The Psychology of The Man-Child (Puer Aeternus)

The term puer aeternus is Latin for eternal boy. Carl Jung used the term in the exploration of the psychology of eternal youth and creative child within every person.
It is an archetype, and like all archetypes, has both a positive and a negative side. It can bring the energy, beauty and creativity of childhood into adult life, or thwart self-realisation and doom us to both unrealistic adolescent fantasies and experiencing life as a prison.
The puer is the man-child who refuses to grow up, take responsibility, and face life’s challenges, he expects other people, typically his parents, to solve all his problems. He tries to go as high as possible away from reality, ending up like Peter Pan, the boy who wouldn’t grow up, who lives in Neverland, a place where people cease to age and are eternally young. The puer aeternus is also known as the Peter Pan syndrome. This has become an increasingly common problem in our modern age.
Those who find themselves unable to commit to work, to form satisfactory relationships, to commit to the discipline of education, to carry the weight of responsibility, or who feel that their life has become meaningless, will find the integration of the archetype of eternal youth invaluable in their life.
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📚 Recommended Reading
▶ The Little Prince - Antoine de Saint-Exupéry
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▶ Puer Aeternus: A Psychological Study of the Adult Struggle With the Paradise of Childhood - Marie-Louise von Franz
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▶ Now or Neverland: Peter Pan and the Myth of Eternal Youth : A Psychological Perspective on a Cultura - Ann Yeoman
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🎶 Music used
1. Smoother Move - Kevin MacLeod
2. Cryptic Sorrow - Kevin MacLeod
3. Mysterious Ambient Background Music - The Rake - CO.AG. Music
4. Trio for Piano Cello and Clarinet - Kevin MacLeod
5. Midsommar - Scott Buckley
6. Promising Relationship - Kevin MacLeod
7. Relent - Kevin MacLeod
8. Evening Fall Harp - Kevin MacLeod
9. Charms - Train - Sergey Cheremisinov
10. Charms - Waves - Sergey Cheremisinov
Support the artists:
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Kevin MacLeod - incompetech.com
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Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0
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📝 Sources
- Puer Aeternus: A Psychological Study of the Adult Struggle with the Paradise of Childhood by Marie Louise von Franz
- Memories, Dreams, Reflections by Carl Jung
- Now or Neverland: Peter Pan and the Myth of Eternal Youth by Ann Yeoman
- Jung on the Provisional Life jungiancenter.org/jung-on-the...
- Senex Play and Puer Play: A Jungian Interpretation of the Varieties of Recreation jungiancenter.org/senex-play-...
- Marie Louise von Franz's Puer Aeturnus: Lectures • Marie Louise von Franz...
- Episode 125 - The Provisional Life: Redeeming the Real thisjungianlife.com/episode-1...
- Episode 072 - Puer - Puella: Trapped in the Inner Child • PUER - PUELLA: Are you...
- / an_answer_to_the_quest...
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⌛ Timestamps
(0:00) Introduction
(2:36) Adult Struggle with the Paradise of Childhood
(15:08) Senex and Puer
(16:55) The Role of Play in Jung’s Life
(19:24) The Puer Aeternus and The Little Prince
(26:16) Integration of Puer Aeternus
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Thanks for watching!
#eternalyouth #psychology #carljung #pueraeternus #manchild

Пікірлер: 5 000

  • @Eternalised
    @Eternalised Жыл бұрын

    *“Whatever one has within oneself but does not live, grows against one."* Subscribe to newsletter: eternalisedofficial.com/subscribe Become a Patron (exclusive content): www.patreon.com/eternalised KZread Member (exclusive content): kzread.info/dron/qos1tl0RntucGGtPXNxkkA.htmljoin Official Merch: eternalised.creator-spring.com Donate a Coffee: ko-fi.com/eternalised Transcript and artwork gallery: eternalisedofficial.com/2022/10/09/puer-aeternus-psychology *Special thanks to my Patrons* ♥ Jay B, icarium75, matevz drnovsek, Keller Dellinger, RhoBean, Mr X, Jessica Armstrong, Andrew Morisey, Spirit Gun, Ramunas Cepaitis, Justin Raper, Joshua, Emilee VerDuin, Kyle Schaffrick, Ryon Brashear, Joanne Durkin, Ronny Khalil, Franceso Marchesoni, Camille Guigon, Emmanuel Miller, OwainW, Matthew Keyes, Terra Bell, Abdullah Erkam Ak, Daniel Mureșan

  • @albertocastro805

    @albertocastro805

    Жыл бұрын

    Aàà

  • @jeffreyjackson5513

    @jeffreyjackson5513

    Жыл бұрын

    Appreciate your videos and everything you do. I was wondering if you could do a video just about Carl June's mysterious red book and it's origins?? And your personal thoughts about it?? why was locked in a Swiss safe deposit box by the heirs to C.G. Jung’s estate for so many years? It took Jungian scholar Dr. Sonu Shamdasani three years to convince Jung's family to bring the book out of hiding. It took another 13 years to translate it.And still, the Red Book remains incomplete. The last word Jung wrote in the Red Book is "moglichkeit," or possibility.

  • @eanredur9920

    @eanredur9920

    Жыл бұрын

    ​ @The Rooster Protocol I am sorry, if someone dear to you cannot get the help they need from psychology, or if you judge psychology as a wasted endeavor you have to support To explain the question: Psychology is an imperfect, growing and developing tool to understand humans, used by humans. Failure to provide help can either stem from inadequacy of the tool or the user. Sometimes understanding is not enough, oftentimes it is imprecise and fails. But like every science it becomes better over time and, hopefully, people will look at our psychology like we do on Newtonian Physics.

  • @derekstaroba

    @derekstaroba

    Жыл бұрын

    Krishna in hindu loves to play. He likes playing pranks on people (in a non harmful way)

  • @eliascommentonly4652

    @eliascommentonly4652

    Жыл бұрын

    10;36 1982 Athens greece Europe 40 old man child 🇪🇺🇪🇺🇪🇺🇪🇺🇬🇷🇬🇷🇬🇷🇬🇷🇬🇷🇬🇷⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ yes I'm man child whats the problem ???,, ⭐⭐⭐⭐

  • @TheNightWatcher1385
    @TheNightWatcher1385 Жыл бұрын

    I think this is me. My therapist said something that’s stuck with me: “You’re so afraid of uncertainty that you subconsciously prefer to be certain of failure than to have a mere chance of success.”

  • @menazic5192

    @menazic5192

    Жыл бұрын

    Same here. My mind is often preoccupied with the thoughts of failure. I anticipate failure than any chance of success. I don't want to deal with the consequences even though they are the essence of all action and our life as well.

  • @ThatOpinionIsWrong

    @ThatOpinionIsWrong

    Жыл бұрын

    Man, this really hits home

  • @kirkfisher188

    @kirkfisher188

    Жыл бұрын

    Same here, she plucked it out of a comment. I had 500$ in my stock account, along with big desire to experiment… but after shopping for 3 weeks and listening to my psych, I went ahead and have found something meaningful. The meaning hit me when the material refers to the two different types of play, so far as I stay ahead of those stocks it will be productive. For example

  • @Astrnauted

    @Astrnauted

    Жыл бұрын

    I wouldn’t say this defines you as a “man-child” there’s a phrase “paralyzation by over analyzation” “There’s someone out there making 10x what you make because they were too stupid to doubt themselves.”

  • @TheNightWatcher1385

    @TheNightWatcher1385

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Astrnauted Reminds me of a quote from a book I read awhile back, “I’ve witnessed men achieve incredible things for the simple fact that they were too inexperienced to understand that their goals were impossible.”

  • @andrewsawdon2170
    @andrewsawdon2170 Жыл бұрын

    As someone who dreams too much, this was a wake up call. I have a habit of daydreaming about my future success, but the steps between now and then are foggy. This also made me realize how toxic it is to always give the impression of how put-together my life is. Deep down I know I'm behind in life and that the only person I'm fooling is myself

  • @xXrockstarboy100Xx

    @xXrockstarboy100Xx

    Жыл бұрын

    Hopefully the following is applicable. It’s not toxic to give the impression of “how together life is,” rather thank yourself for being in the position you’re in now versus when life wasn’t “together.” You are exactly where you’re supposed to be.. accept that because it’s written in stone. One last thing, NEVER compare yourself because you will not achieve pure joy, as president Theodore Roosevelt said “comparison is the thief of joy.”

  • @yoseeev8306

    @yoseeev8306

    Жыл бұрын

    Well spoken man, we must focus, be still and accept the Truth. Plant seeds of patience, stillness and persistence. The persistence of toiling, toiling behind the image and foundation of righteousness.

  • @kingofthedead333

    @kingofthedead333

    Жыл бұрын

    This kinda sucks if you ask me What i got from this is to dream but actually do something to make them happen dreaming of the future is apart of being human so dont stop doing it just do it right

  • @cometcourse381

    @cometcourse381

    Жыл бұрын

    "Behind in life" in what sense? I'm really not sure what is meant when I hear someone say this.

  • @Ranger_Rust

    @Ranger_Rust

    Жыл бұрын

    Same

  • @benzos5704
    @benzos570411 ай бұрын

    I think the saddest part about life is that, children are looked at with potential, but adults look at each other as one thing, making any type of charitable interpretations of your words impossible. As a kid, you are what you feel so there’s nothing to hide. But adulthood is a big game of poker and no one trusts anybody to show hands. That’s what makes me sad about people. People say I’m very good at making friends… but it’s just me not hiding my poker hand.

  • @marlandt.renhoek9853

    @marlandt.renhoek9853

    10 ай бұрын

    We’re all too scared of getting hurt

  • @TheCrapOnYourStrapOn

    @TheCrapOnYourStrapOn

    9 ай бұрын

    I used to kill people for a living. You’d think that would mess with my head but all it’s done is make me appreciate people because it’s a miracle that you survive every day that you do. So many things trying to do you harm. Well I live in Florida so literally everything here from the sun to the bugs want you dead.

  • @A1_Amir

    @A1_Amir

    9 ай бұрын

    @@TheCrapOnYourStrapOnhow do you cope with everyday life?

  • @TheCrapOnYourStrapOn

    @TheCrapOnYourStrapOn

    9 ай бұрын

    @@A1_Amir florida is great, what do you mean?

  • @lilboi42100

    @lilboi42100

    9 ай бұрын

    @@TheCrapOnYourStrapOn Deaths gonna love taking your throat soldierboy scout

  • @valdo2323
    @valdo232311 ай бұрын

    “It took me four years to paint like Raphael, but a lifetime to paint like a child.” - Pablo Picasso.

  • @KithEsq

    @KithEsq

    10 ай бұрын

    Wonderful...

  • @Lyrielonwind

    @Lyrielonwind

    7 ай бұрын

    Picasso was an artist and a predator. Look for what he did to his lovers; he destroyed them. Yes, he was a child and a very malignant one.

  • @poom641

    @poom641

    7 ай бұрын

    Raphael was so gifted

  • @mneech609

    @mneech609

    7 ай бұрын

    Dementia does take its toll with age

  • @swagnusmcduck7566

    @swagnusmcduck7566

    5 ай бұрын

    @@mneech609What do you mean? Children paint for joy. “Adults” paint for recognition, respect and other alterior motives.

  • @andrewh5138
    @andrewh5138 Жыл бұрын

    Man. My mother coddled me as a small child but she had an undiagnosed mental break of some kind after her divorce when I was in 2nd grade and became wildly verbally/psychologically/physically abusive and just totally unhinged. There was no one to protect me from this person who used to be a maternal guardian angel who had suddenly turned into some kind of horrifying wraith. And I was a really good kid- I was uncommonly polite and smart for my age and never got in trouble. She quickly married another unhinged abuser and they moved me away from my family. I remember being around middle school age and very decisively thinking, “I am tired of being terrorized and harmed. I cannot endure this for a moment longer than I have to. When I grow up, all I want in the world is to be safe and comfortable.” I was considered a “gifted” kid and was usually way ahead of my peers in most areas. Now here I am, 36, and I’m struggling to keep a job I despise, alone and trying to manage suicidal depression that has haunted me since college. I’m no longer ahead of most of my peers- in adult life I am dragging far behind them, unable to afford to join them on excursions or return their generosity because of my chronic occupational underperformance. Only after 15 years of mental agony have I realized that the goal born out of my childhood abuse is inherently flawed- you cannot be completely comfortable while being completely safe and vice versa. They’re almost opposite concepts. Now I have to dig myself out of this trainwreck at an age where time has done away with much of my energy and enthusiasm. It’s more difficult than it had to be. In some ways, it’s fair to say I’ve burned half my life due to this refusal to deny that abused child of his well deserved comfort. If you are in your 20’s and you connect with this video at all, you must act now. Don’t wait until you’re alone and approaching middle age. Start taking steps, one at a time, toward liberating yourself. It’s not as scary as it seems.

  • @thedativecase9733

    @thedativecase9733

    Жыл бұрын

    My mum was similar in some ways. However after a particularly brutal argument with her, when I did the teenage thing of slamming the door and running up to my room. I was 13. My dad knocked quietly on the door sat with me and gently told me about my mother's earlier life - how hard it had been. She'd been orphaned very young she sexually abused and was then an unmarried teenage mum when that was considered a terrible sin for a convent educated girl. She clearly had an undiagnosed mental condition as well. There was much more which I can't go into here. After this I saw her as a damaged human being. It didn't stop her unstable behaviour ("all sugar and shite" as my dad described it with typical Lancashire honesty. However it founded my respect for how she had coped and eventually we became real friends which seemed to help her heal as a person. Sorry for going on !

  • @Joseph_Hamilton

    @Joseph_Hamilton

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you so much for sharing. I was a similar child, minus the abuse. Unfortunately my mother never forced me to break out of my comfort. I was allowed to do whatever I pleased whenever I pleased, and would have great outbursts if I didn’t get what I want. I just turned 24 and have had suicidal depression since I was 12. I want to deeply thank you for the warning.

