The first time I ever wrote about being unhappy in my marriage, I’d been in it for 18 days.

And yet I held onto it for 32 years.

I did the same thing with my candy apple red Dodge caravan. Rust started eating away at it, but I drove it another 4 years until the bottom literally fell out.

Let’s not get started on the pair of hermit crabs I got when I was 12 and kept them until their exoskeletons hung like noodles out of their shells.

Closure has never been my strong suit.

I’ve been a white-knuckle gripping kind of gal.

But in this gentle era of my life, I want to practice letting go faster and do it with less guilt and more grace.

🌿 Finding a Better Way to End Things

Linda Carroll Curtis calls it Honorable Closure.

It’s a framework for ending things — relationships, roles, identities — with intention and integrity.

Not with drama.Not with avoidance.Not with silence masquerading as strength.

It’s about leaving clean.It’s about looking backward without fixating.It’s about moving forward by unhitching your emotional U-Haul.

🌿 What Makes Closure Honorable

Honorable closure means:

  • Telling the old story in a new way.Instead of recycling pain or pretending you’re “fine,” you give voice to the truth of what happened — and then be on the lookout for what’s working now. This helps you honor the lessons without staying stuck in the hurt.

  • Resolving your regrets.It’s not about shame or endless self-blame. It’s about courageously owning your part, seeing where you could have shown up differently, and turning those insights into growth.

  • Letting go and letting it be.Notice what you're still holding onto—resentments, expectations, or grudges. Remember that forgiveness isn't about the other person; it's more badass than that.

  • Being intentional about how you end things instead of ghosting, avoiding, or letting resentment fester.

Linda emphasizes that people often stay too long in the wrong situation (a job, a relationship, a project) because they don’t know how to leave well — or they fear the unknown.

Honorable closure provides a framework for moving on in a way that’s emotionally clean, not messy or ambiguous.

🌿Creating Your Honorable Closure Statement

She encourages writing a “closure statement” — not always shared with others — that:

  • Names your reasons with honesty(This is why I’m choosing to step away…)

  • Acknowledges your part and growth(Here’s what I’ve learned, how I’ve changed…)

  • Offers gratitude where possible(I’m thankful for what this gave me, even if it was painful.)

  • Releases resentment or emotional clutter(I choose to let go of blame, even if I’m not ready to forgive.)

💡Why This matters:

  • It clears emotional residue and stops the recycling of guilt, blame, or regret.

  • It respects the past without staying tethered to it.

  • It models emotional integrity and maturity, especially for those of us committed to growth.

Gentle Nudge

Closure takes practice. Most of us weren’t taught how to leave well — only how to try harder.

Linda’s work gives us a map out of the trying trap.

Maybe you’re stuck in a job you hate.Or a friendship you’ve quietly outgrown.Or a marriage where your spouse has never truly known what keeps you up at night…

This could be your cue for closure.

To leave — not with rage or regret…But with reverence.Not in pieces…But on purpose.

✍️ Honorable Closure Statement

1. What I'm Leaving: "I am choosing to step away from _______." Name the relationship/role/situation clearly and without judgment.

2. Why I'm Leaving: "I've grown to understand that this is no longer aligned with who I am becoming." Add a simple explanation — be honest but not blaming. This isn't about fault—it's about fit.

3. What I'm Taking with Me: "I'm grateful for _______." List some moments, lessons, or insights. I'm choosing to honor what was good — the growth, the learning, and the unexpected gifts I didn't see at the time but now carry with me.

4. What I'm Leaving Behind: "I release both myself and others from carrying _______." Name what you're setting down—resentments, expectations, old stories. Not because the regret, the "what ifs" don't matter, but because I want to be free.

5. My Intention Moving Forward: "I move forward with _______." Clarity, integrity, and openness. I trust that this ending is making space for something new and necessary.

Often all we need is enough light for the next step:

  • The clarity to name what we're leaving

  • The courage to say why

  • The wisdom to collect what matters

  • The freedom to release what doesn't

🕯️ What are you still holding onto… that you might finally be ready to give an honorable closure to?

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