How well can you 'let something go'?

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EeveeElectro

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Aug 3, 2008
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I hold a grudge like a motherbitch. I have a horrible need for revenge too. If someone seriously fucks me over and doesn't apologise, I find ways of slowly destroying their lives and if I hate them that much, I'll do it.
It takes me MUCH longer to get over things than most people and sometimes when I have a quiet moment to myself I can end up getting angry or upset thinking about things that have happened in the past.
Even people who have done nothing bad to me recently, I still think they are a ****.

I know that's not healthy in the slightest, maybe it's because I've had a lot more trauma in my life than most people I know.
 

Fiz_The_Toaster

books, Books, BOOKS
Legacy
Jan 19, 2011
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It's very rare that I will hold someone against someone since they really have to screw me over bad enough for me to do that. After that? Good fucking luck getting back on my good side.

Other than that, I let a lot of things ago and I just shrug it off. I guess to the point where it seems like I don't care, which is fair, but I really don't want things to get to me to the point where it's all I think about. I have better things to do with my time.

That's not to say that I don't get initially angry over things because I'm not a robot, but it's nothing like a good beer (or four) and a ***** session can't fix. :D
 

Frankster

Space Ace
Mar 13, 2009
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I've got an annoyingly good memory for negativity, I almost never forget an insult whereas compliments tend to be brushed aside (also praise makes me suspicious in general and I have no idea how to accept a compliment without being awkward or outright deflecting it or saying something negative to balance it out) and quickly forgotten.

As a result when I hold a grudge, it tends to be a long lasting one. Most negatively I've noticed this also affects how I remember people: so I'm far more likely to remember the bad times with old friends and be uninterested in meeting up until I randomly talk to them and go all "damn that's why I liked them, we had some good times too we did...". I recognize this as being a bad thing that just leads to unhappiness so I try to be conscious of this failing.

Catchpra: Too Late. Well thanks a lot catchpra, I won't forget this! D:<
 

Lynx

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Jul 24, 2009
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Depends, I guess. If someone's wronged me, but obviously without meaning to, I can let it go quickly. It's when I'm unsure of the reason for someone's behavior that I tend to linger. As soon as I get a valid explanation for it though (whether it's a forgivable one or not) I can move past it. It's the unanswered questions that often keep me holding on to negative feelings. If that makes any sense.
 

Euryalus

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Jun 30, 2012
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Padwolf said:
It depends on what it is. Negative things I sometimes find hard to let go of, like if I have been slighted and at the time it happened I let it slide by but later on it will come into my mind and I'll find myself getting angry over it.
T0ad 0f Truth said:
99% of the time I let things slide no problem... That other 1%... When what you did genuinely hurt me... I try very hard not to stay angry, but god damn am I shit at it.

I won't treat you poorly because of it, but I may silently hate you.
I'm the same way really, I try hard not to be angry, I always sit and think about how pointless it is to be angry, but I can't help it. I keep bottling when things have upset me, and then bring it out months later when I finally crack and have a good ol fashioned scream! When it comes to breakups, I try not to let those get me down, and both times I've gone through them I've returned to normal life after a few days.

When it comes to positive things, I do like to keep hold of them. That way when hormones raise their ugly heads at that time of the month, I can go "Hey emotions, remember when this happened? Or when this was said about you?"
Scream... yes... totally not break my things in a stupid blind rage... >.>

And A caveat I would add is that if I don't like you, am friends with you, or friends with friends of yours... I'm far less silent about my hate. It's rare that strangers/not people I was close to bother me that much though...

Actually thinking this through is making me worried about how much anger I hold onto and internalise xD
 

Euryalus

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Jun 30, 2012
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Lynx said:
Depends, I guess. If someone's wronged me, but obviously without meaning to, I can let it go quickly. It's when I'm unsure of the reason for someone's behavior that I tend to linger. As soon as I get a valid explanation for it though (whether it's a forgivable one or not) I can move past it. It's the unanswered questions that often keep me holding on to negative feelings. If that makes any sense.
Honestly I'd rather be wronged by a blatant asshole than a "timid" vindictive one. Openness is refreshing even if the shitty kind?
 

Lynx

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Jul 24, 2009
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T0ad 0f Truth said:
Lynx said:
Depends, I guess. If someone's wronged me, but obviously without meaning to, I can let it go quickly. It's when I'm unsure of the reason for someone's behavior that I tend to linger. As soon as I get a valid explanation for it though (whether it's a forgivable one or not) I can move past it. It's the unanswered questions that often keep me holding on to negative feelings. If that makes any sense.
Honestly I'd rather be wronged by a blatant asshole than a "timid" vindictive one. Openness is refreshing even if the shitty kind?
I suppose I would too, but in this scenario I meant more of an "accidental" wrong, if you know what I mean? I can forgive someone stepping on my toes because they have clumsy feet. But otherwise I agree with you. E.g. girls who pretend to be my friend and wrap their insults in a layer of cutesy courtesy so it's impossible to confront them, yeah, those I have a hard time forgiving. :p


Captcha: honest tea...
 

