Shadow
Shadow
Shadow
It’s always standing right behind us, just out of view. In any direct light, we
cast a shadow.
Let's start by inspecting what the shadow is and how it comes into being.
Carl Jung
2
Shadow Work
The shadow is the "dark side" of our personality because it consists chiefly
of primitive, negative human emotions and impulses like rage, envy, greed,
selfishness, desire, and the striving for power.
However, we cut ourselves off from many of our best qualities too. (I cover
the "positive shadow" in a separate guide on psychological projection.)
Although we deny them in our attempt to cast them out, we can’t get rid of
them. We repress these qualities; they are part of our unconscious. Think
of the unconscious as everything we are not conscious of within us.
3
Shadow Work
Every young child knows kindness, love, and generosity, but children also
quickly learn anger, selfishness, and greed.
These emotions are part of our shared experience. But as we grow up,
something happens. Traits associated with "being good" are accepted,
while others associated with "being bad" are rejected.
We all have basic human needs, including physiological needs, safety and
security needs, and needs for belonging.
We adjusted our behavior to gratify our needs and learned to adapt to the
external world.
4
Shadow Work
As poet Robert Bly says in A Little Book of the Human Shadow, the child
puts all of these unwanted parts into an invisible bag and drags it behind
him.
5
Shadow Work
The ancient Greeks understood the need to honor all of the parts of the
psyche. The Greeks worshiped these archetypes as autonomous gods and
goddesses.
The Greeks knew a god or goddess you ignored became the one who turned
against you and destroyed you. Any part we disown within us turns
against us. The personal shadow represents a collection of these disowned
parts.
6
Shadow Work
So here's the problem: The shadow can operate on its own without us
knowing what’s happening.
1
Bargh, J. A., & Morsella, E. (2008). The Unconscious Mind. Perspectives on psychological
science: a journal of the Association for Psychological Science, 3(1), 73–79.
doi:10.1111/j.1745-6916.2008.00064.x
7
Shadow Work
Do you remember Robert Louis Stevenson's Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde?
Dr. Jekyll was a respectable gentleman (the "good," conscious side of the
personality) who took a potion to separate his darker impulses to create a
creature free of conscience named Mr. Hyde (the personal shadow).
Dr. Jekyll could not control the actions of his darker half, leading him to
commit unscrupulous acts, including murder. Such is the fate, although
usually not so severe, of anyone who denies his or her shadow.
ugs
Looney Tunes did their version of this classic tale in B
Bunny in Hyde and Hare.
8
Shadow Work
So what happens to all the parts of ourselves that we sweep out of view?
Whatever qualities we deny in ourselves, we see in others. In psychological
terms, this is called projection. W
e project onto others anything we bury
within us.
If, for example, you get irritated when someone is rude to you, it's a good
bet you haven't owned your rudeness. This person may be rude; however, if
rudeness and disrespect weren't in your shadow, someone else's rudeness
wouldn't bother you so much. This process doesn't happen consciously. We
aren't aware of our projections. Our egos use this mechanism to defend
itself—to protect our self-image and self-identity.
Our false identities of being “good” keep us from connecting to our shadow.
These psychological projections distort reality, creating a thick boundary
between how we view ourselves and how we behave.
9
Shadow Work
Carl Jung
10
Shadow Work
The shadow isn't a popular topic. Who enjoys owning their flaws,
weaknesses, selfishness, nastiness, envy, hate, and so on?
But we can only run from our shadows for so long. Over time, all of the
ego’s tricks—repression, denial, suppression, escape—become less
effective. What we’ve been hiding from begins to bubble to the surface.
As you integrate your shadow and come to terms with your darker half, you
see yourself more clearly. You become more grounded, even more human.
When you can accept your own darker parts, it is easier to accept the
shadow in others. As a result, other people’s behavior and attitudes won’t
trigger you as easily.
You’ll also have an easier time communicating with others. You may notice
an improvement in your relationships with your spouse, family members,
friends, and business associates.
11
Shadow Work
Lasting change occurs when you get to the root of this fear, accept it, and
integrate it into your conscious personality. And this happens in the course
of getting to know and integrating your shadow.
Develop self-knowledge
In seeing others and yourself as you are, you’ll have a cleaner lens with
which to understand yourself (and others).
12
Shadow Work
Fatigue and lethargy plague the unexamined life. Mental suppression can
also lead to physical pain and disease. Dr. John Sarno healed many
thousands of patients of chronic back pain by helping them acknowledge
the repressed rage in their unconscious.
In working with your shadow, you liberate a vast reservoir of energy you
were unconsciously investing in protecting your self-image. This freed
energy can improve your physical, mental, and emotional health. It can
bring you inner strength and a greater sense of balance, making you better
equipped to take on life's challenges.
How can we feel a sense of wholeness and balance with a divided mind?
Integrating the shadow brings you one step closer to realizing a sense of
wholeness. It’s a critical step to achieving mature adulthood. An absence of
this understanding helps explain why less than 2% of adults realize mature
2
adulthood, according to developmental psychology.
