Forgiveness is not for the person who hurt you.
This is the most important thing to understand before any conversation about forgiveness can be useful. The person who hurt you has their own inner life, their own rationalizations, their own pain they are or are not working through. Your forgiveness of them does not change their experience. It changes yours.
As Unicole Unicron writes in Fundamentals of UNICULT: “When you forgive someone, it’s for yourself, not for them. Your anger doesn’t hurt them but your forgiveness has the potential to teach them about higher ways of being.”
That last sentence matters. Forgiveness, when it comes from genuine release rather than performance, does have an effect on others. Not because it fixes them. But because you stop feeding the energetic loop that keeps both of you locked in the same pattern.
The Weight of Grudges
There is a reason forgiveness cultures, spiritual traditions from Buddhism to Christianity to indigenous healing practices, have consistently identified forgiveness as one of the most powerful acts a human being can take. It is not sentimentality. It is not weakness. It is the recognition of a hard truth: grudges cost you more than they cost the person you are holding them against.
Unicole is blunt about this:
“Grudges and anger are vibrationally low. They bring your energy down. Grudges and anger truly do not impact the person who hurt you. The person who hurt you has their own Personal Reality going on. They either feel good or bad about their actions and experience. Your feelings toward them will not change that.”
You can spend years replaying what someone did to you. You can build a case so airtight that every reasonable person would agree you have every right to your anger. And you would be correct. And it would still be costing you. Not them. You.
What Forgiveness Is Not
Forgiveness is not the same as reconciliation. You do not have to let someone back into your life to forgive them. You do not have to tell them you forgive them. You do not have to pretend the harm did not happen.
Forgiveness is also not a one-time event. It is often a practice, something you return to over and over as grief or anger resurfaces. The UNICULT framework for this is honest about the timeline:
“This process will likely take years depending on the severity of your trauma. Be patient and allow yourself to be angry and hurt for as long as it serves you.”
That phrase deserves emphasis: as long as it serves you. Your pain is a messenger. It is telling you something. The instruction is not to rush past it. The instruction is to listen to what it has to teach, extract that teaching, and then decide whether continued suffering is serving your growth or just filling space where growth could be.
The Root Below the Wound
UNICULT offers a specific practice for moving through forgiveness. One of the most useful steps is this one: trace the pain. When you are hurt by something someone does, ask yourself when you first felt this way. Go back. The answer is almost always in childhood, in a moment where your needs were not met, where you were not safe, where the world taught you to expect a certain kind of treatment.
When you find that original wound, something shifts. The current situation stops being quite so enormous. The person who hurt you stops being quite so uniquely devastating. You see that they landed on a bruise that was already there long before they arrived.
That does not excuse them. But it gives you back some of your power. The story stops being entirely about them.
Forgiveness as Freedom
Unicole speaks from experience about what forgiveness actually produces. Having worked through some of the deepest wounds a person can carry, the conclusion is not theoretical:
“Forgiveness allows you to grow beyond the limitations of your pain. You are in charge of how you experience the world, no one else is. Coming from that place of love will allow you to act in a way of light. You will unlock so much freedom and JOY that it will be impossible to contain.”
The freedom is not freedom from the fact of what happened. It is freedom from carrying it as your primary identity, your dominant lens, the thing that defines your expectations of the world going forward.
You get to put it down. Not for them. For you.
This article was inspired by
Fundamentals of UNICULT by Unicole Unicron
The official philosophical text of UNICULT. A guide to JOY, consciousness, and building the world you actually want to live in.
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