See below- the work at Havard and Baylor are doing around human flourishing and mental
health/ wellbeing is pretty cool (one of my Ivy league exceptions…) especially in the
context of an RCT… my guess is that no one does forgiveness really well (myself
included…): REACH model: Recall the hurt; Empathize with the offender; realize forgiveness
is an Altruistic gift; Commit to forgive; and Hold on to forgiveness during the return of
anger. Might be good to think about in terms of cultural relevance (universals and
particulars- is the idea of forgiveness universal? They did the RCT it in (Columbia, South
Africa, Ukraine, Indonesia, and Hong Kong) Or particular to a culture?) and implications
for those with disabilites as well…MDB
From: VanderWeele, Tyler J. <tvanderw(a)hsph.harvard.edu>
Date: Wednesday, May 29, 2024 at 3:12 PM
To: Burke, Mack <Mack_Burke(a)baylor.edu>
Subject: Forgiveness Campaigns
You don't often get email from tvanderw(a)hsph.harvard.edu. Learn why this is
important<https://aka.ms/LearnAboutSenderIdentification>
This research update discusses the results of our forgiveness workbook randomized trial
and forming local and international forgiveness campaigns.
[Image removed by sender.]
[Image removed by sender.]
Research Update: May 2024
Dear Friends,
This research update from the Human Flourishing
Program<https://harvard.us12.list-manage.com/track/click?u=c6412613756...
discusses the results of our recent forgiveness workbook randomized trial and the
workbook’s potential to form the foundation of local, national, and international
forgiveness campaigns.
Need for Forgiveness
These past months, our country and our world have witnessed numerous forms of conflict and
tension, disagreement and violence. It is easy to become angry, and often there is just
cause to do so. Anger itself can be channeled towards justice but, ultimately, seeking
justice should involve a restoration and promotion of the good. To do that effectively, we
also need to re-orient our own motivations and actions to seek the good of others, even
those who have hurt us. Forgiveness is a practice to bring this about.
Forgiveness involves replacing ill-will towards an offender with good-will. Because of the
wrongs we have experienced, our thoughts and feelings about others may be bitter, angry,
or even hateful, but with forgiveness – without forgetting or discounting the past offense
– we come to want good things for the offenders, to hope that they will flourish. This
doesn’t necessarily mean foregoing just punishment for their wrongdoing; after all,
justice or redress might be the very thing needed in order change, or it might be
necessary to keep others safe from harm. Nonetheless, forgiving the wrongdoer does mean
that you won’t seek such punishment out of a desire for vengeance, and that your pursuit
of it will be tempered by a sense of mercy, flowing from your desire for his or her
good.
[Image removed by sender.]
Bringing About Forgiveness
For many of us, however, forgiveness is a tall order. Resentment, rumination, and a desire
for vengeance often return. Recognizing this, clinical psychologists have in recent
decades drawn upon both psychological research and also deep religious and cultural
traditions concerning forgiveness to better understand how forgiveness can be brought
about.
One such approach is Everett Worthington’s REACH model: Recall the hurt; Empathize with
the offender; realize forgiveness is an Altruistic gift; Commit to forgive; and Hold on to
forgiveness during the return of anger. The effectiveness of this forgiveness model has
been studied in dozens of randomized
trials<https://harvard.us12.list-manage.com/track/click?u=c6412613756a...
in clinical settings. However, truly promoting global forgiveness requires approaches that
are more easily disseminated. To try to bring this about, over the past years, we have
worked with Dr. Worthington and others to evaluate the effectiveness of a self-directed
workbook
version<https://harvard.us12.list-manage.com/track/click?u=c6412613756...
of the REACH forgiveness approach.
Our Forgiveness Randomized Trial
Our forgiveness workbook randomized trial was carried about with about 4500 participants
in 5 relatively high conflict countries: Columbia, South Africa, Ukraine, Indonesia, and
Hong Kong. We’ve given further details of the trial design and the REACH forgiveness model
in an earlier
post<https://harvard.us12.list-manage.com/track/click?u=c6412613756a3f...;.
However, we are happy to now report that the results of that trial were just recently
published in BMJ Public
Health<https://harvard.us12.list-manage.com/track/click?u=c6412613756a...;.
