Hidden Brain - The Power of Mercy
Episode Date: June 15, 2021Granting forgiveness for the wrongs done to us can be one of the hardest things we face in life. But forgiveness can also be transformative. In the first of a two-part series on apologies and mercy, w...e talk with psychologist Charlotte Witvliet about the benefits of forgiveness, for both the mind and the body. If you like our work, please consider supporting it! See how you can help at support.hiddenbrain.org. And to learn more about human behavior and ideas that can improve your life, subscribe to our newsletter at news.hiddenbrain.org.
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This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanthan.
Over the course of our lives, we all accrue a ledger of the wrongs done to us.
For some of us, that ledger is long and detailed.
We find ourselves pouring over the pages again and again, accounting for each betrayal,
tallying every injustice, adding up the petty cruelties. We sit with these
wrongs done to us and as time slides by our anger festers instead of fading away.
This week on Hidden Brain we begin a series on forgiveness and apologies. We'll
consider why holding a grudge can feel bad and good at the same time.
And we look at why the process of forgiveness can sometimes be a long struggle between
head and heart.
This journey has its own twists and turns and there can be surprises.
There can be times of incredible, effortful intentionality that feel almost fruitless.
But there are other times where that persistence can all of a sudden be met with like an
aha revelation, a gift. Granting forgiveness for the wrongs done to us is one of the hardest things human beings
can do.
At Hope College in Michigan, psychologists Charlotte Whitfleet studies the psychological barriers
and effects of forgiveness. She and others have examined why forgiveness is hard
and the transformative effects of forgiveness
on both victims and transgressors.
Shout it with, Fleet, welcome to Hidden Brain.
Thank you, Shankar.
It's a joy to be with you.
Shout it, you're a researcher,
but you also spend a lot of time in clinical settings,
working with patients.
What kind of hurts and traumas do people tell you that they are carrying around?
It's so rare that someone has come into a clinical setting and not had some sort of deep
interpersonal pain that felt unfair or unjust to them.
There are all sorts of betrayals. There are betrayals from childhood,
betrayals in friendship, in families, in romantic relationships, in fidelities,
having your reputation maligned. All sorts of hurts show up. And some of us carry
these hurts around for years, even decades, right? Oh, yes. That's the powerful thing about memory. Something that happened in the past can
be currently embodied. Something that happens this week can activate powerfully painful memories
of something that happened 30 years ago.
Before we talk about the science of forgiveness and the effects of forgiveness, Charlotte, I want
to talk a moment about the barriers to forgiveness. the effects of forgiveness, Charlotte, I want to talk a moment about the barriers to forgiveness.
Why forgiveness can be so hard?
I want to play your clip from the television show Frazier,
where the title character Frazier Crane is a radio host and psychotherapist,
and he's trying to convince his father to bury the hatchet with an old friend who's in the hospital.
Dad, we're talking about a few minutes out of your life.
Just just long enough to sit there
and have a little chat with a very sick man.
I don't see why that's so impossible for you.
Now, come on.
Believe me, you'll be glad you did.
All right, listen, sonny boy.
That sanctimonious tone may wow them on the radio,
but it doesn't cut any ice with me.
When I say no, that's just what I mean.
I'm not sitting and chatting with Arty Walsh.
You know, many of us have had the experience of feeling like Frasier Crane's father there
are Charlotte.
It doesn't feel enjoyable to hold a grudge to remember the times that we've been hurt,
but we also find it very difficult to let go of our hurts and grudges.
And you and others have studied why it is this happens.
So what do you find?
So often I think we seek vindication. And one of the things
that we found early on was that when people were thinking
about the offense, nursing a grudge took the edge off their
sadness. And it actually led them to feel a greater sense of
perceived control. And a little less bad.
Although overall, they still had the same high levels of anger.
Can you talk for a moment, how for many people, letting go of a grudge doesn't even seem
like it's possible.
They don't even realize that they actually have a choice.
I think that our emotions are so powerful and when we're distressed and we see so clearly
what is so very wrong, we aren't in a mode of thinking flexibly. We don't always go to the place of
saying we can tell the truth about how wrong it is and we can tell the truth about the humanity
of the other person.
