
“Holding a grudge doesn’t make you strong; it makes you bitter. Forgiving doesn’t make you weak; it sets you free.” ~Unknown
My situation is probably not unlike that a lot of people reading this.
I grew up in a single-parent home. Don’t get me wrong, I had a pretty happy childhood, and my mom did an unbelievable job raising me. She worked four jobs to make sure I always had the best of everything. But I could never shake the feeling that I always wanted a father figure in my life.
My parents had separated when I was very young. My dad was a marine, my mom was a doctor, and she had realized that she didn’t want to be moving around her whole life. This meant that I only got to see him once or twice a year. And slowly, we became increasingly estranged.
When I was sixteen, I found out that he was deciding where to buy a new house for a more permanent and stable job post. I started thinking that he would find something nearer to me. He now had more flexibility, and finally, I could see him more often. We could begin to build a real relationship and make up for the years of missed birthdays, graduations, and other memories.
But then, right when I got my hopes up, he didn’t. He stayed where he was—with his new wife and her kids. Even though it seemed like they didn’t appreciate him, and even though I felt that I needed him more than they did.
It broke my heart.
In fact, it’s almost ten years later, and although we’re on better terms now than we’ve ever been, I’m still healing.
I had to learn to let him go before I could learn to forgive him. And I had to learn to forgive him before I could build a relationship with him. We’re in the process of building that relationship, and we’re better off now than we’ve ever been. But I’m still accepting that I’ll never get the dad that the little girl in me always wanted.
It’s a tough pill to swallow. Knowing that people that you have the most love for are sometimes going to hurt you. Sometimes even those who are supposed to protect you. It’s one of the most difficult lessons you’ll learn in a lifetime, but it’s a part of being human.
I hope my experience can help to shed some light on your own relationships with partners, family members, and close friends.
Here’s how I learned to let go and forgive.
1. See the human being in the projection.
A significant part of what we see in other people, particularly those with whom we have an emotional history, can often be a projection of our own unconscious attitudes toward that person, and not a reflection of how they are behaving.
This is difficult to see in ourselves, and tends to be even more pronounced in people we’ve known for a long time, particularly our parents.
I learned to forgive my dad by seeing the person in him and not the idea of what I thought a father should be. Doing so wasn’t an easy process, as I had to face shortcomings in both of us. On his side it was constantly making promises he couldn’t keep, out of a fear of losing love and affection from anyone around him. For me, it was the inability to give him a chance to make things right, and see him in a new light, even when it was the most appropriate thing to do for both of us.
Fortunately, over time, as I grew as a person, I was able to build a new relationship with him, based on fresh experiences and not sour expectations.
2. Constantly re-assess your expectations.
When trying to start afresh with my father, I found myself constantly face to face with my old expectations. Whenever he would act in a certain way, such as making empty promises or failing to be there for me when I need him, it would trigger an old story (and old emotions) I had about how he’d always been this way or how he’d never change. But each time I did so, I was able to reassess my expectations.
A cynical way to look at this would be to say that I lowered them. But who’s to say for whatever reason they weren’t too high to begin with? When he began to act in a way that was more congruent with what I had come to expect, we were both happier, and he even began to positively surprise me sometimes when he fulfilled promises I didn’t expect him to.
3. Look at the world from their perspective.
The spiritual teacher Ram Dass once said: “If you think you’re enlightened, go spend a week with your family.” It’s a tongue-in-cheek quote, and I’ve tried to apply the idea my situation. I’ve always thought that I’m an empathetic and understanding person. But can I really stand in the shoes of my family members and be completely ok with their actions, particularly those who have hurt me?
I tried to think about my dad’s situation, his expectations and disappointments, the influences in his life like constantly being on the move because of his work. And I understood that he wasn’t there for me partly because he was afraid of losing his new family and being alone.
At the end of the day, while I couldn’t come to justify his actions, I was able to see the rationale in them, and have empathy for him as a flawed human being, rather than someone who had intentionally done me wrong.