The self-directed forgiveness workbook, which takes about 2-3 hours to complete, did
effectively promote forgiveness. But it also effectively reduced depression and anxiety,
and improved flourishing. Given the important effects of the forgiveness workbook, and its
easy costless dissemination, we believe the workbook could be used as a cornerstone of
local, national, and even international campaigns to promote forgiveness. The workbook is
now available in
translation<https://harvard.us12.list-manage.com/track/click?u=c641261...
into the primary languages of more than two-thirds of the world’s population.
Forgiveness Campaigns
We need forgiveness. Right now, much of the news and social media we consume add fuel to
the fires of tension and hatred. Some of this reporting is important. But if we are going
to bring about greater societal flourishing, we need to re-orient ourselves to seek the
good of others, of those with whom we disagree, or by whom we are offended. Bringing about
more global forgiveness could be greatly facilitated by campaigns designed to promote
forgiveness.
To better understand how to most effectively carry out such campaigns, we have worked with
researchers at Universidad del Sinú in Columbia to examine changes in forgiveness,
anxiety, depression, and flourishing both before and after a 4-week forgiveness campaign,
and how such changes potentially varied by campaign activity. While such pre-/post-
designs do not have the same level of rigor as randomized trials, they can be helpful in
assessing how activities and campaigns might be effective in practice, and the results of
this campaign study were just recently
published<https://harvard.us12.list-manage.com/track/click?u=c64126137...
in the International Journal of Public Health.
The forgiveness campaign included 16 different campus-wide activities ranging from the
dissemination of the REACH forgiveness
workbook<https://harvard.us12.list-manage.com/track/click?u=c641261375...
to forgiveness movies, webinars, journals, and social media marathons, to forgiveness
walls and trees and group activities. Participants were free to engage in as many of these
as desired and data was collected on about 2800 participants. Overall forgiveness,
depression, anxiety, and flourishing all improved during the course of the campaign,
though there was considerable variability in improvements, and in participation, by
activity. In general, the greater the number of activities, the greater the improvement.
Amongst the various activities, the REACH workbook and the forgiveness animated videos had
both high participation rates and strong association with improvements in forgiveness.
More details are available in the
paper<https://harvard.us12.list-manage.com/track/click?u=c6412613756a3...;,
but we hope that the study will help inform future forgiveness campaign efforts. And we
are continuing our partnership with Andrea Bechara and Maria Fatima Bechara at Universidad
del Sinú, and their new Flow
Center<https://harvard.us12.list-manage.com/track/click?u=c6412613756a...;,
to better understand promoting campus-wide flourishing.
Potential for Future Forgiveness
Given the effectiveness of the REACH workbook intervention and its free accessibility in
so many different languages, efforts can, and arguably should, be made to disseminate it.
This could be done in the context of psychiatric care and clinical counseling for those
struggling with anger who want to forgive, but are having trouble doing so. The workbooks
could be disseminated at the community level as an important
preventive<https://harvard.us12.list-manage.com/track/click?u=c6412613...
mental health resource. The workbooks could be disseminated within religious communities
to help facilitate the forgiveness that such groups already value. The workbooks could be
disseminated in schools, and universities, and workplaces, possibly accompanied by videos,
lectures, and group activities to promote forgiveness. If we truly desire to be oriented
towards seeking the good of others, even amidst conflict, we need such efforts to promote
forgiveness, and to thereby bring healing, and better flourishing, for all.
Tyler J.
VanderWeele<https://harvard.us12.list-manage.com/track/click?u=c641261...;,
John L. Loeb and Frances Lehman Loeb Professor of Epidemiology, Harvard T. H. Chan School
of Public Health
Director, Human Flourishing Program, Harvard University
A permanent link to this research note is available here:
[
https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/human-flourishing/202405/the-impo...;]
You are welcome to distribute or re-post the link to this research update elsewhere.
The Human Flourishing Program grants reporters and journalists permission to re-use and
quote any of the above material, provided proper attribution is given.
Key References and Related Articles
* Ho, M. Y., Worthington, E., Cowden, R., Bechara, A. O., Chen, Z. J., Gunatirin, E.
Y., Joynt, S., Khalanskyi, V.V., Korzhov, H., Kurniati, N.M.T., Rodriguez, N., Salnykova,
A., Shtanko, L., Tymchenko, S., Voytenko, V.L., Zulkaida, A., Mathur, M. and VanderWeele,
T.J. (2024). International REACH Forgiveness Intervention: A multi-site randomised
controlled
trial<https://harvard.us12.list-manage.com/track/click?u=c6412613756a3...;.
