Why You're Secretly Addicted to Sadness — Carl Jung
Drawing on the psychology of Carl Jung and attachment theory, this video explores one of the most honest psychological truths almost no one talks about. The strange, hidden comfort we find in our own sadness. Why familiar pain can feel safer than unfamiliar peace. Why the mind returns, again and again, to emotional territory it knows. And what it might mean to finally understand that pattern rather than simply live inside it. If something in this finds you, leave it in the comments. ― 0:00 — The feeling that keeps returning 2:15 — Why the mind is drawn to what it knows 4:50 — Carl Jung and the shadow self 7:30 — Attachment theory and emotional home 9:45 — The safety of sadness over happiness 11:55 — Self-sabotage and the fear of freedom 14:20 — The space between pattern and self 16:40 — A different relationship with the dark ― #wonderism #psychology #carljung #philosophy #selfawareness

Why Being Alone Changes You Forever — Carl Jung

How Depression Facilitates Self-Transformation

Let People Disappoint You — Carl Jung

The Most Confident Person in the Room Is HIDING SOMETHING. Carl Jung Explains What.

Nobody and Nothing Will Affect You Again - Carl Jung

Why Your Brain Mistakes Anxiety For Love – Freud’s Most Disturbing Discovery

Why People Hate Sophia Empaths (Even More Than You Think) - Carl Jung

The Psychology of People Who CUT Everyone Out of Their Lives - Alan Watts

Be Careful With Trauma-Born Empath Loners — Only 1% of People Survive This | Carl Jung Original

The Rarest Minds Always Leave the Herd | Friedrich Nietzsche

This Is Why Some People NEVER Go Out

The Unspoken Trauma of Feeling Better Alone

Heal Your Inner Child, Heal Your Life – Carl Jung

The Day You Stop Romanticizing People — Carl Jung

Why It’s Better to be Alone Than with the Wrong People| Schopenhauer

7 Films Jung Would Use to Break Your Shadow Self Open

Why Is Solitude the Ultimate Test of Your Life? – Carl Jung

7 Signs Your Presence Intimidates People Without You Realizing It | Carl Jung

Don't Take Life too Seriously | Alan Watts

