Religion

Wednesday, July 1, 2026

The Self Beyond the Labyrinth

 

Part 5: Who We Are When Suffering Is No Longer the Whole Story

When the wound becomes part of us without becoming all of us



"The privilege of a lifetime is to become who you truly are."

— Carl Jung



This final essay explores Jung's idea of integration: how we become whole not by escaping suffering, but by allowing it to become part of a life that is larger than the wound.


There is a moment in the journey that nobody quite prepares you for.

Not the descent. Not the long residence inside the labyrinth. Not even the terrifying appearance of the door, which Part Four explored: the moment healing reveals itself as its own kind of grief, its own kind of betrayal.

This is the moment after you walk through.

And you discover the hardest truth of all.

You brought it with you.

The labyrinth did not stay behind you like a set abandoned after the film ends. The thresholds you crossed did not close themselves. The rooms you lived in did not disappear simply because you found your way out of them. You carry the knowledge of them, their particular light, their silence, their strange familiarity, into every ordinary morning that follows.

Coffee before sunrise. The soft sound of the house settling. Life continuing without announcement.

And you, somewhere inside it, wondering who exactly made it out.

That is the question this final essay wants to sit with.

Not whether healing is possible. The previous four essays have quietly argued that it is, slowly, imperfectly, always on a longer timeline than we expected.

The question is more intimate than that.

Who are we when suffering is no longer the primary story of our lives?

The Misunderstanding About Healing

Something in the human imagination keeps expecting healing to feel like subtraction.

As though the goal were to arrive at the self that existed before the wound. To recover the person who had not yet crossed the threshold. To reassemble what suffering took apart and return to a previous, undamaged wholeness.

This is understandable. When something has been broken, we want it unbroken. When something has been lost, we want it returned. The desire to go back is one of the most human desires there is.

But it is not how healing actually works.

It cannot be.

Because the threshold was real. The crossing was real. The rooms beneath reality were real, and they left their marks on us in ways that belong to us now, not as punishment, not as permanent damage, but as part of the particular shape our lives have taken.

Carl Jung spent much of his life articulating what he called individuation: the slow, nonlinear process by which a person becomes more fully themselves. Not a better version of an earlier self. Not a repaired version of a broken one. Something larger. A self that has gradually incorporated its shadow, its grief, its complexity, and its mystery into a more complete whole.

Jung did not imagine this process as recovery from darkness.

He imagined it as integration of it.

There is a profound difference.

Recovery suggests a return. Integration suggests an expansion. The wound is not erased. It is folded into a self large enough to hold it without being organized entirely around it.

The labyrinth was real.

But it was never the whole house.

What Kirsty Carries

Kirsty Cotton does not emerge from the labyrinth unchanged.

Across the films, she is never quite the same person she was before the box opened. She carries the knowledge of what she has seen. She carries grief for what she lost inside. She carries a particular weariness in her eyes that belongs only to people who have been somewhere most people have not, and who understand they cannot entirely explain it to anyone who wasn't there.

But she also carries something else.

A quality of attention that suffering produced in her. A refusal to be deceived that she did not possess before. A particular fierceness in the way she protects what she loves. A capacity for the kind of courage that is not the absence of fear but the willingness to move toward the door anyway, even terrified, even uncertain, even carrying everything the labyrinth left inside her.

She is not the Kirsty who existed before the threshold.

She is something more complex than that.

Something that includes the labyrinth without being contained by it.

This is not a small thing.

This is, in fact, the central thing.

The Cenobites could not imagine it. Their understanding of transformation runs only in one direction: into the wound, deeper into the labyrinth, further from ordinary life. They cannot conceive of a self that descends and returns and is somehow larger for having made the journey.

They cannot conceive of Kirsty.

And perhaps that is why she could survive them.

The Archaeology of the Self

James Hollis, the Jungian analyst whose words open this essay, has written that the second half of life is less about building a self than discovering one. Less about accumulation and more about excavation. Clearing away what was never truly ours: the performances, the identities constructed for survival, the roles we adopted to endure what we could not otherwise face, until something older and quieter becomes visible beneath all of it.

Something that was there before the labyrinth.

Something the labyrinth could alter but not erase.

This is what Hollis means when he speaks of becoming who we truly are. Not the project of self-improvement. Not the reconstruction of a damaged life into a better-managed one. But the slow uncovering of a self that predates the wound and outlasts it.

The Christian tradition says something adjacent to this, and Part Four touched on it quietly. The self is known before it is wounded. Named before the labyrinth. Loved before it had done anything to earn that love. The wound is real. The transformation suffering produces is real. The labyrinth leaves genuine marks.

But none of that is the foundation.

The foundation is prior to all of it.

Which means healing is not the self rebuilding itself from what it survived.

It is the self remembering what suffering could damage but never fully reach.

Both of these images, Jung's individuation and the older theological one, point in the same direction.

There is something beneath the wound that belongs to us.

The work of healing is, at least partly, the work of finding our way back to it.

What Integration Actually Looks Like

It does not look like the labyrinth disappearing.

