A — Give the Altruistic gift of forgiveness

Recall a time you were forgiven, and offer forgiveness as a gift rather than a transaction.

Why it works

Framing forgiveness as a freely given gift, rather than something the offender must earn, removes the condition that keeps you waiting (and resenting) until they "deserve" it. Recalling your own past need for forgiveness builds the humility and gratitude that make the gift feel genuine instead of forced — which is what lets the resentment actually loosen.

How to do it

  1. Recall a time you were forgiven and how that release felt to receive.
  2. Decide to extend the same unearned release, for your own freedom, not theirs.
  3. Notice the resistance ("they don’t deserve it") and hold the gift framing anyway.

Evidence

The altruistic-gift framing is core to the REACH protocol that meta-analyses support overall. As an isolated step its specific contribution is mechanistic, grounded in work linking gratitude and humility to forgiveness. (mechanistic)

A "gift" that is actually self-coercion can backfire; the step works only when it is genuinely chosen, not performed.

Common mistake

Making forgiveness conditional on the offender earning it first — which hands them control over your peace and usually means you wait forever.

Practice this with IX Coach

IX Coach reframes forgiveness from "did they earn it" to "what frees me," anchoring it to a time you yourself were forgiven so the gift lands as real rather than dutiful.

Start with IX Coach

7 days free, then $40/month (~$1.30/day).