Why the End of Spiritual Awakening Feels Like Losing Everything | Carl Jung

Why the End of Spiritual Awakening Feels Like Losing Everything | Carl Jung

You expected the awakening to end in arrival. Instead it ended in an ordinary Tuesday that feels like a room someone has already moved out of. The synchronicities stopped. The clock went back to being the time. The certainty that you were close to something has quietly gone, and no one warned you that completion could feel this much like loss. Carl Jung mapped the mechanism underneath this silence. He called it deflation, and he understood that what dies at the end of an awakening is not the awakening itself. It is the seeker you had to become to survive it. This video traces what your inflation was built on, why the world goes quiet the moment you stop projecting your own depths onto it, and what is left standing once the one who was searching finally lies down. Sources referenced in this video: C.G. Jung, Two Essays on Analytical Psychology (Collected Works, Vol. 7) C.G. Jung, Memories, Dreams, Reflections C.G. Jung, Aion, Researches into the Phenomenology of the Self (Collected Works, Vol. 9, Part II) C.G. Jung, The Archetypes and the Collective Unconscious (Collected Works, Vol. 9, Part I) C.G. Jung, Psychology and Alchemy (Collected Works, Vol. 12) 📕 Perception Training for Empaths: Book + 3 Exclusive Videos → https://shorturl.at/72zZL ▹ EMPATH PLAYLIST →    â€Ē Empath Awakening Series — Carl Jung Psycho...   Subscribe to: 

@thesurrealmind‮ This video explores Jungian analytical psychology as a philosophical and educational framework for understanding self-awareness. It is provided for educational purposes and does not constitute medical advice or psychological diagnosis.