It does not look like forgetting the rooms beneath reality or pretending the descent never happened or arriving at a morning that feels entirely unburdened by everything that came before.

It looks, most often, surprisingly ordinary.

A person notices they laughed without guilt for the first time in longer than they can name. They realize they have gone several hours without the wound being the first thing their mind reaches for. They find themselves genuinely curious about something in a way that has nothing to do with grief. They feel the unmistakable texture of a future they can actually imagine inhabiting, not because the past has been resolved, but because it has begun to take its proper place.

Behind them. Part of them. Not ahead of them, filling the entire horizon.

Jung called one of his central concepts the transcendent function: the psyche's own capacity to hold opposites in tension long enough for something new to emerge from between them. Not the resolution of opposites. The holding of them. Light and shadow. Wound and wholeness. The self that descended and the self that returned.

Integration is not the victory of one side over the other.

It is the discovery of a self large enough to contain both.

Viktor Frankl understood this from the inside. He did not emerge from the camps unchanged, and he carried what he had seen for the rest of his life. But he carried it inside a self that had found, in the deepest darkness imaginable, something the darkness could not take from him: the possibility of choosing one's response even when one cannot choose one's circumstances. He did not return to who he had been before. He became someone who had descended and integrated the descent.

That is not a lesser outcome than the one we hoped for.

In many ways it is a larger one.

The Rooms Are Still There

There will be mornings when the labyrinth feels closer than it did the day before. A particular smell, a date on the calendar, a quality of winter light through a certain window, and the rooms beneath reality will feel suddenly near again, familiar in the way that old grief is familiar, not foreign but not comfortable either.

This is not failure.

This is not the wound reasserting control over the story.

It is simply what it means to carry a real past inside a real life. The rooms do not disappear. They become part of the house. And over time, with enough of what healing slowly provides: genuine connection, meaning that is larger than the wound, small ordinary tenderness in a kitchen on a Tuesday morning, the steady presence of something that holds, the rest of the house becomes more familiar than the labyrinth.

Not instead of it.

Alongside it.

C.S. Lewis, who understood grief from the inside and did not flinch from its full weight, noticed something in the years after his loss that surprised him.

The presence he had feared healing would erase was, in fact, more present in his integrated life than it had been inside the acute wound. He had not left her behind by surviving. He had, somehow, carried her forward into a life that was larger than the grief alone.

The wound integrated is not the wound minimized.

It is the wound metabolized.

Taken into the self. Transformed into something that belongs to the larger story.

Who We Are

So then.

Who are we when suffering is no longer the primary story?

We are people who have been somewhere.

People who know, from the inside, what the rooms beneath reality feel like: their particular cold, their strange silence, the way time moves differently there. People who crossed thresholds that could not be uncrossed and found their way back anyway, or are still finding it, which is not so different in the end.

We are people with a particular quality of attention that did not exist before the descent. A specific compassion that cannot be manufactured, only earned. An understanding of the dark that becomes, quietly, a gift we can offer to others still inside it.

We are people who know what tenderness is worth because we know what its absence costs. People who can recognize, in a stranger's carefully maintained composure, the signs of someone living in the rooms beneath reality. People who know to leave a light on because we remember what it meant to find one.

We are larger than what happened to us.

Not because the wound was not real.

Because we are real too.

Because the self that was there before the labyrinth is still there after it, altered, deepened, marked, but not erased. Still recognizable beneath everything the descent required of us. Still reaching, however tentatively, toward the life that belongs to us beyond the wound.

Jung wrote that we do not become enlightened by imagining figures of light, but by making the darkness conscious.

This is what the Cenobites could never do. They crossed into the darkness and stayed. They made the darkness their world. They could not take the final step that transforms descent into wisdom and wound into self.

They could not return.

Kirsty could.

And perhaps that single difference is the whole story.

Coming Home

Home is not what it was before the labyrinth.

How could it be.

But it is still home. Recognizable in the ways that matter, in the quality of certain light through windows, in the sound of rain against glass, in the warmth of a familiar voice from another room, in the ordinary and almost unbearable beauty of a morning that contains nothing remarkable except the fact of continuing.

The box opened a door.

It could never contain the self that walked back through it.

The labyrinth is behind us. Part of us. In us. And still not the whole house.

We come home carrying what the darkness taught us: that we are more durable than we knew, that tenderness is not weakness but the thing that kept us human when nothing else could, that suffering is real and is not the final word, and that the self beneath the wound is not a fiction we tell ourselves to endure but a foundation that was there all along.

Waiting.

Patient.

Larger than the labyrinth ever was.

We come home.

****


The Hellraiser Series

These five essays have used the imagery of Hellraiser as a lens for some of the deepest questions the human soul carries: what happens when we cross thresholds that change us, what suffering does to the self over time, and what it means to find our way back to something larger than the wound. Here are the first four essays:

Part One: The Rooms Beneath Reality — What Hellraiser Understands About the Human Soul
(Thresholds, archetypes, and the hidden rooms beneath consciousness.)

