Finding Clarity in Healing: When Our Minds Fill in the Blanks

Finding Clarity in Healing: When Our Minds Fill in the Blanks

Lynn A. Haller, MSW, LCSW, is a trauma-informed therapist and educator with over 25 years of experience bringing Internal Family Systems concepts to life through story. Her first children's book, The Hallway of Doorknobs, helps young readers meet their protective inner parts as characters they can understand and befriend.
Lynn A. Haller
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Mustangs, Mailboxes, and Three Eagles Overhead

The other day, I was out walking with my sister and a friend when my friend pointed ahead and said, “Hey, there’s your son!” to my sister. She’d spotted a blue Mustang Mach-E, same make and model as my nephew’s car, and was certain it was him.

My sister wasn’t convinced.

Our friend doubled down. “There can’t be another blue Mustang Mach-E in the neighborhood!”

We all laughed when we got close enough to see a complete stranger behind the wheel.

A few minutes later, three eagles circled overhead. My friend loves animal symbolism, and she said the eagles were reminding her to take in the whole view. They see everything from up there. The big picture, not just the blue car in front of you.

Maybe, she said, that was her message for the day: stop assuming and start looking.

When Our Brains Tell Stories

That made me think of something that happened a while back. I had mailed a gift to a friend and knew exactly when it arrived. Days passed. No text. No thank-you. Nothing.

My mind started filling in the blanks. Maybe she didn’t like it. Maybe it was too much. Maybe she’s upset with me.

The gift was a surprise, so I couldn’t just ask if she got it. My worried parts may have spiraled some. But I listened to them and tried to understand that they were trying to protect me. I decided not to ruin the surprise by reaching out to ask.

And I’m glad I didn’t. The day she finally checked her mail and found the gift, the timing was perfect. If I had asked about it, the moment we shared when she opened it wouldn’t have happened the way it did. That’s when she told me she only checks her mail once a week.

I never told her about the spiral. But she knows about my worried part. She would get it.

That’s the thing about assumptions. They say more about our parts than about the other person.

What IFS Teaches Us About Clarity

In IFS, Clarity is one of the 8 Cs of Self. It’s the quality that helps us see what’s actually happening instead of what our parts are afraid is happening.

My worried parts couldn’t tell the difference. They saw silence and assumed rejection. They were doing their job, trying to protect me from getting hurt. But they didn’t have the full picture. They never do when they’re afraid.

When I can notice that my worried parts have taken over, I can thank them for trying to protect me and ask them to step back. That’s when Clarity shows up. Not because I forced it, but because there’s room for it.

My friend was right about those eagles. They don’t assume. They watch. They take in the whole view before they decide what they’re looking at.

I’m not great at that yet. My worried parts still fill in the blanks faster than I can catch them. But I’m getting better at noticing when it happens. And sometimes that’s enough. Just noticing.

A Reflection for Your Journey

Clarity is something we all have access to. It shows up when our protective parts feel safe enough to step back and let us see what’s actually there.

  • Has your worried part ever filled in the blanks about someone’s silence or behavior? What turned out to be true?
  • Think about the last time you were certain about something that turned out to be wrong. What part of you was doing the convincing?
  • What would it look like to be more eagle than Mustang? To take in the whole view before deciding what you’re looking at?

Sometimes clarity is just realizing it’s another blue Mustang. And sometimes it’s trusting that the gift will land when it’s supposed to.

This post is part of my monthly series exploring the 8 Cs of Internal Family Systems, a framework that shapes how I teach, write, and support healing. The 8 Cs are qualities described by Dr. Richard Schwartz, founder of the Internal Family Systems (IFS) model.