Have you ever wondered why some people, even though they are not richer, more talented, or more famous, still radiate an energy that makes you want to be near them? They don't need to appear positive. Nor do they speak inspirational words.
Yet something in the way they live, [music] the way they look, the way they are present makes others feel calmer, clearer simply by being around them. Carl Yong believed that such [music] people were not born different. They simply learned something most of us have forgotten.
Every [music] day they work with their own souls. Because modern humans spend nearly all their time trying to [music] control the external world, work, relationships, reputation, but neglect the inner world. In today's video, we'll walk through 10 things Carl Young believed you must practice every day, [music] not to become better, but to become truer.
10 small yet [music] profound practices that can change the way you think, feel, and show up in the world. Because growth doesn't begin with leaps. It begins when you stop, listen, and make peace with yourself day by day, [music] breath by breath.
Are you ready to begin this journey? Number one, self-observation instead of autoreaction. Have you ever said [music] something in anger and just minutes later wished you could take those words back or felt that someone got under your skin without understanding why your emotions flared up [music] so quickly?
Most of the time we don't truly live consciously. We're merely reacting, not choosing. Carl Jung once wrote, "Until you make the unconscious conscious, it will direct your life and you will call it fate.
" Self-observation is the first step to breaking that cycle. It's not about forcing yourself to think positively, but about learning to pause before the first reaction. Reaction is the voice of instinct, while observation is the voice of awareness.
Between those two moments lies a very small space. But it is precisely within that space that freedom begins. Imagine you're driving [music] and someone suddenly cuts you off.
The automatic reaction is anger, honking, cursing. But if you pause for just one second, [music] take a deep breath and watch that anger, something strange happens. The anger starts to dissolve.
You realize you are not the anger. You are the one witnessing it. In that moment, instead of being controlled by emotion, you become the observer watching emotion pass through.
When you're no longer swept away by each emotional wave, you start to see what lies beneath [music] your reactions. Perhaps fear of being judged, the feeling of not being loved, or an old memory that triggers defense. And when you recognize the true cause, you no longer need to control yourself.
Awareness alone takes away emotions power over you, just as turning on a light makes [music] darkness vanish naturally. A friend once told me she often got angry at slow co-workers. But after keeping a nightly journal about moments that triggered her, she discovered that her anger wasn't towards them.
It was toward the part of her that feared she wasn't good enough. Each time someone worked slowly, that fear was activated and [music] disguised as irritation. By observing it long enough, she realized the anger didn't [music] come from outside.
It was a mirror reflecting her inner insecurity. Self-observation, therefore, is a quiet form of healing. It doesn't require you to change instantly only to be there and see.
Each time you pause, you send a message to the unconscious. I am ready to see. And when you see, the unconscious begins [music] to open.
No longer as your ruler, but as your [music] ally in growth. You can start with a simple practice. Each day, write for 5 minutes about [music] what triggered you the most.
No need to correct sentences, just raw feelings. I felt angry when. I felt hurt when.
Gradually, you'll notice repeating patterns. The same kind of people, situations, emotions, those are the footprints of the unconscious surfacing. Once you see them, they lose their hold on you.
That's the power of self-observation. [music] Quiet, unpretentious, yet transformative. It is the art of one moment of stillness before reaction.
one second that can change how you speak, how you love, [music] and how you live. Number two, balancing doing and being. We live in an age that worships [music] action.
Everything revolves around what to do next, finishing projects, achieving [music] goals, improving oneself. Society makes us believe that if [music] we stop, we'll fall behind. But Carl Jung saw the opposite.
The soul [music] doesn't grow in speed, it grows in stillness. Imagine your mind as a lake. When the water is constantly stirred by endless doing, its surface turns murky, unable [music] to reflect anything.
But when you pause, let the wind calm and the waves settle. The water becomes [music] clear and you begin to see the true image of the sky, of yourself. In that moment, you don't [music] need to do anything more.
Just be present, and the answers you seek will arise naturally [music] from the depths. We've lived in the rhythm of doing to exist for so long that we've forgotten that being is the very energy that nourishes all action. A person who never stops will do a lot but never feel fulfilled.
When the mind is always directed outward, we lose the ability to sense the life unfolding within. Jung believed that only in stillness where you're not trying to achieve anything can the mind restore its natural order. He once said, "People will do anything, no matter how absurd, to avoid facing their own souls.