Part Two: When Tenderness Disappears — What Hellraiser Understands About Emotional Unreachability
(How suffering can sever us from ourselves and one another.)

Part Three: When Suffering Becomes Identity — What Hellraiser Understands About the Self
(When the labyrinth starts to feel like home.)

Part Four: When Healing Feels Like Betrayal — What Hellraiser Understands About Freedom
(Why freedom is sometimes the most frightening door of all.)

Saturday, June 27, 2026

The Shoreline Series: Faith at the Edge


Every shoreline is a meeting place. Land gives way to sea. Certainty gives way to mystery. One chapter ends while another quietly begins. The Shoreline Series: Faith at the Edge is a weekly invitation to explore these sacred thresholds in Scripture and in our own lives, discovering again and again that God has always been a God who meets His people at the water's edge.

----


Session 1: The God Who Meets Us Between Worlds

Based on Exodus 14, Matthew 4, John 21


I. A Place That Belongs to Neither World

Stand at the edge of the ocean and notice what is beneath your feet.

It is not quite land. It is not quite sea. The water comes and goes, the sand shifts with each wave, and the line between one world and the other is never fixed.

A beach is a threshold - a place that exists precisely because two worlds are meeting there.

Neither world fully possesses it. The land cannot keep it. The sea cannot claim it. It belongs to the meeting itself. And perhaps that is why so many of God's most important moments happen at places like these.

Most of us know this feeling. Not from the ocean, but from life.

The space between a diagnosis and what comes next. Between a relationship ending and whatever follows. Between the faith we had and the one we are still trying to find. Between who we were and who God is making us.

Scripture does not call us to avoid these places. It calls us to look for God there.

T.S. Eliot wrote in Four Quartets,

"We shall not cease from exploration, and the end of all our exploring will be to arrive where we started and know the place for the first time."

The in-between is not a detour. It is often the journey itself.

II. Israel at the Water's Edge

Israel arrived at the Red Sea with Pharaoh's army behind them.

They were no longer slaves in Egypt. They were not yet free on the other side. They were standing at an impossible threshold with no way forward that made any sense.

"Moses answered the people, 'Do not be afraid. Stand firm and you will see the deliverance the Lord will bring you today.'" (Exodus 14:13)

The miracle did not come after they crossed. It came while they were standing at the edge.

God did not ask them to figure out the crossing first. He asked them to stand still and watch.

Henri Nouwen wrote,

"Waiting is not a passive resignation. It is an active expectation that something is going to happen."

The threshold is not where God is absent. It is where He is about to act.


III. Called from the Shoreline

The disciples were not in a temple when Jesus found them.

They were working, mending nets, sorting fish, doing ordinary labor on an ordinary morning. Jesus came to the edge of the water and called to them where they stood.

"'Come, follow me,' Jesus said, 'and I will send you out to fish for people.' At once they left their nets and followed him." (Matthew 4:19-20)

He did not wait for them to arrive somewhere more prepared or more spiritual.

He came to the shoreline, to the boundary between the life they understood and the one they could not yet imagine.

Dallas Willard wrote,

"Grace is not opposed to effort. It is opposed to earning. Effort is action. Earning is an attitude."

God calls us not once we have it figured out, but while we are still standing between two worlds.

IV. Breakfast on the Beach

After the resurrection, the disciples went back to fishing.

Whether from grief or confusion or simply not knowing what else to do, they returned to the water. They caught nothing. And in the early morning, Jesus appeared on the shore.

"Jesus said to them, 'Come and have breakfast.' None of the disciples dared ask him, 'Who are you?' They knew it was the Lord." (John 21:12)

He already had a fire going. He already had food prepared. He met them in their uncertainty, not after it resolved.

This is also where Peter's restoration happened. Three times Jesus asked him, "Do you love me?" - one question for each denial. The healing came not in a moment of triumph but in a quiet conversation beside a charcoal fire at the water's edge.

Brené Brown writes in Rising Strong,

"The middle is messy, but it's also where the magic happens - where transformation begins."

Jesus did not wait for Peter to have it together. He met him at the threshold, between failure and grace.


V. What God Does at the Water's Edge

A pattern emerges in scripture.

Once you begin noticing it, you see the shoreline everywhere in Scripture.

Again and again God chooses places of crossing rather than places of arrival.

He seems strangely drawn to thresholds.

God parted the sea while Israel stood at its edge, not after. He called the disciples from the shoreline, not from the other side of it. He built a fire on the beach in the space between grief and understanding, not once the understanding had arrived.

"When you pass through the waters, I will be with you; and when you pass through the rivers, they will not sweep over you." (Isaiah 43:2)

Not when you have passed through. While you are passing.

Thomas Merton wrote,

"The biggest human temptation is to settle for too little."

We settle for waiting until things are resolved before we expect God to show up. But He is already there, at the edge, in the in-between, in the space where two worlds meet.

VI. Standing at Your Shoreline

The beach is a reminder we all need.