  • @andrewh5138

    @andrewh5138

    Жыл бұрын

    @@thedativecase9733 Thanks so much for sharing. It's always so cool to have a meaningful chat over the pond! I've heard no shortage of horrifying stuff about British orphanages. They're basically a staple of many movies and television shows here. And over the last decade or two it's seemed to be the case that life as an orphan in England was even worse than anyone thought. It's amazing she survived at all. My mom had a horrible childhood too. Crazy similarity- She lived in the very religious American South and had a child out of wedlock when she was like 17 that her family forced her to put up for adoption. The nurse took the child out of her arms right after delivery and when she got home, her parents kicked her out and sent her to live on the other side of the country with relatives. It broke her forever. I'm thankful you had a good dad who could help you understand it, at least. "All sugar and shite" is such a great and succinct way to put it. On a good day, she was the sweetest woman. On a bad day, she was the worst human being you could ever hope to meet. I thought she might chill out with age but she wound up getting more detached from reality and remained extremely manipulative and miserable. I had to sever contact with her completely to have any chance at healing. I'm sincerely thankful you two were able to mend the wound. And also that neither of you has to pay $1000 to get an x-ray, lol. Little envious over here, not gonna lie!

  • @andrewh5138

    @andrewh5138

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Joseph_Hamilton It was a pretty bipolar situation for me. I too had way more freedoms than some of my young friends and oftentimes after a very bad day, she would seem to recognize that she had some reason to feel guilty, and then she would spoil me to try and make it up to me. That cycle would repeat a lot- screaming verbal and physical abuse that went on for hours, then a couple days later I would get taken out shopping and told how great I was. It wound up being a real mindfk. 24 was one of my worst years. I'm so sorry to hear you are experiencing anything like that. Do me a favor and try to keep your inner dialogues kind to yourself. It's very easy for us to cast harsh judgement on ourselves when we are coping with deep depression, but you did not choose your upbringing. And it's so impossibly hard, I know, but stay optimistic about your future. I mean, I really wish someone could have put this video in front of me at your age. As someone who can relate to you, and as described in the video, it is extremely hard for us mankids to turn our thoughts and realizations into action. However as I've gotten older, the more I've become wise to how the best way to take the actions I need to take is to do so without giving myself a chance to think. A good analogy I often hear is that the hardest part of going to the gym is getting through the front door. If you can make determinations on what actions you should take, position yourself strategically (sometimes so strategically it's actually funny) to take that action without thinking. I keep my walking shoes by my office door so the moment my shift is over, they go on my feet and I am going on my walk or jog. I've found what can help with this approach too is a more "Eastern" viewpoint. I'm not highly spiritual, but listening to some lectures on Zen Buddhism and Taoism and learning to meditate have been very useful in helping me not be paralyzed by thought loops and irrational concerns. The past is gone forever and can never be reached. The future doesn't exist and never arrives. There is only an ongoing now, and now, and now, and for me that is a very freeing concept. Hang in there, homie.

  • @Titantitan001

    @Titantitan001

    Жыл бұрын

    My guy. I’ve been in that position. Jesus Christ saved my life. My friend as well. Not here to debate. Take with those words what you will. I would be dead if not for it. Never saw a therapist either. Just met the right guys to explain what Jesus actually means for us. Peace and blessings my friend.

  • @MWorsa
    @MWorsa Жыл бұрын

    The difficult part is recognizing the problems yet feeling powerless to correct them.

  • @ronmaest

    @ronmaest

    Жыл бұрын

    That’s where the devil lies.

  • @spencermannan6075

    @spencermannan6075

    Жыл бұрын

    If you have truly recognized the problem, then you have the power to correct them. The issue is seeing that there is a problem and not recognizing you have two hands and a mind

  • @LukeMicheal20

    @LukeMicheal20

    Жыл бұрын

    Imagine a neat made bed in the morning, and then make your bed neat. This is the first step every day to find a balance between your inner puer and senex.

  • @ronmaest

    @ronmaest

    Жыл бұрын

    @@spencermannan6075 you underestimate the importance of drive. We’re all not much without it.

  • @ronmaest

    @ronmaest

    Жыл бұрын

    @@pebblepicassos damn, you’ve got some talent! Congratulations! That kid must make you some good money.

  • @christianriosofficial
    @christianriosofficial10 ай бұрын

    You don’t find this video, it finds you. I nearly turned it off because of the feeling of almost overwhelming shame it evoked. I’ve got a lot of work to do.

  • @tj03297

    @tj03297

    3 ай бұрын

    Listening to this video was like my ego was being forced to stare at its naked reflection. I feel violated and repulsed, though a glimmer of relief as well.

  • @Chungus581

    @Chungus581

    3 ай бұрын

    @@tj03297I feel upset at and repulsed by myself but it’s truly motivating. Repulsed In a liberating way, like okay pussy, here are the issues you cause/face and here’s why. You’ve known it, you’ve ignored it and deluded yourself to avoid it, shape up.

  • @sBaby-en6tj

    @sBaby-en6tj

    3 ай бұрын

    Im a 28 year old junkie, watched my dreams crumble in my hands. Let’s get to work

  • @frenchVanilla13

    @frenchVanilla13

    3 ай бұрын

    How are you doing now?

  • @s4awd2

    @s4awd2

    3 ай бұрын

    Agreed. But only when you grow older and the Sennex arrives. Hopefully soon enough before it's too late.

  • @047Kenny
    @047Kenny8 ай бұрын

    26, and I just had my car repossessed. I spent my days getting high and drinking, and now I’m facing homelessness. That is a huge wake up call. And this video is a huge wake up call. The future is uncertain, and certainly won’t be easy… but I must reap what I sew and make changes so that I can’t finally mature into the man I’m SUPPOSED to be.

  • @Xlnjv

    @Xlnjv

    3 ай бұрын

    Wish you well man.

  • @elmirabrazil9936

    @elmirabrazil9936

    3 ай бұрын

    Be encouraged 😊

  • @Itried20takennames

    @Itried20takennames

    3 ай бұрын

    Yeah…you seem on the right track by realizing that maybe frittering your 20s away is not a great plan, so that is on your favor….some don’t even reach that point. You don’t have to fit anyone else’s set plan, but….you do need to grow up and be responsible eventually. Staying as a perpetual 13 year old at a parents house just gets sadder and sadder each year, and each year it’s harder and harder to fix. The 20s are the foundation of your adult life….waste them and you will never quite be as well off later, you can’t catch up, but if you sacrifice and work during your 20s….you can set yourself up for a much easier life later. Pick a job that is the best compromise between what pays, what you are good at and what you can get. Start it….doesn’t matter if it’s not perfect…you can change, but much easer to change with experience getting you hired elsewhere. You won’t love your job and it won’t fulfill you…only a lucky few manage that, and as my dad says…there is a reason jobs pay you money. But….you have the rest of your week to devout to your likes and passions. Get an emergency fund, then put aside a couple thousand per year for retirement….you will likely get old like the rest of us, and being old and poor is WAY worse than young and poor. Best wishes, and almost anything is possible if you break it down into small steps. It’s never as much fun as childhood, but every stage of life is like each season of the year…,they all have their good and bad parts, and better to enjoy the fall than to be sad the Spring has gone.

  • @great4ever845

    @great4ever845

    3 ай бұрын

    So you got your car repossessed and you thought getting drunk and High was the best thing to do

  • @Jayden-lu7od

    @Jayden-lu7od

    2 ай бұрын

    ⁠​⁠@@great4ever845you were given education in reading comprehension as a child and you thought dumbing around was the best thing to di

  • @GabrielLopez-nk3sr
    @GabrielLopez-nk3sr Жыл бұрын

    This made me tear up just listening, because it described my current state so well. The day dreaming of a successful career only to never really put any work into getting there. The constant fear of failure, the putting off of day to day chores. Escaping through drugs, alcohol and video games. The frame of mind described it something I know all too well and everything I struggle with now. Im so disappointed by who I am, and this video helped me see it from such a different light. If you relate, lets take this as the wake up call it should be, lets change this one day at a time, I wish you all the best.

  • @jakedemaggio8649

    @jakedemaggio8649

    Жыл бұрын

    🙏🏻

  • @GhostAdvocate13

    @GhostAdvocate13

    Жыл бұрын

    What has helped me introduce some order in my life, despite lack of motivation, has been to set clear daily tasks that are productive towards my goals. I have 6 of them. For example "exercise", to achieve physical condition and aesthetic goals; "Illustration" and "music" to work on creative production; "Meditation" to work on the mind. I rarely feel like doing them, but the little whiteboard on my fridge pushes me to check the daily boxes. I add the total of tasks accomplished and tally them by week and month. I'm not as productive as I would like, but I definitely am getting more done than before. Actually finishing things. Afterwards, indulging in some tv and escaping into a videogame (we all need to escape once in a while) doesn't feel like avoiding life.

  • @DeusPsycho

    @DeusPsycho

    Жыл бұрын

    Wish you all the best

  • @shiromk1689

    @shiromk1689

    Жыл бұрын

    I do the same I'm not able to get over it

  • @cathylindeboo.9598

    @cathylindeboo.9598

    Жыл бұрын

    @@shiromk1689 Maybe you make progress in the direction of wholeness? That is something!

  • @cooladam6670
    @cooladam667011 ай бұрын

    A man who procrastinates in his choosing will inevitably have his choice made for him by circumstance. - Hunter S. Thompson

  • @spumpjam1767
    @spumpjam176728 күн бұрын

    Dont usually comment on videos because i feel like im screaming into the void when I do. That being said, im 122 days clean as of writing this and just starting to turn things around again, and this hit home in all the right places. To anyone still struggling, hell really is what we make it, that self obsession and hyperfocus on internal thought...whereis im starting to find freedom through what I previously lauded as weakeness - that being the absence of thought, living in the moment, community, structure, routine, and faith that things might just get better if I stop only listening to myself. To anyone still struggling, its possible, and it starts with admitting your wrong and asking for help. Hardest thing ive ever done...and its increasingly becoming the most rewarding.

  • @webspaghetti
    @webspaghetti6 ай бұрын

    Don't assume this video has seen through you. Almost everyone will recognise aspects of it in themselves and think "yeah this is exactly me"! Just as someone else below mentioned, it's like a horoscope or séance; generalisations, some of which hit the spot and trick you into believing it is totally accurate. Don't let anyone tell you who you are! You are an individual and a complicated mix of personalities. Be yourself and find yourself! Too many unhappy people trying to fix their unhappiness by projecting it onto other people, and that includes the likes of Jung and Freud etc. As someone once sang....Whatever gets you through the night, it's all right.

  • @darkbags39

    @darkbags39

    6 ай бұрын

    Exactly

  • @MarkusManon

    @MarkusManon

    5 ай бұрын

    Thank you! I was looking for something, anything like this.

  • @georgepetkovic440

    @georgepetkovic440

    5 ай бұрын

    This comment should be the disclaimer for this video.

  • @mrjoe5292

    @mrjoe5292

    5 ай бұрын

    Glad to see I'm not the only one seeing this video for what it is. Keep fighting.

  • @TristanWintle

    @TristanWintle

    4 ай бұрын

    This video is pretty much just a mirror. It gives you a clear look at what you really are. When you watch it, it will be immediately obvious which parts do and don't apply to you.

  • @iamzafkiel
    @iamzafkiel Жыл бұрын

    The neglected childhood part hit like a truck. The most powerful aspect of childhood is the "eternally in the present" status of their perception of life. Bullying takes that state and forces the child to adopt a twisted and chronically pessimistic expectation on the future. Tomorrow is no more the gift-bearer inviting you to discovery, it's the torturer.

  • @bellakrinkle9381

    @bellakrinkle9381

    9 ай бұрын

    I'm sorry to see that you have trapped yourself into your childhood. You can find your path out, yet this requires courage and persistence.

  • @nomadsanity

    @nomadsanity

    8 ай бұрын

    Very well said

  • @Lyrielonwind

    @Lyrielonwind

    7 ай бұрын

    I agree. It's much worse if your mother was a narcissist and chose you to be the scapegoat. After you get bullied by your family, you are going to get bullied at school, work and mostly all the spheres of social engagements.

  • @Christhreeonesix

    @Christhreeonesix

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@LyrielonwindI'm so sorry

  • @Christhreeonesix

    @Christhreeonesix

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@bellakrinkle9381🙏

  • @billyin4c514
    @billyin4c514 Жыл бұрын

    Dude just explained my existence. I think the only difference is that the reason I allowed the fear of engaging with the world to shut down my desire to go out into the world is because my father terrorized me as a child. So when I engage with something I fear in the world, I feel the level of fear I felt as a boy being screamed at and threatened by my father. I go around holding back an unbelievable amount of sadness and anger. I also have an extremely creative imagination and none of it has been manifested in the world.

  • @abrianna9676

    @abrianna9676

    Жыл бұрын

    I can relate to you.The same thing happened to me but with my mom. I never thought other people could relate to me I always felt so alone in this. Im working on myself because I also have an extremely creative imagination that I want to share with the world. You are a very special person and everyone has their own unique journeys. Some take longer then other to get to where they want to be and sometimes that's for the best:). Still working on myself but little by little I'll get there. So will you. Just give yourself patience and kindness. You deserve that so much.

  • @billyin4c514

    @billyin4c514

    Жыл бұрын

    @@abrianna9676 I know you're telling the pure truth by what you said at the end. I've found it so hard to be kind to myself in life. I think when the instinct to protect yourself is hindered you won't even fight for basic things that makes up a good life. The instinct to fight is unbelievably vital to success in life. I've finally gotten to the point that I can acknowledge my humanity and the parts in me worth fighting for. So this year I'm going back to try becoming a composer again and frankly I'm probably gonna fight a couple people in competition. Time to be a fucking man and make a life for myself. I hope you also fight to reach your potential and make a beautiful life. All the strength you need is inside of you.

  • @Tadesan

    @Tadesan

    Жыл бұрын

    Hugs

  • @dodgecityvanlife

    @dodgecityvanlife

    Жыл бұрын

    Same here

  • @WinkLinkletter

    @WinkLinkletter

    Жыл бұрын

    If only I could get back all the energy spent and time occupied in fruitless loops of anger toward my Mother. I'm working on it, and vids like this really help become more aware.

  • @ridwanosman5644
    @ridwanosman56446 ай бұрын

    “I'm 27 and I feel like I'm stuck in a phase of not wanting to take on adult responsibilities. I don't have a job, I'm not in a relationship, and I rely on my family for financial support while living at home. I don't really have clear goals or ambitions, and I often doubt myself”😔

  • @ToxicAvengerCleanYourMind

    @ToxicAvengerCleanYourMind

    6 ай бұрын

    Remember not to lie to yourself and live in delusions of grandeur. That well will dry up and should be used as a benefit to drink from while searching for a new well.

