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4 Things You Should Never Reveal to Anyone — Carl Jung's Disturbing Discovery 📕 Perception Training for Empaths: Book + 3 Exclusive Videos → https://shorturl.at/72zZL Subscribe to: @thesurrealmind Carl Jung spent forty years mapping the hidden architecture of the human mind — and what he found wasn't just disturbing, it was precise. Most people don't destroy themselves through failure or bad luck. They destroy themselves by revealing the wrong things, to the wrong people, at the wrong time. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━ Carl Jung's clinical work across decades revealed a consistent and disturbing pattern: people arrived at psychological collapse not through dramatic trauma, but through a thousand small acts of over-exposure. This video explores four core principles embedded in Jung's actual theories — on the shadow, psychic energy, the persona, and the unconscious — that point to what we reveal, and to whom, as one of the most consequential decisions we make. The shadow must be confessed, Jung believed — but only to someone capable of receiving it. Indiscriminate confession doesn't heal the shadow; it simply hands it to someone who will misuse it. Goals drain when announced publicly, a conclusion Jung's framework of libido — psychic energy needing pressure and containment — anticipates, and that modern research by NYU psychologist Peter Gollwitzer has since confirmed. Performing virtue publicly produces identification with the persona, causing a person to lose contact with their actual moral development. And exposing intuition to skeptical audiences triggers what Jung called participation mystique, dissolving the boundary between your own perceptions and other people's doubt. The answer Jung returned to again and again was sacred silence — not fear, not coldness, but the deliberate protection of the interior life until it is ready to meet the world. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━ References: Gollwitzer, P. M. (2009). When intentions go public: Does social reality widen the intention-behavior gap? Psychological Science, 20(5), 612–618. Jung, C. G. Psychology and Religion (1938). Collected Works, Vol. 11. Princeton University Press. Jung, C. G. Two Essays on Analytical Psychology (CW 7). Princeton University Press. Lévy-Bruhl, L. Referenced in Jung, C. G. — concept of participation mystique adopted and developed within Analytical Psychology. Additional sources provided within the video narration and notes. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━ About Surreal Mind Surreal Mind: Welcome to the Surreal Mind, for those who seek to explore the uncharted depths of philosophy, psychology, and the dimensions of reality. We dive into the subconscious, unraveling the mysteries of dreams, desires, and the hidden expressions of the mind. Unlocking the power of the unconscious, guiding you through transformative journeys that challenge perception and awaken your inner potential. Subscribe for more videos and embark on a voyage into the surreal dimensions of your mind! #philosophy #psychology #mindset #empath #empaths #carljung