Most of life is lived at a threshold of some kind. We want God to meet us at the destination, once the answers are clear and the future is secure. But scripture tells a different story.

He is the God of the in-between. The God who meets His people at crossings, thresholds, and water's edges. The God who builds a fire and cooks breakfast in the middle of our unresolved grief.

"Be still, and know that I am God." (Psalm 46:10)

The shore beneath your feet may feel like it is shifting. It may feel like neither land nor sea.

That is exactly where He does His best work.



Practicing the Presence of God at the Shoreline This Week

  1. Name your threshold. Where are you between two worlds right now? Write it down without trying to resolve it.
  2. Stand still before you strategize. Before you make your next move, pause. Ask God what He is doing in this in-between place.
  3. Look for the fire already burning. Where is God already at work in your uncertainty? What provision has appeared that you have not yet acknowledged?
  4. Extend the shoreline to someone else. Who in your life is standing at a threshold? Offer presence rather than solutions.
  5. Release the destination. Pray not only for where you are going but for what God is doing while you are on the way.


Continue Walking the Shoreline

If today's reflection encouraged you, you may also enjoy:

The Place In Between Where Life Still Meets You

The Fifth Season: When Closure Never Comes But Clarity Does

Before Resurrection Was Recognized



The Shoreline Series: Faith at the Edge is a weekly Saturday devotional exploring the places where God meets us between endings and beginnings, certainty and mystery, grief and hope.

 

Tuesday, June 23, 2026

When Healing Feels Like Betrayal


Part 4: Why Freedom Is Sometimes the Most Frightening Door of All


"We are not what happened to us. We are what we choose to become through what happened to us."


— James Hollis, Jungian analyst and author of Finding Meaning in the Second Half of Life


Kirsty Cotton survives.

Across multiple Hellraiser films, she is the one who makes it out. She outsmarts the Cenobites, finds the door, and walks through it.

She survives.

But survival is not the same thing as healing.

Watch her carefully after she crosses back. She carries the box. She carries the knowledge. She carries the memory of every threshold she crossed and every person she lost on the other side of it. Technically she is free. In every way that matters she is still living in the aftermath of the labyrinth.

The first essay asked what happens when we cross a threshold that changes us.

The second asked what happens when suffering separates us from ourselves and others.

The third asked what happens when pain stops feeling like something we carry and starts feeling like who we are.

This essay asks a quieter question.

What happens when the door out finally appears?

Not whether escape is possible.

Whether it feels like something we actually want.

Most conversations about healing assume the hard part is getting there.

The grief. The work. The long road through whatever broke us.

What those conversations rarely name is the problem that comes before all of that.

The problem of wanting to go.

When suffering has organized a life, when the wound has become the lens through which we see ourselves and everything around us, healing does not arrive as rescue.

It arrives as disruption.

It asks us to release something that has become, over a very long time, the primary story we tell about who we are.

And that is not a simple thing to do.

Not because people enjoy suffering. The desire to be free of pain is one of the most basic human instincts there is. But suffering, over time, becomes familiar. Familiar feels safer than unknown. A painful identity at least provides a map. It explains why things hurt. It makes a certain kind of sense of the world.

Healing is more disruptive.

It asks different questions.

It opens different rooms.

And when suffering has been the center of a life for long enough, healing can feel less like liberation and more like a particular kind of loss.

It can feel, in ways that are difficult to articulate without sounding strange, like betrayal.

The Four Betrayals of Healing

There are several forms this betrayal takes.

The first is betrayal of the wound itself.

The suffering was real. Moving forward can feel like minimizing it. Like claiming it mattered less than it did. Like the person who endured it is being left behind, abandoned somewhere in the past, while life moves on without properly honoring what it cost.

Grief was real. Trauma was real. Loss was real.

Healing can feel, at a certain depth, like saying it wasn't.

The second is betrayal of others still inside.

When we begin finding our way toward healing while people we love remain inside their own labyrinths, or when we carry the weight of having survived something others did not, freedom becomes complicated.

What right do I have to leave a room that others cannot?

Why am I the one who gets to move forward?

That guilt is one of the quieter cruelties of recovery. It attaches itself to the first signs of lightness and turns them into something that needs to be apologized for.

The third is betrayal of the self we built.

The adapted self, the one constructed for survival inside the labyrinth, had genuine strength. Competence earned at significant cost. A particular wisdom about how to endure that only comes from enduring. That self kept us alive. It found a way to function inside circumstances that should not have required functioning.

Healing asks that self to stand down.

It does not go quietly.

The fourth is betrayal of the story.

If the wound is no longer the center, the narrative we have been telling about our lives needs to be revised. Not just adjusted. Fundamentally reconsidered.

And that revision is not merely psychological.

It is existential.

It touches identity, memory, and the way we understand everything that came before. It requires us to look at the life we have been living and ask whether the meaning we assigned to it still holds.

That is an enormous thing to ask of anyone.

This is why healing is not simply difficult.

It is, at a certain depth, its own kind of grief.