BMJ Public Health, 2:e000072.
* Bechara, A.O., Chen, Z.J., Cowden, R.G., Worthington, E.L., Toussaint, L.,
Rodriguez, N., Murillo, H.G., Ho, M.Y., Mathur, M.B., and VanderWeele, T.J. (2024). Do
forgiveness campaign activities improve forgiveness, mental health, and
flourishing<https://harvard.us12.list-manage.com/track/click?u=c641261...
International Journal of Public Health, 69:1605341.
* The Power of
Forgiveness<https://harvard.us12.list-manage.com/track/click?u=c641261...;.
Psychology Today. Human Flourishing Blog. April 2023.
* Balancing Negative News Reporting: Promoting the
Good<https://harvard.us12.list-manage.com/track/click?u=c6412613756a3f...;.
Psychology Today. Human Flourishing Blog. June 2020.
* Long, K., Worthington, E.L., VanderWeele, T.J. and Chen, Y. (2020). Forgiveness of
others and subsequent health and well-being in mid-life: a longitudinal study on female
nurses<https://harvard.us12.list-manage.com/track/click?u=c6412613756a...;.
BMC Psychology, 8:104.
* VanderWeele, T.J. (2018). Is forgiveness a public health
issue?<https://harvard.us12.list-manage.com/track/click?u=c6412613756a...
American Journal of Public Health, 108:189-190.
Program Updates
Forgiving What You Can't Forget Podcast
[Image removed by
sender.]<https://harvard.us12.list-manage.com/track/click?u=c641261375...
In this
podcast<https://harvard.us12.list-manage.com/track/click?u=c6412613756...;,
Tyler VanderWeele discusses the benefits and challenges of forgiveness along with Laura
Thompson (clinical and consulting psychologist) and Matthew Ichihashi Potts (Plummer
Professor of Christian Morals and the Pusey Minister in the Memorial Church).
New Collaboration with FLOW
[Image removed by
sender.]<https://harvard.us12.list-manage.com/track/click?u=c641261375...
We are excited to highlight one of our collaborative partners,
FLOW<https://harvard.us12.list-manage.com/track/click?u=c6412613756a3f...;,
a happiness center at Sinú University in Montería, Colombia. FLOW offers free yoga and
mindfulness classes to the Unisinuano community in order to increase access to physical
and mental well-being resources. Our work together focuses on positive education.
Our Mission
The Human Flourishing
Program<https://harvard.us12.list-manage.com/track/click?u=c6412613756...
at Harvard’s Institute for Quantitative Social Science aims to study and promote human
flourishing, and to develop systematic approaches to the synthesis of knowledge across
disciplines. You can sign up
here<https://harvard.us12.list-manage.com/track/click?u=c6412613756a3f...
for a monthly research e-mail from the Human Flourishing Program, or click
here<https://harvard.us12.list-manage.com/track/click?u=c6412613756a3f...
to follow us on Twitter. For past postings please see our Psychology Today Human
Flourishing
Blog<https://harvard.us12.list-manage.com/track/click?u=c6412613756a3f...;.
If this email was forwarded to you, you can sign up
here<https://harvard.us12.list-manage.com/track/click?u=c6412613756a3f...
[Image removed by sender.
Twitter]<https://harvard.us12.list-manage.com/track/click?u=c641261375...
[Image removed by sender.
Website]<https://harvard.us12.list-manage.com/track/click?u=c641261375...
Program
Website<https://harvard.us12.list-manage.com/track/click?u=c6412613756...
| Support
Us<https://harvard.us12.list-manage.com/track/click?u=c6412613756a3f96...
| Give
Online<https://harvard.us12.list-manage.com/track/click?u=c6412613756a...
This email was sent to Mack_Burke@baylor.edu<mailto:Mack_Burke@baylor.edu>
why did I get
this?<https://harvard.us12.list-manage.com/about?u=c6412613756a3f960a5...
unsubscribe from this
list<https://harvard.us12.list-manage.com/unsubscribe?u=c6412613756a3f...
update subscription
preferences<https://harvard.us12.list-manage.com/profile?u=c6412613756...
The Human Flourishing Program at Harvard University · 12 Arrow Street · Cambridge, MA
02138 · USA