R — Recall the hurt
Face what happened deliberately and calmly, without minimizing it or replaying it as a victim.
Why it works
You cannot forgive a hurt you keep suppressed; avoidance keeps the injury emotionally live and unprocessed. Recalling it on purpose, in a regulated state, exposes the memory in a way that lets its emotional charge start to settle rather than ambush you later. The aim is acknowledgement, not rumination — naming the harm so the rest of the process has something concrete to work on.
How to do it
- In a calm moment, name what was done and how it affected you, plainly and specifically.
- Breathe and slow down if the recall spikes anger — you want it accessible, not flooding.
- Decide not to cast yourself as a helpless victim of it; you are choosing to examine it.
Evidence
Confronting rather than avoiding a painful memory is consistent with exposure-based emotional processing in clinical work. As the opening REACH step it sits inside a model whose full protocol has been trialed, but this step alone is mechanistic. (mechanistic)
For trauma-level harm, deliberate recall should be paced and is often safest with a therapist.
Common mistake
Skipping straight to "I should just let it go," which buries the hurt instead of processing it — so it leaks out as resentment later.
Practice this with IX Coach
IX Coach helps you recall the hurt in a regulated state, pacing the recall and pulling you back if it tips from acknowledgement into rumination.
7 days free, then $40/month (~$1.30/day).