Do You Know What Happens When You DETACH And Let Go | Carl Jung.
They say time heals all wounds, but what they don't tell you is how we keep reopening them. That person you can't stop thinking about? They're living rent-free in your mind while you're evicted from your own peace. The most devastating revelation isn't that they left—it's that you never truly arrived in your own life. The withdrawal isn't from them—it's from the version of yourself you became addicted to in their presence. What if I told you that the emptiness you feel isn't a wound but a canvas? That this painful void isn't your ending but the first blank page of your most authentic story? Have you felt or do you feel that you can't let go of someone? That a part of you remains tied to their memory, to what was, or what could have been? In my previous videos about detachment, I've talked about how to detach and the seven lessons to do it. If you've seen them, excellent, this is the one you need to see next. But if you haven't seen them, that's perfect too - start with this one as it will be very important.
I know what it's like to fight against your own mind, trying to distract yourself, making yourself believe that it's over, only for a simple memory, a song, or a message that never arrives to take you back to the same starting point. And it hurts, it hurts a lot because deep down, it's not just the person you miss. It's the version of yourself that you were when you were with them. It's the story you built in your head, the moments that felt so real, and the feeling that without that, something inside you remains empty. But listen to me carefully - that emptiness is not a sign that you need to go back; it's proof that you need to move forward. And in this video, I'm going to tell you how to do it.