5.
Re: Forgiving the Son Who Killed My Family
Oct 6, 2008 10:54 AM
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In response to:
harpobear
Forgiveness. A subject greatly overlooked. Not forgiving, the one thing that determines moving forward, healing and personal growth. Thank you for covering this very important subject. I appreciate, deeply, the courage it took for Kent to share with the public, most have so little to forgive in comparison.
I struggled with forgiveness myself. I left a job, after eight years, and the owner was able to ensure no one in my industry hire me due to a non-compete clause I signed. many job offers, outside my non compete, were rescinded simply to avoid the threat of a lawsuit. Who wouldn't avoid that! This man was a very and respected business owner. This man helped me bury my 19 year old son, then saw to it that I couldn't keep a roof over my tow remaining children's head. I was a single parent, sole support. I lost my home, and for a while, my direction and my hope. Last year I was able to write him a letter, intent on closure and release from my anger. In the letter I acknowledged all he did for me, he went to the funeral home and paid the costs of my sons funeral and allowed me to pay back with no interest, and thanked him. He responded immediately in writing and in person, acknowledging, in between the lines, what I was forced to overcome.... and applauded me.
How I love humor, not only did I need to forgive him for my own self growth, but who I forgave didn't even realize he had to be forgiven. That was simply an exclamation mark on the reason we forgive is for ourselves, not for the perpetrator.
I am headed out to by the book "Dare to Forgive", conscience, yes, to have none is hard to comprehend and frightening when you do. How many are out there with no conscience? How terribly sad for them.
Lori