When Healing Feels Like Unfaithfulness

C.S. Lewis understood this.

Not as an abstraction. When Lewis wrote A Grief Observed following the death of his wife, he was not producing theology. He was producing testimony. He wrote about grief the way someone writes when they have no choice, because the alternative is silence, and silence had become unbearable.

What he found inside the grief was not what he expected.

He found that mourning did not move in one direction. That the moments when things seemed to ease were sometimes the hardest moments of all. That the first signs of recovery felt, at times, like a kind of unfaithfulness.

He wrote about the fear that moving forward meant leaving her behind.

He wrote about the strange guilt of a morning that felt almost ordinary.

He wrote about the way healing disrupted the very grief that had been keeping her present.

What Lewis named in the context of bereavement applies to every form of suffering that has become identity.

The wound kept us connected to something.

Healing asks us to release it.

And releasing it can feel like losing the thing itself all over again.

What Lewis eventually found, and what he was careful not to simplify, was that grief transformed was not grief abandoned. That the woman he loved was not less present in his life because he was no longer destroyed by her absence. That the wound, integrated, became something different.

Not smaller. Different.

It became part of a larger story rather than the only story.

That movement, from wound as center to wound as part of a larger whole, is perhaps the quietest definition of healing that exists.

Kirsty faces the same question.

Not whether she can escape the labyrinth.

But who she becomes after she does.

The Self Beyond the Labyrinth

The Cenobites pursue her not simply because they want her back. They pursue her because in their understanding, what was opened cannot be closed. She crossed a threshold. She carries the knowledge. The self that walked out of the labyrinth is not the same self that walked in.

They are not wrong about that.

What they are wrong about is what the films cannot quite imagine: what becomes possible on the other side of that change.

The Cenobites believe transformation only moves in one direction.

Into the labyrinth.

Into the wound.

Into the identity that suffering constructs.

What they cannot conceive of is a self that carries the threshold crossing without being defined entirely by it. A self that includes the descent and is still larger than the descent. A self that was changed by the labyrinth and is still, beneath all of it, something more than what the labyrinth made.

Kirsty survives because she keeps reaching for the door even when the door leads somewhere terrifying.

That is not nothing.

That is, in fact, almost everything.

The reaching is the thing.

Not arriving.

Not having the labyrinth disappear behind us as though it never existed.

Just continuing to reach for the door even when reaching is frightening. Even when the other side is unknown. Even when part of us would rather stay in the dark we have already learned to navigate than step into a light we do not yet recognize.

The deepest problem with healing as betrayal is the assumption beneath it.

The assumption that who we are is entirely constructed from what we have survived. That the self is only the sum of its wounds and its adaptations and the long work of enduring. That there is no prior ground to return to because there was never anything prior.

If that is true, then healing really is a kind of loss. The best available outcome is a more integrated relationship with the suffering, which is meaningful, but which stops short of something the human soul seems to persistently reach for.

Something that feels less like reconstruction and more like return.

The Christian tradition makes a claim that cuts directly against that assumption.

The self is known before it is wounded.

Named before the labyrinth.

Loved before it had done anything to earn or protect that love.

The wound is real. The transformation that suffering produces is real. The labyrinth leaves marks that do not entirely disappear.

But none of that is the foundation.

The foundation is prior to all of it.

And healing, understood this way, is not the self rebuilding itself from what it survived.

It is the self remembering something that suffering could damage but never fully reach.

The First Door

Perhaps healing begins with the first door opening.

Not the final door.

Not arrival or resolution or the end of difficulty.

Just the first door: the one that requires believing, against the evidence of everything the wound has taught us, that we belong somewhere beyond where we have been.

That belief is not easy.

Nothing in the labyrinth prepares us for it.

The wound taught us that pain is reliable, that the map we built around suffering is the truest one available, that the self we constructed for survival is the self we are.

The first door asks us to consider that we were something before all of that.

That we are still something beneath all of that.

That healing is not the deletion of the labyrinth but the discovery that the labyrinth was always inside a larger house.

And that the house has been real the entire time.

The door is open.

The question is not whether we deserve to walk through it.

The question is whether we are willing to believe that we do.

*****

 

The Hellraiser Series

Across these four essays, Hellraiser has served as a lens for exploring suffering, identity, transformation, and the hidden ways pain can shape a life. Together they ask what happens when we cross difficult thresholds, become lost inside our wounds, and begin the long journey toward becoming something larger than what happened to us.

Part One: The Rooms Beneath Reality — What Hellraiser Understands About the Human Soul
(Thresholds, desire, and the hidden rooms beneath reality.)

Part Two: When Tenderness Disappears — What Hellraiser Understands About Emotional Unreachability
(How suffering can separate us from ourselves and one another.)

Part Three: When Suffering Becomes Identity
(When the labyrinth starts to feel like home.)

 

If Something Met You Here, These May Too:

The Fifth Season: When Closure Never Comes But ClarityDoes
(Living faithfully when the story remains unresolved.)

The Fifth Season, Part 2: When Life Begins Again WithoutPermission
(The surprising return of life after loss.)

