Is Your Healing Practice Actually Keeping You Stuck?

A person standing holding a fake smile over their face.

I’ve been sitting with this after years of working with people who are deeply committed to healing but still suffering. I’m a huge supporter of engaging in multiple modalities for healing so, this isn’t an attack on other practices. But I’ve found that, at times, healing can turn into hiding.

Maybe this sounds familiar: You’ve been reading all the books, doing the healing work, seeing energy healers, tried various spiritual practices, gotten regular massages. You’re committed to your healing.

But you’re still suffering.

I see this pattern often. People come to see me after working with a variety of healers, practitioners, and modalities. They’ve invested time, money, and energy. But they still feel stuck. And honestly, their life is very limited, carefully constructed just to get through the day.

Maybe you’re functioning on the outside. Going to work, paying bills, showing up where you need to. But on the inside, you’re barely hanging on, consumed by physical pain, avoiding people and real connection. Or if you are engaged with others, it’s all very surface-level. You feel too fragile to risk another lost friendship, another misunderstanding, another disappointment.

What if some of your healing practices are actually keeping you stuck?

One problem is that healing has become something you buy.

Buy this crystal. Book this retreat. Try this medication. Download this app. Attend this ceremony.

The wellness industry has turned healing into a marketplace. Healing is now about what you’re purchasing, an item or a service, and less about the actual work of healing: your personal story, the inner work, the deeper conversations about yourself, and most critically, changing your patterns.

You can spend thousands on healers, therapists, retreats, and supplements. You can fill your calendar with appointments and practices, and you can look like someone deeply committed to healing.

But if you’re not doing the uncomfortable work of actually changing how you relate to yourself, to others, to your pain? You’re just busy.

And busy is exhausting.

The Difference Between Healing and Hiding

Spiritual bypassing is when you use spiritual practices, beliefs, or language to avoid dealing with painful feelings or unresolved trauma.

The practices themselves can be helpful. Meditation, affirmations, energy work, and psychedelic ceremonies can all be powerful healing tools. But when used to skip over the hard emotional work? They become another way to hide or avoid the pain that needs to be seen.

I see this show up as:

  • “Everything happens for a reason” (said before you’ve actually processed the trauma)

  • “I’m releasing that energy” (but your body is still holding the pain, you’re still repeating the same patterns)

  • “I only want high vibrations” (while refusing to feel your grief, your anger, your rage)

  • Over-relying on mantras without doing deeper somatic or relational work

  • Calling every painful emotion “low vibe” and trying to transcend it rather than feel it

I get it. I was deeply in a spiritual healing-focused community and it was powerful. The feeling I had when sitting in these deep and sacred spaces felt like healing and in many ways, it was. But it was also feeling disconnected from myself. That’s more comfortable than sitting with anger, grief, the inner disaster spiral.

Spiritual practices are powerful and important in many ways, but they’re not a replacement for the messy work of dealing with your emotions, your body, your relationships, and your patterns.

You see, healing needs to occur across three dimensions of life:the mental/physical, the emotional/energetic, and the consciousness/spiritual realms. If you’re healing only in the spiritual realm, you’re missing those deeper patterns in the body, in the mind, and the unconscious patterns driving the problems. You can have profound spiritual insights and still be dysregulated. You can feel connected to something larger and still be repeating the same relational patterns. You can meditate daily and still be stuck in survival mode.

Real transformation requires addressing all three dimensions—not just the one that feels most comfortable or accessible.

Red Flags Your Healing Practice Might Be Keeping You Stuck

Are you avoiding difficult emotions?
Do you meditate every time you start to feel angry instead of letting yourself actually feel and express the anger? Instead of asking yourself why you’re angry to understand yourself more deeply?

Are you performing healing?
Does your healing practice feel like another task on your to-do list? Another way to prove you’re “doing enough”?

Are you chasing the next thing?
Always looking for the new modality, the better technique, the more powerful plant medicine? Never staying with one practice long enough to actually learn and integrate it?

Are you spiritualizing your pain before you’ve processed it?
Saying “This trauma happened to teach me a lesson” before you’ve actually grieved what you lost or raged about what was done to you?

Has your life gotten smaller, not bigger?
Real healing should gradually expand your capacity for feeling, for connection, for presence, for life itself. If your “healing practice” requires you to stay isolated, avoid triggers, and keep your world small and controlled, something is wrong.

What Genuine Healing Actually Looks Like

Real healing isn’t always peaceful or blissful. Honestly, you will feel worse before you feel better, and that’s often a sign of real integration happening. Facing those buried emotions and memories will hurt, but it’s the pathway out.

It involves feeling the things you’ve been spending years avoiding. The grief, the rage, the shame. The profound sadness about what happened and what you lost.

It’s slow and unglamorous. You work through the same patterns again and again, each time going a little deeper, learning a little more, integrating a little more.

It happens in relationship. With a therapist who can hold space for all of you, with trusted friends who can witness your pain, with your own body as you learn to listen to it again.

You become more human, not more “enlightened.” More able to feel, to connect, to be messy. Less concerned with transcending, more interested in being fully present for your actual life.

Your world gradually expands instead of contracts. You can handle more. Feel more. Risk more. Connect more deeply.

Healing isn’t about becoming a “better” version of yourself. It’s about becoming more fully you, with all your complexity, your pain, your humanness.

You don’t need another promise of transformation.

If this resonates, sit with it. You do not need to fix anything today. Noticing is already part of the work.

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How to Start My Healing Journey (When You’ve Tried Everything and Still Feel Stuck)