Do you want to feel freer, healthier and more energetic?

in #life2 years ago

"Wounded healers don't emerge from nowhere." They shape themselves by translating their pain into power. So they know how to confront and transmute shadows into brightness. They guide lost souls to help, home, and healing by illuminating unknown paths.

This archetype was created by Carl Jung in the early twentieth century. However, this idea has been around since the dawn of mythology. To discover more about this subject, you can read Chiron's narrative. The basic assumption is that a person who heals himself eventually heals others.

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Let's define a healer as someone who aids in another's healing. You're a healer.

Consider the wound as a bother that causes you pain. You've been hurt.

"Our wounds are a personal invitation to heal."

No better way to learn about myself. If I can get out of a bad circumstance without being sidetracked or using my coping mechanisms, I've learnt something. I found what mattered to me, what I want, and what drives me. I found out what I suppress and what I keep buried in my head. I found I have an unbreakable side, which made me stronger and more resourceful.

Healing begins with your own wounds. This transition can be gradual or sudden. Our scars, according to Jung, lead to our unconscious, but they can also inspire us. When we face our scars, we uncover a new degree of creativity. The world will improve dramatically if we embrace it! Your creative genius has arrived just in time.

Even if others are ahead of us, we are all on the same path. We all suffer, but I'm talking about something more. Your own suffering affects your community's. People have been involved in your wounds and will continue to be. From the outside, you can see that all mankind shares your agony and suffering. This is the wellspring of our pain, wound, and healing.

We may get fixated on our wounds, obsessing over them and victimising them. We don't judge because it may happen to anyone. I wouldn't pick this kind of irritating self-obsession. Consider how our wounds can serve us in the long term. Your disease or trauma may prompt empathetic treatment. Addiction may help you relax. Maybe you relate to your friends through feeling inadequate. This is how we acquire acclimated to our presence and our scars. Your wound is an experience, not a prison.

"With a hammer, everything looks like a nail," it says. It's a word we understand. Some people assume that if they heal and reform themselves, then all of their friends or clients will do the same. But it may not be their fault. It's difficult to let go of our expectations about our experiences. We run the risk of miscommunication and misinterpretation if we don't approach people with an open mind. We may miss an opportunity to help them recover.

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So, what does that mean?
That's probably it.

True You = entire and vulnerable.

We were born this way because everything went our way. Our wounds tore us away from it, as if something was missing, malfunctioning, or ruined. Wounding is the process of bringing our consciousness to our fullness.

Reality is a mess. Our hurt heals us. We are both injured and whole.

Let us put it simply:

Poor parenting, neglect or abuse, traumas, dysfunctional attachment styles and life's issues all have an impact on our programming. But, and this is vital, none of these occurrences have harmed us. We are hit on a relative level, which might be severe. We are, however, unharmed. Humans are both broken and whole.


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