Our deepest wounds, the silent turmoil in our hearts, the disturbed mental peace, and the baggage we carry on our backs, are not just pain. They are also doors, doors for vulnerability.
When we’re broken, when we finally drop the mask and speak honestly, when we let ourselves be truly vulnerable, something bigger can slip in.
Maybe it’s a sudden light, a path, that changes everything. Maybe it’s God’s grace, the kind that feels like a soft hand or support on your shoulder when you’re falling. And Psychologist Carl Jung calls it God!
Right now, we live in a world that expects us to be strong and tells us to hide the cracks. We edit our faces for photos, polish our stories until they look perfect, and swipe away discomfort with distractions.
But Jung offers a valuable perspective for this. He beautifully tells that wounds aren’t failures. They’re sacred thresholds, places where the light can finally get in.
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Quote of the day
God enters through the wound
Carl Jung
What does the quote mean?
Carl Jung, the Swiss psychiatrist who founded analytical psychology, is often credited with the line, “God enters through the wound”. Jung spent his career studying the depths of the human psyche, the shadow, the unconscious, dreams, and the painful parts of ourselves we tend to hide.
In this quote, the “wound” does not just mean physical injury. It is symbolic of any deep pain: grief, loss, trauma, failure, rejection, or spiritual crisis. These are the moments when our defenses hold down, our egos shrink, and we feel truly small.
Jung’s wise words tell us that it is precisely in these moments of brokenness and the low that we become open to something greater. When we are no longer pretending to be perfect, when we stop trying to control everything, and we tend to incline towards deeper self-awareness, real compassion, and love for ourselves and others.
In other words, we don’t wake up fully to who we are when we are in our comfort zones. We wake up through suffering that we’re willing to face honestly.
How is this relevant today?
Today’s society often expects us to be polished, prim, and proper always, even on our sad days. It is like an age that is often “anesthetised against wounds, be it psychological, spiritual, existential”. We are expected to hide our struggles on social media and treat discomfort as a problem, and then correct it immediately.
It is only when we are at our lowest, like when someone loses a job, you might finally question what truly matters to us.
When a relationship ends, we finally get the time and consciousness to reflect and identify the parts of ourselves we’d ignored.
Jung says the light that enters through the wound is not external, it’s the radiance of our own true selves, which we had long hidden beneath layers of denial and false identity.
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