Learning to Let Go, A Journey with Emily Dickinson’s “Forget”

Recently, I found myself constantly replaying moments I wish I could erase  people I trusted, words I shouldn’t have spoken, dreams that didn’t come true. I was stuck in a loop, unable to move forward. That’s when I read Emily Dickinson’s short but powerful poem “Forget.” Though just a few lines, it struck me like a quiet storm.

“‘Tis easier to forget
Than to remember
Which is why
I would forget”

These lines felt like they were written for me.
Forgetting is not about erasing people or events from our memory. It’s about setting ourselves free from pain that keeps pulling us down. In my own life, I have faced situations where relationships didn’t go the way I hoped. I gave my time, trust, and truth, but in return, I got silence. I realized I was carrying emotional baggage I didn’t pack. That weight was not mine to bear.

Dickinson’s poem gave me permission to let go. Not because I’m weak, but because I want to make space for better things  peace, self-worth, and presence. I’m learning that forgetting is not failure; it’s wisdom.

We don’t live in the past. We live in this moment breathing, becoming, and building a new story. Dickinson’s words remind us that we have the power to forget not by force, but by focus on ourselves, on now, on what we deserve.

So today, I choose to forget. Not because it didn’t matter, but because I matter more.

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