Addiction Isn't a Disease. Carl Jung Called It a Philosophical Emergency.
Автор: Echo of Wisdom
Загружено: 2026-03-12
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Addiction is often misunderstood as a lack of discipline. But Jung saw compulsive behavior as meaningful. According to Carl Jung, addiction can emerge when parts of the self are repressed, exiled, or disconnected from conscious life. The unconscious looks for relief — and addiction becomes the substitute.
This video explores:
Carl Jung’s theory on addiction
The psychology of addiction and compulsive behavior
Shadow work and addictive patterns
Trauma and addiction recovery
Why willpower alone rarely works
The unconscious roots of addiction
How to overcome addiction from the inside out
We connect Jungian depth psychology (shadow, persona, complexes, individuation) with modern addiction psychology, trauma science, attachment theory, nervous system regulation, and dopamine-driven habit loops.
Addiction is not just about alcohol or drugs. It can include emotional addiction, food addiction, validation seeking, toxic relationship cycles, overworking, scrolling, and compulsive behaviors that temporarily numb pain.
If you’ve ever asked:
Why can’t I stop drinking, smoking, scrolling, or overeating?
Why do I keep self-sabotaging?
Why do cravings feel stronger than logic?
How do I heal addiction at the root?
This video is for you.
Understanding addiction through Carl Jung’s psychology shifts the focus from shame to integration. Healing begins not by fighting the symptom — but by listening to what the psyche is trying to express.
Topics covered:
Carl Jung addiction theory, psychology of addiction, Jung on addiction, how to overcome addiction, addiction recovery psychology, shadow work and addiction, trauma and addictive behavior, Carl Jung shadow work, individuation and healing.
#CarlJung #AddictionRecovery #PsychologyOfAddiction #ShadowWork #AddictionHealing #DepthPsychology #MentalHealth #TraumaHealing
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