Sometimes Healing Feels Like Loss First
(Why growth often feels like another grief before it feels like freedom.)

The Life That Didn’t Take Shape
(Making peace with futures that never arrived.)

The Place In Between Where Life Still Meets You
(Finding meaning while living between what was and what comes next.)


Sunday, June 21, 2026

The Inheritance We Didn't Choose: A Father's Day Reflection


Thou mayest


Nobody chooses their inheritance.

Not the genetic kind. Not the emotional kind. Long before we're old enough to consent to any of it, we receive temperament, patterns of anger or silence, ways of loving or withholding love, entire postures toward the world that were never ours to select.

Father's Day asks us to celebrate fatherhood. It rarely asks us to examine what fatherhood actually transmits.

Some of what we inherit is wonderful. A father's patience. His steadiness. The particular way he made a house feel safe simply by being in it. Some of what we inherit is harder to hold. A temper that surfaces faster than we'd like. A silence we learned before we knew we were learning it. A way of loving that withholds as much as it gives.

Most of us carry some combination of both, whether we've ever examined it or not.

The difficulty is that inheritance rarely announces itself as inheritance. It feels, most days, simply like personality. Like the way things are. It takes a particular kind of honesty to notice that a reaction we assumed was simply ours actually has a much older source: a father, a grandfather, a pattern handed down so quietly that nobody along the way ever thought to call it what it was.

John Steinbeck spent six hundred pages wrestling with this question in East of Eden, and he built the entire novel around a single word.

The Trask and Hamilton families echo the story of Cain and Abel across generations. Brothers competing for a father's approval, a mother whose cruelty ripples forward into sons who never asked to inherit it. Cathy's coldness reappears in Cal. The longing for a father's blessing reappears in nearly everyone. By the time the novel reaches its third generation, the question hanging over every character is the same one: does the past simply repeat itself in us, whether we want it to or not?

Steinbeck's answer turns on a verse from Genesis. When God speaks to Cain before the murder of Abel, He says that sin desires to have him but that he may rule over it. Translators have argued for over a century about exactly how to render the original Hebrew. Some versions render it as a command: thou shalt. Others render it as a promise, almost a guarantee: thou shalt surely.

Steinbeck's characters land somewhere different. Not a command. Not a guarantee. Thou mayest.

The inheritance is real. The desire to repeat what came before genuinely presses in. But the verse refuses to make that pressure into destiny. It simply says: you may. You are permitted to rule over what was handed to you. Nothing forces your hand in either direction.

That single word is doing an enormous amount of work, both in Steinbeck's novel and in the lives of anyone who has ever wondered whether they're doomed to become their father, for better or worse.

Scripture had already said something close to this, long before Steinbeck found it.

In the book of Ezekiel, the exiles had taken to repeating a proverb among themselves: the parents have eaten sour grapes, and the children's teeth are set on edge. In other words, we are simply living out the consequences of choices that were never ours. The sins of the fathers have become the inheritance of the sons, and there is nothing to be done about it.

God's response, through the prophet, is direct. That proverb will no longer be repeated. The soul who sins is the one who bears responsibility. The child does not carry the guilt of the parent, nor the parent the guilt of the child. Each person stands accountable for what they do with what they were given.

This is not a small theological point. It is, in its own way, a declaration of freedom.

Naming what was passed down to us, the good and the painful both, is not betrayal. It is not blame directed at a father who likely received his own difficult inheritance from somewhere too. It is simply honesty. And honesty, as it turns out, is usually the precondition for freedom rather than its enemy.

A person cannot rule over what they refuse to name.

None of this should suggest that every inheritance is something to escape.

Paul wrote to a young man named Timothy about a faith that lived first in his grandmother Lois, then in his mother Eunice, and now lived in Timothy himself. That, too, is inheritance, not a wound passed down the generations but a gift, carried faithfully from one set of hands to the next until it found a place to rest.

Many people reading this had fathers who gave them something worth keeping. Patience. Integrity. A particular kind of courage. A faith that became their own only because someone else lived it first, in front of them, long enough for it to take root.

The goal was never to reject everything a father gave. The goal is simply to look honestly at what was received and to keep what was good, release what wasn't, and recognize that the difference is something only the next generation can decide.

Every father leaves something behind, intentionally or not. A temper. A tenderness. A silence. A faith. Some combination the child never gets to choose and will spend a lifetime learning to hold.

What Steinbeck understood, and what Ezekiel said long before him, is that having of an inheritance is not the same thing as being ruled by it.

The patterns are real. The pull toward repeating them is real. But standing over all of it is a single, almost unbearable permission: not a guarantee that we'll rise above what we were given, not a command that we must, but simply the chance that we might.

This Father's Day, that may be the truest gift available to anyone holding a complicated inheritance: not the demand to be different from their father, and not the certainty that they will be, but the door left open all the same.

Some will spend this day grateful for exactly what they received, with nothing to release and everything to honor. Others will spend it carrying a more mixed inheritance, recognizing gifts they would never surrender alongside patterns they hope will end with them. Both are honest responses to the same reality.