Those things can be really a big stretch for us when we are deeply distressed and acutely
aware of how wrong the injustice is.
You mentioned something a second ago about the role that our emotions are playing.
You and others have studied how grudges produce anger,
but also in some ways how anger then, in turn, feeds a grudge.
Can you talk about this almost symbiotic relationship between the hurts we carry,
the grudges we hold, and the emotion of anger?
Yeah, so anger is something that we experience
subjectively, but we also experience it in a very embodied kind of way.
And it can put us in a place of almost inflexibility
where we are on the lookout for evidence that we're right
and that we have reason to be angry. We can be on the
lookout for clues that the person is really as bad as we feel like they are based on the behavior.
We can tell the story of what happened in such a way that it really conveys our powerful emotions,
almost amping up the adjectives and adverbs that communicate the force of
our emotions, but that can also amp up the contempt and condemnation that we experience.
And those things sort of solidify the anger, solidify the narrative, and solidify that
place of emotional inflexibility.
Even when we encounter things that might help us get out of that loop, we're inclined
to dismiss them and instead tell the story in a way that supports our remaining in that I want to talk about one last barrier to forgiveness.
Sometimes I think we believe that we can ask people to forgive in the absence of accountability,
in the absence of what you might call psychological safety.
Some years ago we did an episode on a forgiveness ceremony in a war-torn country, this was Sierra
Leone, where perpetrators would confess that crimes over a bonfire
and victims were expected to immediately forgive them.
They gave me a knife to kill his father,
but what I did was not my choice.
Well, Malakia, please forgive me.
I'm on gun djump there.
I have accepted it, and I have agreed to forgive him.
But when the researcher, Androla Dubé,
later measured the effectiveness of the technique on psychological well-being,
here is what she found. This process of talking about the past is actually
painful and personally difficult for people as manifest in worsened
psychological well-being in these communities.
So we have three different measures that we look at,
an anxiety, post-traumatic stress disorder, and depression.
And we find that all three outcomes are actually worse
in the communities that have gone through this process.
And we think this is consistent with the idea
that going through these memories of war
in a short, intense fashion can actually reopen
some old wounds.
So,
Shadot, can you talk about this idea
that trying to force forgiveness,
especially in maybe this short, intense way, without perhaps proper accountability,
that in some ways it could backfire on our ability to be forgiving. Yes, when we have horrifying
hurts, traumas, to put people in a position where they're expected to confront that pain and open it up on someone else's terms,
but without the sort of time to process them
as well as without the sense of agency
that I'm deciding to do this.
This is a choice of mine and I'm committing to it.
We often have to hit the pause button say,
first we need to care about safety. I mean physical safety, emotional safety, psychological
safety, sexual safety, spiritual safety. If we haven't assured safety and if we don't have plans in place for accountability that halts the harms, we can actually add deep
hurt to that existing hurt and put people at greater risk.
When we come back, how grudges and forgiveness affect our bodies and our minds. This is Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedantam. Psychology is Charlotte Whitfleet studies the barriers, pathways and effects of forgiveness.
Many of us find that the body is not a human being.
It is a human being.
It is a human being.
This is Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedantam.
Psychology is Charlotte Whitfleet studies the barriers, pathways,
and effects of forgiveness. Many of us find that giving up hurts can be painful. We sometimes
go to great lengths to nurture grudges and to keep the embers of our anger glowing. Grudges
can consume our minds, but increasingly, researchers are also discovering that they can have measurable
effects on our bodies.
Charlotte has brought volunteers into the lab and asked them to ruminate on harms done to
them.
The results are striking.
When we ask people to come into the lab and relive these real life hurts that they've experienced. It allows us to see how their bodies react.
And we have examined their cardiovascular responses by looking at their heart rates and their blood
pressure.
We've also looked at a measure called heart rate variability, which is an index of the
parasympathetic or the calming regulatory mechanisms that connect the brain
and the heart. And another thing that we've looked at is sweat as well as
different facial muscles that are important for emotion. And what do you find happens to people's heart rates
and blood pressure and their facial muscles
and their sweating?
