How do I forgive myself for something I did?
Answered by Dr. Nitnem Singh Sodhi · Mental Health Counsellor, Neuropsychologist & Psychotherapist · Updated 2026-06-05
Short answer
Self-forgiveness is not letting yourself off. It is the four-step sequence of full acknowledgement, repair where possible, changed future behaviour, and dropping the private punishment loop that helps nobody.
Why 'just forgive yourself' fails
Because it skips the accountability step. Genuine self-forgiveness cannot be manufactured by affirmations; it is the psychological state that follows real repair. Trying to shortcut it produces either bypassing (denial dressed as growth) or entrenchment (endless self-punishment that changes nothing).
The four-step sequence
One: acknowledge fully, in specific words, what you did and the harm it caused. Two: repair what can be repaired — an apology, restitution, disclosure. Three: identify what in you allowed it (fear, denial, addiction, immaturity) and change that layer, not just the behaviour. Four: consciously drop the private punishment. Rumination is not accountability; it is guilt spinning in place while producing no repair for anyone.
When it stays stuck
If a specific event has been looping for months or years and the four steps above cannot land, it is usually because the event is entangled with older shame or trauma. That is a therapy indication — often a single focused course of work is enough to unfreeze it.
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