Oprah.

For so many different reasons, like a couple of years ago, she was at inbound and she was one of the guest speakers and I was like down for everything that she had to say. I love her story. I love her podcast. She does a really interesting podcast that we can share a link to in the show notes. But her quote that around this topic that we're having today, she says forgiveness is giving up the hope that the past could have been any different.

It's accepting the past for what it was and using this moment and this time to help yourself move forward. And when I think about that, and we're, we're literally on a podcast called beyond your default, which if was, we translated it, it's moving past, moving forward, like getting to a place and this idea of.

Just giving up on hope that the past could have been any different. It just is what it is, is the unlock to get you to where you actually need to go. And instead of fantasizing about a false future, it's being able to live fully. In the one that you create, well, 

[00:11:39] Liz Moorehead: this segues nicely into the part of the conversation I wanted to have right now, which is what are some of the different ways in which people struggle to forgive themselves?

So you've spoken a bit here about, you know, these false aspirational futures that we feel are now outside of our reach. What are some other reasons? Do you think that people struggle to 

[00:11:59] George B. Thomas: forgive themselves? There's going to be people that are going to love what I'm about to say. And there are going to be people who hate what I'm about to say.

And what I have figured out over time, myself and others around me is that we are really bad at understanding how wonderfully made. We are how exactly we are, what we're supposed to be, how we have been designed for a purpose, how we are spectacular and beautiful. And we don't use those words towards ourself very often.

And it's funny because there's this layer of me that because of so many years trying to be humble, go back and listen to the episode, that I would not speak of myself this way. And I see that other people don't really say, I am who I am and that's good enough. That's actually exactly what I'm supposed to be.

And so we don't necessarily forgive ourselves because we don't think as high of ourselves as we should. It's okay in my mind that we put ourself on a little bit of a pedestal now, not narcissistic. Not egotistical, but listen, we wake up every morning and we have the ability to be or do anything that we want to be.

The only thing that is limiting us is ourselves and what's fun is this conversation that we're having the unforgiveness of historical things or the unforgiveness last week of other people. Is one of the major or two major hurdles that we put in our way. And so preparation for this episode, you sent a couple articles.

One, I was like, Oh, this is like death to read through. I'm quickly realizing I would much rather watch some YouTube videos or some, like, TED Talks than get into, like, the psychological, uh, journal, blah la blah la, whatever it is. Now, don't get me wrong, I pulled some stuff out of there. And there's some stuff that I was like, ooh, that's, that's a very good talking point.

But you sent this other article. And I... Where I sit was like, Oh, man, I want to read this every day. I should make a recording of this so people can play it so they can listen to it. And then all of a sudden my brain, I flipped a switch and I was like, Oh my God. This would actually be difficult for old George to do.

This would be difficult for old George to hear. Old George wouldn't believe these things and what it is, is Liz sent this article and there's a lot of good resources, by the way, we'll put it in the show notes. It has 20 self forgiveness affirmations. I'm going to read some of these. And when I read some of these, what I want you to do, well, first of all, and I'm not going to get all woohoo here, but as I'm reading this, as you listen to this podcast episode, I want you to close your eyes.

I want you to pay attention to your body. And what I want you to pay attention to your body is I want you to pay attention to the comfort and the way that you start to breathe either slower or if you get uncomfortable. When you hear these things and you're applying these things that I'm reading to yourself as you're hearing them, I 

[00:15:32] Liz Moorehead: think it might be beneficial for our listeners.

I'm going to do that and then I'll report at the end how I'm feeling. 

[00:15:37] George B. Thomas: Yes. Yeah, I think that's good. So listeners, you're going to do this to close your eyes and just take a deep breath. You can think about yourself, think about your body, inhale, exhale, pay attention to your chest, like expanding and then contracting and just take a couple breaths.

And then I want you to think about if you woke up every morning and you said to yourself, I am worthy of forgiveness. I am human. And sometimes I make mistakes. I can learn from my mistakes. I forgive myself for what I did. No one is defined by one mistake or one incident. I can let go of feelings of guilt and shame.

I can forgive myself as I would forgive others. I deserve to treat myself with compassion and kindness. I love forgive and accept myself with all of my imperfections. I am worthy of others, love and acceptance, just as I am by accepting responsibility for what happened. I can achieve personal growth. Now, I'm going to pause there and when you're ready, go ahead and open your eyes, but that was only 11 of the 20 and what I want you to honestly do.

