How To Own Your Shadow Before It Owns You: 7 Helpful Exercises

 / 

,

In this article, I am going to dive into everything you need to know about the shadow. How to face and own your shadow, integrate it, and use it as your rocket fuel. Ignore this advice, and your shadow will own you. It will wreak havoc in your relationships. Left unfaced, your shadow becomes the anchor being pulled behind the boat of your life, dragging along the ocean floor and slowing your progress in all that you attempt to accomplish.

After releasing my recent articleย 7 Of My Favourite Quotes That Will Turn You Into A Better Person, one of my readers asked me what I thought Carl Jung meant when he said, โ€œThere is no coming to consciousness without pain.โ€

To me, shadow work is the epicentre of this painful self-discovery process. It takes courage and grit to be willing to look into the darkest, most repressed parts of our psyche.

Enter: shadow work.

What Is The Shadow?

The shadow is a concept thatย Carl Jungย (a genius dude, way ahead of his time) coined. Simply put, our shadow is the so-called dark side of our personality.

We all feel fine presenting the bright, shiny, nice parts of ourselves to the world (kindness, benevolence, generosity, thoughtfulness, etc.)โ€ฆ but the parts of ourselves that we fear society would deem unsavoury often get relegated to the shadow.

Do you know every person has a shadow element based on his/her zodiac sign? To know more about it check out the post on the shadow zodiac sign element.

own your shadow

How Does Your Shadow Come Into Existence?

No matter how healthy and positive some peopleโ€™s childhoods are, everyone experiences invalidation at some point in time.

Say you displayed a specific character trait (like rage, envy, or greed) when you were a toddler and one of your parents shamed you for it. You would then infer, โ€œWhen I show these parts of myself to the world, I am less lovable. I am less safe. Therefore, it is not safe to show these parts of myself to the world. These parts are less lovable than the rest of me.โ€

When this occurs, we cast these seemingly less lovable things into the discard pile of our own personal shadow.

Compound this trend over time, and we learn to make certain parts of ourselves so โ€˜wrongโ€™ or unlovable that we never give them any time to come out and play. And the longer we suffocate these parts of ourselves, the more power those traits gain over us (while lurking in the shadows of our subconscious mind).

Read Shadow Work And The Empath

In short, the things that we are in rejection of are the things that come to form the building blocks of our shadow self.

What Happens If You Arenโ€™t In Right Relationship With Your Shadow?

If you havenโ€™t done conscious shadow work to face into and integrate your shadow, some of the most common side effects are:

1. Difficulty in relationships (friendships, intimate partners, familial, business/colleagues, etc.)

2. Persistent feelings of distance, separation, and isolation from others

3. The same frustrating lessons appearing in our lives over and over again (for example, thinking that youโ€™ve finally met a romantic partner who is completely unlike your last five and then finding out theyโ€™re the exact same โ€“ in the most frustrating ways โ€“ as the previous ones)

3. Misalignment in your career and relationships

4. Lashing out at people with anger, jealousy, or being manipulative, in ways that are seemingly completely out of left field and incongruent with who you think yourself to be

5. A lack of passion and energy throughout your life in general

Someone who hasnโ€™t integrated their shadow is also a risk factor (to themselves and to the world).

How Can I Be Substantial If I Do Not Cast A Shadow

People who perpetually suppress aspects of themselves and have an increasingly large shadow side are at a greater risk of turning into rapists, murderers,ย suicideย statistics, and mass shooters. This might sound dramatic, but it isnโ€™t. When parts of the psyche are hidden away for too long, those suppressed emotions convert themselves into demons โ€“ and those demons need to find a way out, one way or another.

Read How to Continue Being Yourself In A Relationship

If you bring forth what is within you, what you bring forth will save you. If you do not bring forth what is within you, what you do not bring forth will destroy you. โ€“ Gospel of Thomas

Why Is It So Difficult To Face Into Your Shadow?

The things that you suppress into the shadow were once put there for a reason. In many cases, these reasons may have literally felt like they were a matter of life or death.

Itโ€™s not uncommon for children in multi-sibling family systems to fear that if they donโ€™t suppress the seemingly less lovable parts of themselves, that they will lose love and/or be cast out of the family.

If you are afraid of your own shadow, How will you face the substance that life is ready to offer you soon?

