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“Everyone carries a shadow, and the less it is embodied in the individual’s conscious
life, the blacker and denser it is. If an inferiority is conscious, one always has a
chance to correct it… But if it is repressed and isolated from consciousness, it never
gets corrected, and is liable to burst forth suddenly in a moment of unawareness. At all
counts, it forms an unconscious snag, thwarting our most well-meant intentions.”
Carl Jung talks about two types of shadows: the personal shadow (the unknown dark side
of our personality) and the collective shadow (the unknown dark side of society).
Starting with the personal shadow, Jung calls it:
“the thing a person has no wish to be.” It represents unknown or little-known attributes
and qualities of the ego. It is the sum of all those unpleasant qualities we like to
hide from ourselves. The shadow contains inferiorities which everybody has but prefers not to know
about, they seem weak, socially unacceptable or even evil. The shadow is most visible when
one is in the grip of anxiety or other emotions, under the influence of alcohol, etc., one
may suddenly blurt out a hostile remark during a friendly conversation. When we do not want
to assimilate what we despise, we project it unto others.
It is possible for one to be acquainted with one’s shadow and be partly conscious of
it, that is, under ego control. Many people, however, refuse to recognise their shadow
so completely that the ego is not even aware of shadow behaviour and thus has no possibility
of commanding it. Under these conditions, the shadow is autonomous and may express itself
in inexplicable moods, irritability and cruelty. Throughout his writing, Jung refers to the
importance of developing awareness of the shadow in psychotherapy and its projections
in the individual’s life. Although the shadow is usually perceived as negative it can also
be positive. In fact, exploring our shadow gives us access to many positive qualities,
Jung writes that the shadow: “displays a number of good qualities, such
as normal instincts, appropriate reactions, realistic insights, creative impulses, etc.”
One of Jung’s closest collaborators, Marie-Louise von Franz writes:
“The shadow is not necessarily always an opponent. In fact, he is exactly like any
human being with whom one has to get along, sometimes by giving in, sometimes by resisting,
sometimes by giving love – whatever the situation requires. The shadow becomes hostile
only when he is ignored or misunderstood.” The shadow contains all sorts of qualities,
strengths and potentials, which if remain unexplored, give us a state of impoverishment
in our personality, creating unconscious “snags” which inhibit the growth and embodiment of
these good qualities that lie dormant in our psyche.
For instance, a person might believe that being assertive is being rude or aggressive,
losing the qualities of confidence and the ability to speak up for himself in an honest
and respectful way, which in turn may lead to less proactivity, make it more difficult
to get a raise or job promotion, struggle with money, and so on.
So, when a person encounters an assertive person deep down he feels resentment and guilt,
which makes his shadow blacker and denser. These valuable aspects ought to be assimilated
into actual experience and not repressed, it is up to the ego to give up its pride.
We also encounter our shadow in our dreams, as a person of the same sex as the dreamer.
It is what seems to be a “criticism” of our character from the unconscious, an inner
judge of your own being that reproaches you, and the result is usually embarrassed silence.
We must identify the contents of the shadow and integrate them into our personality.
This is the process of “the realisation of the shadow”, also known as shadow work.
Here begins the painfully and lengthy work of self-education, one must enter into long
and difficult negotiations with the shadow, a work, we might say, that is the psychological
equivalent of the labours of Hercules. Through shadow work, one can observe one’s shadow
outwardly by watching one’s emotional reactions and being radically honest about one’s interactions
with others, and inwardly by exploring one’s dreams.
This allows one to become enlightened and reduces the shadow’s destructive potential,
not so much, as it were, by waging war against the darkness, but by bringing the darkness
to the light, the light to the darkness. As Jung writes:
“There is no light without shadow and no psychic wholeness without imperfection.”
One must not strive for perfection, but rather wholeness of personality. The lifelong process
of individuation creates a balance between one’s conscious and unconscious realms,
aligning the ego to the self, the totality of one’s personality.
However scary or dark it is to confront our shadow, finding truth brings relief. Discernment
of the truth is the process of authenticity; a painstaking excavation into the depths of
our being to explore possibilities and limitations, distortions and the buried and often forgotten
parts of ourselves and abilities. Most people, however, are too indolent to
think deeply about even those moral aspects of their behaviour of which they are conscious;
let alone to consider how the unconscious affects them.
