Tag: Psychology
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Psychedelics and the Structure of Being – 4: Healing or Hallucination? Psychedelics, Trauma, and the Eternal Self
The revival of psychedelics has not only sparked philosophical curiosity and spiritual exploration—it has also ignited a new frontier in trauma therapy. Across clinical trials and underground retreats, individuals report profound breakthroughs: encounters with lost memories, emotional catharsis, a sense of peace, connection, and even self-love. For many, these experiences offer something long absent—a feeling…
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The Circle of Unveiling — A Closing Reflection
What began as separate inquiries has become a single unfolding. Through the last four series, we have traveled not through topics, but through the gradual unveiling of what was always there — a truth no longer hidden, yet still missed by a world entranced by time and becoming. This is not a journey from confusion…
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Psychology and the Disappearing Self – 4: The Myth of Growth — When Progress Becomes Another Cage
“Keep going.”“Do the work.”“Trust the process.”“Become your best self.” These are the sacred mantras of modern spirituality and psychology. Growth is no longer just a goal — it is a moral obligation, a mark of worth, a sign of self-awareness. To grow is to evolve. To evolve is to be good. To stay the same…
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Psychology and the Disappearing Self – 3: Inner Child and Fragmented Selves — Healing Without Wholeness
The modern self is a fractured self. In the therapeutic worldview, we are not one — we are many.We carry an “inner child,” a wounded protector, a critical parent, dissociated parts, shadow selves. We speak of being triggered, “not feeling like ourselves,” or “working with the parts that got hurt.”And so healing becomes the art…
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Psychology and the Disappearing Self – 2: The Trauma Identity — Woundedness as the Modern Self
We live in an age where trauma has become a primary lens through which the self is understood. No longer reserved for the catastrophic, trauma now describes nearly every kind of suffering, rupture, or emotional pain. To be traumatized is no longer a condition on the margins — it has become a central identity. We…
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The Wound of Time – 2: Memory and the False Redemption of the Past
We often turn to memory in search of redemption. We revisit the past — through recollection, analysis, even therapy — hoping to find answers, healing, clarity. We try to make sense of what happened, to piece together a self from what we remember, or to change how the past affects us now. Memory, in this…
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Introduction: The Circle of Unveiling
Starting tomorrow, a new four-part series will begin. It is not a collection of arguments or positions, but the unfolding of a single clarity — one that does not need to be constructed, only remembered. What follows is not a progression of topics, but the gradual lifting of a veil. We begin not with belief…
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Male & Female 1: The Polarity of Being – Male and Female as a Fundamental Structure
Polarity is woven into the fabric of reality. From the forces governing the cosmos to the tiniest particles in physics, the universe operates through the tension and balance between opposites. One of the most fundamental and enduring polarities is that of male and female. This polarity isn’t just a social or cultural construct—it reflects a…
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Know Thyself – 8: The Rediscovery of Personhood: From Psychological Construct to Eternal Reality
Know Thyself: The Crisis of Identity and the Return to Being “Man is not merely a part of the world, but the place where the world begins to appear.”– Emanuele Severino The Disappearance of the Person In an age obsessed with identity, the person has all but disappeared. We speak endlessly of roles, traits, preferences,…
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Know Thyself – 2: The Fragmented Self: Psychology, Power, and the Loss of Presence
“I used to think I was one person. Now I’m not so sure.” The modern self is not only in crisis; it is shattered. Fragmented across roles, performances, diagnoses, and projections, the self has become a mosaic of shifting parts. Where once we spoke of character or soul, we now speak of personality types, trauma…
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The Unbearable Truth: What Our Demographic Collapse Really Means
We are witnessing not a problem to be solved, but a fate to be understood. The converging crises of demographic implosion, unsustainable debt, and societal aging are typically diagnosed as separate policy failures: a lack of childcare incentives, flawed economic models, or medical advances that have outstripped our wisdom. But to see them this way…
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Mind & Heart – 5: A New Understanding of Mental Health: Thought, Science, and Spirituality in Dialogue
The Crisis of Mental Health as a Crisis of Thought The crisis of mental health in the modern world is more than a medical or psychological issue—it is a crisis of thought, a failure to recognize the eternal structure of Being. Rising rates of anxiety, depression, and despair reflect not only individual struggles but a…
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Mind & Heart – 3: The Necessity of Being and the Healing of the Self
The Self in the Midst of Contingency The prevailing sense of uncertainty and fragmentation in human existence stems from the deeply ingrained belief that the self is a contingent occurrence—an ephemeral construct emerging from material conditions, social influences, or fleeting experiences. Within this framework, identity appears fragile, defined by the shifting landscape of time, external…
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Mind & Heart – 1: The Existential Crisis and the Collapse of Meaning
The Necessity of Nihilism’s Appearance The contemporary crisis in mental health is not merely a matter of personal struggles or biochemical imbalances. The rising prevalence of depression, anxiety, and despair coincides with the dissolution of once-dominant narratives of meaning. This is no accident but part of a necessary unfolding. The decline of religious, philosophical, and…
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