What happens when they ruminate on past herts and grudges?
When people come into the lab and they are ruminating
about real life herts, their heart rates escalate,
their blood pressure surges, and there's an important
measure of the regulation of the heart that plummets when people are ruminating.
At the same time, their faces are showing furrowing of the brow as well as tension underneath
the eye.
And all of us in some ways have experienced what you're just describing.
We might not have observed these markers as carefully, but all of us I think can remember
times when we are lying in bed at night, maybe one o'clock in the morning, two o'clock in
the morning, and we remember something hurtful that's happened.
And we experienced a stress response in some ways to the memories of past hurt.
Yes, have you ever had it where even your chest hurt?
Yeah, that's sinking feeling.
Sometimes that corresponds to this decrease in vagal tone,
which makes it harder to be flexibly toggling out of that ruminative mode.
So you do these studies that measure in some ways the effects of rumination on past hurts,
but then you also ask some people in these experiments to try and exercise forgiveness.
What are the instructions you give them to accomplish this, and what do you find, what do your measures show? One of the prompts that we've used in a lot of our studies is meant to invite a compassionate
way of re-opraising their response to the offender.
So we ask people to remember that this person who offended them is a human being and to
focus on the humanity of this person.
We also ask them to think about the wrongdoing as evidence that things aren't right,
that the person needs to experience some sort of learning or growth or change or transformation
and that they're in a unique position to be able to see
some way in which that person may need to be able to grow or improve, and then
find even a small way to genuinely wish that person well towards that good
future. And when you ask people to do this, do you also continue to measure
their physiological
markers the ones that you talked about before?
Yes.
And what do you find?
Physiologically, their bodies are showing less of a stress response, so their heart rate
doesn't escalate as much.
Their blood pressure doesn't escalate as much.
Their sweat levels are closer to baseline.
Their heart rate variability is more like the relaxation baseline condition.
So, even though they're still thinking about that same offender and the specific offense
that is hurtful, they are able to maintain more of a regulated, calm sort of embodied response.
So someone who listens to this and says, all right, you know, I want to tweak my heart rate and blood pressure
and parasympathetic nervous system and get those things working in a way that's
good for me. And okay, what Shadid Wittfleet is telling me is that if I forgive, I get all of these
physical benefits. You have, however, argued that some of these benefits might be better understood
as side effects of forgiveness rather than the real effect of forgiveness. Why do you, why do you say that?
rather than the real effect of forgiveness. Why do you say that?
The reason I use the language of side effects
is because I think it can help us keep in view
that forgiveness is a moral response to a relational breach.
It's about meaning and relational injustice and healing.
And at the same time, because it's humans who are engaging the response,
it means that psychology, the cognition, the emotion, the behavior,
and the physiology is all part of that.
But I think that there are other things we could do to simply get lower heart rate or
blood pressure or calm cardiovascular systems that have nothing to do with the offense at all
that wouldn't necessarily bring about forgiveness.
So there's some irony here because I think what I hear you saying is that when we try and exercise forgiveness because we're trying to obtain some kind of mental or
physical benefit, not only is that not potentially real forgiveness, but perhaps
we don't even get the full mental and physiological benefits of forgiveness.
There's some interesting research that if you ask people to try to simply distract themselves rather
than trying to re-appraise it in a forgiving way, for example, that later on when they're
prompted to relive the offense, it's the people who try to re-appraise it in a forgiving
way that experience the blood pressure changes in an enduring way, whereas the people who
merely distracted themselves and had a blood pressure benefit in the short term
didn't hold onto that. Because there wasn't real engagement with the
relational injustice and that moral response. How useful do you think short-term lab experiments
that measure physical markers?
How do you useful do you think they are?
In telling us about the effects of forgiveness
in the real world where both harms can sometimes
unfold over years, but also forgiveness
can sometimes unfold over years or even decades.
I think lab experiments have their place,
but we shouldn't overstate them either.
So what they allow us to do is examine a thin slice
and to determine with specificity
the nature of the different kinds
of physiological responses that happen.
