Dancing With Shadows: Eliminating Psychological Blind Spots

<p>Are you master in your own house? Do you fall into a mood or does the mood fall into you? Why do you see the speck in your friend&rsquo;s eye and not the log in your own?</p> <p>Oftentimes, we don&rsquo;t just&nbsp;<em>observe&nbsp;</em>the world, but we are&nbsp;<em>affected&nbsp;</em>by the world. The two are quite different. When the environment merely&nbsp;<em>informs&nbsp;</em>us, we don&rsquo;t project any of ourselves onto the world; if it&nbsp;<em>affects&nbsp;</em>us, we are possibly a victim of our own projections.</p> <p>What is a&nbsp;<a href="https://academyofideas.com/2018/02/carl-jung-shadow-dangers-of-psychological-projection/#:~:text=Projection%20occurs%20when%20we%20attribute,former%20rather%20than%20the%20latter." rel="noopener ugc nofollow" target="_blank">projection</a>? A projection &ldquo;occurs when we attribute an element of our personality, which resides in our unconscious, to another person or group. We can project both negative and positive characteristics, however, there is a greater tendency to project the former rather than the latter.&rdquo;</p> <p>The term &ldquo;projection&rdquo; was originally popularized by Sigmund Freud, who believed that projection was a type of defence mechanism, to avoid the anxiety of having to claim one&rsquo;s faults as their own.</p> <p>We all have blind spots. Traits and tendencies that we refuse to accept and cast into the world as a projection. The projection of negative emotions and qualities onto others is common in our society and can have sinister consequences, both personally and collectively.</p> <p><a href="https://medium.com/illumination/dancing-with-shadows-eliminating-psychological-blind-spots-5df668aa72e5">Read More</a></p>