BecomingKind wrote:The trick is to stop reacting to a situation that is no longer happening.
Yes. That's my understanding, and my goal.
BecomingKind wrote:To me, forgiveness might do that but it also acknowledges that there was no bad intent.
Not so much.
Forgiveness, at least to me, is about a process for letting go of things that happened to me, and of things I've done to others and myself. It's something you do for your own sake, not for another's. And it does not condone what happened, or say that "it's ok." Maybe think of it as a process for acknowledging what happened, learning to let go, and to stop letting things that happened in the past define who you are.
I'm not sure I'm able to explain - I don't have the knowledge or the experience. But I've spent a lot of time working on it over the last few years, and I think it's helping. I've been looking for a video or something to share by Jack Kornfield. He's a psychologist and a former Buddhist monk. I've found his teachings helpful - this one is rather long, almost an hour, but I thought it was instructive.
http://youtu.be/yiRP-Q4mMtk There are some sections that may not be directly helpful - he spends some time talking about forgiveness on a cultural level, but for the most part it's about individuals. Hope it's helpful.
May you find rest in a peaceful heart.