Couverture de 'Sorry Not Sorry': How to Protect Yourself When Accountability Never Comes

'Sorry Not Sorry': How to Protect Yourself When Accountability Never Comes

'Sorry Not Sorry': How to Protect Yourself When Accountability Never Comes

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Someone hurt you. You did the brave thing and called them out for it. And then they responded with denial, minimizing, blame-shifting, or the classic non-apology: "I'm sorry you're upset."

That moment can make you feel dismissed and a little unsteady—like you need to build a courtroom case just to prove your own experience.

This episode is about what to do when someone hurts you and refuses accountability. When repair isn't mutual. When they deny, deflect, or gaslight—and still expect access to you and your family.

  • Click here for this episode’s blog post with links to sources and even more content.
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You Need This Episode If...

  • You've named your hurt and been met with deflection ("That's not what I meant," "You're too sensitive," "Why are you still on about that?")
  • You're stuck between wanting to repair the relationship and realizing they're not interested in owning their part
  • You keep rehearsing the "perfect speech" in your head that will finally make them understand
  • You need scripts for stepping away from arguments that go nowhere

What You'll Get

  • How to spot non-accountability patterns, like common deflection lines that invalidate your feelings
  • Why you can't force accountability (and what to do instead) and scripts to stop the argument and step away
  • Traps to avoid, like over-explaining and performative forgiveness
  • Questions to ask yourself for using boundaries as risk management (How much access should they have to you? What do you need to stop expecting from this person?)
  • Practical options for when you can't fully avoid that person

Your Host

Caitlin is a former teacher, current mom, and someone who has learned (the hard way) that you cannot force another adult to become honest, curious, or fair on demand. This episode is about choosing your response when repair isn't mutual.

Sources & Mentions

  • Apology and Forgiveness in Reconciliation: How Words Can Mend | Beyond Intractability
  • On Rupture and Repair: A Relational Approach | RIAP Psychological Services
  • Apology and Restitution: The Psychophysiology of Forgiveness After Wrongdoing | PMC

The most grown-up thing you can do when someone refuses accountability is to stop arguing, stop explaining your pain to someone committed to misunderstanding it, and decide on the kind of contact that protects your peace.

Next episode: Forgiveness—how to let go without pretending something didn't happen.

Have a topic you want me to cover? Send me a text using the link at the top of the show notes.

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CK & GK

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