And Liz, I'm going to get your response here in a minute. Is first of all, listeners, if you would like something created around all 20 and a little bit of music and whatever that you could listen to on a daily basis, you just need to let me know. I'll create that thing, but I need you to be honest with yourself and be like, how did that make me feel?

So, Liz, when you were listening to that. Unpack where your brain was going. One of 

[00:17:32] Liz Moorehead: the things that I have been working on, and we talked about this in previous episodes is understanding what feelings are when they manifest in specific parts of your body. I think we talked about this during the fear episode.

I literally was a 40 year old woman who had to be shown a chart about what it means when you feel feelings, certain parts of your body. So I can now tell you my first immediate reaction, and I am someone, by the way, who has a daily meditation practice. I spend a lot of time doing breath work. I spend a lot of time doing these things.

I immediately felt anxiety. I felt immediate anxiety starting to gather in my chest. I could feel the immediate resistance of this is okay for others, and this is not okay for me. And I'll be brutally honest, you know, when I think about, you know, the answer to my own question of why do people struggle to forgive themselves, it goes back to a conversation you and I have had a thousand times, which is what do you do when you run into old versions of yourselves?

The thing is, is that anytime we make a mistake, anytime we have some sort of failure in our lives, right, that is a moment for us to grow, to move through, but sometimes we're going to run into the consequences of our own actions over and over and over again, and we have to meet that old version of ourselves again.

And that's really hard sometimes to deal with, depending on what it is. Toward the end of it, it was something where I allowed myself to just observe the feelings I was having. You know, I can feel the feelings of anxiety in my chest, but I'm going to stick with this. And I felt a lot better toward the end.

But I think what it really illuminated for me is that I think sometimes we think we are more self compassionate than we actually are. And that we are intensely damaging to ourselves just because we are a human. Who happened to make a mistake, maybe once, maybe twice, maybe thrice, who knows? Sometimes it takes us all a while to figure out, hey, the hot stove is hot.

Maybe we shouldn't keep touching it. Some of us learn the hard way, you know what I mean? But that's what arose for me. And I was very surprised by it and how immediate it was. 

[00:19:43] George B. Thomas: It's interesting because for me, I knew that I started to, like, cause I was down for this, but when I connected my old self to this, I got to this point of like, why did, cause by the way, I got very anxious too when I put my old hat on versus like who I am now.

And then what's interesting is I broke it down to like, why did my brain do that? And there's something about I'm worthy of. I forgive myself for I deserve to those narratives that are being put in your brain. It's like, Oh, and then it gets to this line. I love forgive and accept myself. With all of my imperfections, we try to stay so clean, and so neat, and so tidy on the outside.

Because then it's like this perfect fortress of a human, that everybody's like, Oh, they have their shit together. Yet inside, it's this like, messy, toxic, We spend so much time on the exterior and we, we need to spend so much more time on the interior of ourselves and our brain in, in this, this topic that we're having today.

[00:21:00] Liz Moorehead: Well, think about some of the labels that you were using earlier today about yourself, and I'm going to use these examples, George, not because I think you're holding on to negative connotations of them, but more to illustrate a point. I think when we say things like, you know, for example, my version is, you know, I'm not a high school dropout, but I'm a college dropout.

Right. I've talked about this quite a bit. You know, I spent a lot of my life just feeling like a perpetual disappointment. Like, I'm just never living up to the expectations of people around me. And so when you carry these stories with you, and this is what I was saying earlier, right, about the importance of the language we use to talk about ourselves, and if we're not forgiving ourselves for things.

Sometimes it's not even forgiveness. Have you ever noticed that we feel the need to forgive ourselves for things where if you talk to another person, they're just like, there's nothing to forgive. You were a human who woke up that day and had a human experience. Right. Yeah. But like, if you sit there and say, well, I'm a college dropout.

I perpetually disappointed both of my parents. I'm twice divorced. So, you know, why do something soul crushing once when you can do it twice for twice the price. Right. You know, and it's one of those things where it's like, Well, how do you paint yourself or believe yourself to be deserving of things when you feel like you're perpetually falling on your face?

