The weekly column dealing with questions from readers of the Peace  Weekly discusses the common problem of emotional scars that are  difficult to heal. This week the discussion focused on the problem that  could result when losing a girl friend. The father of the troubled youth  wrote to the priest-columnist to ask for his help. His son can't sleep,  drinks a lot and says he wants to enter a monastery.
We are told that even when we suffer from loss of memory as we grow  older, we don't forget the emotional scars and sorrows we've experienced  in our life. When we try to forget these traumas from the past and  can't, it  becomes a problem both in our daily living and in our  spiritual life. Learning to forget these past traumas is an important  skill to have if we are to live a healthy life. 
A young woman  came to a priest telling him she can't forget her boy friend who had  died. She wanted the priest to recommend a convent. The priest selected a  very strict community, thinking that this would help her forget.  However, within a year the young woman left the convent and told the  priest that as time passed, the thoughts of the boyfriend became even  more vivid, and she had to leave.
This time the priest recommended a very lax community where the  religious did little praying and a lot of talking. Even though the young  woman again did not last a year, this time she came to the priest with a  beaming smile, thanking him.  "The religious in the  community asked me  so many questions about my boyfriend," she said, "it made me sick and  tired, and I forgot about  him." 
The priest goes on to say that  learning to forget is not the same as trying to forget; when we try to  forget we are creating stress for ourselves. We are trying to repress,  and this is bringing  the issue more to our attention, and  making an imprint on our brains. He cites a Japanese psychologist who  tells us that the way to forget is not to try to forget but to do  everything possible  to remember, to bring it all to mind. If we have  lost out in love, cry like you have never cried before.  If you  have  failed at anything, feel the pain and do it daily.
Why? He believes that we all have a forgetting curve within us. In 3 months, you will come to a point when you will forget. There is within us a self-cleansing mechanism that will take over. We have all heard of women who continually cried for their dead husbands, and very abruptly married. Men have more difficulty with this approach because they do not talk as freely as women about emotional issues. Men keep it inside, and it takes more time for the process to take over.
It's good to remember that our emotions are sporadic not permanent; they are fickle and we get tired of them. We don't  want to deny this fact but work with it. When faced with something that we can't forget and the pain of the memory keeps bothering us, don't make the effort to forget but rather bring the troubling memory to mind. Think about it and tell others about it. If this is done for a period of six months you will find peace.
 
