A turning point doesn’t arrive with noise or celebration. According to Carl Jung, it arrives quietly — after exhaustion, after disillusionment, after the old ways stop working. It’s the moment when you realize you cannot continue as you were, but you also don’t yet know what comes next. This video is about that exact psychological threshold. Jung believed that true change begins only when the ego runs out of strategies. When motivation fades, when familiar identities collapse, and when the mind is forced to confront what it has been avoiding. This moment feels confusing, heavy, and isolating — but it is not failure. It is transition. In this video, we explore: • Why feeling stuck often means you’re actually at the edge of change • How Jung’s concept of individuation explains life’s turning points • Why clarity comes after breakdown, not before • Why discomfort signals psychological readiness • What shifts internally when the old self can no longer survive Jung taught that the turning point is not when life improves — it’s when you change your position toward life. When you stop asking for direction and start developing inner authority. When you no longer want comfort, but truth. If you’re watching this and something inside you feels different — quieter, heavier, clearer — it may be because you’ve reached the point where your life can no longer go back to what it was. And that is where transformation begins. Hashtags: #CarlJung #TurningPoint #Individuation #InnerTransformation #Psychology #Awakening #PersonalGrowth #MentalClarity #SecondHalfOfLife #SelfAwareness Search Terms: Carl Jung turning point, psychological turning point explained, individuation Jung, life transformation signs, feeling stuck before change, inner shift Carl Jung, breakdown before breakthrough psychology, second half of life Jung