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Jung's Enantiodromia: Why People Who Suppress Their Feelings Always Eventually Break Do you feel like you've been holding it together so long you've forgotten what falling apart even looks like? Have you ever watched someone who seemed completely in control suddenly lose everything — and wondered where it came from? Or maybe you're the one quietly managing the pressure, telling yourself you're fine, waiting for the day when fine finally stops being enough. What you're about to discover has a name. Carl Jung called it enantiodromia — the psychological law that says anything pushed to its extreme will eventually flip into its opposite. And once you understand it, the breakdowns you've witnessed — or survived — will never look random again. This video is for anyone who has ever been told that strength means not feeling. For the professionals who manage every crisis at work but fall apart behind closed doors. For the helpers who give everything to others and have nothing left for themselves. For the stoics, the overachievers, the "I'm fine" performers, and the people who haven't cried in years and aren't sure if that's a victory or a warning sign. 💭 Notable Quote Featured: "Knowing your own darkness is the best method for dealing with the darknesses of other people." — Carl Jung Comment below which pattern hit closest to home for you. Was it the dam analogy, the seven forms, the collapse of the helper, or the idea of the controlled burn versus the wildfire? If you've lived through your own version of enantiodromia, share it — this community is built for exactly that conversation. #JungianPsychology #Enantiodromia #CarlJung #EmotionalSuppression #ShadowWork #MentalHealth #Psychology #Individuation #ShadowSelf #EmotionalIntelligence #JungShadow #BreakingPoint #EmotionalHealth #Burnout