What remains true either way is the permission underneath it all. Not a verdict already decided. Not a future already written. Simply an open door, and the chance to walk through it.

Perhaps that is the deepest meaning of Father's Day. Not merely honoring what was handed to us, nor condemning it, but seeing it clearly enough to choose what happens next.

Thou mayest.

Wednesday, June 17, 2026

When Suffering Becomes Identity: What Hellraiser Understands About the Self

 

Part 3: Why Some People Stop Hoping to Leave the Labyrinth

When the labyrinth starts to feel like home

 

"Until you make the unconscious conscious, it will direct your life and you will call it fate."

— Carl Jung

 

By the end of Hellraiser, the most unsettling thing about the Cenobites is not what has happened to them.

It is what they have become.

The first essay explored thresholds.

The second explored emotional unreachability.

Both point toward a deeper question.

What happens when suffering remains long enough that it stops feeling temporary and starts feeling like reality itself?

What happens when a person can no longer remember where the wound ends and they begin?

Not grief as an event.

Not loneliness as a season.

Not pain as a wound.

Identity.

The Cenobites no longer appear to be beings experiencing suffering. They appear to have organized their existence around it.

Pain is no longer something they endure.

It has become the architecture of who they are.

The chains.

The scars.

The rituals.

The endless pursuit of sensation.

All of it feels less like punishment and more like identity.

And perhaps that is what makes them so psychologically unsettling.

Not because they suffer or because they crossed a threshold. Human beings have always suffered and crossed thresholds throughout their lives.

But because they no longer appear capable of imagining themselves apart from what happened to them.

No earlier self seems visible beneath the transformation.

The suffering has become the story.

Every human being who has suffered long enough has glimpsed some version of the same fear.

Not merely that pain will continue.

Not merely that grief will linger.

But that eventually they may forget who they were before it arrived.

The fear that one day the wound will feel older than the self.

The fear that suffering will stop feeling like something they carry and start feeling like the only thing they are.

That is the possibility the Cenobites embody.

And that may be the deepest horror of all.

When Survival Becomes a Self

One of the quietest dangers of prolonged suffering is adaptation.

The psyche learns. It reorganizes itself around what it encounters repeatedly.

Over time, even experiences that once felt foreign begin to feel familiar. Grief finds its place in the daily rhythm of life. Loneliness becomes something a person learns to carry. What initially felt like an interruption gradually becomes part of the landscape.

Human beings are remarkably adaptive.

That adaptability is one of our greatest strengths. It allows us to endure losses we never wanted and survive seasons we never anticipated. The problem is not that the psyche adapts. The problem is that adaptation sometimes happens so gradually that we fail to notice when survival has begun reshaping our understanding of who we are.

The danger is not adaptation itself.

The danger is forgetting where adaptation ends and identity begins.

A person begins by saying:

"I am grieving."

Months later they may find themselves unconsciously living a different sentence:

"I am the grieving one."

The experience slowly becomes identity.

What began as a wound becomes a lens.

What began as a season becomes a self.

Without realizing it, a person may begin interpreting every part of themselves through the suffering they carry. Not because they choose to, but because the wound has occupied so much territory.

Perhaps this is why healing sometimes feels surprisingly threatening.

Not because people enjoy suffering but because suffering can become familiar, and familiarity often feels safer than freedom.

A painful identity at least provides a map. It explains the landscape and helps us understand why things hurt.

Healing is more disruptive.

It asks different questions.

Who are you if the wound is no longer the center of the story?

Who are you if grief is no longer the first thing you think about each morning?

Who are you if the room you have been living in is no longer the only room available?

Those questions can feel surprisingly unsettling.

Not because healing is bad, but because becoming someone new always requires leaving something behind.

The Cenobites embody this possibility symbolically.

They do not seem trapped inside their transformations.

They seem devoted to them.

They do not merely inhabit the labyrinth.

They serve it.

And that may be the most frightening possibility of all:

the moment suffering stops being something we carry and becomes the story we use to explain ourselves.


Viktor Frankl and the Space Beyond Suffering

Viktor Frankl spent much of his life asking a question that remains profoundly relevant:

How does a person suffer without becoming their suffering?

It was not an abstract question for him.

It emerged from some of the darkest circumstances imaginable.

Reflecting on life inside the concentration camps, Frankl wrote:

"When we are no longer able to change a situation, we are challenged to change ourselves."

Frankl understood that suffering inevitably changes people.

It would be naïve to pretend otherwise.

Loss changes people.

Illness changes people.

Disappointment changes people.

Grief changes people.

Certain thresholds leave marks that never fully disappear.

The question is not whether suffering will alter us.

The question is whether it becomes the entirety of who we are.

Throughout his work, Frankl returned repeatedly to the importance of meaning. He observed that people could endure astonishing hardship when they retained some connection to something beyond the suffering itself: a person they loved, a responsibility they still carried, a future they hoped to reach, a purpose that remained unfinished.