And how long it takes for a particular reappraisal
or rumination condition to have its effect.
It's so important to make sure that there is research that examines what it's like to
see these responses unfurl over longer durations that follows people over, you know, longitudinal
designs or even more
dyadic sort of interactions.
You've sometimes talked about forgiveness not as a decision but as a process and
you've sometimes drawn an analogy between forgiveness and our response to grief.
Can you talk about that?
The fact that forgiveness might not be sort of a binary, yes,
no answer, but much more of a process. Forgiveness so much like grief is an unfolding journey,
we have experienced deep hurt because of a loss. And so our emotions as we process this loss unfold over time.
And we may adopt a different mindset about it
and experience a sense that we are moving forward
in our meaning making, in our absorption of the reality
of it, in our reckoning with it,
and in our capacity to tolerate distress around it.
And perhaps even in our sense of hope.
And then we can have memories arise and setbacks occur in how in terms of how we we feel.
And so there's not like this neat linear process
where you do step A and then B and then C
and then you're done.
This journey has its own twists and turns
and there can be surprises.
There can be times of incredible, effortful intentionality
that feel almost fruitless.
But there are other times where that persistence can all of a sudden be met
with like an aha revelation, a gift, but those emotions can't just be sort of unfriiled
at will.
To put this another way, you can decide to forgive someone, but your heart might not go
along with your head.
The choice to forgive can be made in an instant, but the experience of what it means to forgive
can unfold much more slowly.
There are two types of forgiveness that are sometimes discussed and this comes out of
the work of Everett Worthington. Decisional forgiveness is this very cognitive sort of intention and commitment to respond
in a way that might align with one's values system to sort of do the right thing as
it were in forgiving.
And there's also emotional forgiveness, which involves a change of heart, where more positive and
generous kinds of responses to another human supplant, the hurt in bitter kinds of responses
that are otherwise there with unforgiveness.
In the work that we're doing, we're actually asking people to try on these different mindsets,
so they can try this conscious, effortful way of thinking through things.
What we find is that that too has at least a short term, reliable effect on shifting people's emotions, not only de-escalating the negative intensity,
but also generating positive, other-oriented responses.
Charlotte says our ability to demonstrate positive and generous responses to another person,
to empathize with them, this is critical to our ability to forgive.
An empathy seems to come more easily to some of us than to others.
Charlottes and her colleagues have tried to unravel why that is.
They've studied the effects of genes, and they've also looked at gender differences
in terms of empathy and forgiveness.
Empathy plays such a central role in forgiveness when in self-report higher
perspective taking an empathic concern than men do. What we've found in our
research is that empathy is the connector. It's the mediator between gender and
the disposition of forgivingness in general, as well as the extent to which
people express forgiveness toward a real life offender while they're reliving that hurt.
We also did some genetics research looking at a particular genetic variation that is
associated with empathy and sociality. So the oxytocin receptor gene single
nucleotide polymorphism RS53576 was the predictor. So empathy is the hub of the
genetics and forgiveness relationship.
We've talked at some length Charlotte about the effects that forgiveness can have on us.
And I want to spend a moment just talking about the effects that forgiveness can have on
other people, including people who have transgressed against us.
Some years ago, the social psychologist Roy Baumeister conducted a study that found that people were less likely
to repeat offenses if they had been forgiven for an earlier offense. What do you make of a study like
that? Why do you think you would see an effect like that? Gratitude. When we receive a gift like that,
a gift like that, we're grateful for it. And to the extent that people feel appreciative of receiving forgiveness and to the extent that they sense their
own accountability for what they have done and they realize the gift that
someone's giving them when they're forgiven, they may have a stronger sense of commitment to not enact that sort of harm again.
However, it's also the case that when people who have disagreeable personalities receive forgiveness,
unfortunately, they sometimes are reinforced.
They're almost emboldened, and they have a sense that they can get away with things.
So I think that can go in two different ways.
