
“Some of us think holding on makes us strong, but sometimes it is letting go.”
Herman Hesse
I often write about finding lightness in life.
It can come from an unhurried but effective day at work or from uncluttering your home.
Or from learning how to let go and move on in life.
Learning to let go of a relationship, of something else in your past, of something that is just an unimportant distraction or of trying to control what you cannot control can free up huge amounts of the energy and the time you have to use for something better and more fulfilling.
It is not always easy. But it can be life-changing.
In this article you can find five steps that have made it easier for me to let go over the years.
I hope they will help you too.
Step 1: Know the benefits of not letting go.
Why is it sometimes hard to let go of something?
Well, to be honest, there are advantages and benefits to not letting go. At least for instant gratification and in the short run.
- You get to keep feeling like you are right. And like the other person is wrong. And that can be a pleasant feeling and way to look at the situation at hand.
- You can assume the victim role. And get attention, support and comfort from other people.
- You don’t have to go out into the scary unknown. You can cling to what you know instead, to what is familiar and safe even if it’s now just a dream of what you once had.
I have not let go of things in the past because of these reasons. I still sometimes delay letting go of things because of those benefits above.
But I am also conscious of the fact that they are something I get out of not letting go. And I know that in the end they are not worth it.
Because…
- What will the long-term consequences be in my life if I do not let go?
- How will it affect the next 5 years in my life and the relationships I have both with other people and with myself?
The mix of knowing how those benefits will hurt me in the long run and of knowing that there are even bigger benefits that I can get from letting go become a powerful motivator that pushes me on to let go for my own sake and happiness.
Step 2: Accept what is, then let go.
When you accept what is, that this has happened then it becomes easier to let go.
Why?
Because when you’re still struggling in your mind against what has happened then you feed that memory or situation with more energy.
You make what someone said or did even bigger and more powerful in your mind than it might have been in reality.
By accepting that it simply has happened – that you were rejected after a date for example – and letting it in instead of trying to push it away something odd happens after a while.
The issue or your memory of the situation becomes less powerful in your mind. You don’t feel as upset or sad about it as you did before. You become less emotionally attached to it.
And so it becomes easier to let go and for you to move on with your life.
Step 3: Forgive.
If someone wrongs you then it will probably cause you pain for a while.
But after that you have a choice.
You can refuse to let go of what happened. And instead let it interfere with your relationship and replay what happened over and over in your mind.
Or you can choose to forgive.
First accepting what happened can be helpful to make it easier to forgive.
Another thing you can do is not to focus on forgiving because it is “something you’re supposed to do”.
Instead, if you like, find the motivation to forgive for you own sake. Do it for your own well-being, happiness and for the time you have left in your life.
Because, as Catherine Ponder says:
“When you hold resentment toward another, you are bound to that person or condition by an emotional link that is stronger than steel. Forgiveness is the only way to dissolve that link and get free.”
And that you forgive does not mean that you have to stay passive towards your future.
You may for example choose to forgive but also to spend less time or no time in the future with someone who has hurt you.
Step 4: Focus on what you CAN influence in your life.
By reliving what happened over and over in your mind you aren’t really changing anything.
Unless you have a time-machine you don’t have any control over the past.
And being distracted or worried by things that you cannot control in your life in any way right now doesn’t help.
So ask yourself:
- What CAN I focus my time and energy on instead to actually make positive progress or a change in my life?
- And what is one small step I can take today to get started with that?
My experience has been that by switching my focus from what I cannot influence to what I actually have influence over and by doing that over and over again – by using questions like the ones above – it becomes easier and easier to stop worrying and to let go of what has happened or what I cannot control.
Step 5: Let go again (if necessary).
If you let go of something that happened or some distraction in your life then that might not be the end of it.
Life is not always that neat. The issue or distraction might pop up again.
Then let it go once more.
I have found that each time I let something go it pops up less and less frequently and it has less power over me.
Plus, this extra practice will make it easier to let go in the future. Letting go is something you’ll get better at over time just like for example keeping an optimistic mindset during tough times.
Henrik Edberg is the creator of the Positivity Blog and has written weekly articles here since 2006. He has a bachelor’s degree in journalism from the University of Gothenburg and has been featured on Lifehacker, HuffPost and Paulo Coelho’s blog.
Comments on this entry are closed.
Thank you so much, i jest closed the episode of my 1 year distraction,which made me hurted,ur words became the key to lock such distractions,thank you again.
Loved this beautiful article….Really Henrik all these articles of yours have a positive and a practical approach in my life.
Hey Henrik,
Another good post by you! Letting go is something huge for everybody and I think it is important for us to do it a lot more often than we may think. Life is always attacking us in various ways, so moving from one thing to the next is essential in our development.
I think it is also important that we actually understand what it is that we should even be letting go of. We might be blinded to the fact that whatever it is might be unhealthy or holding us back in some type of way. Being aware of those things or people unworthy of my attention sometimes is the hardest part for me.
Thanks a lot for the post!
Well done.
Incredible, isn’t it, that every moment is a choice? We can choose to live a life chained to the past or focused on the now.
Really appreciated the great message of this post and shared it with my community. I wrote this post on forgiveness on my blog recently and think it ties in great to your perspective: http://sometimesdancing.com/forgive-reconcile-question/
Thanks for sharing your helpful insights, Henrik. Bless!
woow it just fuond me trying to let go some things. actually it is asingle honor to get such a brave words that can change your life.am a happy person today
Henrik, I swear you wrote this article specifically to me!!!!
the words is so strong that some found it hard to let go.but you have disclose the reasons for letting go our pains.thanks for the wonderful teachings/reasons
This article speaks volumes to me!!! Because of this article I’m choosing to let go, forgive, and motivate myself to focus on a positive, happier, me! Thanks Henrik.
Layla
Funny how things pop up at appropriate times… Thanks again, Henrik!
Must let go. If you don’t let go then the non let goes will be your shadows of the future.
thanks a lot because of your really interesting articles . I really do enjoy them and I have changed my life a lot.
Something is wrong with me I think. I blame Disney. Now all I hear anytime I see that phrase is the “Let it Go” song from Frozen. Ugh. Great message all the same, and probably one of the hardest things to do. Speaking firsthand, I’m a control freak to a point, I want control over as much as I can with my own life, but there again – it’s knowing the difference between what you can control and what you cannot. Controlling someone else is not an option, nor is being responsible for their decisions. It makes it easier to let go when you are able to stop blaming yourself for something you had no control over, and wasn’t your fault to begin with.
Nicely put together. Thanks for your continuous inspiration :-)
Life is hard. Sometimes when you’re feeling overwhelmed by it all it is easy to feel lost and down; focusing on all the bad things. This site helps to focus on the good. I used to describe myself as a realist, which is really just a nicer way of saying a pessimist! I am now a converted optimist, always trying to focus on the positive things in life.
I wrote some similar stuff on this myself and thought I would share them:
http://www.bannanablog.com/2014/10/feng-shui-your-mind/
http://www.bannanablog.com/2015/02/turn-that-frown/
Thanks Henrik,
(great name btw!)