Carl Jung Quotes About Personality

We have collected for you the TOP of Carl Jung's best quotes about Personality! Here are collected all the quotes about Personality starting from the birthday of the Psychiatrist – July 26, 1875! We hope you will be inspired to new achievements with our constantly updated collection of quotes. At the moment, this page contains 27 sayings of Carl Jung about Personality. We will be happy if you share our collection of quotes with your friends on social networks!
All quotes by Carl Jung: Abundance Acceptance Achievement Addiction Adventure Age Aging Angels Animals Archetypes Art Attitude Awakening Awareness Being Happy Belief Birth Books Certainty Challenges Change Chaos Character Childhood Children Christ Coincidence Community Conflict Conscience Consciousness Creation Creativity Culture Darkness Decisions Defeat Demons Desire Destiny Devil Difficulty Doubt Dreams Earth Effort Ego Emotions Enemies Energy Enlightenment Eternity Evil Evolution Eyes Fate Fathers Fear Feelings Fighting Finding Yourself Free Will Freedom Fun Genius Giving Giving Up Goals God Gratitude Growth Happiness Happy Healing Health Heart Heaven Hell History House Human Nature Humanity Illness Imagination Impulse Independence Individuality Innovation Inspiration Inspirational Inspiring Integration Intuition Jesus Judgement Judging Judgment Kindness Knowledge Language Leadership Learning Life Life After Death Loss Love Lying Madness Mankind Meaning Of Life Memories Mental Illness Mindfulness Miracles Mistakes Morality Morning Mothers Myth Mythology Nature Office Opinions Overcoming Pain Parenthood Parenting Parents Passion Past Perception Perfection Personality Philosophy Positive Positive Thinking Prejudice Progress Psychiatry Psychoanalysis Psychology Purpose Quality Reality Redemption Relationships Religion Responsibility Risk Running Sad Sadness Science Security Self Awareness Self Confidence Self Love Silence Sin Sleep Solitude Son Soul Spirituality Spring Study Suffering Talent Teachers Teaching Terror Today Torture Tragedy Transformation Truth Understanding Unity Universe Values Vision War Water Wisdom Writing Yoga more...
  • The Shadow is a moral problem that challenges the whole ego-personality, for no one can become conscious of the shadow without considerable moral effort. To become conscious of it involves recognizing the dark aspects of the personality as present and real. This act is the essential condition for any kind of self-knowledge, and it therefore, as a rule, meets with considerable resistance. Indeed, self-knowledge as a psychotherapuetic measure frequently requires much painstaking work extending over a long period of time.

  • So far as the personality is still potential, it can be called transcendent, and so far as it is unconscious, it is indistinguishable from all those things that carry its projections...that is, symbols of the outside world and the cosmic symbols. These form the psychological basis for the conception of man as a macrocosm through the astrological components of his character.

  • To become acquainted with oneself is a terrible shock.

    Carl Gustav Jung, Mary Foote (1976). “The visions seminars: from the complete notes of Mary Foote”
  • So often among so-called "primitives" one comes across spiritual personalities who immediately inspire respect, as though they were the fully matured products of an undisturbed fate.

    Carl Gustav Jung, Herbert Read, Michael Scott Montague Fordham, Gerhard Adler (1954). “The Collected Works of C.G. Jung: The development of personality”
  • A complex is a cluster of energy in the unconscious, charged by historic events, reinforced through repitition, embodying a fragment of our personality, and generating a programmed response and an implicit set of expectations.

  • The difference between the "natural" individuation process, which runs its course unconsciously, and the one that is consciously realized is tremendous. In the first case, consciousness nowhere intervenes; the end remains as dark as the beginning. In the second case, so much darkness comes to light that the personality is permeated with light and consciousness necessarily gains in scope and insight. The encounter between conscious and unconscious has to ensure that the light that shines in the darkness is not only comprehended by the darkness, but comprehends it.

    Carl Gustav Jung (1968). “The Collected Works”
  • Enlightenment doesnt occur from sitting around visualizing images of light, but from integrating the darker aspects of the Self into the conscious personality.

  • Personality is the supreme realization of the innate idiosyncracy of a living being. It is an act of high courage flung in the face of life, the absolute affirmation of all that constitutes the individual, the most successful adaptation to the universal conditions of existence coupled with the greatest possible freedom for self-determination.

  • One is always in the dark about one's own personality. One needs others to get to know oneself.

  • Unfortunately, there can be no doubt that man is, on the whole, less good than he imagines himself or wants to be. Everyone carries a shadow, and the less it is embodied in the individual's conscious life, the blacker and darker it is. If an inferiority is conscious, one always has a chance to correct it

  • Creative powers can just as easily turn out to be destructive. It rests solely with the moral personality whether they apply themselves to good things or to bad. And if this is lacking, no teacher can supply it or take its place.

    Carl Gustav Jung (1953). “Collected Works of C.G. Jung: The development of personality”
  • We carry our past with us, to wit, the primitive and inferior man with his desires and emotions, and it is only with an enormous effort that we can detach ourselves from this burden. If it comes to a neurosis, we invariably have to deal with a considerably intensified shadow.

    "The Collected Works".
  • Identification with one's office or title is very attractive indeed, which is precisely why so many men are nothing more than the decorum accorded to them by society. In vain would one look for a personality behind the husk. Underneath one would find a very pitiable little creature. That is why the office is so attractive: it offers easy compensation for personal deficiencies.

    Carl Gustav Jung, Richard Francis Carrington Hull (1992). “Two Essays on Analytical Psychology”, p.145, Psychology Press
  • Everything good is costly, and the development of personality is one of the most costly of all things. It is a matter of saying yes to oneself, of taking oneself as the most serious of tasks, of being conscious of everything one does, and keeping it constantly before one's eyes in all its dubious aspects.

