
You don’t have to love who you were or what you did, in order to forgive yourself.
I say this as someone who has struggled with enormous regret for years.
Regret is literally the biggest challenge in my own trauma and addiction recovery.
I don’t love who I was or patterns of behavior that defined my life for…decades, actually.
I look back and I cringe. Maybe you can relate.
In my trauma recovery, I’ve come to understand that some, maybe many, of the situations that I hate thinking about now, weren’t actually my fault or my “choice.”
But that doesn’t always help, does it?
I still don’t love who I was or how I responded to those situations.
I wish I’d have been cooler.
Smarter.
More skilled.
I wish I’d had more integrity, been truer to myself.
What many people don’t understand about trauma recovery is, it’s not just about what happened to us.
It’s also about how we responded at the time— and how we respond now to memories and feelings associated with what happened.
There were times when I was not a nice person. Not a reliable person. Not a person of integrity.
Yes, I can have some compassion for and extend some grace to who I was then— he was, after all, working with the tools he had at the time.
But I still don’t love it.
I get asked a lot about the relationship between self compassion, self forgiveness, and those times when we weren’t our best selves.
“What if I actually DID hurt someone, even if I was down the rabbit hole of a trauma response that I didn’t choose?”
Well, what if?
I actually agree that our trauma wounds don’t, actually, give us a “free pass” to hurt people.
If we weren’t our best selves, if we behaved destructively, we should own up to that.
The problem that many of us trauma survivors have with “owing up” to our past behavior, tough, is that we have a tendency, because of our trauma programming, to blow right past “accepting responsibility” and lock right in on “kicking the sh*t out of ourselves.”
Kicking the sh*t out of ourselves is not useful, necessary, or deserved.
“Personal responsibility” and “making amends” in the context of trauma recovery is not about self-punishment.
It IS about accountability— and realistic accountability is about changed behavior.
We don’t change behavior long term out of shame or punishment.
As counterintuitive as it might be, self-forgiveness puts us in a much better position to sustainably change how we think, feel, and behave going forward.
“Grace over guilt” is not just a catchy slogan.
It’s a summary of how we practically, realistically approach our role in the train wreck of our past.
Neither you nor I require “forgiveness” for things that happened TO us.
And both you and I can realistically, self-compassionately take responsibly for how we’ve responded to the things that have happened to us without kicking the sh*t out of ourselves.
With practice, we can do that, anyway.









