The Setup
Setting the scene
They want back in your life. They have apologized, maybe even changed. But forgiveness and access are two different things — and you are trying to figure out where the line is.
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Part of this story
The Boundary Forgiveness
→Forgiving someone does not mean letting them back in. Learn to release resentment while maintaining protective boundaries.
Part of the quest
Forgiveness & Letting Go
→Holding onto resentment is like drinking poison and waiting for the other person to die. Learn the liberating, difficult practice of releasing what weighs you down. You'll navigate four escalating scenarios — from the weight you carry to the letting go — practicing the decisions that matter most when the pressure is real and the stakes are personal. This isn't theory. It's practice for the moments that define how this chapter of your life unfolds.
What you'll learn from The Setup
This scenario focuses on Setting the scene — a critical skill inside the broader emotional intelligence domain. You'll face a decision where the instinctive response is often the wrong one. After you make your choice, you'll see exactly what happened in the other person's head and why it mattered. The scenario is part of The Boundary Forgiveness, a full interactive story inside the Forgiveness & Letting Go quest.
Skills you'll build in Forgiveness & Letting Go
More scenarios in this quest
People around you are pressuring you to reconcile. Family, friends, even your own guilt. But your gut says the boundary exists for a reason — and dismantling it would cost you your peace.
You practice saying it out loud — I forgive you, and I am not letting you back in. The words feel contradictory. Society tells you forgiveness means reunion. Your therapist says otherwise.
You release the resentment without opening the door. It is the hardest kind of forgiveness — the kind that heals you without giving them what they want. And it is entirely yours to give.
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