4. Practice acceptance in all areas of life.
Sometimes I couldn’t separate the man from the projection, I couldn’t change my expectations, and I couldn’t come to rationalize where I’d been done wrong. At this point, I had to try and accept things the way they are. And at first, I couldn’t. It just felt so inauthentic, I was still so angry and upset. So I decided to start small and practice acceptance as a skill.
I accepted little things like traffic on the way to work and rudeness by people in shops. I accepted when I saw something I didn’t like on the news or friend of mine had been a little thoughtless. I even made it a habit to accept things I didn’t like about myself, and finally, I began to be able to accept my father for his mistakes.
5. View relationships as fluid, not solid.
This final point was one of the most interesting. I began to view relationships in my life as fluid and not solid. For me, fluid relationships meant that people could enter and leave, their roles could change, as could the way we related to each other. Unfortunately, this is a natural fact of life, and the choice we have is whether or not we resist it.
My dad hasn’t been a huge support, nor a good role model, but right now he’s a father and a friend, and someone I love. That may change in the future, for better or worse, but I’m trying my best to be open to the journey.
Learning to let go of people you love when they’ve hurt you is one of the most difficult challenges we will face in a lifetime. As you can see from my situation, letting go of someone may be releasing the grip you have on the idea of who they should be. Sometimes you can still maintain a relationship, just not the one you want. And sometimes, that’s exactly what you need.
Have you ever had to rebuild a relationship with someone who’s hurt you? Leave a comment below, I would love to hear your stories!
About Anais Rodriguez
Anais Rodriguez is a marketing consultant, cosmetics aficionado, and the social media manager for the mental health and meditation blog Project Monkey Mind. If you'd like to know how you can calm your mind using Modern Psychology and Eastern Spirituality, get the free cheatsheet 7 Psychological Hacks for Depression & Anxiety (in 5 minutes or less).











Though I run this site, it is not mine. It's ours. It's not about me. It's about us. Your stories and your wisdom are just as meaningful as mine.
Yes, I did it once with my boyfriend. At the start of our relationship, we fought a lot due to misunderstandings and difference in thoughts. At some point, I kind of give up in him. Then after a lot of efforts, him and me now in the process of understanding each other and eventually understand how our projections on each other can destroy the beautiful reality of ours.
Now I understand him as a person and not as the idea of how a “boyfriend’ should be. It helps me to be more compassionate.
I am from India. Me and my husband met 4 years back. And we got married recently. My parents were pressuring me to get married soon because of typical indian culture. My husband is coming from a poor background. Because of that reason he wanted some years time to get married. My parents suggested me and him to get engaged till he wants to get married. We obeyed them and after engagement he needed 2 years as he wanted to get settled financially. But even after 2 years he was not ready. But since his family has given a word to us they borrowed money from their relatives for marriage expense. After marriage those relatives got hospitalized as one of them had brain stroke and another one is having blood pressure problems. They started pressuring my husband to give the money back as they need it for hospital expense. My husband started demanding me to get money from my parents. My parents said they have taken personal loan for marriage expense and also for surgery as I got operated after marriage because of gynaec problem. My husband started blaming us that because of me and my parents he is having severe financial crisis. And actually he was not willing to get married. My heart broke when my parents said all these and I stopped talking to my husband and wanted to divorce him right away. But he apologized me a lot for his rudeness and he wanted me back in his life. And I struggled a lot because of anger and frustration inside. I took time pampering myself and forgiven him. I started treating my husband as another human being instead of expecting him to be like how I wanted him to be. I understood his pain but without blaming myself. I have understood Out of pain and frustration our loved ones can change towards us because they too are humans. My husband was frustrated but he needs me always because he loves me. So I forgiven him and tried to understand him. Lots of peace in mind once you forgive. This article helped me more to cope up myself. Thank you for reading lengthy comment. Sorry to write big story I wanted to talk about it and let it out to make myself feel better…
I have to say this article helped me so much. It really helped me get “unstuck” on feeling totally hurt and disappointed with a family member. I am trying very hard to view him with empathy, though I can’t fully understand why a person should act the way he does. Trying to view the world through is eyes is truly enlightening though. Thank you for writing this. Please continue to write more, this was such a beautifully written article.
