The advice is almost always well-meaning, but it’s completely clueless.
“Come on,” the advice goes. “That happened a long time ago. He didn’t really mean to hurt you. They did the best they could. You just need to let it go. It’s time to get over it.”
I know what it feels like to think this about someone, because I’ve done it, too. I remember a conversation I had years ago in which a friend and I mocked someone who couldn’t “get over it” and move on after childhood abuse. That was before I understood my own childhood trauma, so I eventually felt guilty about having said such things about someone else.
But I get it. When you watch someone else go through the agony of long-term pain and anger from emotional abuse, it’s baffling if you don’t have a frame of reference. The person who’s suffered abuse can come across as crazy — at least it can look that way to someone who’s not hurting.

Why exactly is it such a big deal to be invited to the White House?
Cancer diagnosis forces you to decide what really matters in life
Proposals to skip rent payments are rooted in magical thinking
Taking a break from Facebook is a step to retake control over my life
If abortion is just simple choice, why is killing babies for gender bad?
Capitol rioters weren’t SS troops, just woeful losers living a fantasy
‘Tolerant’ left seethes with hate if you don’t accept ‘gender theory’
What if people don’t really care about understanding each other?