What do you think of when you think of healing?
Do you think of a cut or bruise regenerating into toughened skin? Do you think of bones being reset or a full recovery from a debilitating injury? Do you think of processing and releasing internal emotional and energetic weight in a way that allows you to feel lighter, more whole, and more strong?
Healing is a term that can manifest in a multitude of ways. From an objective outside perspective, healing can be something beautiful; a reformation of the body, a conscious process of reawakening, shedding, and coming into a new level of inner knowing.
From the inside, however, the action of healing is not quite so simple and streamlined. The journey is (more often than not) slow, at times painful, and sometimes gets worse before it can get better.
Recently, there has been a real cultural emphasis on healing. Similar to terms like self-care, and mindfulness, healing has become something of a buzzword.
But what does it actually mean to heal?
What does it mean to take action towards our healing, and is that even possible?
What does it mean to look at and tend to our wounds?
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Physically, the process of healing is something we’re likely more familiar with. We know that after a bone has been broken, it needs to be set and stabilized. We know that a cut requires cleaning and a band-aid. We understand that healing in a healthy way doesn’t just begin - sometimes we have to undo the wound in ways that start us at neutral to allow the wound to heal productively.
We also understand that in order to not be wounded in the same way again, we have to examine how we found ourselves hurt in the first place, and actively choose not to make the same choices again.
These processes can sometimes be easy, and other times applying the metaphorical peroxide and adjusting our choices or habits feels like we're re-wounding all over again.
Because a physical wound can be more easily understood due to its external and visual nature, we can look to this process of healing for insight on the steps of internal and emotional healing. The steps are essentially the same, although not usually linear, and inner healing requires a different form of internal medicine, belief and habit reorganization, and mental restructuring.
We may be less familiar with the process of healing emotional and energetic wounds, simply because it’s been less discussed and less encouraged. We may have been taught simple practices like apologizing for our wrongdoings, or allowing ourselves to feel sad when we've been verbally or emotionally hurt by someone. But often the education ends there, and sometimes it's even encouraged to dismiss and ignore the difficult feelings that come with being emotionally wounded in order to keep the peace and keep up the hustle.
Thankfully, we’re coming into a collective moment where healing is a buzzword, and mental and emotional health are beginning to be regarded as just as important and, in fact, intertwined with physical health.
So how can we look to the physical experience of healing to inform our education and experience of internal healing? Why would we engage in such a difficult and amorphous process in the first place?
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Have you ever left a relationship that wasn’t working, only to find yourself in a similar relationship with a similar person, dealing with the same challenges all over again?
When we carry the weight of unhealed wounds, we unconsciously seek out ways for these wounds to be healed by others, whether we consciously want to or not.
Not acknowledging and doing the work to heal our own internal hurts can often lead to unhealthy attachment styles, misdirected anger, and the inability to be honest and vulnerable with others. Just as if we were to ignore a bleeding cut, if we ignore our own internal wounds they will only keep bleeding, and potentially bleed all over others.
For this reason - for ourselves and the people in our lives - it is just as important to tend to these wounds as it is a broken bone. It may be incredibly tender, and even painful, to turn inward and examine our inner wounds of abandonment, trauma, loss, heartache, but when we choose to do just that, we also choose our own lightness, our ability to trust and be open, and the building of our own strength and resilience. We become all the more fortified in ourselves and relationships, and are able to live with more consciousness, kindness, and ease.
We can look to our physical healing as proof that our bodies instinctually and intrinsically know the healthiest choices for us. Whether it be by organically threading our skin fibers back together after a cut, or guiding us (just as quietly) toward taking the steps to mend our heartbreak. With a physical or emotional wound the body takes its time, utilizing the resources available to it in order to rebuild what was damaged.
This means that when healing in any way, the process may require timing that does not align with what our head (or our ego) wants, but rather it asks us to trust in the intrinsic wisdom of our internal systems. It's a process that requires time and patience, asking us to live within the discomfort of restitching parts of ourselves together in order to eventually become whole.
We can consider the process of healing similar to the process of growth - as a spiral. The first circle is the first layer of recovery and adjustment after the wounding. The second circle is a little lighter, a little higher, but asks us to honestly address another layer of what is no longer working, and what needs our care. As we spiral upwards we may come back around to the same things over and over from different perspectives to heal little by little.
In that same sense, the process of healing can sometimes look like walking around the pain over and over, and entering into it through the side rather than the front door. It can be taking the same level of the spiral over and over again in order to truly understand and heal what’s been damaged.
It can be a long process as we're exposed to new ways of looking at and acknowledging our pain as it is confronted by different situations. It's about staying with ourselves and holding ourselves through those moments. Our bodies will only ever give us as much as we can handle - it will use the knowledge, information, and nutrition (literal and energetic) it has at hand and nothing more, and as we work our way up that spiral, we bring with us more and more insight, health, and strength.
Metaphors can be helpful, but let's break down the actions of healing into simple, understandable steps. Although every wound is different, we can follow this framework towards guiding us to make the decisions unique to the healing process, while also taking out some of the guesswork, and empowering ourselves in the process.
Steps:
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The process of healing can be messy and painful, and sometimes it gets worse in order to get better. We might be required to do the things that really make us uncomfortable, bitter, and in more pain that we initially started out with.
But it's when we go into the parts of ourselves that are the darkest and most tender, that's where we discover our internal gold mines. The Japanese practice of Kintsugi, using gold to fill the broken part of an item, is a perfect representation of this. When something becomes broken, there is an opportunity to make it even more durable, and long lasting. The care put into filling that broken space makes it all the more worth it, because you not only still have the treasured item, but it’s all the more beautiful and valuable.
Scar tissue is the most durable part of our skin and physical connective tissue, and therefore our wounds create the strongest parts of ourselves that we get to build through our own journeys. Just like the gold used to fill the broken items in Kintsugi, we are also made more valuable and resilient for the action we take to heal.