The Paradox of Healing
At the core of trauma work, especially in EMDR and other experiential therapies, lies a contradiction:
• We guide clients through painful memories, yet the goal is to uncover their inherent wholeness.
• We reprocess suffering, yet we are not trying to erase it—we are integrating it.
• Healing happens in relationships, yet the work is deeply personal.
This paradox can be difficult to hold: how do we acknowledge suffering without reinforcing it? How do we remind people of their innate wholeness while validating the depth of their wounds?
Our minds want simplicity, but the heart can hold the truth of these contradictions.
Healing is not about choosing one reality over the other—it is about expanding our capacity to hold both. We are not either wounded or whole; we are both. Suffering is real, but so is our resilience. The pain of the past lingers, but so does the possibility of transformation.
In a world that feels increasingly fractured—where disconnection, fear, and division dominate the collective experience—holding the paradox of healing is more important than ever. While the larger systems around us may feel unstable, in this moment, we can ground ourselves in the truth that healing is still possible, connection is still available, and wholeness has always been. When we stop seeing healing as a process of fixing what is broken and instead recognize it as a process of remembering what has always been whole, something shifts. The burden of proving our worth dissolves, and in its place, a quiet knowing emerges—we were never unworthy to begin with.
Suffering as a Result of Disconnection
Shame is one of the most painful emotional states we experience. It stems from a deep biological imprint—our survival once depended on our place in the tribe, and disconnection meant death. Even now, our bodies react to rejection as if it were a physical threat.
When we are wounded, we internalize messages: I am unworthy. I am broken. I am not enough. I am unlovable. I am powerless. These become the stories we live by, shaping our nervous system, our relationships, our sense of self, and our experience in the world.
But these beliefs are distortions. The suffering is real, but the idea that we are broken is an illusion.
Healing Through Remembering
If our work is to remember our true nature, then healing is an act of unlearning—letting go of the falsehoods we’ve carried about our worth. Through the phases of EMDR Therapy we uncover the moments in time that have proved the false narrative. We can digest these experiences, unleashing a broader perspective. With this shift our emotional patterns have the opportunity to shift naturally, without force or a continuous need for coping. This is not a cognitive process. We cannot simply tell ourselves we are whole and expect to believe it. No matter how many times we reframe, redirect and reorient, we won’t believe it until our body does.
This is where reprocessing comes in. With EMDR, we don’t have to convince a client to believe a positive cognition—they discover it. The truth of their dignity emerges naturally out of the process in a way that is unique to their story. When shame no longer has the fertile ground of unworthiness, pain dissolves.
The Role of the Collective
The paradox is that we need others to hold this truth for us when we cannot. It is often easier to see the wholeness in others than in ourselves. When we enter a relational field of love, something shifts. The sense of separateness quiets. Our animal body and nervous system settles. We can feel the truth of our inner divinity through the eyes of others.
This is why healing in groups, circles, and community is so powerful. When someone else sees our wholeness and reflects it back, it becomes easier to embody. When we remember together, the truth is emboldened, and the lies can’t survive.
Holding Complex Truths
Healing is not about eliminating suffering—it is about learning to hold it differently. We can hold pain without identifying with it. We can recognize trauma while refusing to be defined by it. In a world that feels increasingly at odds with itself—where conflict, injustice, and uncertainty weigh heavily on the collective—it’s easy to internalize the chaos as a personal truth, or as a truth about others. But even in the midst of division and upheaval, we can choose how we hold our pain. We can witness suffering without collapsing into it, and we can remain connected to our wholeness even when the world feels broken.
This is the healing paradox:
We are whole, and we suffer.
We are divine, and we are human.
We are complete, and we are still becoming…