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Life Skills

How to give a real apology

A good apology repairs trust. A bad one makes it worse. The difference is one small word you have to leave out.

Dad's Quick Take

A real apology names what you did, takes responsibility without excuses, acknowledges the impact, and says what you'll do differently. The fastest way to ruin it is the word “but” — drop it entirely.

The four parts of a real apology

  1. Name it — “I'm sorry I was late and didn't text you.”
  2. Own it — no “if,” no “but,” no blaming them.
  3. Acknowledge the impact — “I know that left you waiting and worried.”
  4. Repair it — “Next time I'll message you the moment I'm running behind.”
The word that cancels an apology

“I'm sorry, but you also…” isn't an apology — it's an accusation in disguise. If you catch a “but,” stop and restart without it.

What not to do

Common questions

What if it wasn't entirely my fault?

Apologize for your part, fully and cleanly. You can sort out the rest later — leading with a real apology usually makes that conversation easier.

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