" That he believed is the root of modern conflict. We've lost the capacity to sit quietly [music] with ourselves. When you're constantly chasing your to-do list, your mind never gets the chance to reconnect with depth.
Unprocessed [music] thoughts, repressed emotions, unresolved conflicts all accumulate in the unconscious. That's why we often feel exhausted even when we haven't done anything wrong. Jung called this the [music] ability to live in a state of being, to exist fully without being [music] trapped in doing.
Each day, spend at least 15 minutes doing nothing. Sit in silence, [music] feel your breath, listen to the wind, or simply look out the [music] window. At first, you may feel restless, as if you're wasting time.
But in truth, you're allowing your mind to return to its natural frequency. This pause is also how you reclaim your energetic authority. When you are present, [music] you're no longer pulled by the world's chaos.
You create your own rhythm, the rhythm of awareness. Jung believe that intuition, the soul's deepest intelligence, speaks only when the mind is quiet. Silence [music] is the bridge between consciousness and the deeper self.
For it is in that space that the unconscious can be heard. Intuition awakens and your true self, not your roles, not your titles, begins to speak. When you learn to be present, you don't lose the drive to act.
You give your actions a soul. And then you realize silence is not the absence of life. It is where life truly begins to breathe.
If these words made you pause just to breathe to listen to yourself amidst life's endless motion, share that moment in the comments. Tell me, have you ever had a moment when you truly sat with yourself, not striving, not chasing, not proving, just being, [music] and felt an unfamiliar peace, because perhaps your story will help someone else stop just in time before they burn out in the race to do more. Number three, cultivating inner honesty.
When you learn to stop and be present, you begin to hear more of what's inside you. Not only peace, but also those uncomfortable whispers you once ignored. Stillness doesn't only bring calm.
It also reveals what you've avoided. And that's where the true journey of inner honesty begins. Being honest with yourself is one of the hardest things a person can do.
We [music] easily see others faults but masterfully hide our own. Carl Young called this process shadow confrontation, facing the darkness within. Because every time we pretend everything's fine, I'm okay or I've let go.
We're merely putting a thin bandage over a deep wound, one that continues to ache beneath. Jung said, "One does not become enlightened by imagining figures of light, but by making the darkness [music] conscious. " Inner honesty doesn't mean judging yourself.
It means having the courage to say, "I'm hurting here. " It's acknowledging jealousy, fear, selfishness, weakness, all the things we were taught to deny. Remember, honesty doesn't make you weak.
It makes you [music] free. I once knew a woman successful, intelligent, always composed. Yet in relationships, she was often seen as cold, distant.
In therapy, she discovered something unexpected. Behind her calmness lay a deep fear of being hurt. Growing up in a tense, controlling home where showing emotion meant weakness, she had learned to freeze her feelings to survive.
Once she saw this, she stopped trying to control emotions. She began listening to her fear, accepting it as a natural part of being human. [music] And from there, her relationships became more authentic because for the first time, she no longer needed to perform strength to [music] be loved.
Modern psychology calls this emotional integration. A Harvard study found that people who regularly identify and name their emotions have 30% lower stress and higher resilience. Because when we're honest about our feelings, the nervous system no longer stays in defense mode.
The body and mind realign. So each day, ask yourself simple but powerful [music] questions. Where am I pretending to be calm?
What am I avoiding? You may not have answers immediately, but the moment you dare to ask, you open a small door into your inner world where the light of awareness can illuminate everything you've hidden. Start small.
Admit when you're tired, speak honestly when you're sad. Or simply breathe deeply instead of forcing yourself to [music] say, "I'm fine. " Every small act of truth brings you closer to who you really are.
Not someone pretending to be strong, but someone real. And once you learn honesty, you'll also learn to protect your energy so you're no longer pulled into others emotions. Number four, protecting your energetic boundaries.
When you become honest enough to look inward, you begin to notice something deeper. Not every heaviness you feel is yours. Sometimes it's energy [music] you've unconsciously absorbed from others.
That's why Jung emphasized to touch the soul, you must first [music] protect your own energetic boundaries. Imagine yourself as a candle in the night. Your flame can light up a room, but if you [music] stand too close to the wind, it flickers, weakens, even goes [music] out.
