Jared Allen | April 15, 2026
Presented By All Touch Case
Not forgiving ourselves can feel like protection. We hold onto the past like a warning sign, convinced that letting it go might mean forgetting what it cost us. Underneath that is a deeper belief that forgiveness equals erasure. So instead of processing the pain, we preserve it. We carry it forward as if holding onto it is what keeps us from repeating the behavior.
We tell ourselves guilt is useful. That if we keep replaying the moment, we’ll stay sharp, disciplined, and in control. So we revisit it, assign meaning to it, and treat it like instruction. Over time, it becomes a system built on pressure rather than growth. Something that feels like accountability, but slowly turns into weight. In trying to move forward, we end up staying stuck.
At the core of this is fear. Fear of doing something we could have prevented if we had just remembered how much it hurt last time. So we treat pain like a tool. Something to hold onto. Something we can use.
Holding onto something doesn’t always mean it’s valuable. Sometimes it just means we haven’t given ourselves permission to let it go. The weight stays, not because it needs to, but because we’ve decided it should.
But that raises a real question. Is everything worth remembering just because it was painful?
Not everything worth forgiving is worth remembering. We assign meaning to moments because we choose to. Not because they deserve to carry that weight forever. Holding onto something doesn’t make it meaningful. It usually just makes it heavy.
Forgiveness challenges that instinct. It asks us to let go of the anger, but also the need to preserve the pain as proof. It asks us to stop treating the memory like something fragile that needs to be protected.
In a lot of ways, it’s like holding onto a sealed box. As long as it stays closed, the value is speculative. We convince ourselves there’s something inside worth holding onto. Something important. Something defining. But we don’t actually know until we open it.
So allow yourself to open the box. Forgiveness is what lets you see what was really there. Not what you assumed. Not what the pain told you. What’s actually true.
When you refuse to forgive, you’re not protecting yourself. You’re choosing a version of the story and locking it in place. You’re treating your interpretation as truth without ever looking deeper.
That’s its own kind of risk. You can’t understand why something happened, or what it meant, without seeing it fully. And you can’t see it fully if you’re still holding onto it the same way.
Forgiveness isn’t about forgetting. It’s about seeing clearly, letting go of what no longer serves you, and moving forward with something lighter than what you’ve been carrying.
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Sometimes the only way to understand what you’ve been holding onto is to finally let it go.
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