When people talk about healing, they often dress it up with soft words and curated pictures—yoga mats, candles, soft playlists, and sunsets that look like they were painted for Instagram. But let’s be honest—healing rarely looks that way.
Healing is not beautiful. It’s bloody. It’s lonely. It’s honest.
It’s waking up one morning and realizing the people you thought you couldn’t live without have moved on without you. It’s staring at the ceiling at 2 a.m., replaying the exact words that broke you in half. It’s trying to breathe through panic attacks that nobody sees. It’s bleeding silently in places where nobody claps for your progress.
And yet—this is what healing demands of us. It asks us to go into the dark and sit there. Not to decorate it, not to pretend it’s easy, but to face it raw and trembling.
The Ugly Middle No One Talks About
Do you remember when you were a child and fell off of your bike? You can still remember how the gravel tore your skin, and your mother kept telling you not to cry, and you are okay? But you weren’t fine. You had rocks in your knees, blood down your shin, and a pain so sharp that ever since you had ridden you wondered whether you would ever ride again.
And that is what it is like to be healed--only this time you are the grown-up, and no one arrives to bandage you. People want you to be strong, move on, and not to talk about it anymore. But the truth? There are wounds that are not closed by lapsing time. When you eventually dare to go and see them, empty them, and understand they were deeper than anyone thought, they shut up.
Healing consists of the confession: I am not alright.
And that admission? That’s the start.
Healing is bloody, not necessarily the blood, but blood of the sort that spurts when you sever cords with that which you imagined you needed. The type which comes when you tear off counterfeits of yourself- the people-pleaser, the performer, the strong one- just to find out what you have left underneath.
It is painful to kill off those versions.
At times healing is losing those people you prayed to remain. It can be removing the number you knew by heart, forgetting the person who you thought was supposed to save you, or leaving the house where your joke was to die right by your own laughter.
To be healed, there has to be something that dies in your place. And that death—it is bloody.
The Loneliness of Sitting With Yourself
No one tells you about the loneliness. They tell you to go to therapy, journal, pray, meditate. But they don’t prepare you for what happens after the therapist’s office is closed, the journal is filled with words that no longer make sense, and prayer feels like whispering into an empty sky.
Healing will make you sit with yourself. Your raw self. The self without achievements, without followers, without applause. Just you.
Healing will sit you down to yourself. Your raw self. The self who has no achievements, no followers, no applause. Just you.
And when you have spent your entire life in trying not to be yourself: in being busy, having friends, achieving things, that is when it becomes unbearable.
Yet in the face of loneliness it turns out to be intimacy. You start to regard yourself as it is, wounds, scars, the beauty lurking beneath it all. You cease acting and begin to exist.
Healing is not only bloody and lonely, but it is sincere. Brutally honest.
It is knowing that you had been in a relationship long enough to not be in love but because you were afraid of being alone. It is coming out to acknowledge the fact that you took the job not because you loved it, but because your father desired it. It means admitting that you are mad at the people who will never make amends and that you are still holding grudges that you claimed to have gotten rid of.
Healing compels you to quit lying to yourself. And when the truth becomes known--it is painful. But it also frees.
Dark affirmation: You don’t have to fix what was never broken. You only need to stop pretending the cracks don’t exist.
I recall a friend telling me of the day when she eventually left her marriage. She had been years praying the change to come, and love to come back, trying to hold the home together on behalf of the children. She believed that being there, surviving and sacrificing even more would restore her health.
Healing came when she packed her bags. It was on the day she walked out--not because it was easy, but because she knew that the only one that was dying in that house was she.
It wasn’t a day that I felt strong, she said to me, when I left. I felt broken. But this time for the first time it was my breaking.
That is the truth of healing: it is not necessarily a sense of victory. It even seems like falling apart. Neither can collapse be unholy.
You are not failing, if you are in the midst of it--if you are bleeding, or lonely, or choking on truths that you never wanted to know.
This is healing. This is the way it looks when you take the filters off and the timelines and the expectations off. There is no linear, no pretty, no social-media-worthy healing.
But it is real.
And on the other side of the blood, the solitude, the sincerity,--you will find something unshaken. Yourself.
Not the one your parents made you believe. Not this one of you that was forced to perform, please, and prove. Even when you did not think it, the self that was always sufficient.
Healing isn’t beautiful in the way we imagine. It’s not flowers and soft music. It’s not quick or easy. It’s bloody, lonely, and honest.
But maybe that’s the beauty of it. Not the polished version, but the raw one. The version that reminds you that scars aren’t signs of weakness—they’re proof that you survived what tried to end you.
So if you’re there, in the dark, don’t rush. Don’t shame yourself for not being “better” already. Don’t let the world trick you into thinking healing should look like a photoshoot.
Let it be messy. Let it be real. Let it be yours.
And when it hurts the most, remember this: even in the blood, even in the loneliness, even in the honesty—you are becoming. And that is enough.
#selflove #womanhood #breakingstereotypes