  • @michelleconley5871

    @michelleconley5871

    9 күн бұрын

    I know how you feel. I am 35, been to prison(1yr in TN when I was 19, 1.5yrs in AZ when 24, and then 2.5yrs in AZ when I was 31),I've had severe Opioid Dependence since my sister (older than me by 8 yrs) introduced me to sniffing Xanax and percs to within 2 years(which I was 14 going on 15 at this time) she was shooting me up with Dilaudid-started out as a bribe so I would babysit her small village (eventually 7 kids altogether, one after the other,every other year like stairsteps) & I mean I loved my nieces & nephews but I'm talking babysitting ALL THE TIME . It didnt take but 2 or 3 times og doing those dilaudids and I got addicted right away. So much more happened but way too much to say here. Point is,I've had x2 boys myself,the first one is adopted,but he's 15 years old now,my second son(both have same father) he's 13 now,and he lives about an hour away with my mother who has custody. I have a good man,been with him 11 years but he's 25 years my senior. I don't have a job. Can't even get foodstuffs due to past mistakes. I feel like a loser. But I'm trying to pull out if the funk. That's all we can do. Happy to say that I'm 4 years sober from heroin and meth and free from shooting uo too. So miracles do happen . Just know your not alone

  • @glitcharcing
    @glitcharcing7 ай бұрын

    This made me cry. Extremely sad as I have two parents who are like this. The effects of observing this disease on them was terrible. My mom has not had a job for 30+ years and my dad quit every job he got within a year. No amount of homelessness for either of them taught them the lesson… which is, very sadly, the epitome of what being a puer/puella will do to you. They’re both preoccupied with their own versions of the adolescent dreams that they never left… a disappointed shell of an adult. My mom was by far the worst, however. I spent much of my childhood and adolescence trying to convince my mom to do anything with her life, even a simple hobby. As insane as it sounds, she was consumed by watching Disney movies all day and drinking alcohol… In fact, I became homeless at the age of 11 because of her inability to pay rent and take responsibility for me. It was at that point that I started to learn about psychology and read all day. I taught myself everything I wanted to know and went to college at the age of 15, then a university at 18. You would hope that me moving on and away would inspire her? No… nothing changed for the better. She had a mental breakdown… couldn’t take the fact that I wasn’t a child anymore. I paid her rent for her when I was 19 until she one day abandoned her entire apartment and my old cat (I made sure he was okay). I couldn’t reach my mom for months until I one day received a call from a mental hospital. She had traveled hundreds of miles to my town and gotten hospitalized. She pleaded for me to help her by letting her stay at my house. At that moment, I realized that she would be like this forever… sucking the life out of me. Devouring me. I told her that I couldn’t take her in but that I love her… and that was the last thing we ever said to each other. I later learned that that she left the hospital and became lost to homelessness… she has been a ghost for years. What a sad and terrible fate that is. It takes a lot of power to not become a puer when subjected to that. In my childhood, I completely lost my personality due to the devouring mother. What makes me so fearful is that I do see an unhealthy part of myself in this archetype… and to a certain extent, I always will. The good news, however, is that I always knew a genuine passion is what saves me… When I was 11 and homeless, I pushed myself away from the person I knew mother was destined to be… and further into my passion of psychology, which stems from these experiences. I did the same years ago with that phone call I got from her. I knew both at those times and now that I have no choice but to sit with this reality… and continue to remind myself that these experiences will continue to fuel my love for, and therefore work in, psychology. Thank you.

  • @Shahzad-Khan

    @Shahzad-Khan

    7 ай бұрын

    What a deeply profound and beautiful story. As I figure this out, I’d love to help others with these issues.

  • @presidential3228

    @presidential3228

    7 ай бұрын

    dude this is insane i have so so so many questions but its your personal life and i do not wish to invade. dam.

  • @dondada3986

    @dondada3986

    7 ай бұрын

    I hope life is kind to you. All the best for the future

  • @AmericanDrinker

    @AmericanDrinker

    6 ай бұрын

    You made a very difficult yet honorable decision. It sounds like you accepted the very likely and unhealthy consequence, had you accepted your mother. And instead choose to not subject yourself to that pain. You had to grow up with that same pain and realized that now you can make a choice. Thank you for sharing

  • @user-uc6ez8wn9k

    @user-uc6ez8wn9k

    6 ай бұрын

    @@Shahzad-KhanThere is nothing beautiful about it. It’s like a horrific prophecy of failure, and it destroys people.

  • @Dial8Transmition
    @Dial8Transmition Жыл бұрын

    I was raised by an overprotective, abusive mother and it definitely turned me into a man child. I'm not very child like in my behaviour, but I grew up being afraid of the world, anything that was unusual, outside the norm and outside my home was scary and unknown, including other people so I grew up a recluse. I'm 27 now and, I'm just starting to work out this anxiety I have been living with for so long, but it's a hard process with many ups and downs

  • @TomeRodrigo

    @TomeRodrigo

    Жыл бұрын

    I am 41 years old with the same type of mother. One would vomit. Abusive and overprotective..is that shit even going together for fuck sake? :D Many people will develop Borderline personality disorder from such chaotic parent. Especially "Quiet borderline" where they treat themselves like a last bag of shit and can be very angry with themselves. Sorry to hear about your struggle. It is normal to feel paranoid in the world when your closest caregiver been abusive to you. It scares the brain, and the brain will develop mechanisms to be hyper-vigilant all the time. I can also imagine that you struggle with "self-monitoring" and controlling your actions very much, so you can't really be yourself as you are worried about others judgment.

  • @haroldberman1341

    @haroldberman1341

    Жыл бұрын

    I give this story 5 bags of popcorn and a Xanax

  • @jackoroni4609

    @jackoroni4609

    Жыл бұрын

    I’m 19 and terrified that will live the life of a recluse

  • @MegaDonzee

    @MegaDonzee

    Жыл бұрын

    The fact that you recognize what is going on within is a very good foundation for going forward. Good-luck in your journey of self discovery. Be kind and honest to yourself.

  • @redcherry8137

    @redcherry8137

    Жыл бұрын

    Omg super random but love ur pfp , i too am a bit of a "movie buff"

  • @francisfrain6385
    @francisfrain6385 Жыл бұрын

    Childhood trauma made me disconnect from the world around me and emerge myself in elaborate and rich fantasy world that gave me a degree of peace from a very early age. Disconnection from the world around me was my coping mechanism, just like engaging with it in an agressive and conflicting manner was my sister's.. In my adult years i seak comfort at all costs from the world around me but that comfort comes at a great person sacrifice. It has taken me years to realize this but the pain of facing the hardships of life in the near future is nothing compared to the pain of having to face them later on when you're left with no other options.

  • @hbrotha1866

    @hbrotha1866

    Жыл бұрын

    I feel the same, I’m 28 years old.

  • @rotary_7812

    @rotary_7812

    Жыл бұрын

    Feel the same. I daydream to escape from the bad things in life...

  • @talkoholic13

    @talkoholic13

    Жыл бұрын

    Try accepting what happened to you and recognizing that it did not scar you or damage you for the rest of your life. Accept that who you are is not what happens to you, but the decisions you choose to make everyday. And, that you are totally capable, no matter what age or what stage in life, to change for the better if you desire❤ anxiety and depression are based in fear. Fear of the unknown. Accept that you are powerless to the unknown, but the most powerful of yourself, whom you know better than anyone else. Better decisions everyday add up to life change. You have more control over your life than anyone or anything, no matter how it may seem. It is fact that only you know your inner thoughts. These inner thoughts create our reality. Control them, and control your reality, while allowing for the unknown and accepting what comes with it. You can do it. Be your own #1 fan.

  • @muhammadsyahzanbinjohari4306

    @muhammadsyahzanbinjohari4306

    Жыл бұрын

    @@talkoholic13 thank you for this. i appreciate it a lot. its hard but realizing that our past traumatic events scars us and eating away at our own individuality is very awful indeed. Alas, we shall not let these events makes us who we are today. Im absolutely here with you that the decisions we made everyday should be based on our values and ourselves alone. We have the power to determine our fate! chin up everyone!

  • @elizabethbrauer1118
    @elizabethbrauer1118Ай бұрын

    This was my father in the 1970s, leaving my mom for a 21 yo because he wasn't into the family he'd sired (4 kids). He wanted to have fun, travel the world, hang out with swingers, etc.

  • @apeman8985
    @apeman89859 ай бұрын

    You literally described me down to the last detail. I've had this realisation before. This, as you described it as thinking you are an artist without an art form was an exact thought that I had. As I said, I'm completely aware of this but I seem to not be able to escape it. I try to be more responsible and care more about external things but nothing seems genuine enough to make me act or feel in a passionate way. I only feel alive when experiencing the extreme. And even then, there is something unreal about it. I don't really know how to describe it and probably nobody is reading this but I just wanted to thank you for the video. Really made me think again.

  • @theboxingbiker

    @theboxingbiker

    9 ай бұрын

    “Life calls us forth to independence, and anyone who does not heed this call because of childish laziness or timidity is threatened with neurosis. And once this has broken out, it becomes an increasingly valid reason for running away from life and remaining forever in the morally poisonous atmosphere of infancy" - Carl Jung The condition of the Puer Aeternus can be easily described as a general fear of life and avoidance of responsibility. They are the child of the promise and are full of potential, however, they refuse their task. There’s a poignant illusion that the fantasy world is better than reality, even though they secretly know that this is just a maneuver to remain childish. However, having one foot in the eternal childhood paradise gives them a very youthful energy and fills them with creativity, inspiration, and a certain brightness. They tend to be full of ideals and know everything that’s wrong with society. When they look at adults all they can see are people trapped “in the system”.They are the ones that know better! Everything that resembles responsibilities and commitments seems terrifying. They feel trapped, but it’s only because this confronts their childishness. The result is a provisional life. There’s a constant longing for the perfect thing and waiting for the perfect conditions.They are constantly trying to build sand castles on a windy beach. And when everything falls apart they look for someone to blame, when in reality, they never commit to anything long enough and never go all in. Many fall on the perfectionism side, but this is only a protection against an imaginary failure. “If I never try I can’t ever fail”. This mingles with procrastination and so they are constantly stuck. While others expect to be great at something without even dedicating themselves to it. They refuse to pay the price to achieve any kind of greatness, and as soon as it gets difficult they abandon everything. But this shouldn’t matter, after all, they’re constantly substituting reality with their fantasies. And in fantasy land, they can continue dreaming about everything they want to achieve and never do anything. In the end, everything is a maneuver to remain in this stagnant endless loop and avoid dealing with reality. They are hostages to their own fantasies and little do they know that real life can set them free. Because it’s in reality that their fantasies must be given shape and be concretized. A lot of them are extremely smart and love “deep conversations”, but there’s a huge problem. They only understand things on an intellectual level. There’s no action and experience behind it. It’s a half-knowledge that has no life. And deep down, they are hypocrites, because their ideals do not hold up in reality and they’re too afraid to face the world and actually live by them. The Puer always chooses “the easy way out” and tends to create conditions where he can be perceived as a victim, so others take responsibility for him. But obviously, the problem is never in themselves, it’s always the parents that didn’t love them enough or weren’t able to give them everything they wanted. Or they blame “the system” and the inability of other people to see how amazing they are. “The perpetual hesitation of the neurotic to launch out into life is readily explained by his desire to stand aside so as not to get involved in the dangerous struggle for existence. But anyone who refuses to experience life must stifle his desire to live-in other words, he must commit partial suicide" Carl Jung The incessant search to maintaining his fantasies alive can also turn poisonous very quickly. And here we arrive at the most critical element: The one that refuses to live is already partially dead. The longing for paradise and eternal mother also mingles with a constant flirt with death. And here, vices, self destructing habits, reckless behaviors, and porn addiction can all be means to perpetuate this state of unconsciousness and avoidance. And when this is coupled with new-age beliefs or nihilism a whole new cluster arises and opens the door to psychosis. Beliefs like “we only have the now”, “everything is transient”, “the real world is an illusion”, “nothing matters”, “I must kill my ego”, You get the idea. Well, spirituality and philosophy can be great if you have roots in reality, they help you find meaning, but not for the Puer. These ideas can fuel an elaborate scheme that justifies their refusal to take responsibility for their lives. And even psychology can serve this purpose. The results are depression, anxiety, and even death fantasies. Sadly, many succumb to it. There’s a tendency of romanticizing death and suffering. Some use this as a means to call attention and manipulate, and some to reaffirm their state, because, in that way, they will never need to grow. "This sacrifice means giving up the connection with the mother, relinquishing all the ties and limitations which the psyche has taken over from childhood into adult life. It is not possible to live too long amid infantile surroundings, or in the bosom of the family, without endangering one’s psychic health” Carl Jung The Puer tells the story of an unrealized potential and a half-lived life. Healing lies in facing reality and fully committing to living life. But in order to do so, they must let go of their fantasies of being a misunderstood genius or a special snowflake. The internalized megalomania and sense of entitlement must be completely eradicated. Instead, they must learn to accept full responsibility for their actions and learn that everything has a price to be paid. Meaningful work and responsibility are the principles that can redeem their soul. Bringing their dreams to reality and fighting for them is what can revitalize their spirit. Realizing their potential and fulfilling their role as the child of the promise is what can bring meaning to their existence. The journey to redeem our souls ain’t easy, but it’s in this journey that lies what we’re truly seeking. Take your call to adventure. Don’t know where to start? “Where your fear is there’s your task” Carl Jung Written By: Rafael Kruger

  • @mbcw0923

    @mbcw0923

    9 ай бұрын

    @@theboxingbiker this is fantastic, well written, and thought-provoking. Thank you for sharing ❤

  • @kikowzzzz

    @kikowzzzz

    8 ай бұрын

    @@theboxingbiker man, I just see myself so much in these words, can't even describe how crazy it is...

  • @shogun8650

    @shogun8650

    8 ай бұрын

    ​@@theboxingbikerthanks for inspiring a spark of change and redemption in all of us who suffer on the daily and seek to become what we need to be

  • @hb-robo

    @hb-robo

    6 ай бұрын

    @@theboxingbikerreading this is absolutely agonizing, makes me feel like an ant under a magnifying glass. brilliantly written and very compelling though… I had never considered the idea of a “partial suicide” but now that, I can already see that I’ve made “partial” attempts on my life over and over again, through self harm and a lack of conviction about my ability to live. Jesus christ what a condition.

  • @Joseph_Hamilton
    @Joseph_Hamilton Жыл бұрын

    So I’m 5:30 in, and my God. I am the embodiment of this. I am constantly afraid if committing to something out of fear of it either going wrong or not being what I want it to be. I lack self discipline to push through sticky areas of interest, and instead I quit and start something new. This is terrifying but at least I am not alone in this if there is an entire archetype of these characteristics.