โ€œDo mom and dad love my brother/sister more than me? Are my parents glad they had me? How do I earn my place in this family? Do I ask for too much?โ€

Even if these thoughts have no basis in reality (i.e. the parents were never on the precipice of throwing their worst behaved child out on the streets) fears like these can still propagate in the ego-centric minds of children.

When one begins to truly look into their shadow, there is much psychological resistance.

Especially around our most painful thoughts, memories, and layers of self-rejection, there are often psychological buffers that keep us from knowing the exact parts of us that we would be the most set free by alleviating.

The shadow is sneaky like this. Itโ€™s as if weโ€™re walking through the snowโ€ฆ and our shadow compels us to walk in a direction our conscious mind wouldnโ€™t want us to go. But when we look behind ourselves, we see no foot steps as to how we arrived there (because the unintegrated shadow hides our tracks, as we step, without our awareness).

Itโ€™s difficult to look into our shadow because itโ€™s exactly these shadow aspects that we have been rejecting for years, if not decades. It has been their full time job to not be known by us.

Our shadow doesnโ€™t want to be seen because the things that we cast aside long ago were too painful to truly be with.

This doesnโ€™t mean that itโ€™s impossible to face these aspects of ourselves and reclaim them (not at all). It simply means that these aspects of ourselves wonโ€™t be known by us without a fight.

Read 15 Prescriptions for Happiness That Will Change Your Life

The shadow is a moral problem that challenges the whole ego-personality, for no one can become conscious of the shadow without considerable moral effort. To become conscious of it involves recognizing the dark aspects of the personality as present and real. This act is the essential condition for any kind of self-knowledge. โ€“ Carl Jung

Examples Of Shadow Thoughts

There are an infinite number of thoughts that could fall under the category of shadow thoughts.

Before we get into the exercises that will help you excavate your shadow material, in order to demystify the shadow further, I thought it would be beneficial to list examples of what shadow thoughts can sound like. These are real life examples that I have either heard in group shadow work classes, from the mouths of my clients (anonymously, as always), and a few from my own journey mixed in for good measure.

ย 1. โ€œI think Iโ€™m better than most people.โ€

ย 2. โ€œI think Iโ€™m worse than most people.โ€

3. โ€œI hate men for ruining the world.โ€

ย 4. โ€œI think that women truly are the inferior sex. They say they donโ€™t need men, but I feel like they would flounder on their own and theyโ€™re actually afraid of how much they need us.โ€

5. โ€œMy pain is more significant than the pain of others.โ€

6. โ€œI wish that there were wolves in the streets who would feast on the weakest people in my community. It would strengthen the gene pool and get rid of all of the talentless losers.โ€

7. โ€œI should have more money than 99.9% of the world because I will do better things with it than most people would.โ€

8. โ€œI think that people (over the age of 25) who accept minimum wage jobs have low self-esteem and deserve the societal position they have opted themselves into.โ€

9. โ€œI love the feeling of being completely in control of someone sexually. It makes me feel powerful.โ€

10. โ€œI love manipulating men into giving me what I want.โ€

11. โ€œI wish that my mom had died instead of my dad.โ€

12. โ€œI wish that the bottom stupidest third of the world would just disappear. Or at least that it would be made illegal for people under a certain IQ to procreate.โ€

13. โ€œI have fantasized about being raped.โ€

14. โ€œSometimes I hate women for how much power their sexual energy has over me.โ€

15. โ€œI love the idea that I could coast through my entire life on my looks and my charm alone.โ€

16. โ€œI have fantasized about marrying and divorcing several rich men and never working a day in my life. I believe that putting my effort into my looks pays more significant dividends than investing in my mind and education.โ€

17. โ€œI feel like my gender/race have held me back in life and I wish I could change who I am.โ€

18. โ€œI hate money.โ€

19. โ€œI wish I could travel back in time and slit the throat of my high school bully.โ€

Not exactly the kinds of things you would proudly say into a microphone at your kids parent/teacher meeting. And yet, those thoughts can live inside of us and we can still function in society like normal people. Go figure!

And remember you donโ€™t have to 100% believe in a thought in order for it to qualify as a legitimate shadow thought. You can believe in it 1% and it would still count. The fact that itโ€™s part of your shadow has more to do with your resistance to the thought (the degree to which you make the thought wrong) than the thought itself.

Thoughts Are The Shadows Of Our Feelings.

Benefits Of Being In Right Relationship With Your Shadow

The benefits of facing and integrating your shadow are innumerable, but here are a handful of what I believe to be some of the most exciting and rewarding ones.

