Carl Jung: “What is important and meaningful to my life is that I shall live as fully as possible to fulfill the divine will within me.”
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Carl Jung: “What is important and meaningful to my life is that I shall live as fully as possible to fulfill the divine will within me.”

(from the Red Book)   Carl Jung, on “The Resurrection of the Christ Within”   What is important and meaningful to my life is that I shall live as fully as possible to fulfill the divine will within me. This task gives me so much to do that I have no time or any other….

C.G. Jung, on the “advantage” of projection
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C.G. Jung, on the “advantage” of projection

Carl Jung:  “The “advantage” of projection consists in the fact that one has apparently got rid of the painful conflict once and for all.” The “advantage” of projection consists in the fact that one has apparently got rid of the painful conflict once and for all. Somebody else or external circumstances now have the responsibility….

Carl Jung:  “We must bear in mind that we do not make projections, rather they happen to us.”
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Carl Jung: “We must bear in mind that we do not make projections, rather they happen to us.”

Carl Jung, on projections:  “What is farthest is actually nearest.”    We must bear in mind that we do not make projections, rather they happen to us. This fact permits the conclusion that we originally read our first physical, and particularly psychological, insights into the stars.  In other words what is farthest is actually nearest….

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Carl Jung: “It frequently happens that the object offers a hook to the projection, and even lures it out.”

Carl Jung: The Hook of Projection   It frequently happens that the object offers a hook to the projection, and even lures it out. This is generally the case when the object himself (or herself) is not conscious of the quality in question: in that way it works directly upon the unconscious of the projicient….