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Teaching Forgiveness

Teaching forgivness is an underrepresented skill in our culture. This blog is a helpful start to teaching others forgivness.

The Different Levels of Forgiveness: 

Trait Forgiveness: a constant attitude to forgive (forgiving  across multiple disciplines, occur across a variety of relationships)

The expectation in an interpersonal relationship (dyadic forgiveness): forgiving across many offenses in the same relationship (marriage, co-worker, family)

Offense-specific response forgiveness: a single act of forgiveness for a specific offense within an interpersonal relation (considers: severity, intentionality, and the degree to which it violates personal or relational expectations) 

Definition of Forgiveness: is the idea of a freely chosen motivation transformation in which the desire to seek revenge and to avoid contact with the transgressor is lessened, a process sometimes described as an altruistic gift (e.g., Enright, Freedman, & Rique, 1998; Worthington, 2001). 

AKA: Replacing revenge with goodwill toward an offender. 

Forgiveness

How does forgiveness help? 

Freely given forgiveness is relevant to the GOOD life and greater life satisfaction!

Positive Psychology: How do we facilitate the teaching of forgiveness?

Issues with Forgiveness

What can forgiveness be disguised as?

Common Misconceptions: 

Teaching Forgiveness – Discussion Questions:

With Intention, Sarafina

References:

Berry, J. W., & Worthington, E. L., Jr. (2001). Forgivingness, relationship quality, stress while imagining relationship events, and physical and mental health. Journal of Counseling Psychology, 48(4), 447–455. https://doi.org/10.1037/0022-0167.48.4.447

The Psychology of Interpersonal Forgiveness and Guidelines for Forgiveness TEnright, R. D., Freedman, S., & Rique, J. (1998). The psychology of interpersonal forgiveness. In R. D. Enright & J. North (Eds.), Exploring forgiveness (p. 46–62). University of Wisconsin Press.

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