A grudge is what the algorithm for “they owe me and I think I can collect via social pressure” feels like from the inside. This implies that you still believe:
They owe you something, and
It’s possible to collect
Both of these statements are false, but it’s easier to start with the second one. Admit the truth: barring a miracle, you are never going to collect this “debt”, because it’s not one your parents will ever acknowledge. Indeed, I would guess that if someone held a gun to their heads and insisted they repent, they’d be like, “What are you talking about? We didn’t do anything to her!”
When you finally admit to yourself that this is true, there won’t be a grudge any more, because the grudge is nothing more than your brain’s insistence that you should be able to collect, in denial of the fact that you can’t collect. Use the Litany of Gendlin and the Litany of Tarski here, or the questions from The Work of Byron Katie, which is particularly effective at resolving grudges and judgments directed at other people.
One of the things Byron Katie sometimes says about these kinds of judgments is that in order to free yourself, you have to want to know the truth, more than you want to be right, or than you want to get whatever it is from that person. The truth will set you free, but first it’s going to annoy the hell out of you. ;-)
A grudge is what the algorithm for “they owe me and I think I can collect via social pressure” feels like from the inside. This implies that you still believe:
They owe you something, and
It’s possible to collect
Both of these statements are false, but it’s easier to start with the second one. Admit the truth: barring a miracle, you are never going to collect this “debt”, because it’s not one your parents will ever acknowledge. Indeed, I would guess that if someone held a gun to their heads and insisted they repent, they’d be like, “What are you talking about? We didn’t do anything to her!”
When you finally admit to yourself that this is true, there won’t be a grudge any more, because the grudge is nothing more than your brain’s insistence that you should be able to collect, in denial of the fact that you can’t collect. Use the Litany of Gendlin and the Litany of Tarski here, or the questions from The Work of Byron Katie, which is particularly effective at resolving grudges and judgments directed at other people.
One of the things Byron Katie sometimes says about these kinds of judgments is that in order to free yourself, you have to want to know the truth, more than you want to be right, or than you want to get whatever it is from that person. The truth will set you free, but first it’s going to annoy the hell out of you. ;-)