Modern life is full of winds, emotional currents, expectations, pressures from others blowing through you every day. If you don't protect your inner flame, that light will no longer be your own. Jung once said, "You cannot touch the soul if you are constantly entangled in the energy of others.
" When you let your energy blend with others, you lose your soul's center, that still, clear, original space that connects you to awareness itself. Notice how your mood shifts each day. You may feel peaceful in the morning, but after a single conversation, you feel heavy or you leave a meeting feeling drained even though nothing bad happened.
That's not weakness. It's sensitivity. [music] Jung called it emotional identification.
Unconsciously absorbing others frequencies [music] and mistaking them for your own. Thus, energetic boundaries aren't about pushing people away, but about returning to your true frequency. Like an instrument, you must retune your strings daily, or the sound will go off key.
Each morning, before you [music] begin the day, set a simple intention. Today, I choose to stay in my own energy. This small sentence acts as a psychological anchor, reconnecting you with your inner center before stepping into the world.
Yung also encouraged observing your energy after each interaction. Ask, "Do I feel lighter or heavier after this conversation? " The body always knows the truth before the mind can explain it.
When you become aware of this, you start distinguishing what's truly yours from what you're merely carrying for others. And most importantly, [music] don't fear setting boundaries. Kindness doesn't mean allowing others to invade your inner space.
A soul with real light knows how to open without dissolving. [music] Boundaries aren't walls. They are the sacred lines that preserve your energy [music] so you can love more deeply and be more fully present.
Just as a candle cannot illuminate if it burns itself out, you cannot bring light to anyone [music] if you've lost your own center. And once you master that, you'll begin to tap into the strength of [music] inner discipline, the foundation of true selfmastery in Yungian psychology. Number five, psychological discipline.
In the modern world, discipline is often misunderstood as coercion, the opposite of [music] freedom. But for Jung, inner discipline is not about control. It is about integration, [music] aligning the mind, emotions, and actions toward one inner axis.
This idea is beautifully symbolized in Greek mythology through Adysius, the hero who must overcome countless temptations on his journey home. At times he is lured by the songs of the sirens or seduced by the sorceress Cersei, who offers every pleasure imaginable. Yet Adysius orders his sailors to tie him to the mast so he will not yield to temptation and forget his true path.
That is spiritual discipline, not to flee from desire but to hold steady to the direction of the soul. Jung once said, "There is no coming to consciousness without pain. " Inner discipline is the willingness to embrace challenge as part of growth rather than resist it.
In a Yungian therapy session, I once met a young woman working in a creative field. She told me she hated repetition, so she would often start new projects but abandon them halfway. To her, discipline felt like the death of inspiration.
But after years of fatigue and lack of direction, she decided to try something small. Writing for 15 minutes each morning, whether she felt inspired or not. After several months, [music] she noticed something miraculous.
Her inspiration didn't die. It deepened. Instead of chasing fleeting emotion, she began to cultivate a sustainable creative [music] flow.
Discipline, she said, didn't kill freedom. It became the soil where freedom could bloom. Think of discipline as [music] forging a sword.
Every time you keep a small promise, reading 10 pages, meditating [music] 10 minutes, journaling, exercising, or simply turning off your phone a bit earlier. You are hammering another strike on the blade within you. Not for achievement but because every deliberate act strengthens the bond between you [music] and yourself.
When your word to yourself becomes trustworthy, your mind stabilizes. Research published in the journal [music] of personality and social psychology shows that people who maintain [music] daily micro habits have higher confidence, focus, and happiness. The brain is wired to respond positively to a sense of completion, however small.
For Jung, this proved that the conscious and unconscious [music] can be reorganized through consistent purposeful action. Thus, inner discipline is not a path of extreme effort, but an art of alignment. When mind and action unite, you feel inner strength.
You no longer act out of fear but out of self-respect. As Jung wrote, "Who looks outside dreams, who looks inside awakes. " Every disciplined act is a way of awakening in the midst of chaos.
Not by doing more, but by doing the right things consistently from the center of awareness. We've now traveled more than halfway through the journey and I want to thank you for your steady mindful presence so far. Before moving on, pause, take a slow breath, feel your heartbeat.
If you sense that discipline no longer feels like pressure, but as an act of love for yourself, write one word in the comments. Discipline. Sometimes a single gentle reminder is enough to realign the soul.
