The Miracle of Self Forgiveness
by: Diane Harmony
Our hearts melted into one another’s in instant recognition during that
first hug. Two bodies reunited after 36 years...two spirits that had
never been separated. The gap of time was instantly filled during that
one moment of reunion. The bond of mother and daughter can never be
broken. Only shame, guilt and remorse fed the fire of apparent
separation. Only forgiveness would dowse the flames and complete the
circle of love.
Thirty-six years before, I had given birth to my first daughter and then
released her for adoption. Suffering from a heart broken by the decision
to honor my parents’ wishes that I not marry my first love, I emerged
from being an "unwed mother" with emotional scars so great that my only
defense was to bury them deeply, pick up my life as though nothing had
happened, and go on. So successful was my denial of the gaping hole in
my heart that, as the years passed, I could not even remember my child’s
birth date.
How was it possible then, some 30 years, four children and two marriages
later, that I could find myself in a class of spiritual counseling
students that had six other women who shared the same closely held past
that I did? We were all birth mothers. Our secret became our magnet, and
we began to meet and vision a ministry at our church that could
prayerfully support all people who are affected by adoption: adoptees,
birthparents and adoptive parents. It was a noble idea, and one that
would require that we do our own healing work in order to be available
to others.
And so we began the excruciating journey of dredging up our pain. We
individually faced our own demons -- guilt, shame, blame, anger and
self-recrimination -- at whatever pace we felt capable of moving, and
collectively we prayed for one another and all those whose pain we
share. We created the Adoption Triad Ministry at The Agape Center of
Truth in Los Angeles and invited people touched by adoption to come and
tell their stories and join in prayer each month. We opened the way to
allow each member of the triad -- adoptee, adoptive parent and birth
parent -- to dialog with the other, seeking an understanding of the
unique emotional issues that each carries. And some of us searched to
find our child and/or parent. My decision to try to find my daughter
opened up my personal Pandora’s box.
It was in that atmosphere of prayer and spiritual guidance that I felt
safe enough to face my own walls of defense and denial and try to bring
them down. The process was agonizing. Not only was I delving into the
shame and pain I had caused my parents and siblings by becoming a
pregnant teenager, I was allowing to surface the hatred I held for
myself for not having fought for what I wanted...my mate and my baby.
What I was inviting into conscious awareness - and ultimately acceptance
- were the shame and guilt of having sinned, according to the church of
my childhood as well as the mores of society in 1961. I was admitting
that I was filled with rage at my parents for interrupting my fantasy to
have the perfect family, and at my boyfriend for not having fought
harder to save me from this torturous sentence of a banished offender.
During the search for my daughter, I was required on numerous occasions
to recall those difficult circumstances surrounding her birth, and it
was all I could do to keep from passing out. As I unleashed one tidal
wave after another of suppressed feelings, I was constantly on the verge
of emotional overwhelm. What kept me going was my deep, deep desire to
find my daughter, to tell her how much I loved her, to share with her
that she was conceived in love, and to complete the circle that began
with her birth.
And so I searched...and I prayed...and I began to forgive. As I
progressed through the classes in spirituality that were preparing me to
be a spiritual counselor and prayer practitioner, I came to realize that
without forgiveness I would be unable to free myself from the maze of
negative self-judgment which I had allowed to tarnish the beauty of the
birth of my daughter. I understood that if I were to welcome her with
true open arms now, I had to find the good in my being her birth mother.
I knew that the healing miracle I so dearly sought was possible only
when I released my guilt, shame and blame about the circumstances
surrounding her coming into this world.
"Seventy times seven." Jesus admonishes us that this is how often we
need to forgive in order to be free -- in other words, as often as it
takes. I was well on my way to completing my forgiveness of the other
actors in my drama -- my parents, my first love, my church, my society.
Now it was time to forgive myself. I had held myself on the cross of
self-blame and shame for so long that I wasn’t sure how to let myself
off.
I began by feeling great compassion for the teenager I was who was so in
love and so passionate about life, and who only wanted to experience and
express that love in any way she knew how. I listened to that
19-year-old’s pain of profound loss and of feeling that she did not
belong. That pain had been so severe that she had essentially shut
herself off from trusting her own beautiful heart. I listened to her,
consoled her, told her how much I loved her and that I would not let
that kind of pain happen to her again. The I AM of me (my God Self)
forgave her for any belief she held about being a "bad girl," a
"sinner," an "undesirable good-for-nothing," and a "cause of pain to
others."
The months -- and yes, years -- that I have spent forgiving the layers
of self-recrimination and loathing I felt for myself have truly
unburdened me. Freeing myself from the shackles of that seemingly
unforgivable and unforgiving past has truly given me a new life. The
attitude I now hold toward myself, my family, my first love and my
pregnancy is only gratitude, gratitude for one of the greatest growth
experiences of my life. By coming to terms with my past, the gift of
compassion was ignited in me -- a gift I can and do readily share with
all those I teach and counsel. The miracle experienced from my
commitment to forgiveness is the profound love I share with my
first-born daughter, a love activated the moment we hugged that has
continued to enrich my life ever since.
See Also:
Forgiveness
God is powerful to convert even the most sinister plots of the
unrighteous for the good of righteous.
Do You Operate in Fear or
Faith?
The greatest tool the enemy uses against us in life is fear, because
fear keeps us from doing many of those things we would like to do in
order to make our lives, and the lives of others, more complete and
prosperous.
Giving
Thanks and Spiritual Healing
God calls us not as we should be but as we are. Each of us has our own
unique flaws. If we will allow it, the Lord will
use our flaws to bring beauty and grace in service of God and humanity. In
God's great economy, nothing goes to waste.
God's
Love
The greatest power in the world is not the Hydrogen bomb, but it is the
redeeming love of God. The Hydrogen bomb may destroy the whole world but
only the redeeming love of God can make it anew.

Diane Harmony is in the business of personal and spiritual empowerment.
She is an author, platform speaker, workshop/class teacher and facilitator,
ordained Minister of Religious Science and guide on spiritual retreats. Today,
Diane is the leader of her own company, Universal Harmony Inc. You can visit her
web site at:
http://www.5gifts.com .