  • @bill5478

    @bill5478

    Жыл бұрын

    Fully agree I was laughing to myself how accurate it was

  • @itsshglerg8247

    @itsshglerg8247

    Жыл бұрын

    I believe our the modern first world American has a lot of people suffering from this or at least I see plenty of them on the internet

  • @Joseph_Hamilton

    @Joseph_Hamilton

    Жыл бұрын

    @@bill5478 oh same here. I was teetering between laughing and crying because it hurt but at least it could be diagnosed.

  • @That_Freedom_Guy

    @That_Freedom_Guy

    Жыл бұрын

    The fact that you can identify what you need to do is a fantastic start! Many would be reluctant to admit it to themselves let alone to others as you have. 👍

  • @MWorsa

    @MWorsa

    Жыл бұрын

    💯❕

  • @usel7226
    @usel7226 Жыл бұрын

    This was really important and painfully difficult for me to hear. I fit the man-child archetype perfectly and it explains literally everything that has been happening inside of me and around me for many years. Thank u so much for this video

  • @mrfarax4944

    @mrfarax4944

    Жыл бұрын

    Ikr the more he spoke the more I understood myself

  • @yoseeev8306

    @yoseeev8306

    Жыл бұрын

    Where you guys from?

  • @eliascommentonly4652

    @eliascommentonly4652

    Жыл бұрын

    10;36 1982 Athens greece Europe 40 old man child 🇪🇺🇪🇺🇪🇺🇪🇺🇬🇷🇬🇷🇬🇷🇬🇷🇬🇷🇬🇷⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ yes I'm man child whats the problem ???,, ⭐⭐⭐⭐

  • @shadesmarerik4112

    @shadesmarerik4112

    Жыл бұрын

    To grow up is an experience we grown-ups all share... for some it comes later and some even get stuck there somewhere. In a way it is important to understand its process, but on the other side it is dangerous and misleading to label it and to look down on this process of individuation with contempt, since it opens the gate for stereotypization, bigotry and hatred. One is never only the puer, since humans have many facets and the shadow as part of urself will always be what u deny of urself. If u see urself as purely puer the senex in ur shadow will grow and overcome u, without u noticing it. Please always see the archetypes as what they are: parts of our collective conscientious, part of our myths, sometimes just stories to illustrate a point, not single indiviuals who u can point at and say that they "are" the puer.

  • @Avenus112

    @Avenus112

    Жыл бұрын

    It's like astrology, horoscopes and personality tests. Makes you think of a certain scenario in your life where you were unsatisfied with the outcome and offers a cheap and easy answer why it worked out that way.byou feed selection bias into the confirmation machine and the machine feeds back a confirmation bias.

  • @mirko7587
    @mirko75877 ай бұрын

    "The puer knows that everything goes wrong because he is lazy, but he cannot want not to be lazy, and so he remains in depression" that one hit home, especially to me, being son of a devouring mother married to a neglected child (12:46).

  • @mrjoe5292

    @mrjoe5292

    5 ай бұрын

    I spent a chunk of my adult life being fairly dysfunctional, more or less what this video characterizes as a man child. There were plenty of times I wanted to be less lazy. Hell, there were plenty of attempts towards it, some more successful than others. This video is largely just a bunch of generalizations about a reasonably diverse group of people with a reasonably diverse set of problems. I think it's mostly just counting on people noticing that one or two apply to them, along with some more general statements, and hoping they won't question anything else too hard, similar to cold reading.

  • @mirko7587

    @mirko7587

    5 ай бұрын

    I mean yes, it is generalization because in order to speak about a type of person you have to generalize, but everyone is different, including puer aeternus, just like a someone with schizophrenia is different from another a puer aeternus can be totally different to another puer because of their different lives and experiences.@@mrjoe5292

  • @thaisplouvier5403
    @thaisplouvier540311 ай бұрын

    0:25 Diionysos & Eros 1:00 beauty, creativity 1:30 avoids individuation & wholeness 2:00 blue pill 2:35 Von Franz book on Puer Aeternus 4:20 always ready to say goodbye. Trains not to suffer by anticipating it. Isolated from life. 5:30 God complex. Artist without art. 7:10 escape from reality 10:00 human = earth 13:50 newness, potential, yes sayer 16:20 child dreams, senex works 18:00 Jung's aspiration through building 19:20 The little Prince 25:20 devouring mother : Kali 26:00 grow by exposing oneself to daily life & hard work 26:45 pull away from the mother via collectivity. Sacrifice megalomania without sacrificing the self. 29:35 cure to neurosis of the puer is work --> gain exceptionality in reality, not fantasy 30:30 Kierkegaard : lose oneself in the finite (imitation) or in the infinite (inaction) 30:50 child jumps from one work to another and quits when bored. Depressed because lazy. 32:30 Jung biased by body temple : don't think, act 33:57 child is driven by desire for safety or pleasure (Si child ?) 37:33 William Blake integrated the child

  • @SevericK_BooM

    @SevericK_BooM

    9 ай бұрын

    Thank u, this video is so hard to follow what’s going on

  • @neek911

    @neek911

    7 ай бұрын

    Thank you

  • @sofiahaokip2799

    @sofiahaokip2799

    6 ай бұрын

    Tysm

  • @coloredCYANIDE

    @coloredCYANIDE

    6 ай бұрын

    “Always ready to say goodbye” is a painful reality of any immigrant or even first gen but this has transpired into a lot of my life. For the rest nice to know I’m scoring as I should to change and grow. Competing with myself here anyway.

  • @cynthiajuma9006

    @cynthiajuma9006

    6 ай бұрын

    Si hero also seeks safety

  • @QualeQualeson
    @QualeQualeson Жыл бұрын

    I'd like to say to this comment section: Be wary of diagnosing yourself. Remind yourself that you're looking for patterns everywhere. Many archetypes will resonate with a lot of people without necessarily qualifying for conclusion, and there are many paths to some of the typical consequences mentioned in this video. If you're really struggling and you think you spot fitting labels, find a solid professional to make a proper analysis and get them confirmed or refuted. This is not necessarily an easy task as there's a lot of practitioners in the relevant fields who for various reasons are incapable or unwilling to help you in this way, but they _do_ exist. Just know what you want from them and define it clearly. Evade blurry long term therapy plans as well as medication.

  • @kevinlow69420

    @kevinlow69420

    Жыл бұрын

    But it's literally me

  • @chuhwey3632

    @chuhwey3632

    Жыл бұрын

    More importantly. Self fulfilling prophecy will seal your fate.

  • @chuhwey3632

    @chuhwey3632

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@kevinlow69420As you say. Life will give

  • @CalligraphysMusic

    @CalligraphysMusic

    Жыл бұрын

    Sound advice 👌

  • @ambrosialovly3676

    @ambrosialovly3676

    Жыл бұрын

    oh my

  • @GhostAdvocate13
    @GhostAdvocate13 Жыл бұрын

    This one was a righteous slap to the face. Never have I felt more pointed out. At 38, I am finally trying to be productive and finish things. To work towards my goals. Little by little, day by day, I am doing the necessary things to achieve what I have settled on wanting. Define your goals, or you will lose yourself to the infinite possibilities and end up nowhere, indeed.

  • @samness5798

    @samness5798

    7 ай бұрын

    I like how you phrased that; "to achieve what I have settled on wanting"

  • @ToxicAvengerCleanYourMind

    @ToxicAvengerCleanYourMind

    6 ай бұрын

    I feel like technology has changed so rapidly that your generation was bound to have difficulty to this ever changing world around. I wouldn't get too depressed and guilt ridden about things as that will not help in the slightest and only continue wallowing in self loathing delusions of grandeur... Instead treat your free time as work even if not getting paid. Learning is work, cleaning is work, just seeking opportunities is work... Life isn't easy for any species and can be quite harsh but start small, don't dream too big, and get a little more serious about this thing called life

  • @Idengard

    @Idengard

    6 ай бұрын

    Do you also sometimes, when you hear or read about a life (like, in a novel), have the feeling that some time, you too could lead that life - even if it is too late for such a life? (Hard to explain)

  • @mrjoe5292

    @mrjoe5292

    5 ай бұрын

    "This one was a righteous slap to the face. Never have I felt more pointed out." This isn't a coincidence, it's the point of these sort of ideologies. People with mental health issues are pretty much always the victims of the societies they live in. By that I don't mean they're necessarily caused by society (though they can be), I mean people are far _far_ too happy to point and jeer. It's not about helping, if that were the case they'd do things that helped. They'd be out there, doing what they can, or at least they'd be raising money, for whatever it may be worth. It's because it makes them feel better about themselves. Don't buy into this tripe. Ask yourself what you want from life, whether you're happy. If you are, great, don't worry about what others think (though try to make the world a better place too, because why the hell not). If you're not happy, then less great, but you can change. It's not easy, and yeah, sometimes it requires facing unpleasant truth about yourself. But those truths should come from yourself and your own desire to change, not from the sort of person who needs to compare themselves to you to pat themselves on the back. Allowing fear and ridicule to motivate you, well, if you ask me we've seen the end point of that ideology in the twentieth century. Which isn't to say there isn't any place for social norms or enforcing them. There's a subtle but important distinction between using criticism and using shame (which has its place too, just not here). To be really clear I'm not saying everything in this video is untrue. For example the idea that too much thinking can be poisonous, I've found that to be very true. My point is that by and large this isn't coming from a place of care or any kind of desire to help. You only have to look at the treatment of the mentally ill throghout history to understand this. It's probably fair to note that a lot of the people writing and quoted in this video didn't necessarily have the knowledge we have now, but if anything that's just a reason to not take them at face value and take them in their context. Responsibility is obviously a good ideology and a good idea in general, but nature doesn't care, it's a human construct. An important one. But that doesn't mean it should be used to punch down. It's entirely possible for there to be factors beyond a person's control that could cause them to be unable to function in society. That's not an excuse for fatalism, believing you can't help yourself ensures you can't. Free will isn't a universal constant, it's the result of a well raised and healthy mind. Best of luck, genuinely, I struggle too and it's not easy. Though I'm lucky enough to be able to see this sort of thing for what it is, I wasn't always strong enough, I used to eat this shit up. It didn't help me or make me stronger, it just damaged me. I don't think that's the goal, but I do think the sort of people who write this nonsense don't really care. It's about them.

  • @greenspark101

    @greenspark101

    4 ай бұрын

    @@mrjoe5292 I really enjoyed your reply to this post. If you feel like sharing, what has worked for you? Do you have favorite authors/channels/concepts/resources? I love a good deep dive and based on your comment I think you might, too 🤍

  • @LootableCorpse
    @LootableCorpse7 ай бұрын

    Reading the comments it worries me that people are so quick to blindly accept this philosophy. They see a name like CGJ and hear a story that sounds reasonable enough so they accept it without any critical thinking involved. I didn't come here to simply hate but every story deserves feedback that compels the listener to ask questions relative to their reality. Not being skeptical enough is just as bad as being too skeptical. If you are willing to question this philosophy instead of blindly capitulating then my advice is to start with asking yourself what adulthood or maturity really is. I know it's pretty tempting to listen to a 40 minute video and say yep that's me but I promise you there is a lot more to you. Please make sure you know something about the nature of the self by asking yourself some of the following questions: Do you know the difference between emotional, mental and physical maturity? Do you know the difference between morality and maturity? How does adulthood fit in with today's version of society and how is it different from the society that Jung lived in a hundred years ago? What does it mean when people say things like "grow up" or "act your age"? Have you been able to actively build your character without sacrificing valuable parts of your younger self? Does the way others see you match up with who you really are? 🍀🤍good luck finding yourself!

  • @lukaswilhelm9290

    @lukaswilhelm9290

    7 ай бұрын

    We "believe" in this because this just very relatable. Nothing too deep, we're man child after all what you gonna expect? Some hard thought critical thinking? Please...

  • @cno733

    @cno733

    2 ай бұрын

    It sounds like you don't get it and this doesn't really describe you personally. Other people understand this very well because they feel it and live it.

  • @jameshofbauer1089

    @jameshofbauer1089

    12 күн бұрын

    To add to your observation, which I think is a fair one delving deeper, I felt reading the comments that most stopped simply at the self-accusatory. There was more than the inability to grow-up expressed in the video, especially in the end. Positive aspects of the man-child as well as the puer contrasted with the senex provide interesting points. A balancing with different aspects taking the lead at different times in our life. I sense in some comments a desperation stalled within dualistic combative thinking--the addiction to good and evil and all its shameful self-destructive consequences. In fact, I would say to watch the video and identify with only the negative aspects would demonstrate man-child reactionary thinking. The overwhelming need to attack one's self, to suffer perpetual guilt and shame, the inability to deal with deeper issues gnawing at the subconscious--all backlash severely into isolation, substance-abuse, and obsessive thinking dissecting the world and one's self. One becomes locked down and demanding upon moments--tending to experience extremes of self-willed indulgence followed by penitent shameful confessing. Others are sought as authoritative problem solvers. Usually this only leads to another backlash inflicting further destruction. Your ending questions are phrased well, guiding toward a contemplative exploration, rather than an all-consuming emotional confession within a personal attack upon one's self. Unraveling yourself, efficaciously developing healthy self-awareness, does not need to be a dramatic upheaval.

  • @thesaurusrex7919
    @thesaurusrex791910 ай бұрын

    This is really a generalization that really could apply to most everybody. It’s like a horoscope , this video can mean the same thing to many.

  • @skeptikus
    @skeptikus Жыл бұрын

    I see a few problems with this concept. For example, like many psychological concepts it conflates the ideal of adulthood with the present day reality of it. In reality, the natural progression from passionate play to serious work gets interrupted the moment one senses that most of what we spend our time on as adults is empty and meaningless. I think Nietzsche got it right when he wrote: “The maturity of man - that means to have re-acquired the seriousness that one had as a child at play". The child aspires to become a man. That's what play is all about. Chopping wood, building huts, fighting battles. The child can't wait to become a man. And it's only when the reality of being a man is presenting itself to us as emotional numbness, as cynicism and brutal pragmatism, that many stop progressing. And that is very likely not a malfunction, but a warning sign that we need to take seriously if we want to stand a chance of surviving as a culture. Interestingly, Nietzsche also saw the child as the last developmental stage of man, preceded by the camel, doing as it's told without complaining, and the lion, doing as it wants without exception, the child in its playfulness transcends, according to Nietzsche, those one-sided approaches to life. When you are done seeking meaning in being abused and when you are done seeking meaning in abusing, all that's left is play. And he interestingly enough even has the Jesus on his side, who made it quite clear that no-one was to enter heaven unless he becomes like a child again first. And looking at our society, it seems to me that our freedom to choose is mostly limited to the first two options: lion or camel, servant or master, hammer or anvil as Goethe put it. I see a world of naked kings and wannabe adults who mistook submission for maturity and I see the child that cuts through the bullsh!t because it hasn't been conditioned yet. That child is our reason for hope. If you ask me.