To remember that true discipline is not force but rebuilding trust between you and yourself. And who knows that small comment might inspire someone else who is searching for their inner strength. Number six, acceptance [music] of paradox.
Once you've cultivated inner [music] discipline, you begin to realize that life no longer operates under rigid categories [music] of right or wrong as the mind prefers. The things that once confused you start to reveal hidden wisdom. This marks the next Yungian stage, learning to accept paradox.
Yung said, "Only the paradox comes anywhere near to comprehending the fullness of life. Humans crave clarity, right or wrong, light or dark, success or failure. But the soul doesn't evolve [music] linearly.
It grows through contradiction, through sitting between opposites without discarding either side. Jung believed that every inner conflict is an invitation from the soul, urging us to expand consciousness to hold both sides of a truth. When you choose only light and reject shadow, you tear yourself in two.
But when you dare to see both, integration begins. And that is true maturity. A woman once told me she hated feeling weak.
She always appeared strong, controlled, emotionless. Yet, after a painful breakup, [music] she was forced to stop. In therapy, she discovered that the weakness she despised was [music] precisely what made her human.
She learned to accept that she could be both strong [music] and vulnerable. That these qualities were not contradictions but compliments. I thought I had lost my edge, she said.
But in truth, I was only learning how to let my heart soften. That's the paradox Yung spoke of. True strength comes from the courage to be tender.
Real light doesn't come from banishing darkness, but from illuminating it. Only when you face the opposing forces within, do you reach a deeper level of awareness, where peace no longer depends on [music] circumstances, but on understanding that everything has its place in your evolution. Modern research on paradoxical thinking at Stanford University supports this.
People who can hold two seemingly opposite beliefs, [music] for instance, I'm confident and I have much to learn, tend to be more creative, calm, and resilient. Their brains don't rush to close the case, but keep open space for integration [music] rather than opposition. Jung called this the union of opposites.
Conflict doesn't destroy you, it unites you. Each day when something doesn't go [music] your way, try shifting the question from why is this happening to what can I learn from both sides of it. When you can do that, you cease being a victim of difficulty and become a student of life.
Someone who knows that every paradox carries a hidden invitation to grow through acceptance, not control. And when your soul is nourished in this way, you start to hear the subtle signals the unconscious sends. Symbols, dreams, coincidences, all of them are the soul's language, reminding you that the sacred isn't somewhere far away.
It lives in every act done [music] with presence and love. Number seven, soul work in the ordinary. Carl Jung believed that the soul isn't found in grand moments, but in the most ordinary acts of life.
He wrote, "In all chaos, there is a cosmos. In all disorder, a secret order. Beneath the noise and fragments of daily life, an invisible order is always at work.
The order of the soul. Imagine the soul as a garden. It doesn't flourish from sudden storms of rain, but from gentle, steady watering.
[music] Every time you brew tea in silence, write a few lines in your journal, or walk slowly under the sun, you are watering that garden. These acts may seem trivial, yet they are the soul's rituals. The soul doesn't need dramatic change to awaken.
It just needs to be heard through the simple things. We often think growth comes from big achievements. [music] But maturity begins when we live fully within the small repeated gestures of daily life.
Think of Mother Theresa in Kolkata. [music] What moved the world was not her speeches but the way she bent down to hold the dying washed wounds smiled for seconds that [music] held eternity. She said, "Not all of us can do [music] great things, but we can do small things with great love.
" That is precisely the spirit Yung described, the soul nourished through small acts done with vast love. Likewise, you don't need a distant spiritual journey to find yourself. Start by doing ordinary things with extraordinary awareness.
When you wash dishes mindfully, [music] you are meditating. When you write a thank you note, you touch the depth of gratitude. When you slow down to feel the breeze on your skin, [music] you return to life's rhythm.
The rhythm your soul still remembers even when your mind forgets. And in these simple moments, something magical happens. Life stops being a list of tasks and becomes a flow of vivid experiences.
A cup of tea becomes a lesson in presence. A quiet walk becomes a conversation with the universe. So each [music] day, choose one small act and do it with your full awareness, not for efficiency [music] or perfection, but because it's the moment you are truly alive.
