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Shadow & PsycheJungian / Gnostic / Universal

Wholeness

Цялост

[HOLE-ness]

Old English hālnes — completeness, soundness, health; related to 'holy' (hālig) and 'heal' (hǣlan) — all from the same root meaning 'complete, uninjured'

Definition

Wholeness is the state of psychological and spiritual completeness achieved through the integration of all fragmented, denied, and exiled parts of the psyche — the goal of both Jungian individuation and Gnostic soul retrieval, where the scattered divine sparks are gathered back into unity.

Deep Understanding

The English word 'wholeness' shares its etymological root with 'holy' and 'heal' — revealing an ancient understanding that completeness, sacredness, and health are fundamentally the same condition. To be whole is to be holy is to be healed.

Jung understood wholeness as the goal of individuation — not perfection, but completeness. The individuated person has not eliminated their darkness but integrated it. They contain their Shadow, their Anima or Animus, their wounded child, and their divine spark in a conscious unity that Jung called the Self (das Selbst). This Self is not the ego — it is the totality of the psyche, conscious and unconscious, functioning as an integrated whole.

In Gnostic cosmology, wholeness is the Pleroma — the divine fullness from which Sophia fell and to which all scattered sparks aspire to return. The Pleroma is not a place but a state of being: complete, luminous, undivided. The material world — the Kenoma — is defined precisely by its incompleteness, its fragmentation, its fundamental brokenness.

The pursuit of wholeness is therefore not self-improvement but self-recovery. You are not building something that does not exist — you are gathering what was scattered. The divine spark within you is already whole; it is only the personality, conditioned and fragmented by experience, that experiences itself as incomplete.

In Practice

Wholeness is not achieved in a single breakthrough but cultivated through sustained practice: shadow work, soul retrieval, meditation, honest relationship, and the willingness to face what has been denied. Notice where you feel incomplete — that feeling is a compass pointing toward the next fragment to retrieve. Trust the process. The soul knows its own way home.

In The Architect's Words

"Wholeness is not becoming someone new. It is becoming more of who you always were — before the world convinced you to be less. The scattered light can be gathered. The fragments know the way home."

Further Reading

Related Terms