“Everyone thinks forgiveness is a lovely idea until they have something to forgive.” ~C. S. Lewis
PILLAR: Boundaries
FOCUS: Emotional sequence
Reflection
Forgiveness is beautiful. But it’s not always immediate. Sometimes we try to leap toward it because we want peace, we want to be good, or we want to stop feeling so heavy. But real forgiveness—the kind that’s rooted, not rushed—usually doesn’t show up until something else has had a chance to breathe: grief. Anger. Disappointment. Boundaries.
We’re taught that forgiveness is virtuous. And it is. But not if it becomes a bypass. Not if we use it to avoid feeling the full scope of what happened to us or what someone put us through. Not if we convince ourselves that being kind means never getting mad.
There are wounds that need naming before they need softening. There are lines that need drawing before they can be opened again. You can grieve a relationship and still not be ready to forgive. You can love someone and still feel angry at what they did. You can set a boundary and still be healing.
For me, the mistake I made for years was trying to jump to forgiveness before I’d even said, “That really hurt me.” I thought if I could understand their side or find compassion quickly, it meant I was strong. But really, I was skipping the middle part—the part where I get to be sad or mad or confused. One day I realized: I wasn’t avoiding resentment. I was avoiding honesty. And that delay in feeling made the pain linger longer. Once I let myself acknowledge what happened—and how deeply it affected me—I didn’t have to force forgiveness. It started to grow on its own. You don’t owe anyone your healing on a deadline. Forgiveness may come. But if it doesn’t arrive right away—or at all—that doesn’t mean you’re stuck. It means you’re being real with yourself, and that’s where actual peace begins.
Journal Prompt
What do I feel like I’m “supposed” to forgive—but haven’t fully processed or acknowledged yet?
Affirmation
I give myself permission to feel everything before I forgive anything.
Gratitude
I’m grateful for the space to heal on my own terms—not rushed, not forced, just real.
Action
I will let myself feel one unfiltered emotion today, without trying to talk myself out of it.
Final Thought
Forgiveness is powerful, but it’s not the entry point. Sometimes healing begins with anger, clarity, and courage—and there’s wisdom in honoring that.