1. Better intimate relationships

Our unintegrated shadow causes a lot of chaos in intimate relationships. Relationships, by nature, bring up our deepest wounding because weโ€™re allowing someone to get so close to us. When we have come to know all parts of ourselves and accept them, it then becomes that much easier to get to know all parts of another and accept those things as well.

Read 7 Elements That Define An Intimate Relationship

2. Increased creativity

Suppressing various parts of ourselves stifles creativity. Conversely, letting go of being at war with long-suffocated parts of ourselves frees up an incredible amount of energy. In fact, dozens of times over the last few years I have been on coaching calls with clients who described feelings of tangible energy surging through their bodies mere seconds after naming and owning a significant, and long-held shadow thought.

Naming and owning a shadow thought can feel akin to pulling the plug in a filled up bathtub. As soon as the block is removed, the water starts flowing again.

When you integrate more aspects of yourself, donโ€™t be surprised to find that your creative energy will pour through you like never before (even if you hadnโ€™t previously considered yourself a creative person).

3. More energy

Self-rejection is heavy and taxing. When you let go of the one-tonne bag of wrong-making youโ€™ve been dragging behind you for decades, a lot of energy is freed up to be utilized in your life.

Your Shadow is a dark omen

Every potent, powerful bad ass I know is in right relation with their shadow side. This process is a necessary precursor to being your most embodied, creatively expressed, full-spectrum self.

Read How to Discover Your Deepest, Darkest Core Wound

4. Greater feelings of connection with everyone you meet

As you come to know, love, and accept more parts of yourself, it then becomes that much easier to do the same, as your default, for others. Regardless of whether you interact with them or not, it will be that much easier for you to assume the best in others, and you will be more compassionate, understanding, and patient with others.

Unless You Learn To Face Your Own Shadows

How To Face And Own Your Shadow: 7 Exercises

Serious work on the self (and, in particular, engaging in shadow work) is an ongoing process. There will always be more layers to be revealed. I have had clients who had major breakthroughs and realizations about themselves, or about their families of origin, well into their 60โ€™s and 70โ€™s.

That being said, if you are newer to shadow work, then you can move the needle a lot in a short amount of time, by giving a few of these simple exercises a genuine effort.

1. Track your most consistent judgments of other people

The aspects of our shadow that we are least in relationship with are the things we are the fastest to perceive and judge in others.

If youโ€™ve heard of the concept of projection, this is what weโ€™re talking about in this section. When you arenโ€™t facing an aspect of yourself, you (much like a film projector) project that aspect of yourself on to others and see it on them. That aspect very well actually be a part of that personโ€ฆ but if you are quick to see something in others, over and over, then it is likely your psychological content that you are simply placing on to another.

Read 4 Effective Ways To Deal With Judgment And Judgemental People

Hereโ€™s a personal example.

For years, I was quick to either see someone as absolutely brilliant and super-intelligent (when in reality they werenโ€™t very traditionally intelligent) or completely stupid. It was very black and white. In my eyes, you were either a genius or you were an idiot. I eventually came to realize that this pedestalization and/or judging of others was a symptom of me not facing and owning my own intelligence. Because I once thought that I was stupid in my childhood, I suppressed my relationship to my own intelligence and relegated it to my shadow.

Once I came to see, accept, and honour my own intelligence, the weight of this pattern dissipated rapidly. This propensity to judge others on their intelligence hasnโ€™t left me entirely (I am still quick to grow impatient with people who I perceive to be less intelligent than me), but at least now this pattern doesnโ€™t own me in the same way that it used to. I can see the humour in it, even while being in the middle of it.

Itโ€™s Our Shadow That Understands The Perils of Our Inner Battles

2. Notice the people and things that piss you off the most

If something triggers you, itโ€™s because that thing is a part of you and you are not in right relationship with it.

Do lazy people make you red with rage? Look at the ways in which you can be lazy.

Do racist or homophobic people send you into a blind rage? Think about the ways that can you be intolerant or dismissive of others.

Do highly expressive creative types infuriate you? What things are in you that you wish you could be expressing and sharing with the world?

These emotional triggers could show up in your life as people, ideas, objects, or any other source. The point is to notice these triggers as they are occurring, ask yourself, โ€˜How am I like that?โ€™, or โ€˜What is this response showing me about myself?โ€™, and then integrate the lesson.