The shadow can also consist of factors that
stem from a source outside the individual’s personal life. Here is when we stumble upon
the collective shadow, the dark side or the unknown or little known aspects of a society
and culture. It consists of that which opposes our shared and collective values.
The collective shadow refers to a huge, multidimensional, often horrifying, yet elusive aspect of human
life, to an immensity of harm inflicted by human beings upon each other and the natural
world and to the vast aftereffects of such harm in subsequent generations.
We find the collective shadow in the projection of “darkness” and inferiority, in violence
and oppression, in the invisibility of current suffering, in the denial of current responsibility.
While collective shadow material may be acted out brutally in wars, massacres and genocides,
it may also hide under the often attractive cloaks of missionary activity, such as mandating
the use of particular languages, an Orwellian reality that we are experiencing in the present time.
As is the nature of all shadow material, whether
individual or collective, its existence and influence may be pervasive without being obvious.
The collective shadow manifests outwardly in atrocities, persecution, physical suffering,
sickness, poverty, malnutrition, alcoholism, crime, the death of cultures and so on.
It may also manifest more inwardly, amid the complexities of each individual psyche, as
hatred toward oneself, one’s heritage, and one’s culture, depression and feelings of
impotence, the desire for revenge (so that others might experience something like one’s
own pain), etc. The collective shadow is what has historically
been labelled “evil”. In the Christian tradition it would be the devil, and someone
who is possessed by the devil loses his human quality and acquires a demonic nature. Our
primary response to evil, for Jung, must be the quest for self-knowledge, for wholeness,
which presumes the assimilation of shadow material. The individual:
“must know relentlessly how much good he can do, and what crimes he is capable of”
When there is an issue known in a particular society, it can be called a shadow issue if
there is evidence of denial, projection and a lack of taking individual and collective
responsibility. Therefore, taking responsibility – morally, politically and spiritually – is
particularly crucial. The courage with which we bear our darkness frees others from having
to carry it for us. For instance, to respond to examples of massive
historical suffering: wars, genocide, holocausts, pervasive oppression, etc., the effects of
which persist. As human beings we have much to learn in that regard. Denial, often connected
with a wish to “get on with things” and “put the past behind us”, seems the most
common approach and usually the first reaction. There are and have been many attempts to deal
with difficult, painful pasts through public apologies for supporting atrocities, repentance,
reparation payments after wars, pilgrimages to places of great suffering, etc. But how
do we deal with the past in such a way that the integration of the shadow occurs deeply
and broadly within a population, rather than simply at a symbolic level through leaders
or policies? Remembering and speaking what often seems
unspeakable is inevitably a painful process for victims and perpetrators, bystanders and
witnesses. Any such process can only be regarded as successful or reasonably complete once
the pain, outrage, betrayal, suffering, and all the other feelings have been voiced and
heard and once responsibility has been taken. Truth-telling is both the most desirable and
the most feasible way to grapple with a difficult past.
One example of a terrible mass psychosis represented by the collective shadow is Nazi Germany where
people fell into the demonic nature through their personal shadow. They joined the Nazi
party and did worse things than they could have ever imagined or would have done under
normal social conditions. In this sense, the personal shadow is the bridge to the collective
shadow. Therefore, it is important to solve one’s
inner conflicts first (one’s personal shadow), so that one does not fall into the collective
shadow unconsciously. One may then later influence other people and society would be better off
as a whole. “If we practice mindfulness, we will know
how to look deeply into the nature of war, and, with our insight, wake people up so that
together we can avoid repeating the same horrors again and again… The war is in us, but is
also in everyone… Everything is ready to explode, and we are all co-responsible.”
To summarise, we must first acknowledge our personal shadow and enter into long and difficult
negotiations with it (being honest with ourselves and our interactions with others, watching
our emotional reactions and exploring our dreams), in order to not become passive victims
of our shadow and of our unconscious projections, allowing us to rescue the good qualities that
lie dormant within us, which improves our lives and the lives of those around us.
We can then be consciously aware of the collective shadow and not fall prey to it and take responsibility
to address the denial of important issues and a lack of individual and collective initiative,
the courage of bearing our darkness brings relief to others, as telling the truth is
the most desirable way to deal with a difficult past, rather than dismissing the atrocities
and having the shadow grow blacker until it can no grow no more, and thus history repeats itself.
I hope you enjoyed this video on the shadow.
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