2
Cook-Greuter, S. (2013). Ego Development: Nine levels of increasing embrace. Retrieved here.
13
Shadow Work
14
Shadow Work
Here are seven things that will make it easier for you to approach shadow
work:
Cultivate Self-Awareness
It’s for this reason that I emphasize the importance of “finding your
Center” in my Shadow Training course.
When you’re in the Center, there’s less resistance to seeing your shadow
because your ego isn’t in charge.
15
Shadow Work
It's easy to give lip service to these qualities, but actual self-honesty means
being willing to see unpleasant attributes in our behavior and personality
that conflict with how we perceive ourselves.
16
Shadow Work
Cultivate Self-Compassion
If you always try to be a good person and strive for perfection, or if you're
hard on yourself when you make mistakes, it is challenging to confront
your shadow.
I find it helpful to connect to my heart during this process. You can try this:
17
Shadow Work
That is, based on experiences from the past and things we’ve seen in films
and television, we project out images from our mind onto other people and
situations. In this way, we are each living our own independent film.
When someone evokes an emotional charge in you, it’s a sign that you’re
projecting a disowned quality from your shadow onto this individual.
Taking back these projections is an essential step in shadow work.
18
Shadow Work
I find it fascinating how some of our disowned parts want to remain out of
our awareness.
Similar to how a dream slips out of mind moments after awakening, our
disowned parts can elude us—even after we catch them.
19
Shadow Work
Alan Watts
20
Shadow Work
Remember that the shadow is elusive; it hides behind us. We each have
hosts of defense mechanisms designed to keep our shadows repressed and
out of view.
Shining the light of consciousness on the shadow takes a little effort and
regular practice. The more you pay attention to your behavior and
attitudes, the better chance you have of catching your shadow in the act.
One of the best ways to identify your shadow is to pay attention to your
emotional reactions toward other people. Sure, your colleagues might be
aggressive, arrogant, inconsiderate, or impatient, but if you don't have
those same qualities within you, you won't have a strong reaction to their
behavior or the conditions in their personality.
21
Shadow Work
When doing shadow work, it’s helpful to remember that what’s in one of
us, is in all of us.
Sure, not everyone expresses every behavioral attribute all the time. But
every quality—the good, the bad, and the ugly—is in all of us, waiting for
the right conditions to trigger them.
So the next step is to bring that quality you see in another (from Step 1)
back into you.
For example, let’s say you’re judging your friend for being lazy. He sits
around all day, doesn’t want to work, disregards his physical health, and so
on.
Was there a time in your life when you were lazy? Maybe things weren't
going your way, and you started to lose hope or give up? If not, go back
further into childhood. Were you proactive then? Or did you want to sit on
the couch and watch TV whenever you could?
Laziness resides in all of us. We all have a part who wants to do nothing,
who only wants to experience fleeting pleasures.
Someone else's laziness wouldn't bother you unless you're repressing your
laziness. Once you see the laziness within, you'll have less frustration with
your friend.
22
Shadow Work
Many forms of inner work call you to engage in an active dialogue with
various parts of yourself.
At first, this might seem like a scary idea since we have a belief that only
“crazy people” talk to themselves. The reality is, however, that we all have
many subpersonalities—numerous unrecognized, autonomous parts in our
mind.
The parts within us that we don’t know are aspects of our shadow. When
we don’t pay attention to these parts, they have a way of influencing our
behavior.
Have you ever done or said something and then wondered why you did or
said it? An archetype or part in you was taking charge. Every so-called
"accident" is an archetype hijacking your behavior.
Our disowned parts aren’t trying to hurt us, but when we ignore or deny
them, they often do.
23
Shadow Work
So, here, talk to that part of you that you acknowledged in Step 2. For
example, get to know that lazy part. See what it wants from you, what it
likes, and how it feels about how you live your life.
24
Shadow Work
Finally, become this quality or attribute. In the case of laziness, see yourself
as a person that’s sometimes lazy.
Like with Step 3, owning a "darker" part of you may feel uncomfortable as
you're acknowledging something inconsistent with your self-identity. As
such, your ego will naturally resist it.
You can make statements to yourself or say out loud, for example:
● I am lazy.
● I am arrogant.
● I am stupid.
● I am jealous.
● I am dull.
● I am clever.
● I am witty.
The last two examples are positive attributes as the shadow can reveal
positive repressed qualities we project on others as well.
Experience the part of you expresses these traits as fully as possible. Avoid
making the process abstract or conceptual: just BE it. Now you can re-own
and integrate this quality in yourself.
25
Shadow Work
Click here for Watt's discourse on facing your shadow. (It’s worth the 15
minutes.)
26
Shadow Work
Further Reading
27
Shadow Work
28
Shadow Work
For over two decades, Scott Jeffrey has been helping high-performing
entrepreneurs, CEOs, best-selling authors, and thought leaders access their
superhuman potential.
29