Inspired from youth by Albert Camus' sense of the Absurd, I try to be a voice for REASON in the growing darkness and moral insanity of global capitalism .
Tuesday, July 14, 2026
GOOGLE AI result : " What did psychiatrist Carl Jung have to say about the fear of death ?
AI Mode Conversation: " what did psychiatrist carl jung have to say about the fear of death ? " ] You said: what did psychiatrist carl jung have to say about the fear of death ? [Carl Jung viewed the fear of death as a psychological neurosis resulting from an unfinished life. He argued that death is psychologically as important as birth, and avoiding its reality prevents a person from truly living.Instead of treating death as a terrifying end, Jung claimed that the human psyche naturally treats death as a goal and a meaningful transition.Death is a Goal, Not an EndJung explained that life operates like the sun moving across the sky.In the morning of life, the ego grows and expands.After the "meridian" (midlife), the sun naturally begins its descent.For the aging individual, looking forward to death becomes a psychological necessity.Denying this natural progression makes an older person appear as "feeble and sickly" as a youth who is too afraid to embrace life.The True Source of the FearAccording to Jung, the severe anxiety people feel about mortality is rarely about the physical act of dying.Unlived Life: People fear death because they feel they have not fully lived or realized their true potential.Ego Resistance: The ego craves permanence and fears losing its individual identity.Neurotic Paralysis: Refusing to accept aging and mortality creates severe inner restlessness and spiritual paralysis.What the Unconscious BelievesThrough his clinical work and dream analysis, Jung discovered that the unconscious mind behaves as if life continues beyond physical reality.Timelessness: The deepest layers of the psyche operate outside of space and time.Peaceful Dreams: In his studies of dying patients, Jung observed that their dreams did not display fear of annihilation. Instead, the unconscious prepared them with symbols of change, like embarking on a journey or moving to a new locality.Innate Eternity: A deep, quiet assumption exists within us that time is not completely running out.How to Overcome ItJung advised that the best way to conquer death anxiety is to deliberately align the conscious mind with the natural flow of the unconscious.Form a Relationship: Treat death as a lifelong guide that gives life urgency and clarity.Embrace the Adventure: Approach the later stages of life as a transition to a "great adventure" rather than a void.Strengthen the Spirit: For aging individuals, Jung actively encouraged exploring spiritual frameworks or concepts of immortality. He found that this perspective was essential for psychological health and dying well.If you want to explore this concept further, let me know if you would like to look into Jung's ideas on midlife crises, his thoughts on how dreams change before death, or how his views differed from Sigmund Freud's "death drive." ]
@krishnadvr5 months ago [What I have seen is many people ready to die as they get older, including myself. What we should do is a survey on how many 70+ old people are ready to die vs fear dying - and whether it varies from culture to culture.]
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Ron