When you learn to feed the soul through the ordinary, you realize life was never ordinary at all. Only our eyes had grown dull. And as your soul is nourished this [music] way, you begin to perceive those subtle messages the unconscious sends.
symbols, dreams, synchronicities, all speaking the sacred language, reminding you that divinity resides right here in every act lived [music] with awareness and love. Number eight, listening to symbols and synchronicities. There are days when you keep [music] seeing the same number everywhere, 11:11 on a clock, on license plates, [music] on a coffee receipt.
Or you think about someone all morning and they message you that afternoon. Sometimes you dream of a strange image and a few days later something in real life mirrors it. That's not [music] coincidence.
For Carl Jung, it is synchronicity. meaningful coincidence. The way the unconscious communicates through symbols, signs, and seemingly random events.
Jung believed the unconscious doesn't speak in logic, but in symbols, sending messages through dreams, intuition, and chance encounters. Whenever you pay attention to them, you open the bridge between consciousness and soul. A woman once shared that after her mother passed, she kept seeing white butterflies in her room, on her balcony, even in dreams.
At first, she thought it was chance, but she realized every time she felt lost or hopeless, a butterfly appeared. For her, it wasn't just a symbol of her mother. It was a reminder of continuity, a whisper that love never dies.
It only changes form. In the Bible, Jacob's ladder is a beautiful image of how the unconscious speaks through symbols. In his dream, [music] Jacob saw a ladder stretching from earth to heaven with angels moving up and down.
From a Yungian view, the ladder represents the connection between the unconscious and consciousness, between the earthly and the divine, the path every soul must climb in its awakening. Drams aren't illusions. They are inner maps.
Jung said, "Drams are the guiding words of the soul. When you listen to them, you learn your soul's private language, the language it keeps speaking, even when reason forgets. Symbols don't come to frighten you.
They come to reveal you. A wave may symbolize repressed emotion. An old house may represent a memory awaiting healing.
A child in a dream might be the innocent part of you that longs to return. Practicing symbolic awareness doesn't require complex techniques. Each morning, write down any dreams or images you recall, no matter how meaningless they seem.
Don't analyze yet. Just record. Over time, you'll [music] notice patterns, repeated images, recurring themes, emotions tied to them.
That's the unconscious speaking, waiting for you to listen. Just as nature sends signals, rain before storms, wind before spring, the unconscious sends subtle signs before the conscious mind catches up. By noticing these small signs, you become more attuned to your inner life.
One day you'll realize everything around you, from last night's dream to a stranger's random comment, can mirror your soul. And when you listen with your heart instead of logic, you see that the world isn't just a place you live in, it's a living conversation between [music] you and the universe. If this video makes you notice the little signs life sends your way, press like to let me know [music] you too are entering the journey of listening to your soul's whispers.
Because once you begin to [music] pay attention, you'll realize the world has never been silent. It has always been speaking to you. You just hadn't truly listened.
Number nine, conscious gratitude. When you start noticing coincidences, symbols, dreams, you understand that life is whispering to you. And the most beautiful way to respond is not by analyzing but by softly saying thank you.
Jung said the privilege [music] of a lifetime is to become who you truly are. But to reach that true self, you must first be grateful [music] for the whole journey, including its darkness. For Jung, [music] gratitude was a sign that the mind had transcended the ego because the ego always wants more while the soul simply wants to be.
Gratitude means you stop chasing what's [music] missing and start seeing the beauty in what already is. When you practice conscious gratitude, you recalibrate your mental frequency. Gratitude is not positive thinking or self-comfort.
It's daring to see [music] things as they are and still say thank you. It's when heart and awareness meet. [music] When you stop judging life and start appreciating it.
A viewer once shared that after an accident left her temporarily unable to walk. She fell into depression. Every day she felt her body had betrayed her.
Her life collapsed. In therapy, her psychologist asked her to write three things she was grateful for each night, however small. At first, she did it reluctantly.
[music] I can still breathe. I have friends. I can hear the rain.
A month later, something changed. Her mind softened. When she stopped fighting reality, gratitude appeared.
Not because life got better, but because she began to see meaning even in imperfection. Jung called this the reconciliation of opposites. When you're grateful for both light and darkness, you become whole.
Because darkness isn't punishment. It deepens your light. Think of gratitude as a small lamp in a dark room.
