%0 Journal Article %T Reclaiming the Future: Understanding Customer Forgiveness of Service Transgressions %A Cele C. Otnes %A Yelena Tsarenko %A Yuliya Strizhakova %J Journal of Service Research %@ 1552-7379 %D 2019 %R 10.1177/1094670518802060 %X Service transgressions, and how customers respond to them, are of ongoing interest to researchers and practitioners. However, whether and how customers forgive such transgressions remains unexplored. Grounding our investigation in interdisciplinary research on forgiveness, and leveraging self-determination theory as an enabling theoretical foundation, we analyze 34 in-depth interviews with customers who experienced transgressions in the health-care, financial, and retailing sectors. We conceptualize customer forgiveness as a motivational process involving customers¡¯ relinquishing of vengeful thoughts and feelings about transgressors. Four distinct pathways of forgiveness emerge as follows: forgiveness as transgressor¡¯s atonement, as disillusionment, as self-healing, and as grace. Customers anchor their forgiveness pathways in motivations that are either self-focused (autonomous) or transgressor-focused (controlled). Each pathway reflects differences in customers¡¯ internal reconciliations of the transgression. Further, we demonstrate the role of transgression circumstances, service recovery, and broader marketplace realities in customer forgiveness. We identify the key underlying moral premise of each pathway. Finally, we show how each forgiveness pathway impacts restoration of customer-service provider relationships %K customer forgiveness %K transformative services %K failure %K satisfaction %K recovery %K well-being %U https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/1094670518802060