In March 2018 I had my delivery, my mother was already there to support me but when my mother-in-law came she created a nuisance that I thought of committing suicide. My baby was born premature, then also she did not even think of him. It impacted my relationship with my husband. And it was not the first time she did such things. Earlier also she has done such drama. She insults my family members in front of me. I am very much afraid of her behavior. No one in my husband’s family makes her realizes her fault, instead, they all support her. Sometimes I think that I am caught in a web of bad people. Don’t know how to overcome it. Sometimes my mind becomes so revengeful that I keep on cursing them, I know that it’s of no use but it’s very difficult to live with people who humiliates you every time. Ours is a love marriage, and I was not the girl of my in-laws choice. Before this incidence me and husband shared a bond although he never did anything for me to make me feel important in his life.
I have supported in hard time when his own family members disrespected him. I helped him emotionally, mentally, financially.etc. After our marriage things started to change. His mother does not likes me, she keeps on insulting me, she comments on my look, my lifestyle, my dressing sense. But my husbands wants me to obey his mothers demands. his mother wants me to break all relation with my family members.
Can you imagine a lady who delivered a baby (through C-section) getting breakfast at 12 PM, lunch at 5 PM and dinner at 12 AM on top of it I was the one who used to cook the food. This was not a big deal for my husband. Whenever I tell my husband about the behavior of my in -laws he says, they are neither beating you nor abusing you.
I don’t know what should my stand be?
I’m trying to do much of this right now towards my wife. She’s left me, both emotionally and sexually and having an emotional affair and maybe even a sexual one. Fifteen years of marriage. I realize most of it was my doing, projecting my ideals of her and our marriage, but never living up to them. Expectations. Becoming angry and hurtful when they weren’t met. I wish i would’ve recognized this before it was too late.
It is still very new. I do love her and am working on myself to both let her go and be compassionate towards her because right now she is getting the love and attention she deserves. This, and many blog entries here are helping me grow, and go through this gracefully, sort of.
Thanks for sharing your story. Though it was with your father and not a spouse, the same concepts apply. Pray for me to have the strength to grow and move past this and into a better me.
I’m in a similar situation right now. I feel betrayed by a very close friend. It’s not an easy job for me to change the roles because we have been friends for so long. Just realizing that this friendship changed is painful to accept. I don’t know if we could ever be (close) friends again. It’s a matter of trust because the whole situation made me question myself. I would have to get to know him again to be able to trust him again. But can I trust myself again?
That’s why I also think that sometimes letting go is the better option. Sometimes people came into our life for some time, but won’t accompany us during our whole journey.
An amazing article. I can relate you at all levels here. I have rebuilt more than one relationships in my life. It was not with my family but partners. I have been in both sides and experienced being the person who hurt and the person who got hurt. I have come to realise it’s the same path I have taken as you have mentioned in your article. One is happening now and I am seeing her as a new person in my life rather than holding on to the image of her when we were closer. It has helped me heal, helped em othelp other people and helped me to know myself from within. I am in touch with myself more than I ever was all my life. It’s always the fist fight between your expectations and the reality. When we stop living in illusion and accept the reality and adjust with it, everything starts flowing. Yes, the fluidity concept is so apt. Thank you for such an amazing article 🙂
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I’m on the flip side of this… I have too much empathy and understanding for why people act the way they do (based on all the practices mentioned above), and thus end up staying too long in a relationship/friendship/etc with them. The hardest part has been when meeting new people or discovering that I am, again, in the same situation (or pattern from growing up with parents who never respected my boundaries) is the unearned guilt of drawing boundaries and stand up for myself.
Dear Saumya, i am currently in the exact situation of you where i grew deep hatred towards my husband mom due to what had happened after my birth when they stayed with us for 6 months and the nasty situation she had created upon which led me to post natal depression and for more than 6mths later me and my husband relationship was badly affected due to all the resentments i had over his mom. May i ask how are you handling your situation now?
Beautiful ❤️Thank you🙏🏻