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1. Separate Who You Are From Who You Were Taught to Be

Carl Jung believed most people mistake adaptation for identity.

So the first step is asking:

This is the slow removal of the the social mask” (persona).

Identity begins when the mask loosens.

2. Turn Inward Instead of Outward

Jung would redirect attention away from:

Instead, focus on:

This inward turn is uncomfortable but necessary.

“Until you make the unconscious conscious, it will direct your life and you will call it fate.” – Carl Jung

3. Confront the Shadow (Instead of Denying It)

Rather than asking “Who do I want to be?”
Jung would ask:

These point directly to the shadow.

By acknowledging it:

4. Pay Attention to Symbols, Dreams, and Imagination

Jung believed the psyche speaks in symbols, not words.

He’d encourage:

These reveal what the conscious mind can’t articulate yet.

Your deeper self communicates before it explains.

5. Learn to Hold Contradiction

Jung didn’t want people to “fix” themselves.
He wanted them to contain tension.

Identity matures when you can hold:

Most people collapse into one extreme.
Individualized people remain whole.

6. Take Responsibility for Your Inner World

For Jung, identity wasn’t self-expression, it was an obligation.

That means:

Freedom comes with weight. Jung didn’t soften that truth.