The Voids We Don’t Talk About (But Live With Every Day)

Written by Haythem Lafhaj, PLMFT

There’s something we don’t talk about enough in therapy: voids. That empty feeling. The ache you can’t quite explain. The silence after something (or someone) is gone and nothing seems to fill the space.

You can have a good job, a solid relationship, and still feel... hollow. That doesn’t make you broken—it makes you human. Many of the clients I see at Caring Conversations Center walk in not knowing what they’re missing. They just know something feels off.

Sometimes, voids are caused by childhood wounds—emotional neglect, abandonment, or growing up in a home where feelings weren’t safe. Other times, they come from loss—grief, divorce, rejection, or even the gap between where you are and where you hoped you’d be.

The tricky thing? Voids don’t stay still. We try to fill them—with people, work, substances, or distractions. But none of that actually satisfies the ache.

That’s where systemic therapy steps in. We look at how your family, culture, and past experiences shaped the patterns that keep you stuck. We ask deeper questions: What is this emptiness trying to tell you? Who taught you not to need? Where did you learn to settle?

For African and Muslim clients, I also explore the role of faith, community, and intergenerational trauma in the shaping of emotional voids. Sometimes the healing starts with naming the pain, and sometimes it’s about learning to hold it with grace while building something new.

Therapy won’t always erase the void—but it helps you understand it, sit with it, and stop running from it. And that’s when life starts to feel more full, more rooted, more real.

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Projections and Triangulation: When It’s Not About Them (But Also... It Kinda Is)

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Boundaries Aren’t Walls – They’re Bridges