Of course, the "easy" part of the title is a lie.
1. Acknowledge there is a problem. Understand that even if you do not believe that something you did or said was hurtful, the other person does. To disregard this feeling is to disregard the other person entirely. If you are confused about what was hurtful, ask. Any reasonable person will tell you
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If ONLY people actually followed this. Jesus. -_-
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The only way to truly apologize is to say, "I see that I've hurt you. What can I do to make it better?" then DO IT. (To the best of anyone's ability... no-one is Superman but I think for most human beings, even watching someone -try- their hardest to fix it will inevitably fix it.)
I've been thinking of this post for well over a year. I'm just now realizing that I -need- to say it.
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And yeah, just seeing someone make the earnest effort, even if they don't succeed, is enough to make *me* feel better. :)
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Another phrase I absolutely can't stand is, "I'm sorry that you feel that way." It's a way of saying "I'm sorry" without taking -any- responsibility for the actions that may have caused the hurt. "I'm sorry for any pain I have caused" shows much more true desire to make it right for the other person. Which is what one would hope a genuine, heartfelt apology is for.
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Thank you.
I think that, in the next few days, I'll try to write the flip side as well. That's definitely a perspective that also needs to be stated.
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But it really bothers me when the response to that is not even to tell me what mistake I've made. It does happen that we do things without knowing.
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There's always shit on both sides. It's getting through the shit and back to a healthy, respectful place that is the most important part of the whole process.
How are you? *squeezes*
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I've made an effort to hang with peeps more the last few weeks. I will keep trying, but I'm bad at it. :)
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