Or you're using labels that negatively impact you and how you talk about 

[00:22:17] George B. Thomas: yourself. Yeah, it's so crazy and it Liz, it's funny because you're making me think about something that again, historically that I did, God knew I needed two sets of parents, one set. It's not gonna be enough for this guy. So I have a mom and a dad and a dad and a mom, and I really don't like using the word steps anywhere, like stepmom, stepdad.

I just, no, I have two sets of parent. And it's funny because Liz, there was a long time where each set would be like, man, we're proud of you. We're proud of all of you boys. Like, you boys are doing great. I have all brothers, no sisters. And my response was like, external was thanks. Internal was literally like, good talk, bro, thanks.

Like, I couldn't accept the fact that they were proud of who I was, or who I was becoming. Because I was like, well, they're supposed to say that. But then I realized, no, actually they're not. Like, the older I got, and the more I looked at people around me, I was like, Oh, there's probably some parents that may not say that because they're just butthole parents or because the kids are just butthole kids, right?

And like, it's, there's like both sides of that story, but it's funny because now, you know, I hear them say that and again, it comes back to this moving yourself from being stuck living a life beyond your default. But now when I hear my parents say that, or anybody say that, like, I'm very accepting of those words.

And I think it has to do with the work that has been forgiving myself for all of the bad decisions daily. Like, that's the thing I want everybody to realize is, like, I make bad decisions daily. And in the moment, I'll forgive myself for the bad decision, learn the life lesson from it. And one of the things I want people to take away, Liz, from this conversation, or ask themselves, Are you enabling in your life, true forgiveness or fake forgiveness, and this would be towards you or towards others.

This could pair nicely with last week's episode because here's the thing, and this is a video, a TED talk I was watching and it's a slide in the presentation, but I want to bring it forth in this conversation because you can say, oh, I forgive them or I forgive myself. But if it happens to be temporary, like the next week, all of a sudden you're beating yourself over the head again, it's not forgiveness.

If it's conditional, if I don't ever do it again, if they don't ever do it again, that's not forgiveness. If, like, past is ongoing, motivated by fear or anger, it's anywhere in that conversation, fake forgiveness. Not really doing the thing that you need your brain to do for it to be forgiveness. Now, true forgiveness, if we think about this, it's permanent, it's unconditional, your state or you state the past is over, it inspired or it was inspired by love, and it does take time to reach this true level of forgiveness.

And again, I love Oprah because on this slide, there's a quote from her that says true forgiveness is when you can say thank you for that experience. And Liz, I call back to the whole thing that I said about my math teacher for years and years and years, I wanted to punch him in the face. Then I wanted to go back and say, thank you.

I don't want to punch myself in the face anymore, by the way. 

[00:25:41] Liz Moorehead: Personally, I like you in one piece just from a front capacity, but also, you know, work capacity. That'd be great. Let's just keep you whole and unpunched. Yes. What I'd love to hear from you, though, is what are some of the benefits that you've experienced personally in terms of When you started learning to be more forgiving of yourself, what did you see happen?

Because you referenced it earlier. Sometimes I give you fun, happy things to consume when for in preparation for this episode. And then in other times, you're just going to get a big waterfall of scientific research because nobody teaches scientists content marketing principles. They're just not going to get on camera.

You're getting a white paper abstract and a lot of stuff. The research that we looked through, and I'll link this in the show notes, it's from National Institutes of Health, is that it shows, obviously, that when there are high levels of self forgiveness in a person, it's linked with high levels of self esteem.

Low neuroticism, low levels of anxiety, depression, basically the kinder you are to yourself, the easier it is to release yourself from the mental prison of your brain. But I would be curious to hear from you as you've gone through this journey, as you've gone through this process of. Forgiving yourself, integrating all aspects of yourself.

When you do this work inward, what are the benefits you see around 

[00:27:06] George B. Thomas: you? Yeah, and there's a couple things that come to mind, right? Uh, that's just how my brain works. The first thing I want to share is, Imagine, and all of a sudden I'm getting visions of Tony Stark, right? So like, think about Iron Man and Tony Stark, about how he has kind of that generator, that power plant in his chest, right?