Itโ€™s all too easy to see all of the evil โ€˜out thereโ€™ in the world. But nothing could be further from the truth. The more you waste precious mental energy on believing that there are some unknown evil doers out there in the world, the less capacity you will have to look for the evil, malevolent, and vicious parts in your own heart. And there is no coming to true consciousness without first observing your own capacity for the evils that you perceive in others.

Stop blaming โ€˜the manโ€™, the president, or conspiracy theories for how the world is, and instead look inwards and observe your own capacity for evil/greed/hatred/etc.

Wake up, on an individual level, and you will have moved the world further forwards than if you had spent that same energy blaming others for the state of the world.

3. Free writing

Self-observation is key when it comes to digging into our own blind spots.

Free-write (aka writing without stopping) three pages of notes in your journal every day for a week and see what starts to fall out of you. For this practice, I strongly recommend pen to paper writing over digital writing.

You may not be surprised by 70% of what falls out of you general worries and anxieties that take up a lot of your brain space to-do lists random observations about your life. But there will be 30% of your output that will surprise you.

โ€œHmm I didnโ€™t know that was in there. Or at least not to that degree.โ€

Maybe youโ€™ll realize how much simmering anger you have been sitting on about a recent conflict with a friend. Or maybe you will notice just how much stress you have been holding on to about some long-standing theme in your life.

Free-writing is like mining for gold (side note: Iโ€™m obvs a miner in my spare time so this upcoming analogy will be flawless). Most of what comes through you will just be rocks, soil, and rubble. But the nuggets of gold that you find via your efforts will be well worth it.

4. Meditation

Meditation is another potent way to observe your ego-personality in real time.

Meditation doesnโ€™t have to be a big daunting task. It doesnโ€™t have to be sitting in total stillness and silence for an hour at a time on a firm cushion.

Meditation Can Change the Brainโ€™s Structure

Your version of meditation can be dancing to sensual music for fifteen minutes every morning. Or sitting and looking at a lit candle for three minutes and breathing deeply. Or you can scream at the top of your lungs into a big pillow for thirty seconds, five days a week (RIP vocal chords).

Similar to the nuggets of gold that come through in the panning for gold analogy in the previous exercise, certain thoughts, biases, and shadow elements will creep through between the cracks of silence your mind will access during your meditation practice.

Catch them, keep them, and hold on to them for further processing.

Read Meditation: A Mystical Practice That Leads You To A Prosperous Life

5. Talk based therapy

One of the fastest ways to improve the quality of your life is to increase the time you spend around high quality mirrors. Not mirrors like the reflective surfaces that you look into while having sex with your partner (like, real-time porn starring you and your loved one not in an American Psycho way), but mirrors in terms of people who are adept at validating your experience and reflecting your essence (and your blind spots) back to you.

The beauty, and frustration, with being human is that weโ€™re all too close to ourselves. We can catch some of our little quirks and idiosyncrasies as theyโ€™re happening, but the majority of them we are completely blind to. Thatโ€™s where having high quality mirrors comes in.

If you have emotionally intelligent, kind, non-shaming, non-bullshitting friends who can act as mirrors for you and have bandwidth for your process, amazing. Lean on those people and treat the relationships like gold. You are in the 1% of most lucky humans in the world.

If you do not have close friends/confidantes such as these in your life, I canโ€™t recommend doing some form of talk based therapy (with a highly skilled coach or therapist that you have a good rapport with) highly enough. Obviously Iโ€™m super biased because I, personally, have benefitted from this practice so much. I have spent good chunks of the last 15 years, on and off, in benefitting from having a coach or therapist on speed dialโ€ฆ and the value that I have derived form this practice is literally immeasurable.

If you want to come to know your shadow that much more deeply, I canโ€™t recommend therapy highly enough. Especially if your therapist is actually someone who has walked the walk of looking deeply into their own mind and integrated their own shadow. You will know that they have done this work if they do not shy away from going into deeper themes in your sessions.

Conversely, if they try to steer youย awayย from talking about your sadness, grief, anger, hatred, envy, etc. during your early sessions, run. Run far away and never return. Theyโ€™re a hack and deserve none of your time or money and you deserve someone who can actually hold space for the fullness of who you are.

6. Engage in group work

Similar to the last section, but featuring even more mirrors to reflect your stuff back to you.

