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    Home » When Healing Becomes Another Thing to Get Right — And How That Makes Everything Worse
    Mental Health

    When Healing Becomes Another Thing to Get Right — And How That Makes Everything Worse

    By Jack WardApril 1, 2026No Comments6 Mins Read
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    When Healing Becomes Another Thing to Get Right
    When Healing Becomes Another Thing to Get Right

    There is a specific type of exhaustion that results from working too hard on your pain rather than trying to avoid it. It manifests in people who follow accounts about nervous system regulation and attachment theory, journal every morning, go to therapy once a week, and yet feel, in private, that they’re not doing it well enough. As if they are constantly failing at the subject of healing.

    Healing turned into a project at some point in the past ten years. It’s a practice, a discipline, a quantifiable endeavor with benchmarks and progress points, and the constant risk of making a mistake. It’s not just something that develops over time through living, connecting, and the gradual accumulation of better days. The terms “do the work,” “break the cycle,” “rewire your nervous system,” and “heal your inner child” are prevalent when browsing any area of the internet related to wellness. Most of it is done with sincere intentions. However, recovery becomes performance due to some aspect of the framing, and this change is more expensive than most people realize.

    Anxiety about progress, constant self-monitoring, and treating setbacks as failuresDetails
    TopicThe Perfectionism of Healing / Wellness Culture & Emotional Recovery
    Core ConceptWhen the pursuit of healing becomes a performance or rigid checklist, it can create new anxiety rather than relief
    Related FieldsPsychology, Trauma Therapy, Mental Health, Mindfulness, Self-Development
    Key Thinkers ReferencedDan Allender (The Allender Center), Rachael Clinton Chen
    Common PhenomenonSpiritual bypassing, perfectionism in recovery, healing as avoidance
    Cultural ContextRise of self-help industry, wellness as consumer culture, social media “healing” aesthetics
    Warning SignsAnxiety about progress, constant self-monitoring, treating setbacks as failures
    Healthier ApproachNon-linear healing, self-compassion, presence over performance
    Relevant InstitutionThe Allender Center — Narrative Focused Trauma Care
    Reference WebsiteThe Allender Center — Why Does My Healing Matter?

    It’s possible that the self-help movement subtly introduced a new kind of pressure in the process, despite all the real benefits it has provided in lowering stigma associated with mental health and making therapy concepts more approachable. The same perfectionist mindset that led to professional burnout was picked up, dusted off, and applied directly to emotional healing. Some people now feel bad about being depressed, not because they’ve been told it’s wrong, but rather because they’ve been told they ought to have dealt with it by now. They read the appropriate literature. They are aware of the polyvagal theory, the window of tolerance, and the distinction between a trigger and a wound. And still. The emotions come back. And they register that as failure rather than acknowledging it as wholly human.

    Dan Allender, a longtime practitioner of narrative-focused trauma care and the founder of The Allender Center, has discussed this conflict in an unusually candid manner. He has observed that healing is rarely achieved with a single dose. It doesn’t come, solve the problem, and make you better forever. It occurs in cycles; it’s deeper each time, but it keeps happening. Regression does not occur when old patterns reappear after months of hard work. Often, it’s the reverse. The same material is arriving with a bit more space surrounding it and the ability to finally be examined. However, when the larger cultural narrative insists that progress should appear as forward motion, it is nearly impossible to maintain that distinction.

    It’s a subtle trap. It frequently starts with a well-intentioned action, such as someone identifying a pattern, beginning therapy, or realizing how their past has influenced their responses. It truly feels like a breakthrough when that realization occurs. When you start paying attention, the world appears differently. However, at some point, noticing becomes monitoring. The awareness turns into surveillance. What began as self-compassion eventually takes on the feel of a performance evaluation.

    Spiritual bypassing is a term that is occasionally used to describe the practice of avoiding emotions rather than actually processing them by using healing frameworks, affirmations, or meditation. It’s not dramatic all the time. Sometimes it manifests as quickly reframing grief as a lesson before actually sitting with the grief, or reaching for a journaling prompt as soon as discomfort strikes. The shape appears to be healing. Avoidance is the purpose. It can also remain unexamined for a long time because it dresses as self-awareness.

    The fact that healing is fundamentally not something you do correctly is often overlooked in the optimization of emotional recovery. It’s something that happens to you—through open communication, connecting with others, making mistakes in relationships, and trying again after making a mistake. This is precisely what the Allender Center’s approach emphasizes: that healing occurs in community, not in isolation, and that the objective is to become someone who doesn’t give up on themselves when things are difficult rather than to reach an unshakeable state. The self-improvement industry often promotes a destination that is significantly different from that.

    Observing others deal with this gives me the impression that the most important question to ask is not, “Am I healed?” but rather, “Can I stay with myself right now, in this moment, without needing to fix it?” It is more difficult than it might seem to go from doing to being, from correcting to witnessing. especially for those who learned early on that doing things correctly was a kind of safety and whose perfectionism evolved as a survival strategy. For those individuals, letting go of the notion that proper healing is possible feels almost as dangerous as the initial injury.

    The most subtly harmful notion in today’s wellness culture is probably the myth of the fully healed person—someone who no longer gets triggered, no longer grieves in inconvenient moments, and no longer carries any residue from their past. Every stumble is measured against an unachievable finish line. Healing was never intended to be a destination, as author Sladja Redner noted. However, the self-help industry’s entire structure tends to function as if it is, with phases, benchmarks, innovations, and the enduring notion that enough work will eventually result in a finished version of yourself.

    It won’t. Not because healing is ineffective, but rather because humanity never ends. Fear coexists with growth. Grief reappears in new ways. With slightly different attire, old patterns reappear in new seasons. It’s not a failure. It’s the feel of living a somewhat honest life.

    Those who appear to take their healing the lightest are not the ones who have done it correctly. They are the ones who gave up on doing so. who transitioned from an adversarial and corrective relationship with their own suffering to one that was, for the most part, just kind. who realized that the objective was never to be immune to hardship, but rather to be able to overcome it without totally collapsing. That’s a big deal. However, it doesn’t resemble a checklist at all.

    When Healing Becomes Another Thing to Get Right
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    Jack Ward
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    Jack Ward contributes to Private Therapy Clinics as a writer. He creates content that enables readers to take significant actions toward emotional wellbeing because he is passionate about making psychological concepts relevant, practical, and easy to understand.

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