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Letting go of resentment when I'm not willing to empathize?

HomeForumsEmotional MasteryLetting go of resentment when I'm not willing to empathize?

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  • #287237
    Z
    Participant

    A few months ago, my closest friend of several years betrayed my trust and acted really nasty to me, and our friendship has pretty much been reduced to formalities (I still have to see them regularly). Although I’ve been making efforts to move on, occupy myself and self-soothe, I still often find my thoughts going back to what they did, and the pain and bitterness just comes back again, as well as my own insecurity.

    I’ve been reading articles about how to let go of grudges, but a lot of the advice feels centered around, “Put yourself in their shoes” or “Think kind thoughts towards them.” I know this is what a perfect person would do, but for me, reading that makes my defenses come up; I don’t really care why they hurt me, and I don’t feel capable of investing any more kindness into them right now when (in retrospect) our friendship was pretty lopsided anyway, and they’re the ones currently living it up while I’m trying to put myself back together.

    What matters to me right now is the fact that I’m still so hurt. I’m sick of carrying these negative feelings around, and I’m tired of them affecting my life each day, and I really don’t want to keep thinking about this over and over. I just want to not care so much. Until I can release these thoughts and feelings and learn to fill up my own cup (self-love is a struggle for me), and until I can quit checking my phone waiting for an apology that will probably never come (and feel okay with the fact that it probably won’t come), then I don’t know that I’ll really have the energy necessary to give anything more to this person or situation.

    Am I wrong for thinking this way? How do I help myself feel better…?

    #287241
    Mark
    Participant

    Z,

    I can relate to your experience in feeling betrayed, angry, hurt, and resentful.  I can relate on trying to figure out how to let that go.

    What have you done to try to change how you feel?

    Have you journaled about your feelings? Have you written an angry letter to your former friend (and not send it)?  Have you really allowed to be totally into your anger, ex. scream, punch a pillow (or other objects), swear, etc.?  Have you meditate on your anger where you just sat with those angry feelings and not try to make them go away?  Have you tried to re-write the story of your betrayal so you come out as a hero?

    If not then try one or more of those exercises.

    By the way, it is never wrong to feel whatever you are feeling or thinking.

    Mark

    #287285
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Z:

    When you read advice not specific to your particular circumstances, a fit-all advice, well, it most often does not fit all. The advice to empathize with another (“Put yourself in their shoes”), so to no longer feel anger toward that person may fit a situation of a co-worker being rude in the office one day, but does not fit a situation of an ongoing abusive husband.

    I assume the man you wrote about here is the one you shared about in your first thread, and you still see the friend group that includes him. What about the advice I gave you earlier, to exit the friend group so that you don’t see him anymore?

    After all, you don’t really have to see them regularly (“I still have to see them regularly”).

    anita

    #287325
    GL
    Participant

    Dear Z,

    Compassion is a good thing, but the thing is, you are not obligated to show compassion for every person on earth. In certain situations, like a stranger being rude, or doing what you might perceived as a rude action, you might be able to write it off as them having a bad day and it’s not you’ll see that person again to care about what they did. Or with someone you know, if you know what kind of situation they might be going through, then you might be able to show compassion for them even when they are being rude. But, no matter what, if someone is rude or act hostile to you in any way, then you have an obligation to yourself to defend your well-being.

    In those kind of situation, it is not about being compassionate, it is about whether your safety is in a questionable state. Before thinking of others, keep your well-being in mind first and foremost. If you are in danger of any kind, big or small, then it’s not compassion but safety that you should be thinking about. Once you have distance, then you can possibly have compassion, but not before.

    Now, your obsession with your friend likely stem from your bruised ego and your monkey brain. After all, your friend is someone you want to trust to not hurt you. So if your ego didn’t take a punch from your friend, that’d be amazing. Once your ego is bruised, your monkey brain will try to analyzed the whole situation down to the nano second of ‘why would they do that’, ‘did you do something wrong’, ‘what could have lead to it’ and on and on and on. But no matter what kind of excuse they might give you, what you want most is an apology. Because the apology would signify that they did you wrong, that they was the one who hurt you and so should make that known. And that apology might sooth your bruised ego. But the expectations that the other person will somehow mature overnight and take responsibility for their action will always be a dream because if people were always aware of the hurt they have caused others, the world might be a kinder place. But it’s not and it’s incredibly difficult for people to think about others because people observe the world through their own eyes, not other people’s world view. However aware your friend is, expecting them to be apologize is an groundless projection.

    It’s best to let go of that expectation. Others’ actions are their actions, you don’t have control over it. So if they choose to be a d*ck-head, a**hole, and so on, it was a choice they made, consciously or unconsciously. And you have a choice to called it what it is, then you choose whether to make what happened so personal that you can’t let go, depending on whether you can admit that it did hurt you and that you should be angry about it. Of course, they did betrayed you so that wound will take a lengthy period to scab over.

    The expectation of a friend never betraying you tend to be a habitual thing for humans so when it does happen, it seems like the world you knew had changed overnight. Once that has happened, you will have to reorder how you viewed the world to fit in the new information of the situation. That includes all the hurt and anger that comes with that. And you can’t just get over it. You’ll do many things to rationalized what happened to forcing yourself to try to let go but emotion is not logic, you can’t rationalize it away. So the best thing is is to just let yourself sit with this pain of a friendship that is never going to be the same again, a friendship that is likely heading towards the final stages of a relationship before quietly fading away.

    The more you wish to end it quickly, the more you’ll think of it because you wish to find a solution but that just brings you back to the pain, over and over again. It’s a never ending loop. Let your pain and anger be what it is, hurt and betrayal from your so called friend, but don’t try to rationalize it. Logic is not meant to be used when it comes to emotions. Emotions are merely emotions, something that you feel, not think.

    #289393
    Sal
    Participant

    The basis of this whole dilemma is your ”exectations’ on how she should have behaved, or should still behave (with an apology).  You can only know how you would behave if the tides were turned and cannot expect anyone else to do so . No one ‘thinks’ like you and only you know how uoset you are with it.  So what do you do with that?  Find out what this lesson is trying to teach you.  What is it that you are ‘grudging’ on?   What is it that you want her to say to you and would it make any difference if she did?  What Are you feeling and how could you change it?  Let go of expectations of other people. You can lead a person to knowledge but you can’t make them think.

    It’s not about putting yourself in their shoes, it’s about feeling validated for your wishes on how to be treated and how not to be.  But you have no control over how you are treated by others.  What you do with it is up to you.  You cannot ”make’ someone else have a conscious or be responsible for anything they do or say.

    I was there for a friend for 15 years, no judgement, no question.  Always there.  But i can not expect her to be there for me when i need it, not once.   Let it go.

    Love always.

    Sal

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