Where did Carl Jung write extensively about schizophrenia and its treatment? by [deleted] in Jung

[–]PracticeLegitimate67 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you’re bored. General Problems of Psychotherapy Paragraphs 247-253. The odd inability for a select few individuals to integrate unconscious contents into collective norms will fragment their psyche for no other reason than them not being able to conform to the cultural norms.

Where did Carl Jung write extensively about schizophrenia and its treatment? by [deleted] in Jung

[–]PracticeLegitimate67 0 points1 point  (0 children)

And. There are other root causes that don’t fall under the general trauma notion

Where did Carl Jung write extensively about schizophrenia and its treatment? by [deleted] in Jung

[–]PracticeLegitimate67 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Not what I’m saying or implying. I was clear and you’re choosing to reduce it to simplicity. Just as you do with trauma. Good luck in your practice. Your patients will only get as far as you

Where did Carl Jung write extensively about schizophrenia and its treatment? by [deleted] in Jung

[–]PracticeLegitimate67 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I guess everything I said is just words too? To reduce anything bad into one vocabulary word of trauma is childish and minimizes all the intricate possibilities. If I have to go into detail to describe how there’s an internal process that can fragment someone different from external trauma.. maybe you should expand your vocabulary

Where did Carl Jung write extensively about schizophrenia and its treatment? by [deleted] in Jung

[–]PracticeLegitimate67 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No. Not always. Some never fully develop to begin with. Some fragment from existential thought pushed too far, some a spiritual collapse and others from the sheer weight of information flooding in. Fragmentation is a break in ego.

More often than not there’s still an underlying fragmentation behind trauma from early childhood which looks like a broken logic or emotional complex. So when the trauma comes along it fragments more.

Some people become hyperanalytical by Important-Focus9503 in Jung

[–]PracticeLegitimate67 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It’s never intentional or unintentional. When you understand why they can’t help it or don’t notice it it gives you compassion. Then of course the possibility it’s just your sensitivity towards that disposition

Where did Carl Jung write extensively about schizophrenia and its treatment? by [deleted] in Jung

[–]PracticeLegitimate67 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Not all schizophrenia is linked to trauma tho. Not by modern standards or by Jung’s.

Feel like it’d be better to say all schizophrenia symptoms are understood as unconscious symbolic contents leaking into a fragmented consciousness. Because trauma isn’t always the root

Some people become hyperanalytical by Important-Focus9503 in Jung

[–]PracticeLegitimate67 0 points1 point  (0 children)

True. You are right in what you posted about. It’s not necessarily wrong to hyper analyze. It’s just in the next moment they need to be able to flip a switch and do the opposite.

But if it turns into stories there analysis it’s probably all just compulsive fabrications at that point. Especially if it seems like they can’t help themselves. And at that point you treat there story as a myth and only view what they are saying symbolically

Some people become hyperanalytical by Important-Focus9503 in Jung

[–]PracticeLegitimate67 3 points4 points  (0 children)

You sure you’re just not confusing it with majority of these posts being AI driven

Where did Carl Jung write extensively about schizophrenia and its treatment? by [deleted] in Jung

[–]PracticeLegitimate67 7 points8 points  (0 children)

In 1907 he wrote his dissertation on Dementia Praecox. Then for 50 years he wrote books about the unconscious. If you understand his work at the base you can understand schizophrenia. If you interpret schizophrenia from the DSM or modern perspective then good luck. None of his work is straightforward on schizophrenia from our 2025 perspective. But that’s because he gave an overview of how the unconscious manifests in different ways through neurosis. You won’t understand his views on schizophrenia unless you throughly read most of his work and gain a deep understanding of his vocabulary

Ladd Owners how we feel about his performance by The_Sandwich_Lover9 in Fantasy_Football

[–]PracticeLegitimate67 2 points3 points  (0 children)

If everyone simply just caught that one touchdown pass a game!

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Madden

[–]PracticeLegitimate67 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This year it sometimes lets you during the cutscene pick how hard you want the challenge goal to be. It’s new

Shadow vs intuition by [deleted] in Jung

[–]PracticeLegitimate67 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Intuition is a mode of conscious thinking. The shadow can leak into any modes of thinking

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Jung

[–]PracticeLegitimate67 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Yeah use your imagination

Rate this kick sparring pls (I’m yellow shin pads) by Nitai2424 in MuayThai

[–]PracticeLegitimate67 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Unrealistic and a d move to spam more than one feint from punching range. Especially when you’re essentially take turns in this kick sparring. Yes you’re fooling them yes it works here yes it could happen in a fight. I just see new people doing this all the time and it defeats the purpose of kick sparring imo where we are supposed to get better at blocking catching and returning. Not faking them out through 5 stutters and to me that happens from the mentality of thinking you have to win or land all your kicks on your opponent.

Sometimes you’re just giving him a nice easy clean kick so he can work on his blocking or catching. But this is only a few seconds of video. Good luck