I'm wondering Charlotte as somebody who is besides a researcher and a clinical
expert, somebody who's also a human being who goes through life, have there been
times in your life when you have experienced hurts that you find difficult to set
aside or forget? Oh yes I have and what's so interesting to me is that sometimes
it's hard to not ruminate even about small things, but more often for me,
rumination has been a struggle for the really, really deep losses and wounds,
ones that are related to the suffering and death of people I love dearly.
I love dearly. You know, the hurts that are the hardest for me are the ones where it's so clear to me
what the wrongdoing is and the consequences are so enormous and there's no one doing them.
In some ways, I think, Charlotte, you're pointing to something that a lot of people experience, which is sometimes we are called to exercise forgiveness when a
transgressor has not acknowledged the harm they have done to us.
So in some ways, you don't have the satisfaction of having achieved justice.
And what I hear you saying is that these are the things that you have struggled with
where in these situations you have asked yourself,
am I still capable of trying to exercise forgiveness when in fact there has been incomplete accountability
and perhaps never will be complete accountability?
Yes, it is definitely the hardest when an injustice is deeply painful
and so clearly wrong and yet goes unrecognized by the person who bears responsibility, especially
when it's not just sort of a mere matter of opinion or perspective or personal preference for how something
is done, but it's an undeniable sort of offense where there's no apology on the horizon.
There is no indication of regard at all.
That's the hardest because it feels so dehumanizing, feels so
unacknowledged and in some ways than so unspeakable.
Those are really really hard situations.
That's where having a very long view and a view of
justice that transcends what any one of us is capable of in this world can be very important
that to the extent that there's a sense of ultimate trust, for example, in a God who cares
about justice and transformation and mercy. That can be incredibly powerful.
Now, your father was a pastor and I understand that you yourself are also deeply religious.
And I'm wondering has that informed the way that you are thinking about forgiveness?
Because I hear very much, as you just said, it may be that in the here and now,
there's not a neat equation that basically says, I'm going to give you X amount of forgiveness in return for Y amount of accountability.
It may be that one of those is actually not in the here and now, but in the here after,
at least as you see it.
You're right.
My father was a pastor who was present with people in the best of times and also the worst of times, the horrific sort of traumatic times,
the betrayals offering care. And so I think I became very aware about the kinds of suffering
that so very many people experience. And yet it's so rare that apologies and repentant change and accountability are fully
embodied in convincing and complete sorts of ways here and now. So yes, I've been
shaped by that and certainly have been shaped by a gospel that takes very
seriously injustice and the cause of the oppressed and the importance of having justice and mercy.
Meet in God who took on the fullness of pain and suffering and is the one through whom all of that will be transformed.
Where every tool that is a weapon of harm will be transformed into a tool of cultivation.
One ten thousand feet, Emmanuel AME Church.
On June 17, 2015, a white supremacist walked into the
Emmanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston, South Carolina.
African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston, South Carolina. What happened next shocked the nation, and a warning that it remains shocking years later.
The man had a gun, and he used it to murder nine black people inside the church.
People inside were gathered for Bible study.
These people were in church.
They were in church.
And they violated the sanctity of that.
Investigators are calling the shooting a hate crime.
The only reason someone can walk into church and shoot people, pray, is out of hate, the only reason.
The shooter was later convicted on federal hate crime charges and sentenced to death.
Here's what the sister of one of the victims had to say to him.
For me, I'm a work in progress, and I acknowledge that I am very angry.
But one thing to pay to always join in and our family with is that she taught me that
we are the family that love built.
We have no room for hate.
So we have to forgive and I pray God on your soul.
What goes through your mind as you hear this, Charlotte?
I hear such profound faith, such profound commitment to a life and an intergenerational community,
it's mother-manual that lives a gospel of grace and forgiveness,
and that acknowledges the horror and the injustice of the horrific murder and that is so able to tell the full truth that this particular clip, this
woman can speak to her grief, her anger, to the wrongness of the injustice and can also say that there is no room for heat that seeks to destroy but rather seeks to Zee Green, how sweet the sound, that's safe, I want to talk for a moment, Charlotte, about not just interpersonal harms and interpersonal
forgiveness, but harms that take place at the level of groups, perhaps even historical harms, and our capacity to forgive
entire groups or the demands that are placed on some groups to forgive other groups.
