Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 508812772 series 3692586
Content provided by AbFabNerd. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by AbFabNerd or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://staging.podcastplayer.com/legal.

Forgiving Failure Facilitates Freedom

Forgiveness sounds noble and wise—until you’re the one holding the hurt. Everyone says forgiveness is for you, not the other person. I know that’s true. And yet, when you’ve been betrayed, abused, or abandoned, forgiving can feel like letting someone off the hook. Like their pain-free life is a reward for what they did to you.

I’ve lived that tug-of-war. I’ve clung to anger like armor, believing my resentment was the only way to make someone pay. But the truth? Forgiveness isn’t about freeing them—it’s about freeing you.

The harder part, though, isn’t forgiving others. It’s forgiving yourself.
Maybe it’s the shame of a relapse. Maybe it’s the night you said things you can’t unsay. Maybe it’s a choice so heavy you can’t even name it out loud. We punish ourselves with guilt, replaying mistakes like a broken record, convinced we deserve a life sentence of pain.

But here’s the reality:
You can’t undo the past.
You can’t rewrite the damage.
You can choose a different future.

Forgiving failure—especially your own—isn’t about erasing consequences. It’s about refusing to stay imprisoned by them. Self-forgiveness is the doorway to healing, to growth, to the freedom to try again.

“Forgiving Failure Facilitates Freedom” isn’t just a mantra. It’s a lifeline. When you forgive yourself, you loosen the chains of shame and step into the possibility of becoming someone new. That’s where freedom lives.

“Forgiving Failure Facilitates Freedom”, is directed towards you, forgiving yourself for the choices you've made, for the pain you have caused, for the unforgivable things.

And it doesn't even have to be things that you've done in a state of addiction. That is my primary example, because I was in that state of addiction for so long that there was nothing else outside of it.

But I know that a lot of people make mistakes, not within the parameters of an addictive behavior, but just in life. And this applies to those people as well.

You have to be able to forgive yourself for that failure. Learn what you can from it and grow. If you are constantly berating yourself for your failures, because maybe you think you need to be a perfectionist… you could never be better. You'll always be stuck, feeling like you're not good enough, feeling like you're unworthy. Overwhelmed with your own guilt and shame.

“Forgiving Failure Facilitates Freedom”.

It facilitates freedom for you, it facilitates freedom for others, and it is absolutely essential if you want to break the chains of addiction. Absolutely essential.

I wish for you healing and personal growth.

Please Prioritize Self-Care and Mindfulness

ALL MY LOVE,

AbFabNerd

Mindfulness & Self-Care, Addiction Recovery, Personal Growth, Emotional Healing

#ForgivingFailure #SelfForgiveness #HealingJourney #Mindfulness #AddictionRecovery #PersonalGrowth #EmotionalHealing #FreedomThroughForgiveness #AbFabNerd

www.abfabnerd.com

  continue reading

4 episodes