  • @Ennui000

    @Ennui000

    Жыл бұрын

    This exactly. I couldn't have put my thoughts into words better than that

  • @mountainjay

    @mountainjay

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes, this video is twisted

  • @Memwosh

    @Memwosh

    Жыл бұрын

    It's about balance. Play is important as is resposibility. Living this balance and bringing it into the world (to the "submissive" people) will create wholeness. Also children and elderly are closer to the source and therefore (should) have a greater tendency to play.

  • @mountainjay

    @mountainjay

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Memwosh "responsibility". Please define responsibility. It seems rather arbitrary. If you are born a rich slaveowner your responsibility is to whip your slaves and have plenty of money for play but if you are born a slave your responsibility is to serve your master with hard labor all day and never play.

  • @yaqubebased1961

    @yaqubebased1961

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks. It is the man children that change the world. I await the coming of another Alexander patiently, to destroy the current american hegemony and make things new again

  • @raskolnikovman936
    @raskolnikovman936 Жыл бұрын

    notes: integration of the puer aeternus 1. Focus on the external world. Not just a one-sided view of the inner world. Thinking, listening, and understanding, but never acting. Or acting only in fantasy, never in reality. 2. The first half of life is strenghtening the ego through work, relationships and education. Second half is a focus on the inner world. A misalignment causes a midlife crisis. 3. Immerse yourself in the crowd. Socialize and experience the warmth of human beings and relatedness. 4. Collectivity is the antidote for the mother complex. Forming part of a community. Be careful not to lose your self in the crowd by balancing your spiritual life (solitary) and social life (group). 5. The Hero's Journey. Confront your dragons and experience a renewal of your self. Throw yourself into the fire of life. 6. Work is the most important to cure the puer. Routine, and hard-work. Follow the job that your instinctual energy drives you at. Don't speculate about how to live. Toil the soil right in front of you. 7. Discover your version of play: senex is tangible products: painting, cooking, building, puer is non tangible: movies, games, hanging out. 8. Bring dreams to life by writing and colouring like you did as a child. Enter the image through active imagination. When your ego changes, the unconscious changes too. 9. Sacrifice infantile shadow (laziness, infantile, dependant) into the Hero. The child god that presents renewal, life growing and expanding. 10. Integration of the puer brings one closer to the archetype of the Self and become an individuated person. If the doors of perception are opened, everything appears as it is, infinite. Bring heaven into earth. The tree which moves some to tears of joy is in the eyes of others only a green thing which stands in the way. As a man is so he sees.

  • @daankw

    @daankw

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks

  • @HOODTROPHY2x

    @HOODTROPHY2x

    Жыл бұрын

    Well explained 🔥

  • @JR-gc2vv

    @JR-gc2vv

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for this wisdom.

  • @okeyokey578

    @okeyokey578

    Жыл бұрын

    /clap

  • @dagon99

    @dagon99

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks

  • @rickiex
    @rickiex11 ай бұрын

    This is a masterful piece of work, as a man in my 30s coming into terms with my childhood trauma and trails of tribulation in my 20s, this has summarized my struggle, and I'm sure the struggle of many many just perfectly. Thank you so much.

  • @thebeatlesr1

    @thebeatlesr1

    6 ай бұрын

    I know exactly how you feel.

  • @miguelpereira9859

    @miguelpereira9859

    5 ай бұрын

    There were parts in this video where it felt like I was lookinf at my image in a mirror, I'm 23 and identify so much of myself in this archerype unfortunately

  • @garglokeshgarg

    @garglokeshgarg

    5 ай бұрын

    Me too

  • @machAcab

    @machAcab

    3 ай бұрын

    ⁠@@miguelpereira9859you have so much time, friend. but time passes fast. im 29 now, 23 feels like 3 weeks ago. you still have opportunity to change

  • @samuelkanuna3422

    @samuelkanuna3422

    3 ай бұрын

    26, and me too. Lately I've been doing the bare minimum to get by. And spending the rest of the time getting high, watching movies, and day dreaming of my coming success. Yet I don't remember the last time I passionately engaged with hobbies, talents, and works. I feel like I lost myself while trying to find myself, hope that makes sense. But I'm trying to move past that fear, I don't know exactly how but I know I have to change to figure that out.

  • @pretzelboi64
    @pretzelboi646 ай бұрын

    The fact so many people spend this much time analyzing and judging others when they're currently living their first life is utterly bizarre

  • @MichaelRyanEpley

    @MichaelRyanEpley

    2 ай бұрын

    The central distinction between the first life and the second is choosing to avoid judging others. To compare is unavoidable and necessary. To judge should be considered to be forbidden. We should analyze ourselves. Dealing with childhood issues is necessary. We should judge only ourselves, gently, and only relative to who we were yesterday. This is doing well; just a bit better than yesterday. We lose ourselves eventually in our judgments. Refusing to compare oneself to others is the first step. One simply decides acceptance is preferable. This is why the second part of life is the second part of life. One must have an ego and basis of past judgment, good and bad, in personal experience. Then we must learn to give up the regular practice of judgment as a means to control others.

  • @unodos149
    @unodos149 Жыл бұрын

    I think it's mostly a highly creative, intellectual personality, who thinks about everything too much. Add on top of that some too much coddling early on, that type might get trapped in the cycle of being afraid to fail on top of thinking too much. So they perfect an idea forever, etc. Force a person to act, to get a thing done, it ends up just fine. And they'll be surprised at how well and easy it turns out in the end.

  • @kyriedagoat453

    @kyriedagoat453

    Жыл бұрын

    Caught in this loop

  • @juliebaz

    @juliebaz

    Жыл бұрын

    It's nice to meditate on that over thinking wheel that is in constant motion 20 mins of meditation today brought a fresh new re invented me then I felt the surge of creativity along with the cogs taking in a way I could steer.

  • @alexxx4434

    @alexxx4434

    Жыл бұрын

    Child is not born afraid of life, it is curious, if it feels safe it dares to explore. Being afraid to fail is something parents impose.

  • @ernstjung6234

    @ernstjung6234

    11 ай бұрын

    @@alexxx4434 A sentence that hits way too close to home

  • @stoiccrane4259

    @stoiccrane4259

    9 ай бұрын

    Failure is a compass for success. The more one experiences undesired results in a given pursuit the more opportunity te have to re-adjust, recalibrate, and adapt until they bring about their desired end. Failure is the blueprint of all invention and is never final unless one dies or chooses to stop persisting.

  • @s4awd2
    @s4awd2 Жыл бұрын

    This is my baby cousin. Forever happy in reading the menu of life. Always critiquing what others ordered, laughing about it, and is dreadfully afraid of choice remorse. Needless to say he is over 40 now. He lives with his parents who continue to work in their 70's to ensure he has all he needs. We are all watching his life pass away right in front of him. Although he is happy and healthy, it is extremely tragic..

  • @zzzzzzzzzz995

    @zzzzzzzzzz995

    Жыл бұрын

    Get a rope!

  • @mr.makedonija2627

    @mr.makedonija2627

    Жыл бұрын

    Sounds like a narcissist

  • @bananas4077

    @bananas4077

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@Degen Rips his "happiness" is cultivated by the dependency of his parents. He's trapped in his own neurosis and he doesn't know because in his psyche, he "feels" happy. He's not living.

  • @s4awd2

    @s4awd2

    Жыл бұрын

    @@bananas4077 exactly right 👍

  • @pickledweed

    @pickledweed

    11 ай бұрын

    I'm in the same boat as a female at 29. I still have to learn how to drive. I was working a graveyard shift for six years at a supermarket but my parents didn't like me working there especially since I have a degree so I quit and have been unemployed for two years. I feel very unproductive but I'm not sure what to do. I'm extremely passive.

  • @jestnutz
    @jestnutz6 ай бұрын

    There's 1 saying I will never forget. "The truth will set you free" A child will lie, even to itself, it's important to critique yourself constructively without being too harsh. A tricky balance.

  • @itsame_th2283
    @itsame_th228311 ай бұрын

    This was just amazing. I watched it 2 days ago and kept getting constant conscious reminders. These people were/are brilliant yet recognised and accepted their shortcomings. They constantly grew and accepted the bad but looked for the good in all things. God bless you friend

  • @MissCane9
    @MissCane9 Жыл бұрын

    More needs to be said about selfish, smothering/controlling mothers and the damage they do to their sons But so much depends upon how you were raised. If you were emotionally or physically abused or raised by psychopaths or narcissists (like me) you may tend to be detached and have an active fantasy life, but in addition be responsible, hard-working and face challenges. Traumatic scars callused over can make it next to impossible to connect to your spouse, children, or job yet a great job fulfilling those roles. Life isn't fair. Play the hand you're dealt.

  • @imtired469

    @imtired469

    Жыл бұрын

    💅

  • @vurhn2009

    @vurhn2009

    Жыл бұрын

    The problem with single mother and a uncle who barely comes to care being with us too much is so severe I have a mood jump against my mother I'm very much screwed, I have a constant mindset of wanting to do good and not doing bad acts but it's so constant I hinder myself being a picky guy and too paranoid.

  • @michaelhanford8139
    @michaelhanford8139 Жыл бұрын

    The woman who realized what life is at the moment she shoots herself, having a pleasantly surprised look on her face reminds me of a Buddhist story where one of his monks 'drew the knife' and realized what he needed to know to enlighten in his next life as he lay there bleeding out. Another inspiring video. Thank you.

  • @frozen_eclipse

    @frozen_eclipse

    Жыл бұрын

    she had a wound and was dying. "surprise look", lol. she couldn't even pass away in peace without that freak staring at her with interest

  • @kiernanmooney6210

    @kiernanmooney6210

    Жыл бұрын

    I feel like it’s kinda nice knowing that the DMT, either way, is gonna make you all like, “ooooooh I get it now! Dang. Welp…”

  • @scorpious1117

    @scorpious1117

    11 ай бұрын

    @@kiernanmooney6210 what dmt? They one in death?

  • @manic4love

    @manic4love

    11 ай бұрын

    You're one egoist

  • @earlgrey4539

    @earlgrey4539

    11 ай бұрын

    @@scorpious1117DMT is released in the brain at some point during death

  • @hypno5690
    @hypno569011 ай бұрын

    This is insane. I am a typical puer, live with parents no job no friends no romance etc. A while ago I purchased a wall hanging of the goddess Kali. I did not know why, other than the image attracted me. I tried to analyze it and came upon the conclusion that it represented the devouring mother, and hid it in my closet in shame. My mother was an overwhelming figure in my life, abusive, alcoholic, and irresponsible. I am shocked how at how psychology of this sort rings SO true. It feels more true than anything else.

  • @Nayte08

    @Nayte08

    5 ай бұрын

    And where are you 6 months later?

  • @hypno5690

    @hypno5690

    5 ай бұрын

    @@Nayte08 Hello, thank you for inquiring. I've realized that I don't have the personal discipline or momentum to undo an entire life lived in disarray. I've decided to join the Marines and managed to get my GED and am now late in the enlistment process. While I still live with my father at the age of 29, it's not quite too late to learn new patterns of behaviour and I will soon be employed and have a structured environment. Besides the GED, I have to be physically fit to qualify. This is not easy for a 29 year old who has sat in front of his computer and has video games and internet addictions for years and never played a sport (4k hours in DOTA 2, 3k hours in TF2, and more). After months of training I managed to do 9 pull-ups and run a 22 minute 5k, and scored 90 on my ASVAB. The trick to changing is to find a goal meaningful enough that it overrides your other bad habits.

  • @billybobthefarmersson9028

    @billybobthefarmersson9028

    9 күн бұрын

    Kali can help tbh

  • @missnellaful
    @missnellaful11 ай бұрын

    THANK YOU for choosing not to include extra sounds and even more thanks for omitting music! It’s learning time again. Please keep up you fantastic documentaries! I am a very happy person to be able to listen to worthy information!!

  • @Kozli1985
    @Kozli1985 Жыл бұрын

    I worked hard all my life and it brought me nothing than misery and cruelty of this world. Only fools and horses work for a living. I stopped working, living from rent and Im much happier than before.

  • @lllooolll327
    @lllooolll327 Жыл бұрын

    I feel this video "found" me, as the call to adventure. The way it almost called me out on my behaviour, in an almost personally offensive manner, really made me think about how I have been sabotaging my life by never truly commiting to anything but doubt. My childhood was a nightmare in some ways, but it is now my life is. And only my actions here and now, and only now, can define my life to come. Thank you for this video, and all your great work Eternalized!

  • @YogSoth

    @YogSoth

    Жыл бұрын

    I feel the same way. I’m not exactly sure why this popped into my recommended, but I am thankful that it did. I felt like I was being personally called out during the first half of the video. Gives me so much to think about.

  • @theral056

    @theral056

    Жыл бұрын

    Has anything changed for you since? I watched this two weeks ago as well, and I thought it through, played it out in my mind, and continued living as I did before. Though perhaps that's not quite true since I returned to this video, maybe change is still to come. I'll think about that.

  • @APerez89

    @APerez89

    Жыл бұрын

    Please educate yourself. The video was directed at you. The algorithm only feeds you what it wants. Check out the ads and subliminal messages 😂... EVERY ONE HERE exhibits a personality that Googles algorithm is trying to manipulate into taking action of some sort. Then again if you believe the garbage that came out of your mouth, without any deep consideration...maybe you are a man child. 🤯

  • @APerez89

    @APerez89

    Жыл бұрын

    @@YogSoth youre being manipulated. You exhibit traits based on your data consumption that puts you into a market segment. 😂😂😂. It's slowly on a mission to pull you away from the things you love and Into the things IT NEEDS, like cheap labor to fill Amazon and Walmart jobs . Keep chasing and fighting for your dreams and never let anyone make you feel bad for liking Pokemon and wearing silly hats in your twenties and thirties. 😤 Be your own boss and hero.

