There is a version of forgiveness we all wish was reality. The kind where you decide once, pray a quick prayer, and walk away feeling light, free, and done. But that’s not the kind most of us experience.
Because sometimes… you don’t want to forgive. Not a little resistant. Not hesitant. You genuinely don’t want to. You remember exactly what happened. You feel exactly how it hurt. And if you’re honest, part of you feels justified in holding onto it.
And it doesn’t just stay in your thoughts. You feel it in your body. There’s a tightness in your chest when you think about it, a knot in your stomach when their name comes up, tension in your shoulders that never fully releases. You may react quicker than you want to or feel more tired than your day should require. Your body is carrying something it believes is still unresolved.
Unforgiveness does that. It keeps the moment alive. It loops in your mind and lingers in your body. It keeps your system on edge, like something is still happening. Research even shows that repeated negative thoughts can keep your body in a prolonged stress response. But just because you feel the weight of it doesn’t mean you feel ready to let it go.
We often think forgiveness starts when we feel ready. But it doesn’t. It starts with surrender. The starting place of forgiveness is being ready; it’s surrender.
Often the first step is simply saying, “I don’t want to forgive.” That’s not failure. That’s the beginning. Because God is not asking you to fake forgiveness. He’s asking you to bring Him what’s actually there—the anger, the resistance, the hurt that still feels very real.
This kind of raw, honest prayer is obedience before your feelings follow. You speak the reality of your heart and give it to Jesus. You say, “I release this,” even when it still feels tight in your chest. You pray for them, even when you don’t mean it yet. You come back again tomorrow because it’s not finished. Not because you’re doing it perfectly, but because you’re staying.
We’ve all prayed prayers that felt flat. “Bless them. Help me.” And we didn’t feel it. But when we keep bringing it (especially when we don’t feel it) something begins to shift. Not because we forced forgiveness, but because we let Jesus carry it.
You are not responsible for changing your heart. You are responsible for bringing it. Because unforgiveness will ask you to carry something you were never meant to hold. It keeps everything tight, like it’s still yours to manage. Forgiveness is not you figuring it out. It’s you handing it back to Jesus.
So start here: “Jesus, I don’t want to forgive, but I’m bringing this to You. Do what I can’t do.”
That’s it. That’s the beginning.
You don’t have to feel ready. You don’t have to fake it. You just have to surrender and trust that He will do the part you can’t.