In any scene you see, by the way, if you don't watch Marvel and you don't know who Iron Man is, go watch it, this story will make a whole lot more sense. But you always see this, like, glowing from his chest. Liz, when we have unforgiveness in our life, especially against ourself, that lens is cloudy and dirty, and there's stuff in the way.

And as I would kind of clean up my ish, you know, all the stuff that I wasn't forgiving myself, What I realized is it was almost like I was cleaning that lens and one of the things that I have realized that we as humans is we're supposed to shine our light, who we are, we're supposed to give it to the world, we are a gift, we are a blessing.

It's hard to be that gift, it's hard to be that blessing, it's hard to shine that light if your lens is dirty. And so this idea of doing the internal work of cleaning the lens of letting the light shine and being able to be the best of you for those who need you to be just exactly who you are in their life to help move them to that next place.

So that's 1 thing that comes to mind is like, it makes it very. Easy to do that. Now, here's what's fun is the other thing that came to my mind when you're asked this question is how much, when I truly did unlock it, it gave me what I would call a giggle moment, meaning I literally kind of giggled when I made this statement that historically I never would have probably made.

And I put this out on social and I talked about this idea of being a Jesus loving, cigar smoking, whiskey sipping, fast and furious, Tupac listening, Chris Tomlin like human. And that made me giggle because I was able to put all of these things that the world and me and my own brain historically would tell me that they had to be in these different compartments and only show up for these different people.

At these different times, but that's not how I was made. They were all in there. They were all me. And being able to show the world, like, this is really me. And not care if I got judged. And not care if I got judged. Now I'm going to say that for a third time. I'm going to say that. I 

[00:29:55] Liz Moorehead: want to push back on that so hard, but say it a 

[00:29:58] George B. Thomas: third time.

But here's the thing and not care if I got judged. Now I'm going to finish the sentence because everybody's brain went to the external world judging me for the things that I put out. What I meant is that I would not judge myself for the things that I had become or who I was. 

[00:30:20] Liz Moorehead: I feel like that's step one, and this is where I'm about to say something where I know after I hop off this episode, I'll be like, now Liz, you know you should take your own advice.

But here's where I get really hung up on the language piece of it. Because even if we're sitting here saying like, and we're not gonna judge ourselves, we're not gonna judge ourselves. Yes, step one. The step two to that is, and all of those things are worthy of celebrating. Like, you have to flip that switch where it's not just teaching yourself to not judge yourself.

Because I think sometimes what can happen is that if we program our brains to think that way, it's like, and I'm going to talk myself out of judging myself that other people will judge me for. No, it's also about standing behind yourself and saying all of these seemingly contradictory things. Actually, when you blend them together.

Are what makes me unique. It's what makes me someone worthy of celebrating. And I think this is something where people really forget, like we're all little weirdos, we're all little weirdos who love our little weirdo things. Like my version of it is like. I will go hard on, like, crazy, deep cut classical music and opera debates, and Fast and Furious debates, and art, and all of these different things.

Like, we all have these unique melting pot blends. Of perspectives and loves and passions and like all of these different things that make us uniquely human. But I think sometimes, especially given the society that we live in right now. Think about what people are coached on if you ever want to succeed on TikTok.

You have to niche down. You have to be a very specific version of you. You can only talk about one thing. We're being conditioned to be these very one dimensional. I know we're conditioned to be these palatable versions of ourselves, whether that's from, you know, and this isn't obviously throwing this out there at all parents, but you know, the way I was raised, success had to look at very specific kind of way.

Success was very narrowly defined. And it took me decades of deprogramming to figure out I actually had nothing to forgive myself for. One of the things I struggled with is that when I was 14, I was sent from living with my mom to living with my dad. She suffered a mental health crisis. The decision was made that for my welfare, it was best for me to go live with my father.

My mother was an incredibly beautiful and intelligent woman who I think at some point saw something in the mirror about herself that she did not like and decided she could never look at that again. So when she and I reconnected later in life. One of the things that she said was she could never understand why I had to step away and live with my dad, which first of all was not my choice.

Number one, like I didn't have a say in that. That was the state of Virginia said this is where she has to go. And then the other piece of that was I carried a lot of guilt around as a 14 year old. Why was I not more understanding about complex mental health issues that I actually had no business understanding?