  • @porkerpete7722

    @porkerpete7722

    Жыл бұрын

    Nah you're the same

  • @kcav1255
    @kcav1255Ай бұрын

    Most of us are the puer through our 20's. Moving beyond it is painful, and involves great internal loss. Yet it is necessary because the other stages of life are waiting. Those who can make peace with the loss, even if it feels too soon, can progress to the stage of life where responsibility and duty become paramount. Because in this stage of life you are needed. The adults are dying off, and you are now the adult. There is no one else to take their place. Accept the loss and move on to the next stage of life because it ks where you were meant to be. When you accept it, the treasures of the stage will come, slowly but surely. A spouse, a family, a sense of stability. You will lose a part of you that you think is you. But it is not you. You are what you are right now.

  • @kingnova6408
    @kingnova640810 ай бұрын

    As a 17 year old who has a done a lot of self reflecting in the past year or so, this hit me like a train it perfectly describes everything happening with my life. Thank you for this video, it might just be life changing for me.

  • @Hehehehhehehehehehehehhe78

    @Hehehehhehehehehehehehhe78

    8 ай бұрын

    You're only 17. You still haven't even reached young adulthood. However, keep on doing what you are doing and good will come out of it.

  • @nothomelessonyoutube

    @nothomelessonyoutube

    7 ай бұрын

    It's so amazing it happened to you now and you realized it. Took me till I was 25 to even come close to figuring things out. I recommend you go to trade school, work get an understanding, then go to college when you are like 23-25. You are already light years ahead of most 17 years old.

  • @JennyCuntballs

    @JennyCuntballs

    7 ай бұрын

    Really mature mind to be investigating this stuff at 17 but everyone us on their own journey and I wish you all the best on your own personal journey my friend!

  • @Tek_777

    @Tek_777

    7 ай бұрын

    @@nothomelessonyoutubeso true! I’m 25 and I so wish I could’ve had this awareness then. No time like the present though, gotta make changes before it’s too late.

  • @nothomelessonyoutube

    @nothomelessonyoutube

    7 ай бұрын

    @@Tek_777 it's never too late, it's our turn to shine.

  • @MrKillswitch88
    @MrKillswitch88 Жыл бұрын

    One thing I often observe of some common personality types especially on the job is that they are very much externally focused so not much of an inner world so are bored very easily requiring stimulation otherwise are crushed by boredom while those who are inner focused will just find something to think about and just automate whatever task to pass the time.

  • @psychoticschmitz7867

    @psychoticschmitz7867

    Жыл бұрын

    This depends very much on what work you are doing. I'm some one who is incredibly inwardly focused and I do mechanic work. This combination is terrible because there is a steep learning curve that requires intense focus and observation on the details around you. A failure to focus in my job can cause you death, injury, punishment, or just a failure to improve. That level of autopilot has to be earned, and is only doable to a certain level

  • @totesmagotes3688

    @totesmagotes3688

    Жыл бұрын

    @@psychoticschmitz7867 Yes, I’ve got a job that could get me or others killed, or cause property damage if not performed correctly. I’ve come to the point generally that I’m never 100% focused on what I’m doing because I now do tasks automatically while my mind is on philosophy or psychology. Either way, I see a lot of negative aspects of myself in this video. Especially the part toward the end about basically waiting for your Hero function to activate and to feel like you’re truly experiencing life, and not just watching it as a spectator.

  • @leonardodemarchi7147
    @leonardodemarchi7147 Жыл бұрын

    This video understands me, I'm impressed, I'm speechless, I will rewatch it thousands of times

  • @trels203

    @trels203

    Жыл бұрын

    For real, I'm truly beside myself

  • @kevinbaconwasntinfootloose1742

    @kevinbaconwasntinfootloose1742

    Жыл бұрын

    But then you'll overthink everything even more 😱😭

  • @MWorsa

    @MWorsa

    Жыл бұрын

    @@kevinbaconwasntinfootloose1742 And still make no decisions

  • @henoksamuel1106

    @henoksamuel1106

    Жыл бұрын

    Infp

  • @Chungus581
    @Chungus5813 ай бұрын

    This might be the most impactful video I’ve ever listened to. Every single minute hits right at home in a cutting but awakening way. Every description is spot on of me. Maybe not wanting to be back in a womb but the daydreaming, the undue grandiosity that I know deep down isn’t warranted, avoidance of failure or effort, pursuing drugs and feeling detached. I’m lucky I have the support system I do because with bad parents or brothers who didn’t teach me and support me, I’d maybe had gone to college, likely would’ve failed out and currently would probably be either destitute or legitimately homeless. Thanks for making this video man. I need to stop being this way. This is ego cutting but in the most hopeful and constructive way possible. Here I was thinking I was so special because none of the people I know are like me but the only reason that’s the case is cause the people like me fade into obscurity. Turns out being unproductive and choosing to stay in a dreamworld of delusion doesn’t benefit those around you.

  • @splorn
    @splorn11 ай бұрын

    These are without question some of the more worthwhile and well done things I’ve ever seen on here or anywhere for that matter. Thank you

  • @martinvelasco-ramos4097
    @martinvelasco-ramos4097 Жыл бұрын

    Your work has been invaluable to my personal development. You are helping thousands of people change their lives. Thank you for all your hard work.

  • @itslittttttt7111

    @itslittttttt7111

    Жыл бұрын

    U said invaluable to my personal development

  • @lod7635

    @lod7635

    Жыл бұрын

    @@itslittttttt7111 what

  • @yessir640

    @yessir640

    Жыл бұрын

    @@itslittttttt7111 that means important

  • @waynerlopez-fx3yw

    @waynerlopez-fx3yw

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@itslittttttt7111 lol it's litttttttt wasssssuuuuppppppppp lol

  • @temaramatangamarialaviniahau

    @temaramatangamarialaviniahau

    11 ай бұрын

    Martin with the 5

  • @onniram
    @onniram Жыл бұрын

    This will be the most important KZread video I have ever watched. Thank you for making the undefinable thing in my life an apparent syndrome that I now see in myself.

  • @BIBLE-a-s-m-r

    @BIBLE-a-s-m-r

    Жыл бұрын

    YAy❤

  • @vahlah5205

    @vahlah5205

    Жыл бұрын

    Lmao did you just reduce this to a syndrome

  • @EricShaun99
    @EricShaun996 ай бұрын

    Had this in my watch later tab for months now. I'm glad I'm seeing this now before I keep spiraling anymore. Had a jarring social experience recently where I was basically exposed for being a loser and all I could do was shut down and shrink into my imagination. I can't let fear of failure stop me from trying. Thank you

  • @user-kz8zr4si3i
    @user-kz8zr4si3i9 ай бұрын

    "If you arent a productive capitalist consumer or producer then you are a manchild" Great thesis you got there, buddy. Most psychoanalysis is just one big giant projection

  • @legitlou2246

    @legitlou2246

    8 ай бұрын

    Enjoy the blue pill friend

  • @pretzelboi64

    @pretzelboi64

    6 ай бұрын

    It really all boils down to one guy who hasn't even completed a full cycle of existence thinking he knows better than everyone else and making a video about how anyone who doesn't think the way he does is inferior. Like, does he not realize the irony of being a know-it-all manchild himself?

  • @martinainscough9226
    @martinainscough9226 Жыл бұрын

    "Who looks outside, dreams; Who looks inside, awakes." - Carl Gustav Jung Well said and extremely synchronistic. Cheers.

  • @marinnalee2896
    @marinnalee2896 Жыл бұрын

    This is both extremely convicting and comforting that I’m not alone

  • @scooby7877

    @scooby7877

    Жыл бұрын

    Yea at least we’re not alone 😢

  • @ODDERBOTTER
    @ODDERBOTTER11 ай бұрын

    12:48 explains me perfectly. My brother's hard drug addiction and the chaos it caused for years along with my parent's financial struggles forced me to grow up and face harsh realities very early in my childhood. It has made me painfully pragmatic and I struggle so hard with enjoying life and nourishing my inner child.

  • @ThatCMonster

    @ThatCMonster

    10 ай бұрын

    I understand. I went through a phase where I overindulged in a lost childhood because of similar issues. You’ll learn to let them out and nourish them eventually ❤

  • @artisticflower

    @artisticflower

    6 ай бұрын

    I’m with you, I see myself most strongly in Apollo and the child forced to grow up too soon, to abandon my childhood dreams of art school. All of the “productive” hobbies he listed are ones I do; I struggle to just “be” and enjoy things in the moment. In therapy I’ve been working to reconnect to my inner child and find balance, but it’s not easy.

  • @Noobmensito
    @Noobmensito5 ай бұрын

    As a teenager, Im afraid I will become this. I have maladaptive daydreaming problems and probably chronic fatigue (sometimes I feel motivated to do my homework, but most of the time I have a huge weigh on it). Luckily, the life that gave me this issues is getting better, and Im starting to feel more motivated than weighed on; so thats a sign its not fantasy. So I guess I should probably go and do my homework, but if any minors are also here, try to take this message too.

  • @merlene_k
    @merlene_k Жыл бұрын

    This video triggered me so painfully. I had started noticing that I've been stagnant for the last 4 years and couldn't understand what exactly the issue is. After watching this, i feel it has finally shed a light to my situation and as painful as it is to admit, i really needed this. I'm so grateful for your content. It is really helping me on this very confusing journey of adulthood. Thank you so much ❤

  • @screenwatcher949

    @screenwatcher949

    Жыл бұрын

    You've got this friend! Go forth

  • @obedirect5491

    @obedirect5491

    11 ай бұрын

    My son is definitely a man-child and basically said he expects me to raise him. He’s age 40.

  • @merlene_k

    @merlene_k

    11 ай бұрын

    @@obedirect5491 you gotta cut him off. Its the only way he'll grow up

  • @HansLiu23

    @HansLiu23

    11 ай бұрын

    He was offered 50 grand for 2 hours of work. Guy was a neckbeard.

  • @imthecoolestguy

    @imthecoolestguy

    8 ай бұрын

    ​@@HansLiu23???

  • @haroldi.6450
    @haroldi.6450 Жыл бұрын

    This shit hits home, He who dreams success are prone to failure also the artist without art. This describes me perfectly. I want to change

  • @thebeatlesr1
    @thebeatlesr16 ай бұрын

    This video and the comments and responses are incredible. I see my own story here and empathize with so many here. Truly amazing

  • @ceo1OO
    @ceo1OO11 ай бұрын

    👶🏽 You need your childish side 14:33 ... 👨🏽‍💼 But it must be balanced with your adult side 16:13 ... 🌐 The healthy balance can be upset by unexpected external factors; the cost might be some arrested development 27:40

  • @Vahalio
    @Vahalio Жыл бұрын

    As a child, our family never lived in the same house for more than 3 years. I jumped from school to school my whole life and never made long term friends. Now as an adult, I find it extremely hard to stay in the same city / working environment for more than a few years. I always feel like I’m “missing out”, or that there’s something better out there. Im now I’m my early 30s and I really can’t imagine settling down in a 9 to 5 job, or even marrying someone. Even thinking about it there’s a weird feeling of constriction, like I’m being smothered and need to get away.

  • @TheVeryAngryShrimp

    @TheVeryAngryShrimp

    Жыл бұрын

    I got the same feeling when dating. I couldn't stick with a boyfriend, even tried a girlfriend because I wasn't sure if I was a lesbian or not, but ended up having the same smothered, constricted feeling. My family also moved a lot and only with a death in the family did we end up having a place for more than 3 years, but for me it made me crazy and only now, 10 years later I'm making serious plans to move again. I'll be 29 this year and I know there's more to see in the world, but commitments such as a spouse and/or kids make it hard, if not financially impossible for some. I don't want to be one of them.

  • @jpxxzy

    @jpxxzy

    Жыл бұрын

    Me too

  • @Tartersauce101

    @Tartersauce101

    Жыл бұрын

    ​​@@TheVeryAngryShrimp this is a false dilemma you are creating. Who says people with kids or spouse can't see the world? I'm single in my 30s and don't go anywhere. My neighbors, married with kids (two incomes is better than one!!) take trips all the time. We tell ourselves the weirdest lies...good luck.

  • @magesalmanac6424

    @magesalmanac6424

    Жыл бұрын

    I know exactly how you feel. My family was military so we were constantly moving. It creates a detached feeling and the inability to ever truly think of a place as “home.” The notion of settling down somewhere is truly difficult to accept. :(

  • @triggerwarning9241

    @triggerwarning9241

    Жыл бұрын

    I think you need to take an extremely uncomfortable step into settling down. Pick up a couple hobbies that would require you to stay wherever you are currently. Go to places where you can practice these hobbies (Rock climbing, painting, literally anything that you can meet people doing. Then take another uncomfortable step in putting yourself out there for the people with similar interests as you. Go up and talk to people and be a nuisance a little. Once you start building connections with the people and places around you I think you’ll start to feel much more at home. I truly am thinking of you and hoping you can conquer the feeling of being lost that you have.

  • @aridaijimenez351
    @aridaijimenez351 Жыл бұрын

    Amazing how this type of curriculum is not deemed important for the education system of our youth as they grow. The soul can turn against you out of sheer ignorance of understanding of how it is affected through internal environment via consciousness/subconscious and external environment via the world.

  • @Prayforbreezy

    @Prayforbreezy

    Жыл бұрын

    We need someone with money and influence to feel the same way. And change the system

  • @timarmesto9602

    @timarmesto9602

    Жыл бұрын

    We're at a time in history where most kids are living in single mother homes. School system has never had to think about this

  • @anoushkasengupta9034

    @anoushkasengupta9034

    Жыл бұрын

    Theoretically, this can be taught in schools. However, since this is related to the psyche (hence the unconcious cognitive processing), there may not be factual research to prove this. According to my current knowledge of the education system, that is needed to be able to study this as a topic in school.

  • @anonymerdude4501

    @anonymerdude4501

    Жыл бұрын

    @@timarmesto9602 Maybe in the US lol.

  • @UEE-kj6ek

    @UEE-kj6ek

    Жыл бұрын

    ironically if they taught this in school i wouldn't have payed attention to it anyway

  • @hardlineamerican8495
    @hardlineamerican84954 ай бұрын

    Holy fuck I relate to this. I don't exactly fit into these boxes but I relate to all aspects of these characters. I got a personal Ipad for Christmas when I was 8 and it was all downhill from there, effectively ending my childhood. I became so absorbed in it I lost all social connections, developing severe social anxiety and defaulting to extreme emotional immaturity around 10 and 11. Not to mention with unrestricted access I was on it all the time developing severe porn addiction while also gaining a lot of weight when I was 10. Over the years I've slowly rebuilt social networks but I've always found it difficult. I also have a weird mix of the puer aeternus and the senex. People comment how I never have a smile on my face, and all my goals are pretty results oriented. But I also fantasize about those goals instead of completing them. I've wanted to date but despite being 19 I never have. For 4 years I've thought about losing weight but even when I managed to lose 80 lbs I stayed inconsistent and gained it back. I think about goals but don't work towards them. My social immaturity has also led to me being hurtful emotionally to people, which is something I deeply regret, and in my coping I ultimately lost the positive aspects of myself. I used to be a wisecrack but in my guilt I lost my sense of humor and wittiness, something I am also trying to rebuild. I keep thinking about some hypothetical future where all of these are resolved and in the past, but I almost never put in the consistent effort to solve them. I've never seen something so relatable.

