There's a point along the way where something breaks… but not outwardly. It breaks inside. And the most unsettling thing is that you can't quite explain it. You just know you can't go back. Not because you don't want to. But because you can no longer maintain the same version of yourself without feeling like you're betraying yourself. Carl Gustav Jung understood that consciousness, once it expands, cannot be reduced without paying a price. You can try to fit in again, act as before, say what's expected… but something inside no longer cooperates. What was once automatic now feels forced. What was once natural now weighs you down. What was once enough… now falls short. And then a difficult feeling arises: you're not who you were… but you still don't know who you are. It's uncomfortable territory. Because there are no clear reference points. There's no defined identity. There are no quick answers. There is only one silent certainty: You can't go back to living asleep. Many people try. They try to return to the familiar, to comfort, to what used to work. But it's not the same anymore. Because when you see… you see. When you feel… you feel. And when you truly understand something… you can't unlearn it. Jung spoke of this as a point of no return in the individuation process. It's not an achievement. It's not a higher state. It's a necessary break between unconscious and conscious life. And that break comes at a price. Sometimes you lose connections. Sometimes your priorities change. Sometimes you no longer fit in where you once did. But something deeper also happens. You begin to inhabit your life differently. With more truth. With more coherence. With more presence. Even if it's not perfect. Even if it's not easy. Because what you lose in comfort… you gain in authenticity. And then you understand something you can no longer ignore: you can't go back to being who you were… because now you know who you were ceasing to be. #JUNG #WISDOM #TRUTH