So I bring these things up because. I think sometimes there's not necessarily surface level stuff, but I think sometimes we have to be very honest with ourselves that sometimes the sources of information that feed us this narrative of there's something to forgive are sometimes not accurate. Sometimes they are incredibly flawed.

Sometimes they are coming from people who are. For better or for worse, without casting aspersions or judgments upon their character, they are not able to forgive themselves, so they are passing those savings on to you. But I spent decades feeling like a terrible daughter, feeling like I was doing the wrong thing there.

And now, in hindsight, I'm like, No, 14 year old girl to mentally process and handle, and it also is not taking any accountability for what actually happened. I know that was a big diverging tangent there, but I think it's important to note that sometimes these weird narratives around what we think we actually need to forgive ourselves for are completely non existent.

[00:34:54] George B. Thomas: I actually love that you shared that. First of all, I know that there's going to be people out there that are going to hear it and be like, Oh, I, I needed that in my life. And Liz, I would agree with you. Some things that we're labeling things we need to forgive ourself for might not be that. But the thing that came screaming to the front of my brain as you were kind of telling that story is it might not always be truly forgiveness, but it is always going to be truly a lesson that can be learned.

So there were multiple lessons that Liz had to learn through that journey. One of the lessons was, Oh, I really don't have to forgive myself, which by the way, is great when you realize that it's almost like one minute you feel a certain way you have that realization and then all of a sudden you feel like somebody injected you with helium and you're like way later and kind of floating a little bit because you're like, Oh, wow.

And that's the thing too, that I would say about just lessons learned, but forgiveness as well as like, it doesn't have to be difficult. Once you can get to the place where you can do the thing at this point, for me, it's almost like, Oh, shoot. Look, I left the light off. I need to turn the light on. I need to flip the switch.

Now this is after years of working on this. But now it's as easy as diagnosing a thing and then running it through my mental process. Now, my mental process is hard to explain, but again, going back to the research that you sent over, one of the things that I was like, oh, I need to make sure we unpack this in the episode.

Is that there's this one section where they talk about the four R's of self forgiveness. And this at least gives the listeners a framework to be able to pay attention to after this episode. Because here was my biggest fear, by the way. My biggest fear of doing this episode is that you get to the end of the episode and as a listener you go, Ooh, man, I got a lot of ish, I gotta forgive myself.

We're kind of dredging up like the past and all of a sudden you're thinking things and we're asking you to like, think about being worthy and all of this stuff and it can get messy quick. And so I'm like, man, they need some type of rubrics or matrix that they can put this through. And so this article talks about the four R's of self forgiveness.

Which, by the way, when you unlock self forgiveness, you unlock self belief, you unlock self love, and then you realize you as self can do anything that you want in the world. Anyway, the four R's talks about responsibility. So responsibility, the person seeking forgiveness takes responsibility and does not lay blame elsewhere.

The second R talks about remorse. So, this suggests that the individual should work through difficult emotions like shame to more offense specific emotions like guilt, which are more likely to motivate people to make reparations. So, again, this is responsibility, remorse, restoration. The next step is to actively try to make things right, repair relationships, and reaffirm any moral values that were broken.

By the way, when you use the word relationship, if your mind immediately went to, this sounds like we're talking external. No, like you have a, an internal relationship with yourself. There is that inner critic. There is that inner brain. There is without being weird versions of you that you're like trying to be and battling again, but repair that relationship internally.

Responsibility, remorse, restoration. And then this is the one that I love. I love them all. But renewal, renewal, this is a place of self forgiveness, renewed self compassion and self respect through this process, the individual achieves moral growth, self forgiveness, self compassion, self respect. I mean, that's where I would want people to get to.

You truly can love yourself to the layer or levels that you need to when you get all of this crap out of the way, 

[00:39:01] Liz Moorehead: you know, it's interesting to one of the steps that you mentioned in there obviously is remorse repairing, making things right with people who you potentially may have harmed. I think one of the challenges that, you know, I'll be honest, I've alluded to this over the past.

18 months or so have probably been some of the most challenging. I woke up one day, looked around and realized out of fear, I had built an entire life that was only ever going to make me feel alone, miserable, and afraid. Then I had to spend a lot of time reckoning with that. I had to spend a lot of time cleaning up the messes of old Liz's of like, man, she made a lot of choices.