  • @maxwellplummer5931
    @maxwellplummer59316 ай бұрын

    One of if not the best video I've ever seen truly tapped into a deeper part of myself with many self realization.

  • @scottporter1108
    @scottporter110811 ай бұрын

    This is me. I was a good kid until I saw the carnage of alcoholism on my mother and how it damaged me wholeheartedly. Until the age of 14 I was on the straight and narrow then it all went south. Partying, fighting, jail, and dropping out at 15. My mother did nothing but enable me as she was a alcoholic who I grew up despising because of it. There was no repercussions for my lifestyle and no tools given as how to grow up with life skills. I didn’t move out until 22 and that was because my ex stepfather left my mother after marrying her which devastated me and her and her drinking became worse. I’ll just skip to my present day after 9 months of sobriety at the age of 46 I am only now beginning to come out of the fantasy world and into reality to face life on life’s terms. Through my AA meetings, church and living one day at a time, I am learning survival skills to life. I’m jobless at the moment live out my car but I’m grateful and live for the moment and continue to be hungry to learn how to deal with situations as a adult which is not easy for me. I do look forward to lies ahead though.

  • @bhaile1216

    @bhaile1216

    11 ай бұрын

    Wishing you the very best brother 💗 may light and love follow you.

  • @Darthflips

    @Darthflips

    11 ай бұрын

    Thank you for posting and sharing. I know it's hard and sometime situations seem impossible. I've been there and I know things will change for the better for you. I wasnt able to grow until I was able to let myself be vulnerable and reach out. The growth and happiness grew exponentially after realizing I couldn't do it by myself. I feel for you. Please keep going. It does get better and you deserve happiness.

  • @paulayoung8645

    @paulayoung8645

    11 ай бұрын

    Stay Strong friend

  • @dakfo4

    @dakfo4

    11 ай бұрын

    Best of luck man it seem like we had similar upbringings sad but gotta keep pushing 💪🏽

  • @Poodleinacan

    @Poodleinacan

    11 ай бұрын

    We don't all get it easy in life... But those that get it too easy never manage to actually grow. Stay strong, bro

  • @mothmanmarcus346
    @mothmanmarcus346 Жыл бұрын

    I think I went through a mindset similar to this briefly as a teenager. I actively avoided hearing about adult classes for older teens because I wasn’t ready to grow up yet. With me still being in school, I was worried that I’d be stressed trying to balance schoolwork with the inevitability of adulthood. Then I went to therapy and learned more about myself. (Not initially for fear of adulthood, but we talked about it) My therapist was an older lady who shared that she enjoyed playing with legos as a hobby. She was a working woman close to retirement, married, had kids, and yet she still had time to indulge in ‘childlike’ things. She told me I was doing fine and was confident I’d be able to flourish under my own pace. And she was right! After graduating, I took a break from school and started getting into new hobbies and routines that were fulfilling. I found a college I liked and have a consistent workload, and I’m not scared to do things for myself now. I’m disabled, so there will always be some stuff I need help with and I don’t think I can live comfortably alone..but I always try to do things for myself when I can. I’m still young but..I’m surprised by how much I really like my life now compared to when I younger. It really does get better.

  • @CnockCnock

    @CnockCnock

    Жыл бұрын

    This is a very reasonable and healthy comment. Thanks for sharing. What is your opinion on "meaningful" work? My life is very functional on paper but I hate the sector I work in. It really is a bullshit job. I have a lot of hobbies but none I could monetise, and to be honest I don't like the idea of doing so.

  • @RatedxDmnd

    @RatedxDmnd

    11 ай бұрын

    that's awesome to hear :)

  • @Mrimperfections777
    @Mrimperfections7775 ай бұрын

    As a fifty year old who's now just accepting abuse as a kid... I can attest to this first hand.. 30 years of Peter Pan Here... Dealing with the depression and possibly resentment and bitterness cause all my Peter Pan Plans Disappointed me when they neglected to come...live NOW

  • @Nayte08
    @Nayte085 ай бұрын

    You know I put this in my watch later playlist and have been putting it off because I already knew deep down it would speak to me directly. I got to it today and several parts in the video made me realize how much could be describing myself. I’m going to use this video for a better change in myself. Thank you.

  • @Jugsywinkledorf
    @Jugsywinkledorf Жыл бұрын

    I find it interesting how this experience seems to become more common generation after generation

  • @intensepassion3382

    @intensepassion3382

    Жыл бұрын

    yes!!

  • @Xscape128

    @Xscape128

    Жыл бұрын

    Look at the society we're in compared to just 50 years ago

  • @ziahreid9269
    @ziahreid9269 Жыл бұрын

    I feel like I'm gradually pulling myself out of this mentality. I started school again full-time, and I'm working on top of it. I'm forcing myself to take the necessary steps towards success. Still I am riddled with self doubt and it's very hard to find the will to keep going. I hear that the more you do it, the easier it gets, so I'll continue to steer my ship into the storm. I keep doing the things that scare me. Hope everyone else that's coming from this finds the will to do the same. And I hope I keep mine strong enough.

  • @jamisonbernhardt3310

    @jamisonbernhardt3310

    11 ай бұрын

    U got this. Don't do too much at once. Set attainable goals that you will really and can realistically accomplish. Ask just enough of yourself to spark motivation. Nothing glorious all the time please.

  • @ThatGuy-xg5hj
    @ThatGuy-xg5hj8 ай бұрын

    Maybe they just don't want to be slaves to corporations, politicians, other humans in general.

  • @brigittecourson

    @brigittecourson

    3 ай бұрын

    Then start your own business

  • @bella-zk6sy

    @bella-zk6sy

    Ай бұрын

    @@brigittecoursonnot everyone wants to own a business. also, are we born just to work and find identity in how much we produce? no.

  • @jameshofbauer1089

    @jameshofbauer1089

    13 күн бұрын

    I like this answer. The Eternal Child is not all negative. Most of the comments trend toward self-accusing attacks. Which is understandable. However, it stops short of penetrating insight. Self-criticism alone does not hold a key. There is more to be understood. I admire your courage to say wait a second. I am convinced I am on to something. Though I am choosing the more difficult path, a dark path in which many do not find their way--failure while not imminent lurks about--I am not just going to throw my hands in the air and surrender to a defeat that will crush me. I am going to trust myself while becoming malleable. Vultures are usually the ones who first respond to those blindly surrendering.

  • @jameshofbauer1089

    @jameshofbauer1089

    13 күн бұрын

    Finishing the video, this Jung quote further added to my reflection upon your comment: “There is no single, definite way for the individual…if you want to go on your individual way, it is the way you make for yourself, which is never prescribed, which you do not know in advance, and which simply comes into being of itself when you put one foot in front of the other. If you always do the next thing that needs to be done, you will go most safely and sure-footedly along the path prescribed by your unconscious. Then it is naturally no help at all to speculate about how you ought to live.” Jung’s Letter to Frau V. I think it is important to watch the entire video.

  • @myman9566
    @myman95665 ай бұрын

    Man, im glad I found this video. Im 20 and definetely feel like this like this resonated with me. I definetly have alot of growing up to do, and Im glad I had this wake up call before I went on for much longer

  • @brohamerer1604
    @brohamerer1604 Жыл бұрын

    The thing that sucks about this is that to me and to Nietzsche this is one of the most admirable archetypes, but it is also one of if not the most dangerous and hardest to balance. One can not be only the puer aeternus, and as Nietzsche puts it this should be the final destination, not the starting point. If you are always the child you will be stuck as the child forever, never growing, never succeeding, and never gaining any true depth or understanding of anything. So in a sense the child should be locked away, and this is the most difficult and painful part for many such as myself because we think if we lock it away it may never surface again or that it will die, which it very well may do. And thus upon locking it away it should be important to still feed it and give into it every once in awhile, but to keep it locked away until it can finally fully rejoin you once you've grown enough as a person, learned about the rational and true nature of the world that it's insights are useful and beneficial to you, and not a burden or a trap to get lost in. In other words, you need to learn to tell it no, before you can say yes

  • @PK-vw3gd
    @PK-vw3gd Жыл бұрын

    This was a very inciteful and difficult essay to swallow. Realizing I'm a puer myself is harsh. Lots of it is spot on. However, I also can't help but feel like our shitty world is what produces more and more puers amongst us, not necessarily some self-inflicted flaw or mother complex. With that, I can't help but feel like the "cure" to being a puer is exactly what the people who own the world want: "Get back to work and smile about it. Stop complaining. Be a man! Anyone can do it if you do it the way we tell you." --- the carrot-on-a-stick lie our culture feeds us

  • @Rosiestoned

    @Rosiestoned

    Жыл бұрын

    I see what you mean about becoming what our productivity-driven society wants us to be and how that can suck. but the way I see it the cure isn't killing the puer at all. it's about finding balance and being able to cherish the positive puer attributes while negating some of the worse symptoms. it's not about becoming mindless workaholics

  • @jessikaemanuelleirias3698
    @jessikaemanuelleirias36984 ай бұрын

    I'm touched by this sensible analysis! Thank you for that!❤

  • @niobedragones7347
    @niobedragones7347Ай бұрын

    Peter Pan has always deeply resonated with me, the boy who never grows up, i am a dreamer. I see wonders and dragons and I desperately want nothing more than everyone else to see them too, but in order to do that I can't just keep dreaming, I must drive forward and act, I must live and be real. Or I will die with nothing but devastation and self loathing. I refuse to let that happen.

  • @jokerpilled2535
    @jokerpilled2535 Жыл бұрын

    This video really helped a roadblock I’ve been feeling in life. Everyday has been the same, I’m too comfortable, I’m an adult but my parents take care of everything for me. I don’t see any good opportunities but I realize doing nothing isn’t gonna change anything. I have to try, I can’t let my past failures stop me from finding a better future. I’m probably gonna have to face hardship again, but at least I won’t perish in the bowels of comfort, this is no way to live out my life and see it end.

  • @Anomaly66666

    @Anomaly66666

    Жыл бұрын

    Same

  • @Justins-handle

    @Justins-handle

    Жыл бұрын

    Believe me I feel the same way

  • @presidential3228

    @presidential3228

    7 ай бұрын

    life is pain, you either deal with the life of working hard and risking failure to succeed, or you deal with the life of no responsibility no money no girlfriend no productivity.

  • @jokerpilled2535

    @jokerpilled2535

    7 ай бұрын

    @@presidential3228 it took me a while to learn this. Also I realize how much of a dark place I was in a couple years back. It’s better to fail than to not try at all, that comes with its own misery.

  • @roguegamer8568
    @roguegamer8568 Жыл бұрын

    The worst part of self awareness is being unable to change what you now realise.

  • @michaellemmen

    @michaellemmen

    Жыл бұрын

    That’s a limiting belief. You can’t change until you change your belief.

  • @Sh0n0

    @Sh0n0

    Жыл бұрын

    @@michaellemmen can i change gender

  • @emmastone8779

    @emmastone8779

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Sh0n0 no

  • @Sh0n0

    @Sh0n0

    Жыл бұрын

    @@emmastone8779 you sound like a bigot

  • @emmastone8779

    @emmastone8779

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Sh0n0 ah yes, such a bigot for knowing basic biology 😂

  • @lucasbracher
    @lucasbracher2 ай бұрын

    I have no words to thank you for this enlightenment in my life. I feel tempted to say "if I knew this before..." but this is something immature to say. Now I have a long road to drive in order to become mature. Thank you so much for this!

  • @dominiquejenkins5495
    @dominiquejenkins549510 ай бұрын

    LISTEN!!!!!! You have no clue what you've done to my life with this video.... It all makes sense now. Thank you so very much for this ❤️❤️🙏

  • @raurmanproductions3438
    @raurmanproductions3438 Жыл бұрын

    Most of society is ending up like this. What I realized during Covid-19 is that there were very few matured adults.

  • @jordanthornton
    @jordanthornton Жыл бұрын

    *I appreciate how you emphasize the importance of 'real work' for healing and integrating the eternal child! Learning to love LABOUR is truly the major archetypal task - it's about becoming rooted into reality rather than floating higher into delusional escapist fantasies.* During my own 1-1 work with clients struggling with their own Puer Aeternus immaturities, I've likewise found that they benefit from a robust combination of addiction restraint, everyday labour and patient Inner Child Work. Shadow exploration is also an absolute must for integration, but that's probably obvious for anybody reading this comment. Fantastic exploration, and I truly appreciate how you spend an extended amount of time talking about the healthy integration of the Puer Aeternus - also notice your extension of Marie Louise von Franz in 'Puer Aeternus'. Bravo!

  • @jordanthornton

    @jordanthornton

    Жыл бұрын

    @MimiBabe Appreciate your response here and see that these are important issues - although you seem to have missed the essence of my comment! I explicitly mention how eternal child healing involves loving everyday work as part of a holistic healing process including addiction recovery, shadow work and other mental health modalities. It’s not something to be engaged with as singular solution - that’s clearly dysfunctional 🌲

  • @rabbychan

    @rabbychan

    Жыл бұрын

    I believe the delusional escapist fantasies can serve as a path to unlocking creative opportunities in life as long as you remember that it is limited when you decide to incorporate this into reality. You gotta find that balance, if you can master combining these 2 states of mind into a productive real world model, a whole new world opens up for you. It's important to consider that the Puer aeternus is nuanced, not every individual should receive the same treatment. (in the case that it disrupts their life)

  • @jordanthornton

    @jordanthornton

    Жыл бұрын

    @@rabbychan I appreciate your addition here - nuance is truly the word, I agree. Great perspective to compliment and challenge, we all need different things and fantasy is of course massively useful when balanced with ‘reality’ 🌲

  • @Krathify

    @Krathify

    Жыл бұрын

    It would seem that an introduction to craftsmanship would be needed to achieve a balance. Creativity meets with productivity and a love for your creations and the results. I long worked with body shop people and I would argue it is a fine thing to finish repairs on something so needed in our times and yet there is a required imagination to recreate and rebuild something. To paint a car or guve it new and innovative pin striping. Etc.

