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Forgetting can look like healing.
A husband and wife married for fifty years.
Thirteen children.
Three who were never fully loved.
After the parents die, the story changes.
What was once whispered becomes “years ago.”
What was once felt becomes “you’re remembering it wrong.”
What was once painful becomes inconvenient.
But forgetting doesn’t erase harm — it redistributes it.
In this episode, we examine how families, communities, and nations benefit from selective memory.
Who pays the cost when we choose peace over truth?
And when does moving on become organized amnesia?
If forgetting feels warm, is it still honest?
Ownership begins where the voice ends.
But forgetting begins where comfort wins.
#OlgaForeign
By Olga ForeignForgetting can look like healing.
A husband and wife married for fifty years.
Thirteen children.
Three who were never fully loved.
After the parents die, the story changes.
What was once whispered becomes “years ago.”
What was once felt becomes “you’re remembering it wrong.”
What was once painful becomes inconvenient.
But forgetting doesn’t erase harm — it redistributes it.
In this episode, we examine how families, communities, and nations benefit from selective memory.
Who pays the cost when we choose peace over truth?
And when does moving on become organized amnesia?
If forgetting feels warm, is it still honest?
Ownership begins where the voice ends.
But forgetting begins where comfort wins.
#OlgaForeign