And also along the way, some people got hurt. And that was something I really had to reckon with because one of the challenges I've had in the past, and I'm sure we've all had moments like this in our lives. Is that sometimes when we know we have done something wrong and we attempt to right the wrong, we give a genuine apology, some people are not always going to accept it.

Some people are just like, it was the bridge too far and maybe at some point it'll get better, but that can't be the reason you stall out on forgiving yourself. There has to be this both and mentality of, I am not. Asking for forgiveness with the expectation that I will get it. I am simply apologizing because let's acknowledge what happened.

This is the apology that you deserve. And you have to allow the people outside of yourself to have their own experiences with that experience. The reason why they may not be forgiving you may have nothing to do with you or it may just be one of those things where like, hey, sometimes we fuck up.

Sometimes we fuck up big time. But that can't be the reason that you suddenly decide, well, if they are unwilling to forgive me, then I cannot forgive myself. And that's where I used to get hung up, you know, to go back a bit into my past. I think there are the two types of things where you don't get forgiven or get the forgiveness that you're looking for.

In some cases, it's what I alluded to, like, hey, sometimes it's just going to be this thing where, like, that was the straw that broke the camel's back. Or for them, that was just too big of a thing. Or it's just going to need some time to heal. But in other cases, the reason why you're never going to get it is because...

They are wildly unrealistic expectations. My mother was never going to forgive 14 year old Liz for not, quote, cutting her slack. And I had to go through this whole thing of understanding. This is where the script finally got flipped. Finally, one day I had a breakthrough of I need to stop seeking forgiveness from her and realize I need to forgive her for this blind spot and move on.

It is a very interesting thing that I think people get stuck on if there's another person involved and I'm not getting the forgiveness, the absolution, the, Hey, it's okay, buddy, we'll get through this. Like they'll stall. They'll get stuck because if the other person can't do it, am I deserving? I'd love to get your 

[00:42:13] George B. Thomas: thoughts on that.

So, yes, yes, to all of that, my brain kept going back to, and again, if you haven't listened to last week's episode, we're talking about these things like they're two totally different things almost, but they're so very interconnected, very entwined, like. For you to even ask for forgiveness of others, you probably have had to do a little bit of work to forgive yourself for making the bad decision or being part of the bad scenario that ran in, and after you ask for forgiveness, even if they don't give it to you from their mouth verbally, You have done your action, which allows you to then go back in word towards yourself and forgive yourself even more for that thing, because you did what you could do, did what you needed to do.

And you're right, Liz. Sometimes it takes time, right? Time heals all wounds. They say, I don't know who they are, but that's what they say. I don't know if I believe that, but anyway, they is very smart. They, they, they is very smart. But my point is. These are all tied in so tightly. And so I want people to realize that last week, one of the things we talked about is asking for forgiveness of others.

Is it necessarily for them? Does it help them? Yes, but it is literally helping you. Like it's unlocking the things that need to unlock in you when you're asking for forgiveness or even forgiving others. It's like unlocking you and the kind of like. If I were to take something that I said last week and bring it into this episode, it's like forgiving others and forgiving yourself and asking for forgiveness.

These three pieces of this pie, I talked about that vial of poison that you're willing to drink and it only affects you, it doesn't affect the other person. It's like paying attention to all three of those layers is like, we're just going to remove all poison off the table so that everybody can live a better life and not worry about like dying to some internal toxic waste dump that then becomes created inside their body.

Which by the way, like we talked about last week in the article that Liz sent over this idea of unforgiveness, high heart rate, blood pressure, like all of that. There are physical things. That happened based on the internals that you allow to live inside of your body. And so it's just important for so many reasons.

[00:44:40] Liz Moorehead: One of the things that actually also has been very helpful for me, George, is that when I am in that cycle of Learning to forgive myself for something that has occurred that also requires me to speak to somebody else. I've stopped asking for forgiveness. I've stopped going into those conversations where the goal is to get them to give me the outcome that I need to satisfy myself.

And instead, it's just literally like, Hey, you just are owed the apology. Like I've had that conversation with you where it's like, Hey, let's square this up. This was not good. I apologize for it. And let them have their own experience. Because I think when you go into those conversations, and particularly if you're looking to find a way to forgive yourself or absolve yourself, if you're going to somebody else, and there is some sort of wrong that you perceive, that you have inflicted upon them, or they feel that, The goal shouldn't be to get forgiveness.

