
The Happiness Lab with Dr. Laurie Santos Why It Hurts to Hold a Grudge — and How to Let Go with Dr. Fred Luskin
89 snips
Apr 6, 2026 Dr. Fred Luskin, psychologist who runs Stanford’s Forgiveness Projects, shares why grudges cling and how letting go heals the body and mind. Miroslav Volf, Yale theologian, reflects on profound family loss and radical forgiveness. They discuss why forgiveness is hard, how it differs from reconciliation, practical steps to start, and forgiveness as an ongoing, embodied practice.
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
Irish Woman Found Relief Through Group Forgiveness
- Patricia McGee joined Fred Luskin's forgiveness class after her brother was murdered and his killers moved nearby.
- The group work relieved her depression, reduced headaches and sleep problems, and let her speak about her brother without collapsing into tears.
Forgiveness Is Making Peace With No
- Fred Luskin defines forgiveness as making peace with the word no and being at peace with your life right now.
- He found across many stories that suffering stemmed from refusing to accept a necessary no and clinging to deserved yeses.
You Forgive By Remembering Differently
- Forgiveness isn't forgetting; it's remembering differently by reframing the story and quieting physiological arousal.
- Luskin emphasizes memory remains but changing the narrative reduces suffering and allows different beliefs about the event.