The suffering was real.

But it was not the whole story.

Human beings cannot always choose what happens to them.

What they can sometimes choose is whether the suffering becomes the only lens through which they understand themselves.

This is where Frankl and Hellraiser unexpectedly converge.

Frankl asks how human beings preserve meaning inside suffering.

The Cenobites imagine the opposite possibility.

What if suffering eventually becomes the only meaning left?

What if the wound becomes more familiar than the self that existed before it?

What if pain stops being an experience and becomes identity?

What if no other future remains imaginable?

No other story.

No other possibility.

No other version of the self.

That is the threshold where survival begins turning into self-definition not because suffering exists, but because suffering has become the only reality a person can still see.


The Cenobites and the Death of Possibility

The deepest horror surrounding the Cenobites may not be pain.

Human beings have survived pain throughout all of history.

Nor is it transformation. Grief, illness, loss, aging, love, and mortality change people every day. Change is woven into the fabric of being human.

The deeper horror is the apparent death of possibility.

What makes the Cenobites unsettling is not simply that they have been altered. It is the sense that no alternative self remains imaginable. The transformation feels complete, as though every other possibility has been consumed by the one that remains.

Most people encounter some version of this fear quietly.

It appears in ordinary moments: struggling to remember who you were before the loss, realizing how much of your inner life has become organized around a wound, noticing that every future you imagine begins with the thing that changed you.

Not because you want it to, but because suffering can occupy so much territory that it becomes difficult to see beyond it.

Anyone who has suffered deeply has encountered some version of this fear.

A widow may wonder whether grief will always define her life.

Someone who has been abandoned may question whether trust will ever feel natural again.

After years of loneliness, a person may begin to wonder whether connection still belongs in their future.

Beneath those questions lies the same anxiety:

not simply that suffering will continue, but that it has become inseparable from identity.

This is why the Cenobites feel less like villains than warnings. They embody a life so thoroughly organized around suffering that anything beyond it becomes difficult to imagine.

Pinhead is terrifying not because he crossed a threshold.

Human beings cross thresholds throughout their lives.

He is terrifying because he no longer appears interested in returning.

The labyrinth has become home.

And that may be the deepest horror of all.


Remembering the Rest of the House

The goal is not to deny suffering or minimize grief. Some thresholds change us. Some losses alter the landscape of a life in ways that cannot be undone. There are rooms beneath reality that, once entered, can never be entirely forgotten.

Jung understood this well. The task of becoming whole was never about avoiding darkness. It was about refusing to mistake darkness for the entirety of reality.

Perhaps that is where healing quietly begins.

Not when suffering disappears.

Not when grief finally leaves.

But when a person remembers there is more to them than the room they have been living in.

For a long time, suffering can feel all-encompassing. It shapes our attention, our routines, and our understanding of the future. Over time, it can become difficult to imagine life organized around anything else.

Yet the wound is not the whole story.

The person who grieves is still more than grief.

The person who suffers is still more than suffering.

That is the truth the Cenobites seem unable to remember.

What makes them tragic is not that they crossed a threshold or endured suffering. Human beings do both throughout their lives. What makes them tragic is the apparent loss of every other possibility. No other story remains visible. No other room appears reachable.

The labyrinth has become their entire world.

Human beings cross thresholds throughout their lives. Suffering will change us. The deeper question is whether we will remember that we are larger than the thing that changed us.

Healing often begins with something surprisingly small: a glimpse of a doorway where we thought there was only a wall, a moment of unexpected laughter, a friendship that reminds us of an older self, or a piece of music that reconnects us to something we thought had been lost.

Tiny reminders that the house contains more rooms than the one we have been living in.

The rooms beneath reality are real.

The labyrinth is real.

The thresholds are real.

But they are not the whole house.

And neither is the suffering that led us there.

*****



Continuing the Hellraiser Series

Across these three essays, Hellraiser has served as a lens for exploring suffering, identity, and the search for meaning. Together they ask what happens when we cross difficult thresholds, become disconnected from ourselves, and begin to wonder whether pain has become the primary story of our lives.

If you would like to revisit the earlier reflections in this series:

Part One: What Hellraiser Understands About the Human Soul
(Thresholds, desire, and the hidden rooms beneath reality.)

Part Two: When the Soul Becomes Unreachable
(How suffering can separate us from ourselves and from one another.)

 

Some essays stay with us because they articulate something we have been carrying for a long time. If themes of grief, identity, disillusionment, healing, or quiet perseverance resonated with you, you may find companions in these reflections as well:

The Fifth Season: When Closure Never Comes But Clarity Does
(Living faithfully when the story remains unresolved.)

When Healing Feels Like Loss First
(Why growth often feels like another loss before it feels like freedom.)

The Collapse of Performance
(What remains when suffering strips away the identities we once relied upon.)

The Grief of Things That Could Not Stay
(Making peace with people, seasons, and futures we could not keep.)

The Life that Didn't Take Shape

(Honoring the futures we imagined without allowing them to define us.)