The goal should just be to what you said in that list of things when we talk about what is forgiving oneself actually look like in practice. It's more about ownership and accountability, not actually getting the absolution and forgiveness from somebody. It's just going in and saying like, Hey, I own the thing that I did wrong.

That's not cool. You deserve to hear that. And I'm. Sorry, now how they react to that is entirely up to them and they are allowed to have their reaction and you shouldn't be pressuring them into that kind of 

[00:46:12] George B. Thomas: thing. Yeah, I think 1st of all, I love that so much and it's funny because you definitely made my brain like, pause there as you were talking because I think if you go into these conversations with yourself internally and with others externally, based on ownership and responsibility versus.

Based on goals and expectations, the first one will actually probably give you more of the results that you need, not the results that you want, but the results that you need versus if you come at it the other way with goals and expectations, you're probably layering an extra layer of ish on top of the already ish pile.

I'm just going to throw that out there. There's not a reason or a place for goals and expectations in the conversation of self forgiveness or forgiveness of others or any of this, like, it's not the point. It's funny because if I tie back into this, there's one other thing I wanted to make sure, Liz, that I brought up during this.

And again, we'll share the resources. I guess I'm going to be doing a reading also as an additional resource at some point. I don't even know who Carl Jung is, by the way, but Carl Jung is a very smart human because there's a quote like I read this and it actually reminded me of a quote from a movie. I think it's called the coach or something.

We are not afraid of. Anyway, I'll just read the quote. So Carl says the most terrifying thing. Is to accept oneself completely and the reason I want to end with that quote, the most terrifying thing is to accept oneself completely is I want you as a listener to realize that the conversation that we're having today is a top of the mountain conversation like it is one of the hard things.

Like, we might be talking about it like it's relatively easy, but I'm bringing this conversation to you as a 52 year old male who has made many mistakes and has had many opportunities to fail at self forgiveness and be successful with self forgiveness. Just don't use this as another point to beat yourself up.

Don't use this as another point to judge yourself. Realize this is one of the things, like so many others that we'll talk about on this podcast, where you have to have a, I'm a grasshopper trying to become a sensei. Um, while I'm trying to reach mastery, I'm going to always approach this one as a pupil.

For those that didn't get my first kind of analogy around this. It's something that I'm always and will forever always be trying to get better at, trying to learn more, trying to unlock these little pockets that my inner self has gotten really good at saying we fixed, but got really good at still hiding them.

I got to find those pockets and pop them and get rid of them and work through them. I want to 

[00:49:25] Liz Moorehead: end this conversation today with a question that is okay, fine, deeply rooted in a personal request, George, I need you to bring out your youth pastor hat. Oh, are you ready? 

[00:49:38] George B. Thomas: Okay. Are we ready? Yeah. 

[00:49:39] Liz Moorehead: What advice do you have for those folks?

Who are still struggling to forgive themselves who may be coming to the end of this conversation and whether they like to admit it or not, there are maybe one, two, three things that they feel that they've done in their lives that are unforgivable, that may make them feel like they don't deserve that type of internal redemption that is required to truly forgive oneself.

What do you have to say to them? 

[00:50:07] George B. Thomas: I like how you set that up because you told me you wanted me to put my youth pastor hat on, which then allows me to actually like put on the gloves a little bit here. Listen, God loves you. God forgave you. If God can forgive you, why can't you forgive yourself? The thing is you can.

Now what I want you to ask yourself is why are you choosing not to? Because that's what life is, by the way. Life is a set of choices. We make good ones, we make bad ones. But at this point in your life, listening to this conversation, if you are battling with the two, three things, four things, 57 things, I don't care how many, that you feel are keeping you from being who you want to be, who you should be, who you've always felt like you were destined to be.

Then I need you to ask yourself, why am I choosing not to forgive myself? If a God who made me, if a God who loves me. If the people around me have forgiven me, or don't think about these things, why have I not made the choice to just set them down, to let them go, to be lighter, to move forward, to become who you need to become, to become who the world needs you to become.

That's what I would say to them, like for me, I look at this and I realize I reached a point in my life where I went from who would and why would they forgiveness to why shouldn't I? And there was no good reason why I shouldn't.