Does the research say anything at all about the value of doing so, the challenges of doing so,
and the benefits of doing so? What strikes me first is to hear the experience of people who have experienced profound injustice
and to honor those stories and the layers of harm and the implications of those.
And to a no way excuse, ignore or distract ourselves from that, but to be able to see the fullness of the wrong.
And that condemnation alone may not bring about the change that people seek, so it's an
invitation to accountability. And my first thought is how important it is for us
to focus on the need to repent.
That is to recognize the places
where we are the complicit ones,
where we are the bystanders.
Part of this field of forgiveness research
examines what it means to reckon with our own wrongdoing and our
own participation in systemic wrongs and to enact the kind of change that halts the harm,
creates safety and fairness because we actually need to also engage in the kind of change that's required
for our victims to receive the good change that they seek.
And that is good for us too.
When we come back, when forgiveness to you feels like betrayal to me. You're listening to Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta. How long do you carry around your grudges
and wounds? Do you nurture them, grow them, tend to them? What effect does this have on you?
At Hope College in Michigan, psychologist Charlotte Whitfleet studies the psychological barriers to forgiveness
and the consequences of letting go of our hurts.
Charlotte, I want to play you a clip.
This is from the writer Amber Sparks discussing her book
and I do not forgive you.
That's the title of the book.
She is referring here in this
discussion to the Me Too movement and the harms inflicted on women for many centuries.
It was important to me to sort of write an anti-redemption story because we have this idea about
narrative in our society where there's somebody and they do something bad to someone else and eventually they're forgiven and everybody learns something and then we can tie a bow on it. It isn't that great.
And I felt like with what's happening right now, you know, with me too, there are people who don't
deserve redemption or at least it's not owed to you as a victim to give somebody that gift,
especially after like a freaking year or two or whatever,
which some of these guys are asking for.
So it was important to me to sort of write a counter narrative
that included the idea that the person
doesn't have to grant forgiveness,
and that not only cannot be okay,
but that can actually be transformative.
I'm wondering in the course of the Mito movement,
there have been cases where
people have said the people who have harassed women have lost their jobs or they've suffered
in some way, they've been punished enough, they should be forgiven and we should move on.
And I'm wondering both as a researcher who studies forgiveness and as a woman, how you hear
that kind of conversation, how does that strike you? I think there's something about empathizing primarily with the wrong
doer at the expense of the victim that is so problematic and that telling the
truth about what has happened needs to place at the center the concerns of the
person who has been most violated, most
unjustly treated, the group that has been most hurt or unjustly treated. But it is an
additional injustice to quickly rush to say, oh, I'm so moved by that powerful display
of repentance, and then forget that true repentance involves accountable change
and the welcoming of being accountable.
So I think we need to be looking for that.
We need to be looking for are the people who are being held accountable, owning their own
need for undergoing change. That's genuine
and that's responsive. I want to draw your attention to something that Ambers Park said in that
clip, because at least emotionally, I feel like it rings true. It seems to me that sometimes not
forgiving can feel empowering. Not forgiving can feel empowering
because it can be an agentic choice in contrast to being put in a position that you didn't
have any choice about. One thing that we found in my very first study of forgiveness comparing
rumination about a hurt to grudge holding was that when nursing a grudge against a real
life offender, people felt more control.
They felt less sad.
They felt less afraid.
They felt more positive.
At the same time is also true that the ones that remember the humanity of the offender, and that engaged a forgiving response,
those empathic and forgiving responses,
were even more full of perceived control and positivity,
with less anger and less sadness.
And that's where the embodied stress responses
were quieted down the most.
I'm thinking about our capacity for anger
and our capacity for forgiveness.
In terms of our evolutionary history
and I wanna run an idea by you,
it seems to me that if forgiveness was always in our interest
or in the interest of our groups,
we wouldn't find it so hard to do.
Our brains would find it easier to forget grudges
if in fact forgetting grudges was good for us
or at least evolutionarily if it had been good
for our ancestors.
