In her transformative work, The Energy of Emotions, Emily Maroutian offers a definition of forgiveness that strips away the heavy, often martyrlike connotations of the word:
“Forgiveness is a kind of detachment. It simply means cutting the energetic cord that keeps us attached to past hurt. It means we release its hold on our emotions so our focus can be free to be channeled in the present… it does not make the past behavior okay. It makes us okay enough to move forward from past behavior.”
For many, the word “forgiveness” feels like a bitter pill. We mistake it for reconciliation, for condoning injustice, or for letting someone “off the hook.” But Maroutian’s perspective shifts the focus from the offender to the offended. It is not a gift you give to someone who hurt you; it is a surgical strike to remove a parasite that is draining your vitality.
To truly understand how cutting this “energetic cord” changes our lives, we must look at it through the four pillars of human existence: the biological, psychological, social, and spiritual.
1. The Biological Reality: Setting the Body Free
When we hold onto a grudge, our body doesn’t know the event happened five years ago; it thinks it’s happening now. Chronic unforgiveness keeps the body in a state of low-grade “fight or flight.”
- The Cortisol Loop: When you dwell on a past hurt, your amygdala triggers the release of cortisol and adrenaline. Over time, elevated cortisol levels degrade the immune system, increase blood pressure, and disrupt sleep.
- The Heart-Brain Connection: Research from the Journal of Behavioral Medicine shows that forgiveness is directly linked to lower heart rates and reduced physical tension.
By “cutting the cord,” you are literally telling your nervous system it is safe to stand down. Forgiveness is the biological equivalent of putting down a heavy suitcase you’ve been carrying for a decade. Your muscles relax, your digestion improves, and your brain begins to produce more “pro-social” hormones like oxytocin.
2. The Psychological Shift: Reclaiming Your Mental Real Estate
Psychologically, resentment is a form of rumination. It is a mental loop where we replay the injury, hoping for a different outcome that will never come.
- Cognitive Load: Our mental focus is a finite resource. Every ounce of energy spent litigating a past wrong is energy stolen from your current creativity, career, or joy.
- Identity Beyond Victimhood: Maroutian notes that forgiveness “makes us okay enough to move forward.” Psychologically, this means moving from a “victim identity”, where your narrative is defined by what was done to you, to a “creator identity,” where your narrative is defined by what you are doing now.
Forgiveness isn’t about forgetting; it’s about re-filing. It’s moving a memory from the “Active Threats” folder to the “Archived History” folder.
3. The Social Dimension: Breaking the Cycle of Reactivity
We often think forgiveness is a private matter, but its impact on our social circles is profound. When we are attached to past hurt by an energetic cord, we tend to project that hurt onto new people.
- The “Bleeding” Effect: If you haven’t forgiven a previous partner’s betrayal, you might subconsciously punish your current partner for “crimes” they haven’t committed.
- Healthy Boundaries: As Maroutian emphasizes, forgiveness does not make the behavior okay. This is a crucial social distinction. You can forgive someone (cut the cord) while simultaneously deciding they are no longer allowed in your life.
By detaching, you stop being a “reactive” person and start being a “responsive” one. You no longer enter rooms carrying the baggage of old ghosts, which allows for deeper, more authentic connections with the people who are actually present.
4. The Spiritual Perspective: Resonating at a Higher Frequency
Spiritually, unforgiveness is a “dense” energy. It anchors us to a lower vibrational state – one of lack, anger, and separation.
- Energetic Cords: Many spiritual traditions view our connections to others as literal energetic links. When we hate, we are as tethered to that person as when we love. Hate is a form of intimacy.
- Presence as Sacred: If the goal of many spiritual paths is “Presence,” then resentment is the ultimate barrier. You cannot be in the Now if your spirit is stuck in the Then.
Forgiveness is the spiritual practice of surrender. It is acknowledging that while you cannot change the past, you refuse to let the past dictate the sanctity of your soul today.
Daily Practices for “Cutting the Cord”
If you’re ready to reclaim your energy, you don’t need a grand ceremony. You need consistent, small shifts in behavior.
1. The “Box and Breath” Visualization
When a memory of the hurt arises, visualize a literal cord (like an old telephone wire) running from your solar plexus to the person or event.
- Inhale deeply, and as you exhale, imagine a pair of golden shears clipping that cord.
- Watch the cord fall away and see the energy that was flowing out of you return to your own body.
- Acknowledge the returning part of you and how it now changes your experience of life.
2. The Letter of Release (Not for Mailing!)
Write a raw, unfiltered letter to the person who hurt you. List every grievance. Then, write the following phrase: “I release the hold this has on my emotions. I am no longer willing to fund this debt with my life force.” Destroy the letter. Burn it or shred it to symbolize the energetic dissolution.
3. The “Benefit of the Doubt” Pivot
This isn’t for them; it’s for you. When you feel a surge of anger, tell yourself: “They acted from their level of consciousness at the time.” It doesn’t excuse them, but it frames the act as a result of their limitation rather than your unworthiness.
4. Somatic Grounding
Since trauma is stored in the body, use physical movement to “shake off” the attachment. When you find yourself ruminating, literally shake your arms and legs for 30 seconds. This signals to the nervous system that the “threat” is being processed and released
Summary: Your Path to Freedom
Forgiveness is often the hardest work we will ever do, but it is also the most rewarding. Remember these key takeaways from Maroutian’s wisdom:
- It’s about Detachment: You aren’t hugging your enemy; you are letting go of their hand so you can walk away.
- It’s about Energy: You have a limited amount of focus. Stop spending it on a past you cannot change.
- It’s about You: The goal isn’t to make the other person “okay”, it’s to make you okay enough to live a vibrant, present life.
The cord is in your hands. You have the shears. It is time to cut the tie and come back to yourself.