In a 1-on-1 therapeutic relationship, you allow one person to get to know you deeply and see all of your peculiarities. In group work (whether youโ€™re in a menโ€™s group/womenโ€™s group/shadow work group/encounter group, etc.), you multiply the number of mirrors who can either witness you deeply, or trigger your stuff to come to the surface. The trade off often being that the average skill level of people in group work will drop (compared to working 1-on-1 with a highly skilled coach or therapist). But donโ€™t let this deter you. If doing therapeutic shadow work in a group appeals to you, do it. And if the idea of doing shadow work in a group scares the shit out of you, all the more reason to do it.

All of this with the caveat of you want to make sure that you arenโ€™t engaging in the work just to leech from the communityโ€™s energy. Donโ€™t just go to make friends. If youโ€™re going to show up, show up all the way. Be radically honest. Let people see you as you are, and you will reap the rewards of the process.

7. Be in an intimate relationship

Ahhhhhhh intimate relationships, natureโ€™s therapy.

If you think that you have zero blocks to intimacy that being loved deeply doesnโ€™t bring up any sense of un-ease or unworthiness for you and you never judge anyone, ever, I would tell you that youโ€™re either 1) a phenomenal bullshitter, or 2) youโ€™re single and you havenโ€™t been in a relationship for a really long time and youโ€™ve forgotten what your psychological baggage sounds like when love triggers it to the surface.

When we allow a deep, nourishing love relationship to enter into our lives, it is entirely common for the junkyard dog of our ego to get ready to pounce on any impending love intruder who dares to try to love us exactly as we are.

When love is offered to us, everything that is unlike love bubbles up to the surface in order to be cleared out.

As always, observational awareness and self-compassion is key.

Notice the things that bubble up for you donโ€™t judge or condemn those parts and do the work of integration (name it, own it, embody it) to let it go.

Read 8 Profound Lessons Intimate Relationships Teach Us

Sentence Prompts To Help You Integrate Your Shadow

So, how does one integrate their shadow?

The short answer of healing and integrating our shadow is this:ย become aware of the parts of yourself that you are rejecting, and bring those things forwards into your life in a healthy and responsible way.

If youโ€™re currently at a loss for what shadow themes are lurking behind closed doors in your psyche, allow these prompts to poke and prod a little deeper.

1. What is my relationship to power?

2. How much do I want to have power over other people?

3. How much do I want to have power over my intimate partner?

4. How much do I want to sexually control my partners?

5. How much do I want to be sexually controlled by my partners?

6. How much do I feel I deserve to be richer than other people?

7. How much do I aspire to be financially wealthy?

8. How much do I feel I am better than others?

9. How much do I feel I am especially broken/fucked up/unlovable compared to others?

10. How much do I want to use people?

11. How much do I perceive other people as sexual objects?

12. How manipulative can I be?

13. What do I hate about men?

14. What do I hate about women?

15. How much do I enjoy being manipulative?

16. How much do I judge people?

18. How much do I hate people?

19. How much do I wish certain people in my life/in the world would just die?

20. Did those questions bring up some intense thoughts for you?

21. Did you uncover any shadow thoughts that you feel uncomfortable with having had, or excavated?

22. Remember, the point isnโ€™t to find new, creative ways to make yourself wrong for these new thoughts youโ€™re discovering. Nor is it to let these shadow thoughts have total free rein without any interjection on your behalf. These thoughts ultimately mean absolutely nothing about who you are as a person. For now, the point is simply to be aware of them. โ€œOh, thatโ€™s in there. Interesting!โ€

23. Once you are aware of these thoughts, then you are able to be in a place of CHOICE rather than simply living in a place of unconscious reactivity.

Befriend your Shadow

Integrating The Shadow

Integrating our shadow could be boiled down to this simple process:

1) Become aware of the aspects of yourself that are difficult to face

2) Name it out loud and/or have a dialogue with it

3) Step more fully into this trait that you are in resistance to (yes, embody itย moreย fully)

4) Having stepped further into the trait, realize that you didnโ€™t die and the world didnโ€™t end

5) Benefit from a more integrated relationship to that once rejected trait.

We canโ€™t eliminate our shadow (nor would we want to), so the point of facing your shadow is to accept it. See the humour in it. Come to see it as an ally instead of an enemy, and learn how to harness it for the greater good.

For the uninitiated, shadow work might seem intimidating (and, yes, totally validโ€ฆ it is). But if you have made it this far in reading this article, then I trust that there is some important, unresolved psychological content that is begging to come forth and be integrated.

