avatarLucy Dan 蛋小姐 (she/her/她)

Summary

Lucy Dan reflects on the concept of forgiveness, suggesting that it is distinct from forgetting and should be accompanied by remembering the lessons learned from past harm.

Abstract

The web content presents a contemplation on forgiveness through a free verse poem by Lucy Dan. Dan challenges the traditional adage of "forgive and forget," proposing instead that true forgiveness does not necessitate erasing the memory of the offense. She argues that while one can forgive, it is crucial to remember the causality of events and the harm caused, even if unintentional, to prevent future occurrences of such harm. Dan emphasizes the importance of learning from past experiences and acknowledges the role of memory in this process. The poem is a response to the "GiaB ‘Dear Genie’ prompt #2: forgiveness" and includes a photograph by Teslariu Mihai. Dan expresses gratitude to Shaheena Chowdhury and others for inspiring her to explore this topic and tags several individuals, possibly inviting them to engage with the theme of forgiveness further.

Opinions

  • Forgiveness should not be equated with forgetting; true forgiveness involves recognizing and internalizing the lessons from past events.
  • Remembering the consequences of actions, even when they stem from good intentions, is vital to prevent the repetition of harm.
  • The act of forgetting in the context of forgiveness can be seen as an act of malice if it leads to the ignorance or dismissal of the harm caused.
  • Learning from past mistakes is an essential component of growth and is facilitated by remembering, not forgetting.
  • The author acknowledges the influence of other writers and thinkers in shaping her perspective on forgiveness and invites further dialogue on the subject.

Free Verse Poetry

Forgive But Don’t Forget

GiaB ‘Dear Genie’ prompt #2: forgiveness

Photo by Teslariu Mihai on Unsplash

The ages-old wisdom is to forgive and to forget, as if they are twins that skip into your life and out again as soon as you reach the stage of acceptance.

Perhaps my own newer wisdom is to realize that forgiveness does not need to be accompanied by forgetting in order for it to be correct by some old definition.

We may choose to forgive, to accept that good or misplaced intentions may have gone terribly wrong, but not to forget the lesson that cause A led to outcome B, for even with good or misplaced intentions, if repeated while forgetting or even ignoring the harm perpetuated is malice itself.

We must remember to learn.

Lucy Dan 蛋小姐 (she/her/她) wants to thank Shaheena Chowdhury from Genius in a Bottle for the prompt “forgiveness”, and Carlos Garbiras (his poem here) and Melanie J. (her poem here) for encouraging her to chime in on this topic.

Tagging h.a wadi | Alan Henley | Carolyn Riker | Pretheesh Presannan | Anthi Psomiadou| Carolyn Hastings | Agnes Laurens if you’re up to it.

Poetry
Giab Dg
Forgiveness
Free Verse Poetry
Genius In A Bottle
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