  • In every adult there lurks a child— an eternal child, something that is always becoming, is never completed, and calls for unceasing care, attention, and education. That is the part of the personality which wants to develop and become whole.

  • To become conscious of it involves recognizing the dark aspects of the personality as present and real.

    Carl Gustav Jung, Herbert Read, Michael Fordham, Gerhard Adler (1968). “pt. 1. The archetypes and the collective unconscious”
  • I have frequently seen people become neurotic when they content themselves with inadequate or wrong answers to the questions of life. They seek position, marriage, reputation, outward success of money, and remain unhappy and neurotic even when they have attained what they were seeking. Such people are usually confined within too narrow a spiritual horizon. Their life has not sufficient content, sufficient meaning. If they are enabled to develop into more spacious personalities, the neurosis generally disappears.

  • Caution has its place, no doubt, but we cannot refuse our support to a serious venture which challenges the whole of the personality. If we oppose it, we are trying to suppress what is best in man - his daring and his aspirations. And should we succeed, we should only have stood in the way of that invaluable experience which might have given a meaning to life.

    Carl Gustav Jung (1969). “Psychology and religion: west and east”
  • Obviously astrology has much to offer psychology, but what the latter can offer its elder sister is less evident. So far as I judge, it would seem to me advantageous for astrology to take the existence of psychology into account, above all the psychology of the personality and of the unconscious.

  • The darkness which clings to every personality is the door into the unconscious and the gateway of dreams, from which those two twilight figures, the shadow and the anima, step into our nightly visions or, remaining invisible, take possession of our ego-consciousness.

    Carl Gustav Jung (1981). “The Archetypes and the Collective Unconscious”, p.123, Princeton University Press
  • The sight of a child…will arouse certain longings in adult, civilized persons — longings which relate to the unfulfilled desires and needs of those parts of the personality which have been blotted out of the total picture in favor of the adapted persona.

    Carl Gustav Jung (1973). “Memories, dreams, reflections”, Random House Inc
  • The meeting of two personalities is like the contact of two chemical substances: if there is any reaction, both are transformed.

    Carl Gustav Jung (2001). “Modern Man in Search of a Soul”, p.49, Psychology Press
  • The shadow is a moral problem that challenges the whole ego-personality, for no one can become conscious of the shadow without considerable moral effort.

    Carl Gustav Jung, Herbert Read, Michael Fordham, Gerhard Adler (1973). “The Collected Works of C. G. Jung: pt. 1. The archetypes and the collective unconscious. pt. 2. Aion, researches into the phenomenology of the self”
  • Whenever there is a reaching down into innermost experience, into the nucleus of personality, most people are overcome by fear and many run away. . . The risk of inner experience, the adventure of the spirit, is in any case alien to most human beings. The possibility that such experience might have psychic reality is anathema to them.

  • Rebirth is an affirmation that must be counted among the primordial affirmations of mankind. The concept of rebirth necessarily implies the continuity of personality. Here the human personality is regarded as continuous and accessible to memory, so that, when one is incarnated or born, one is able, potentially, to remember that one has lived through previous existences, and that these existences were one's own, ie, they had the same ego form as the present life. As a rule, reincarnation means rebirth in a human body.

  • The shoe that fits one person pinches another; there is no recipe for living that suits all cases.

    Carl Gustav Jung (2001). “Modern Man in Search of a Soul”, p.62, Psychology Press
  • It isn't possible to kill part of your “self” unless you kill yourself first. If you ruin your conscious personality, the so-called ego-personality, you deprive the self of its real goal, namely to become real itself. The goal of life is the realization of the self. If you kill yourself you abolish that will of the self to become real, but it may arrest your personal development inasmuch it is not explained. You ought to realise that suicide is murder, since after suicide there remains a corpse exactly as with any ordinary murder. Only it is yourself that has been killed.

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Carl Jung quotes about: Abundance Acceptance Achievement Addiction Adventure Age Aging Angels Animals Archetypes Art Attitude Awakening Awareness Being Happy Belief Birth Books Certainty Challenges Change Chaos Character Childhood Children Christ Coincidence Community Conflict Conscience Consciousness Creation Creativity Culture Darkness Decisions Defeat Demons Desire Destiny Devil Difficulty Doubt Dreams Earth Effort Ego Emotions Enemies Energy Enlightenment Eternity Evil Evolution Eyes Fate Fathers Fear Feelings Fighting Finding Yourself Free Will Freedom Fun Genius Giving Giving Up Goals God Gratitude Growth Happiness Happy Healing Health Heart Heaven Hell History House Human Nature Humanity Illness Imagination Impulse Independence Individuality Innovation Inspiration Inspirational Inspiring Integration Intuition Jesus Judgement Judging Judgment Kindness Knowledge Language Leadership Learning Life Life After Death Loss Love Lying Madness Mankind Meaning Of Life Memories Mental Illness Mindfulness Miracles Mistakes Morality Morning Mothers Myth Mythology Nature Office Opinions Overcoming Pain Parenthood Parenting Parents Passion Past Perception Perfection Personality Philosophy Positive Positive Thinking Prejudice Progress Psychiatry Psychoanalysis Psychology Purpose Quality Reality Redemption Relationships Religion Responsibility Risk Running Sad Sadness Science Security Self Awareness Self Confidence Self Love Silence Sin Sleep Solitude Son Soul Spirituality Spring Study Suffering Talent Teachers Teaching Terror Today Torture Tragedy Transformation Truth Understanding Unity Universe Values Vision War Water Wisdom Writing Yoga