If you truly want to help the world to wake up, do your own inner healing work. Because everything that you perceive as being โ€˜wrongโ€™ with the world, out there, also lives in you.

I believe in your capacity to find these shadow aspects, and bring them out into your conscious awareness.

Read Shadow Self: 3 Ways To Embrace Your Inner Darkness

And once you have done this you, and the world, will benefit greatly.

Dedicated to your success,

Jordan


Written by Jordan Gray
Originally appeared in Jordan GrayConsulting
Republished with permission
Ways To Own Your Shadow Before It Owns You pinterest
Own Your Shadow Before It Owns You pinterest
own your shadow pin
own your shadow pinop

— Share —

— About the Author —

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Up Next

How I Hacked My Personality?

How I Hacked My Personality

Can we truly reshape our personalities for lasting change? Discover Dr. Shannon Sauer-Zavala’s article “How I hacked my personality” and learn how small shifts in mindset and behavior can lead to meaningful transformation in your life.

A Personal Perspective: Science-backed strategies for intentional trait change.

Key points

Research suggests that personality changes over time.

We can speed up personality change by taking intentional action.

Changes that are reinforced by the environment are easier to maintain.

Up Next

Women Empowerment: The Rebecca Effect in “Ted Lasso”

Rebecca Effect In Ted Lasso Women Empowerment

Can women turn negative experiences into empowerment? Discover the โ€œRebecca Effectโ€ from Ted Lasso and transform your personal trials into powerful self-acceptance!

Personal Perspective: Empowering women to transform shame and betrayal.

Key points

“Ted Lasso” inspired with imperfect, endearing characters whose trials and transformations mirrored our own.

The โ€œRebecca Effectโ€ is the empowerment and transformation possible when we have been oppressed or shamed.

The “Rebecca Effect” is the process through which women embrace themselves in totality.

Up Next

The Healing Power of Emotional Tears

The Healing Power of Emotional Tears

Ever wondered why we shed emotional tears? Tears serve a healing purpose. Explore how it plays an important role for our well-being.

Emotional tears are an expression of our shared humanity.

Emotional tears, expressed by children, teens, and adults, are a universal experience observed across the globe. Emotional tears play a healing role, leading to our emotional and physical well-being. This post explores the value of emotional tears and the importance of presence and support from family and friends during unexpected

Read More Here: โ€œWhy Am I Always On The Verg

Up Next

10 Important Weekly Reflection Questions You Need To Ask Yourself

If you feel stuck and want to keep track of your goals every week, then weekly reflection questions can really help you. Weekly reflection questions can help you check in with yourself and make sure youโ€™re headed in the right direction. These are the questions you need to ask yourself every week to keep growing and moving forward.

Have you ever had a week with so much going on that you end the week feeling overwhelmed and exhausted? I know I have been there. Sometimes, the week goes by so fast that itโ€™s over before I know it, and there is no time left to process it.

A weekly reflection can help evaluate if what you are doing is working. It fosters self-growth. So, pull out that weekly reflection journal and answer the weekly reflection prompts below.

Up Next

Why Is Lying Wrong? Morals Are Not The Only Reason

โ€œI must not tell liesโ€œ, this famous line from Harry Potter is more than just a dialogue. Dolores Umbridge, made Harry Potter cut these words as a permanent mark on the back of his hand. But if asked โ€œWhy is lying wrong?โ€ The answer is always moralistic, which is subjective.

(adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});

We have all received punishment

Up Next

The Zeigarnik Effect: The Reason You Feel Constantly Overwhelmed

Ever wonder why your to-do list seems to weigh you down, even when you havenโ€™t touched it in hours? Thatโ€™s the Zeigarnik effect in play! Itโ€™s the sneaky reason you canโ€™t stop thinking about unfinished tasks and feel constantly overwhelmed. But donโ€™t worry, we will discuss how to overcome Zeigarnik effect.

(adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});

You kn

Up Next

Why Do I Hate My Father? 8 Effective Ways to Mend Your Relationship

โ€œWhy do I hate my father?โ€ โ€“ if you have ever asked yourself this question, then trust me, you are not alone. Not having a good relationship with your father is one of the most painful things to experience in life.

(adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});

Father-child relationships can be really complicated in many cases, and itโ€™s normal to feel a mix of emotions. Whethe