How To Make It Through The Void
Filling the emptiness at the end of your healing journey
There was a time when I thought my healing was finally complete.
I felt at peace with myself. The few memories from my childhood that still surfaced were not painful anymore. I kept a calm mind and didn't get triggered anymore.
Life was good. But somehow life also felt empty.
This time it was a different emptiness. It didn't feel like something was missing inside of me. Instead, it was as if I were standing in an endless white room with no idea where to go.
The stage I was in is also known as the void—the empty space many pass through after their healing.
What the void is about
Childhood trauma often stays buried for decades. I discovered my role as the family scapegoat about 5 years ago. That was after many years of asking myself what was going wrong in my life and why painful patterns kept repeating over and over again.
It all seemed to come back to me. Like so many scapegoats, I learned to walk on eggshells, became a people-pleaser, and believed I had no value. I radiated this into the world. And of course, some people took advantage of it.
The healing journey is about uncovering the patterns that once helped survive in a dysfunctional family system. You allow painful memories and emotions to rise again, and you let yourself feel them and go through the pain. This is how you process your trauma and finally detach from it.
Letting go means releasing large parts of a given identity you never chose. The trauma shaped you. You adapted to your environment. Later, you used those childhood survival strategies as general guidelines for your life.
That's why you experience the same sh*t again and again. Toxic environments felt familiar. You knew how to survive in them. Yes, they hurt, but they were predictable. And that predictability gave you the illusion of control.
Healing and letting go of your past is like a big clean-up. You throw all the rubbish you carried for years. And with it goes the fragile sense of control you once held onto. Suddenly, you find yourself standing in an empty room, unsure where to go.
Welcome to the void…
Most of my life, I defined myself through my achievements and skills. Beyond that, I had no idea what my value as a human being was, or who I was deep down inside.
Chasing success became a problem during my healing. The moments of glory and feelings of worth never lasted. It also became clear that if I kept going like that, I would eventually burn out—healing itself was exhausting.
Most of the things I used for orientation in my life were tied to my role as the family scapegoat. Achievements were one part of it; sacrificing and pleasing my family, making myself smaller than anybody around me, were the others.
After I felt that healing was complete, all those components lost their meaning.
So, what to do with my life?
I knew that forcing my way through the emptiness wouldn't work. Burying myself in books and searching for answers wasn't an option either—I felt like I'd already read every self-help book there is.
I tried to make plans, but my head felt so empty. And to make plans, I needed direction. And that was exactly the problem.
When you're standing in an endless white room, you don't know where to go. Everything looks the same.
So why not choose any direction and see what life will bring?
Although this was a rational thought, it felt pointless—an act out of sheer frustration.
I craved a direction…
Making it through the void
I followed the only option left: allowing myself as much rest as I needed. Of course, I took care of my basic duties and chores. But besides that, I did nothing but rest—no distraction, just sitting comfortably in an armchair or lying on the couch, enjoying my own peaceful presence.
After a few days, I heard a tiny voice inside me saying:
“Tim, what if the empty room is your playground and you can put in it whatever you want?”
I liked that thought, but had no idea what to put inside. So I rested for a few more days. Then the voice spoke again:
“You felt like you were never heard. Why not explore what you can do with your voice? You never thought of yourself as a creative person. Why not take drawing lessons and see how you can express yourself this way?”
These thoughts made me smile and sparked curiosity. They felt like an energy rising from deep inside, finally giving me a direction.
There was a lightness in trying all these new things. And to my very surprise, my inner voice kept offering ideas that felt right for me.
The void is a sacred opportunity to learn about your very core—your essence, the part of you that remains once all beliefs and social conditioning are stripped away.
What feels like peaceful emptiness is actually fertile ground. It's the soil on which you can build your future life. In that space, you are free to give your life a new direction.
Another gift the void gave me was trust in life.
At first, allowing myself to rest was a real struggle. Rest felt like laziness, like standing still, giving up, and losing at life. But that was my old conditioning speaking.
I began to understand that rest feeds the soul. It creates silence and opens space to hear, feel, and see yourself. The more I allowed myself to rest, the more whole I became. Nothing felt missing anymore.
Yes, I was once broken into pieces. But rest was the final glue, slowly putting them back together. My only task was just to allow the process and trust the outcome.
It worked.
The void was not an empty end. It was a reset that gave me a new beginning and handed me the key to my own life. With it, I can fill the room with whatever I choose and finally walk forward without the weight of the past.
The void belongs to many healing journeys, although it is not much talked about.
In the beginning, it can feel like yet another form of emptiness or standstill. It can make you question whether all the energy and time you have put into your healing was worth it.
But the purpose of the void is to make you transition from your trauma-shaped past to the person who can finally thrive.
What matters most is that you allow yourself to rest and trust the process. The less you resist and are willing to give up control, the smoother the transition will be.
Think of it as becoming who you really are and finding your way back to the excitement and curiosity you once carried as a child.
In the silence of the void, your truest self is waiting to be remembered.




“Most of my life, I defined myself through my achievements and skills. Beyond that, I had no idea what my value as a human being was, or who I was deep down inside.” This quote touched me deeply! It summed up my existence before I left nursing. Your article is very good, thank you.
Thank you for these words. I’m in the void now and feel really uncomfortable and impatient. I have been resting though and it does feel good. Appreciate the hope you gave me.