I’m weighing my options. I want to send a Facebook message telling someone from the past how I felt about something truly hurtful they did. I risk seeming completely crazy and starting drama but maybe I’ll finally get my closure.
It is a bad idea to get very personal on any social media. It is also not an appropriate venue to share intimate feelings about hurtful things others have done to us, or about us.
Although I don’t think it would make you look crazy, but, it does make you look like you don’t have good boundaries. You have to remember that many employers now check social media before hiring people. I even know one person who secured a good job, then lost it when an electronic footprint was found. They let him go, writing him a letter that said his values were not consistent with their company.
You will not get “closure” in this way, just more problems.
The high road is to forget about it. It’s been over a year, the incident still makes me want to cry.
No, this is not “high road”. We are often unable to forget deep wounds, and there is no requirement that we do so. We forgive and forbear, but the memories take time to heal, sometimes many years. If it still makes you want to cry that means that the wound is still raw. It is not appropriate to expect yourself to heal according to some timeline such as “a year”.
I’ve been fixated on this incident for awhile.
What is there to do?
I am seeking counseling but the wheels in my head keep turning
This is where your focus needs to be (the wheels in your own head) instead of trying to speak to the offender. It is possible to rub salt and dirt into your own wounds by fixating and letting the wheels keep turning. When it comes to mind, it is a signal to forgive the person and to pray for healing for both of you.
What are alternatives to fully put the lid on the box, bury the box and throw away the key?
This is not only impossible, but counterproductive. This is not how wounds are healed. They need to be cleaned and healed not buried. You should not live inside the wound, but the wound has now become part of your life expereince. It cannot be forgotten, just like we should not “put the lid on the box, bury the box, and throw away the key” of the holocaust!
Don’t you think if it we’re so easy to move on? I would. I want tangible, practical ways to do so. I 100% agree that I should not look back and move on
Have you considered DBT?