It doesn't erase the night, but it lets you see the path. Each time you say thank you, you light another candle in your soul. Slowly, even if darkness remains, you no longer fear it because you understand it [music] too is part of life.
Science confirms this. Research from the University of California found that people who keep gratitude journals are 25% happier and recover from emotional trauma twice as fast. Neurologically, gratitude increases [music] activity in the preffrontal cortex, the region linked to [music] understanding and inner peace.
In other words, when you're grateful, your brain learns [music] to view the world through the lens of the soul. So every night, write down three things you're grateful [music] for. Not just good ones, but the challenges that made you grow.
When you can thank what once hurt you, healing has already begun. At day's [music] end, simply close your eyes and whisper, "Thank you. " Even if today wasn't perfect, that moment itself is a gift because you are alive.
learning, expanding your soul. Gratitude doesn't change circumstances, it changes you. And when you change, the world around you quietly shifts, too.
Number 10, reconnection with nature. Have you ever wondered why simply standing in a forest or sitting quietly by the sea makes your mind still without effort? It's as if something in nature knows how to heal us.
Not through words, but through presence. Carl Jung once wrote, "At times I feel as if I am spread out over the landscape and inside things, and am myself living in every tree, [music] in the splashing of the waves, in the clouds, and the animals that come and go. " That wasn't mere poetry.
[music] It was Jung describing the union between the human soul and the soul of the universe. He believed nature isn't [music] just the backdrop of our lives but the mirror of our souls. When we lose connection with nature, we lose connection with our deepest selves.
Nature doesn't hurry, doesn't hide, doesn't try to be anything [music] else. It simply is. And in that being we glimpse the original image of our own soul.
Pure, honest, tranquil. A woman once shared that after years in finance she reached total burnout. [music] She tried yoga, meditation, vacations but still felt heavy.
One day she moved to a small town with forests and a river. At first she just took short morning walks, no goal. But gradually she noticed when she walked barefoot [music] on the ground, listened to leaves rustle, watched the sky change color.
She felt lighter. Not because problems [music] vanished, but because she stopped spinning inside her mind. Nature didn't teach me anything new, she said.
It just helped me remember who I was. That is Yung's view of nature. It frees us from the collective unconscious.
the layer shaped by crowd and social expectations. When you step outside, touch a tree, watch a bird, or simply listen to the rain, you leave humanity's noise, and return to life's primal frequency. In Yungian philosophy, nature is the living symbol of the self, the center of the psyche, where opposites unite.
The mountain doesn't fight to be taller than the sea. The wind doesn't compare itself to the cloud. Everything coexists, transforms, supports one another in invisible harmony.
When you [music] reconnect with nature, you learn inner harmony. How different parts of you can exist without conflict. Jung said he found his [music] deepest balance at Bolingan Tower, the stone house he built with his own hands by Lake Zurich.
There he lived simply, chopping wood, lighting fires, journaling, walking in the woods. He called it a dialogue between me and nature. For him, meditation wasn't closing his eyes.
It was walking slowly through the forest and letting the mind fall silent. To begin this journey, try a small daily ritual. Spend a few minutes just looking at the sky.
No phone, no thought, no analysis. Just look or touch [music] a tree and feel the rough bark beneath your palm. When you do this, you are reopening dialogue with the unconscious.
Every breath in [music] nature is a gentle reminder. You belong here. You are not separate.
Let every day hold a moment of returning to nature. Not to escape life, but to remember you are life. And in that moment, you no longer need to seek peace.
You are peace. These 10 Yungian principles are not tips to make you perfect. They are 10 breaths bringing you back to your true self amid a world drifting from depth.
Like a craftsman patiently carving lines into wood, you learn to slow down, observe, be honest, hold boundaries, and nurture your soul through small repeated daily acts. Quietly, [music] without haste, yet each conscious moment etches a delicate mark that shapes the form of a mature soul. And if you've ever wondered what makes a [music] person so calm, clear, and serene, the answer isn't found in learning something new, but in daring to return inward, to listen to the smallest voice inside you.
When you practice these 10 principles, [music] you don't just understand Yung intellectually, you live his spirit with every breath. If this video has awakened something in you, a stillness, a light, or simply the desire to live more truthfully, share it with someone who needs it and subscribe to continue [music] this journey with us. Because sometimes one person choosing to live consciously is enough to shift the frequency of the whole world around them.