  • @jordanthornton

    @jordanthornton

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Krathify Agreed, beautiful comment. Intentional Apprenticeship & manual creative labours are sorely lacking today.

  • @jarellhumphries3001
    @jarellhumphries30019 ай бұрын

    This analysis is amazing. It really does make me want to tear up. As many times as I've heard these things about myself, I've never had it broken down so concretely

  • @second-ratelich3520
    @second-ratelich352011 ай бұрын

    Don't mess me up like this, I was always afraid of being stuck but this is like staring at the mirror I been avoiding for so long, hiding from the sight of what am really am. Great video.

  • @ToxicAvengerCleanYourMind

    @ToxicAvengerCleanYourMind

    6 ай бұрын

    Don't be too hard on yourself but truthful. You know, it's not like humanity isn't going through a historical and unprecedented time with the rise in technology, unveiled corruption that creates uncertainty, and AI being said to take over by today's top minds. Having said that, I'd accept the challenge life is throwing at you with the mission to attain a peace of mind, find a suitable daily routine with meaning and purpose (even if it's just making ends meet), and continue to seek knowledge that will expand your path giving possible new branches (or even give you courage to go off the beaten path)

  • @Victor_Andrei
    @Victor_Andrei Жыл бұрын

    Remember kids, there isn't a big finishing line, a medal and champagne at the end of life. No life style is any more or less valid than any other. There's nothing you can do that falls in the "unnatural" category. Do what gives you peace and be kind. That's all.

  • @drachenzahne9262

    @drachenzahne9262

    Жыл бұрын

    You speak truth not many people want to hear.

  • @joelfildes5544

    @joelfildes5544

    11 ай бұрын

    Bang on ! He who dies with the most toys could also be applied to man-childness…

  • @RatedxDmnd

    @RatedxDmnd

    11 ай бұрын

    love to hear that 👏🏻

  • @myradioon

    @myradioon

    11 ай бұрын

    It used to be the Puer was judged against the "End Game" of having to have offspring and the money/home/etc. that is needed for it. That was considered being a Man. And the psychology was deemed faulty because it didn't fit with that. It is also why the Artist who must have some of these traits (childlike mind) was always kicked to the margins of society. In todays world where we see the result of "The Adult Path", over-population, materialism, pollution etc. it looks like the Puer might have a point. Live for yourself, have other ambitions than procreation or material wealth/stability, or not much ambition at all. Just take care of yourself and don't hurt anybody. It is all a question of "fulfillment" psychology says. I say going for "fulfillment" causes many problems, most problems. Mount Everest would not be covered in tons of trash from otherwise monied people who had to be fulfilled and fly across the world to climb it and litter all over it. They feel better and 'drive' is the most important thing says psychology. I say better waking up at 10:30 a.m.

  • @tipi5586

    @tipi5586

    11 ай бұрын

    ​@myradioon over population the problem of western society? Are you joking? The adult path is leading to under population in any country where being a manchild is anything close to 'a life'. In most countries on earth, the manchild lives a life of complete abject poverty.

  • @SwampMope
    @SwampMope Жыл бұрын

    This describes me so well and my puer did not want to admit it.

  • @christiantyson7297
    @christiantyson72972 ай бұрын

    I broke down emotionally multiple times throuought this. It was profoundly enlightening.

  • @benjaming7325
    @benjaming73259 ай бұрын

    Honestly, this was me for thr longest time. I would go from job to job, trying to find myself, not really know what I wanted in life. I left a marriage I was unhappy in. Looking back, I was mostly to blame for my happiness. However, I'm glad to say I've course corrected since then. About to get my Masters in Education, and I'm committed to becoming a teacher, as well as developing my skills as an artist. Great video. Everyone should watch 😊

  • @theop00
    @theop00 Жыл бұрын

    This video resonated with me more than I thought it would... It verbalised everything I have unfortunately realised about myself recently. My mother was overprotective. She wanted nothing but the best for me and I'm appreciative of all her love. However... Growing up I got too used to having her support and push so now I struggle with responsibility more than other people my age. It feels like I'm realising this way too late, being a final year university student, and it's embarassing but thank you for making this video!

  • @bellakrinkle9381

    @bellakrinkle9381

    Жыл бұрын

    You don't realize how young you are...certainly young enough to discover your inner feelings, and true self

  • @kathyadair8552

    @kathyadair8552

    11 ай бұрын

    Certainly Enuf responsibility to get through U. Many don't. You're already ahead and yet, a mere child. Stay tuned to your insights, your growing years are always before you. One PHASE, at a time. + More persistence.

  • @philup6274

    @philup6274

    11 ай бұрын

    The beauty of it is. If you choose. This could be the beginning. Of the greatest time ever.

  • @CoogeeBeach2030

    @CoogeeBeach2030

    10 ай бұрын

    Oh God your life isn't over drama queen. Sounds like you have a great privileged life, be grateful you have a Mum at all. Woe is me; complaining over first world problems. Nobody cares so get on with it.

  • @niceteal
    @niceteal Жыл бұрын

    I'm in my 30s and experiencing the most severe crisis of my entire life thus far. I went to therapy for 5 months and discovered I am very likely on the autism spectrum. I was a gifted child and led a very priviledged, spoiled life because my parents gave me whatever I wanted as long as I was good in school, worked hard and treated other people well. I have had huge ego problems and was only going to be satisfied by achieving the highest threshold of success imaginable. I feel I am on a better path now but it is painful and my depression is the worst it's ever been. I never learned to work hard because school was very easy for me. I was just recently accepted to an adult autism clinic and will hopefully have my first meeting there soon. I know my diagnosis will make my life more difficult than those not on the spectrum but it's not an excuse to not work hard or do my best. This will be the hardest thing I ever do but in this moment I am hopeful that I will still have a good life.

  • @talkoholic13

    @talkoholic13

    Жыл бұрын

    Try accepting what happened to you and recognizing that it did not scar you or damage you for the rest of your life. Accept that who you are is not what happens to you, but the decisions you choose to make everyday. And, that you are totally capable, no matter what age or what stage in life, to change for the better if you desire❤ anxiety and depression are based in fear. Fear of the unknown. Accept that you are powerless to the unknown, but the most powerful of yourself, whom you know better than anyone else. Better decisions everyday add up to life change. You have more control over your life than anyone or anything, no matter how it may seem. It is fact that only you know your inner thoughts. These inner thoughts create our reality. Control them, and control your reality, while allowing for the unknown and accepting what comes with it. You can do it. Be your own #1 fan. This war inside you maybe the will that wants a better life fighting what the world has diagnosed you with. No matter who you are or where you were from or how you were raised you are absolutely capable of changing your life. Therapy will only diagnose you. Therapy will not tell you how to live your life better. Therapy can get you trapped in a loop where you feel completely hopeless to your circumstances and even your own brain. You were created and raised as you were intended to be so that you became the person that you are today and can become the potential great person in the future. I hope and pray that one day you will really believe in yourself and your own agency and take charge of your life as I am taking charge of my own❤

  • @jkscout

    @jkscout

    Жыл бұрын

    everyone has autism

  • @niceteal

    @niceteal

    Жыл бұрын

    @@talkoholic13 what a beautiful reply. Thank you friend.

  • @FrostySnow1000

    @FrostySnow1000

    7 ай бұрын

    Atleast now you know you have autism. The sooner you know, they more you can take action to accommodate yourself. There are unfortunately people going through their lives not knowing their undiagnosed autism/adhd.

  • @balazsjakabffy2556

    @balazsjakabffy2556

    7 ай бұрын

    I'm in almost the exact same situation, diagnosed with autism at 24, also very gifted but I wasn't really coddled as a kid I was just kind of left alone which was also pretty bad. I don't care that I'm autistic it honestly was very liberating that I could stop blaming myself for not socializing and never feeling good at parties etc, I can just accept I'm different and find my enjoyment elsewhere without guilt. I tried my whole life so far to just fit in with the rest of society and it was really hard and I never knew why.

  • @movementencouragedfitness5945
    @movementencouragedfitness59459 ай бұрын

    5 minutes in thinking, “this is me” doesn’t look like it from the outside (or maybe it does) but it is. I’m 31. As the video goes on it’s still resonates. Especially the part of intellectually understanding that I need change. Yet years go by and I’ve just imagined all the change. Or I start research in a new idea or career path, and don’t follow through due to lack of belief. This videos accuracy is strangely on point.

  • @skyrimdavid
    @skyrimdavid10 ай бұрын

    Sadly had to have a break up with a long time love that woke me up from this state. Hearing this really hit me hard bc during the tail end I found myself so unhappy with myself bc I felt like I wanted to grow up already and be a man but I couldn’t quite understand the magnitude of that feeling until it took a hard fall from my world. But “without a fall, one cannot have a redemption” 👑 🙏🏽 embrace the journey, pain can be your clarity, pain can become armor, pain can become growth

  • @Rk-gh4to
    @Rk-gh4to Жыл бұрын

    Marie von franz is really underrated jungian analyst. If you are the case of puer aeternus, you will find this book enlightening and probably even life changing.

  • @YoutubeLoves2Cenosor

    @YoutubeLoves2Cenosor

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you, I'm gonna read it. This video spoke to me on a very deep level.

  • @YoutubeLoves2Cenosor

    @YoutubeLoves2Cenosor

    Жыл бұрын

    I just saw your username. My initials in real life are R K Jungian synchronicity.

  • @Rk-gh4to

    @Rk-gh4to

    Жыл бұрын

    @@KZreadLoves2Cenosor it’s worth the time take it slow i hope you like it!

  • @Rk-gh4to

    @Rk-gh4to

    Жыл бұрын

    @Chormerly Fucks the main point of book is to do “work” including boring work. Were you able to do that? I am having hardtime with disciplining myself.

  • @Rk-gh4to

    @Rk-gh4to

    Жыл бұрын

    @Chormerly Fucks that was hard thing to realize that boring gruelling work is necessary, because i always thought one should work only if one is interested in work. While reading book it occurred to me puer aeternus might be archetype of ADHD.

  • @MrStrocube
    @MrStrocube Жыл бұрын

    Oh man, this really struck a few chords with me. My siblings and I are all survivors of a brutal traumatic upbringing. At 63 I’m still dealing with the many issues that resulted from all that. Recently had another nervous breakdown and was unable to work. Dealing with major anxiety and depression.

  • @bujuben1020

    @bujuben1020

    Жыл бұрын

    Look to mushroom for help. Start with micro dosing. Cold showers and meditation. I had many panic attacks due to anxiety.

  • @talkoholic13

    @talkoholic13

    Жыл бұрын

    Try accepting what happened to you and recognizing that it did not scar you or damage you for the rest of your life. Accept that who you are is not what happens to you, but the decisions you choose to make everyday. And, that you are totally capable, no matter what age or what stage in life, to change for the better if you desire❤ anxiety and depression are based in fear. Fear of the unknown. Accept that you are powerless to the unknown, but the most powerful of yourself, whom you know better than anyone else. Better decisions everyday add up to life change. You have more control over your life than anyone or anything, no matter how it may seem. It is fact that only you know your inner thoughts. These inner thoughts create our reality. Control them, and control your reality, while allowing for the unknown and accepting what comes with it. You can do it. Be your own #1 fan.

  • @MrStrocube

    @MrStrocube

    Жыл бұрын

    @@talkoholic13 Hey, thanks for your thoughtful reply. I certainly appreciate it. Doing what I can . . . All the best to you.

  • @ragibperwez

    @ragibperwez

    11 ай бұрын

    ​@@talkoholic13very wise words man, thanks for explaining that

  • @LetThereBeLoveLight

    @LetThereBeLoveLight

    10 ай бұрын

    I love you ❤

  • @maicolll
    @maicolllАй бұрын

    Hurts to listen. Right from the get-go, you listed so many of my flaws right till the end. Thank you

  • @ksleep5715
    @ksleep57157 ай бұрын

    Hearing this feeling put into words helped me so much. This describes me frighteningly well. The worst part is being aware of it, but not being able to escape or improve.

  • @Simba000
    @Simba000 Жыл бұрын

    Bro... I feel like I just walked into an intervention

  • @Pincer88
    @Pincer88 Жыл бұрын

    I'm not buying it. I see a society that has very little on offer for those who are willing to toil and sweat, except maybe increased levels of stress, low pay, existential insecurity and mind numbing chores, meetings and training, gossip, backstabbing and managers who muddle through like the rest of us albeit against slightly higher pay. I see young people burn out spiritually at work so fast, not because of laziness or inaptitude 'to man up' but out of the stifling bureaucracy, toxic workspace ethics and lots of financial hardship despite working too hard and too long hours. What other escape is there than to retreat in childish fantasies? When I started my professional career, work was exciting and rewarding. And yes, it was hard work, long hours too at times but if one put his mind to it one could progress in salary and get a decent contract, build up a pension and buy a decent house, have a car and go on a holiday in the summer. People were also much kinder and prepared to help each other out, swapping overtime or working on projects together without bothering who would get the credit. And then... somehow everything became an issue of economics, people became a 'cost' rather than an asset, providing true service or products of high standards became too much of a financial burden for shareholders and taxpayers alike and gradually the atmosphere, the pay, the managerial styles, the workload and the nature of the work degraded up to a point that people are supposed to be like robots in a financial machine that looks at everything in terms of cost and productivity, not value. People have become disposable means of production. And that's where the Peter Pan syndrome (and high suicide rates) - first observed in Japan due to maniacally high achievement demands - comes from. Not due of puérilism but out of an utterly disenchanting world (compare Max Weber and 'die Entzauberung der Welt' or Rainer Maria Rilke's poem "Ich fürchte mich so vor der Menschen Wort"). We live in a cynical place ruled by functional rationality that lacks a substantial one. Nothing is of value, but everything has a price. Not everyone can undertake a hero's journey anymore; only those privileged with huge amounts of talent or well to do parents can afford to live. The rest is slowly but surely suffocating in a world that neglects basic human needs. Dealing with burnt up people every day - and edging closer to burn out myself - I think this video is highly poetic, stemming from a time however when people like Jung could afford to build a small mansion whereas people working in the factories pretty much suffered a similarly miserable life as most of mankind currently does. It doesn't take a reading of Marx to see what's wrong with that.

  • @glitcharcing
    @glitcharcing7 ай бұрын

    I am so grateful that you are bringing light to such a powerful phenomenon. This video helped to explain to a lot of my upbringing. It brought out many deep-seated emotions within me - both incredible fear and inspiration. Thank you.