The answer to your question would be true. Your welcome
The answer you are looking for is existentialism. Very popular during the Depression and going into the Second World War.
Answer:
I don't believe in "forgive and forget" I'm a "forgive but don't forget" kind of guy.
I'm a transgender guy who came out just a little over a year ago and I get misgendered and deadnamed by my family daily. My mom refuses to call me Thailer because she feels as though if I ever felt that I wasn't trans that I couldn't take it back. My father does it on purpose any chance he gets. My brothers do it on purpose when I anger them. And my sister is trying. At this point I'm getting used to being called the wrong name and pronouns all the time. So I just don't say anything and repress my emotions. That's the closest I can get.
<em>The </em><em>benefits</em><em> of "forgive and forget" </em>(<u>or forgiving sincerely and forgetting immediately</u>) are-
- Now you can avoid the psychological strain of possible trauma.
- You won't feel stressed or anxious around that person.
- You won't lose trust in them (if you had any to begin with)
- It's all in all just beneficial to your mental health.
The answer is psychoacoustics in which it is the study of the psychological associates the physical measurements of acoustics and it is a branch of psychophysics. In addition to perception, audibility threshold is the lowermost sound pressure level that can be reliably noticed at a given frequency and temporal integration the procedure by which a sound at a constant level is alleged as being louder when it is of the greater period.