It has been a short while since I finished reading the book of Edith Eger, an eminent psychologist and Holocaust survivor. One of the themes in her guide book, The Gift: 14 Lessons to Save Your Life, is to free ourselves from unresolved grief.
Let the dead be dead, that is.
The reason? Denying your grief won't help you heal – nor will it help to spend more time with the dead than you do with the living. The same goes for forgiveness. To forgive isn't to give someone permission to keep hurting you. The harm is already done. No one but you can heal the wound.
Edith Eger's lessons are great but a bit dark. To be honest, it might be a better idea to explore similar ideas in a more heartwarming way. That's how I jumped from Edith Eger's book to that written by Toshikazu Kawaguchi. The mysterious cafe in his novels is one tucked within a small back alley in Tokyo. Go there and find a certain chair, and you will be allowed the unique opportunity to travel back in time.
The time you can spend in the past begins the moment the waitress has poured your coffee, and it ends just before the coffee gets cold. The more important rule – and lesson – is that nothing you do while in the journey back to the past will change the present. Isn't that exactly what Edith Eger means?