How to awaken from Narcissism

Your True Self - Gabor Maté

10 min · 1 de sep de 2025
Portada del episodio Your True Self - Gabor Maté

Descripción

Dr. Gabor Maté dives deep into the human experience, revealing how many of us live under false perception about who we truly are as humans. Gabor Mate explains how these misconceptions shape our behaviors, our emotions—and even our feelings toward us. According to Dr. Maté, like in his book "When The Body Says No" our body is always speaking to us. Whether it whispers through discomfort or screams through illness, it’s trying to guide us back to our authentic and true selves.As I've always believed: when you're out of alignment with your true self, your body sends a message, either it whispers, talks, screams or slaps you. Taken from https://youtu.be/J7TGCSaJ3oY?feature=shared

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episode Stop explaining yourself artwork

Stop explaining yourself

The Swiss psychiatrist Carl Gustav Jung once said, "I am not what happened to me, I am what I choose to become." This idea is at the heart of a widespread but often overlooked behavior: the constant urge to explain oneself. On the surface, justifying one's decisions, feelings, or moods seems polite. But Jung saw it as a deep psychological problem—a symptom of disconnection from ourselves. According to Jung, those who constantly explain themselves are unconsciously seeking the permission to exist that they never received in the past, often in childhood. In environments where feelings were dismissed as "exaggerated" or "nonsense," a person learns that their inner reality is valid only if others understand and accept it. This compulsion to justify is an attempt to avoid rejection and judgment. But the price is high: the loss of one's own psychological autonomy. Instead of acting from inner conviction, one acts merely to avoid being misunderstood. You live for the approval of others, betraying your own truth piece by piece. Jung called this state self-abandonment. The path to freedom lies in developing what Jung called "inner authority." This means recognizing your own experience as valid, regardless of whether others understand it or not. It's about having the courage to stand by your truth, even when it's uncomfortable or meets with incomprehension. When you stop constantly explaining yourself, something powerful happens. You send out a new message: "I know who I am, and I don't need permission for it." This silence is not an absence but a presence. It breaks old patterns in relationships. Superficial or manipulative connections fall apart because you no longer play the submissive role. Genuine, respect-based relationships are strengthened. Ultimately, everything changes when you stop explaining yourself. You give up the search for external validation and instead find inner strength and integrity. You are no longer perceived as someone asking for acceptance, but as someone who confidently takes their place in the world. The world begins to respect what you yourself no longer negotiate.

30 de sep de 20252 min