I'm wondering if it's possible that the story
or forgiveness is it possible that it's missing out
on the power that, you know,
retribution and vengeance have to generate good behavior? In other words, if I
thought you were certain to forgive me no matter what I did, so long as I'm, you
know, appropriately contrite afterwards, isn't that an invitation for me to take
advantage of you? You are right in Mike McCullough's area.
Groups try to uphold their social norms
in lots of different ways.
And punishment is one way, sometimes retaliation,
sometimes avoidance or ostracism,
is enacted as a way of not only addressing
the harm directly or the wrong do or directly,
but also sending a powerful signal about what the rules are. So everybody observing is pretty
clear on what it means to be in this group. And, you know, Mike McCulloch's work also identifies a place
MacKullis' work also identifies a place for forgiveness and conciliatory responses for the good of the group and the survival of it.
I mean, this is the paradox, isn't it, which is that on a group that basically has no memory of
past wrongs and ignores those past wrongs or is too quick to forgive is a group
that's going to get taken advantage of, but a group that cannot forget past wrongs or
cannot get beyond the pain of wrongs that have been done to them is not a group that can
move forward.
In some ways, it's sort of your stuck between a rock and a heart place.
It's really the path, the middle path that you suggested where you're both aware of
the harms that were done and your exercising empathy for the people who've harmed you. I mean, that does
seem to be the middle path between these two extremes. I think you're right. It's so crucial to be
able to engage in the both end of truth telling and accountability. So we need to reckon with wrongs. We need to resist
minimizing them or excusing or ignoring or simply distracting ourselves from them because that
can reward bad behavior, especially by disagreeable personalities who feel emboldened by that.
personalities who feel emboldened by that. And at the same time, when vindication is pursued
predominantly through vindictiveness,
that is a very destructive pattern too.
And so if a group wants to move forward
or if a person wants to move forward,
they have to be sure that they can see that humanity,
and they can see the kind of corrective change that needs to be enacted so that those past
wrongs don't simply get perpetuated into the future. You've talked Charlotte about how,
in some ways, when it comes to forgiving other people, it's this balance between seeking accountability and exercising empathy.
How does this balance play out when it comes to forgiving ourselves for things that we have said or done?
One thing that's really powerful is how important it is to humbly reckon with our own capacity for wrongdoing and to address
the reality of hurts that we have caused others by behaving in ways that are unfair or unjust.
But at the same time, to be understanding and patient with ourselves, even as we are persistent and intentional in trying to do the right thing in our relationship with others.
It's just so crucial to have the accountability piece there, though, because otherwise I think we can slip into sort of a cheap grace that so readily, you know, sees all the reasons why we should be excused of the things we've done, but finds it so hard to extend mercy to others. So it's a complicated
thing to get the right mix. I want to play your clip from the movie Paid Forward. Helen
Hans character is a single mother and recovering alcoholic and she's speaking to her mother
about being traumatized during her childhood. Take a listen to the clip.
I want to try to do something.
All the things when I was a kid,
When I was a kid, the booze and the men, what happened to me when you weren't looking? I know we're all weak.
Not you.
No, I've been weak.
Well, here's the thing.
I forgive you.
I want to speak a moment, Charlotte, about why many of us find these moments moving, even
when we are not involved, when we are not the protagonist,
why is it that we find the granting
of forgiveness to be beautiful?
It's so striking.
When we have a sense that someone has seen it,
they can tell the truth about it,
and they have suffered.
There's just a very, very powerful awareness of the reaching across
that injustice gap to extend some sort of kindness, a mercy to someone that takes our It is remarkable when we witness these profound, generous gifts of forgiveness.
And I think it inspires hope for us too.
I am borrowing this from Everett Worthington, but you know he is quick to say and I join with this
perspective that forgiving is about giving, but in giving there's receiving
too. Charlotte Whitfley is a psychologist at Hope College in Michigan. Charlotte
thank you for joining me today on Hidden Brain. Thank you so much for having me on Hidden Brain.
It's a joy.
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Next week, why it's so hard to apologize or to admit when we've
hurt someone? I'm Shankar Vedantin, see you next week. you