Dear colleagues in forgiveness, To no one's surpise by now, I have also inventoried your greatest forgiveness challenges and experiences. Your GREATEST FORGIVENESS CHALLENGES include forgiving the world for being the way it is forgiving senseless suffering forgiving one's own "sins of omission and commission" in regard to taking care of oneself forgiving what might have been forgiving those who screw others over for fun and profit forgiving past situations that required constructive solution and were instead ignored out of a sense of weakness or naivete forgiving the Holocaust forgiving loved ones whose approach to life is quite different from one's own forgiving procrastination forgiving non-communicative grudge-holders forgiving opportunistic friends forgiving faulty parenting forgiving persons who habitually lie Your GREATEST FORGIVENESS EXPERIENCES include forviging someone who has asked for it being readily able and willing to ask for others' forgiveness of yourself forgiving a parent who was not "there" (2 instances) forgiving an only sibling as she was dying forgiving a loved one's emotional brutality forgiving a friend's betrayal being forgiven by people who remain one's friends discovering that another's perceived unforgiveness was a false perception I am also once again asking you what conclusion(s) may be drawn from these inventories: Does either (or both) of the categories lend itself to an overall generalization? Is there an overall generalization that contrasts the categories themselves?