For a long time, you may have believed that healing was something to achieve—a state you would eventually reach where you wouldn’t struggle the way you do now. Where the parts of you that feel shame, fear, or doubt would finally be resolved, like a puzzle neatly completed. Maybe you thought being whole meant being finished—untouched by old patterns, steady and certain, no longer carrying the weight of things you wish you’d done differently.
But what if you were never meant to arrive?
What if wholeness isn’t something waiting for you at the end of this process? What if it’s something you’ve had all along—something that is still intact, even in the moments you feel messy, even when you fall back into patterns you thought you were done with?
It’s easy to believe that struggling means you’ve failed. That if you were truly whole, you wouldn’t feel this way. But what if being whole doesn’t mean you never struggle? What if it means you don’t abandon yourself when you do?
The Illusion of Arrival
Many people are taught that healing is a process with an endpoint. That once you do enough—therapy, reflection, self-awareness—you’ll finally be free from the things that weigh you down.
But healing was never about never struggling again. It’s about how you relate to yourself in those moments.
If you find yourself reacting from an old wound, you might think, Why am I still like this? or Haven’t I already worked through this?
But what if, instead of seeing those moments as proof that you’ve failed, you saw them as opportunities to stay with yourself? To say, This is here. And I don’t have to turn away from it.
That shift—that’s what healing looks like. Not that you never feel pain, but that you don’t exile the parts of you that do. Not that you never feel shame, but that you don’t let shame decide whether you are worthy of love.
Wholeness Was Never Lost
There’s an idea that being whole means being fixed, but what if wholeness was never something to restore?
What if it was always here?
The part of you that seeks connection, that longs to feel safe, that wants to be seen—that part has always been whole. The pain, the fear, the reactions—those aren’t signs of brokenness. They’re evidence that you needed something and didn’t know how to ask for it.
So when you notice old patterns, when you catch yourself reacting in ways that feel frustrating or familiar, try to remember—wholeness doesn’t mean you never struggle. It means you don’t push away the parts of you that do.
It means those parts deserve to be seen, understood, and held with care.
Holding This Truth When Shame Rises
There will still be moments where you feel like you should be “better” by now. Where you wonder, How am I still here? In those moments, try to hold onto this:
You don’t have to be healed to be whole.
You don’t have to be perfect to be worthy.
You don’t have to be done with your past in order to live fully in your present.
You can hold it all.
And maybe that was healing all along.
Embracing Shadows, Illuminating Hope,
Chelsey Fjeldheim, LCSW
Empowering Souls on the Path of Healing
Copyright © 2025 Chelsey Fjeldheim, Courage Speaks Counseling