Evonisia

Your sinner, in secret
Jun 24, 2013
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I hold grudges fairly easily, while at the same time I find it hard to keep a hold of positive things said or done to me. I remember them but not specifics and they've little effect on me. Grudges will stay in my mind for ages.
 

geK0

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Jun 24, 2011
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I don't typically let things go, but I'm not up front about it. I usually conceal my grudge instead of feeling it. But sometimes I can't hold it back anymore and I just let it go. I let my fears control me but eventually they just don't get to me at all anymore and after that there's no right or wrong, no rules for me and I just feel free.
 

rosac

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Sep 13, 2008
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people being dicks I let slide easily, people being nice I cling on to. It's not great, especially as I either over interpret or misread their actions. Now I just don't make moves any more haha
 

DoctorObviously

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May 22, 2009
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Yopaz said:
Now this probably sounds like bad advise (and it probably is), but you could try giving up completely. I did that and decided to just have casual relationships and it has made social interactions a lot easier. I relax more and I can improve my social skills without drowning in social anxiety. It is possible to turn this around, but it requires some effort. Now it might not be too uplifting coming from me, but you should just try to get experience in a way that seems safe for you. For me that was simply ruling out that I would ever end up in a relationship, but you could probably find a healthier solution if you try.
Actually, I kind of already have given up. The last time I got stood up was because "I didn't do enough". To make matters worse, most people in my social circle agree that, why yes, in order to be "worth" somebody's time is to be constantly funny 68 hours per day, constantly be smooth through every conversation, douche her with gifts, each one different than the other and generally have a new topic to talk about everyday, all day. Never be uninteresting, never have a bad day, or just a "regular day". And you know what? I just can't do that. I'm sick of it. It's exhausting. If this is what relationships are, then I honestly don't want to be in one. I don't know if I simply met the worst stereotypes, but there you go, those were my experiences.

And no, I think yours is a good solution. It's better, I think, to let everything happen as it goes rather than actually wanting to try hard and be on the top of your game.
 

Caiphus

Social Office Corridor
Mar 31, 2010
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I don't really hold grudges. I'm not super good in awkward situations though, or in situations where I feel like someone might not like me.

So if someone gets into an argument with me, or does/says something mean, I'll usually just avoid them. Not in like a silent treatment way, but more of a sheepish way. Even if I don't particularly dislike them or anything.
 

Lilani

Sometimes known as CaitieLou
May 27, 2009
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Due to a bad experience with my boss recently, I've learned the difference between what I consider to be annoyance and frustration, and what I consider to be true anger. Basically, I can deal with being annoyed or frustrated. Those are fleeting emotions, usually driven by immediate pressures which are resolved quickly and often on their own. Perhaps it's just an annoying quirk, or some kind of accident. Just something that isn't deliberate in nature. Unless it's something that's very persistent over a long period of time, I won't bother asking them to address it in some way. I'll just let it be, and accept it as a part of life's little inconveniences. For example, I live in a ground level apartment and my bedroom windows face the parking lot. I get ANNOYED when people sit there parked in a space after dark with their headlights on for 10 or 15 minutes, shining into my window when I'm trying to sleep like a thousand suns. However, I don't get ANGRY because I know these people aren't deliberately leaving their lights on to torment me, and I know it's partially my fault for being lazy and not hanging my blinds up.

However, I will become ANGRY if I believe the action was deliberate. And when I'm angry about something, I'm not willing to let it go after the original moment of frustration has ebbed. When I'm angry, I want them to address what they've done wrong. That doesn't necessarily mean apologize, but I do want them to know what they've done wrong and that I am not okay with it. For example, the bad experience with my boss had to do with him taking advantage of his position to get me to do something for his wife (who does work for another company closely affiliated with the company we work for) which if ANYBODY else in the company had requested for me to do it, he would have told me not because it's not my job. THAT I am not okay with. It wasn't illegal or anything like that, but it made me have to sacrifice about an hour and a half of work on my other projects to do this thing which if it had been ANYONE else, I would have told her, "Sorry, I'm not the person you need, find somebody else." And it's not the first time he's done something like that, either. He has no qualms with using his position to further personal projects or to help his wife with projects that he really shouldn't have anything to do with, and it annoys all of us below him because we know if we ever did the same it would put him in a righteous fury.

So basically, I'm pretty good at letting little things slide. I worked in retail for a long time and you rather have to learn to let things go or else you'll go crazy. However, I have a much more difficult time forgiving somebody who is DELIBERATELY doing things to make my life hell, or is holding me to standards they don't hold to themselves. Though I think I have the most trouble forgiving myself, and overcoming my own faults and fears.
 

Section Crow

Infamous Scribbler for Life
Aug 26, 2009
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Compliments, praise and anything that falls within that nature usually falls flat with me, lasting no longer than about 2 seconds of consideration followed by apathy. The little minor errors remain as phantoms to be irreverent killjoys that pop up on occasion.

With other people in the tense of grudges and general relations, I care very little about how they operate, what they say or what they do probably because I don't really expect anything of them, so if there being unpleasant then that's just what I'm going to deal with. Thus I let go extremely easily unless I specifically try to out someone into a state of begrudging acceptance, usually by being a disconnected and unpleasant shit.