Episode 14: Facing Our Dark Side - Dealing with the Parts of Ourselves We Don’t Like to Admit Exist Podcast Por  arte de portada

Episode 14: Facing Our Dark Side - Dealing with the Parts of Ourselves We Don’t Like to Admit Exist

Episode 14: Facing Our Dark Side - Dealing with the Parts of Ourselves We Don’t Like to Admit Exist

Escúchala gratis

Ver detalles del espectáculo
“Facing Our Dark Side: Dealing with the Parts of Ourselves We Don’t Like to Admit Exist”
Episode Overview

What if the parts of you that you hide, your anger, cravings, judgments, shame, or “unacceptable” emotions, are actually the exact keys to your freedom?

In this episode, Kevin and Joe go deep into the shadow self (a.k.a. your dark side), not as something “bad,” but as the parts of you that were labeled unacceptable by family, culture, or society… and quietly shaped your life from behind the scenes.

Why listen

Kevin and Joe don’t talk theory, they talk reality.

Joe brings structured insight from ontological coaching (including emotional deconstruction work), plus lived experience around recovery, identity shifts, and behavioral patterns. Kevin brings the midlife lens: self-awareness, morality, identity, and personal accountability in a way that’s honest and deeply relatable.

Key Quotes

“Dark side doesn’t mean bad… it means unacceptable.”

“Guilt is breaking your own moral code. Shame is breaking society’s.”

“Your strongest emotional reactions show you where your shadow lives.”

“You’re one decision away from a different life.”

“Shadow work brings you back to your authentic self.”

Main Topics Covered
  1. Jung’s shadow: what it is and why it matters.
  2. Cultural conditioning vs personal morality.
  3. Guilt vs shame.
  4. Triggers, judgments, projections, and patterns.
  5. Emotional suppression in families (especially men).
  6. Humor as avoidance vs connection.
  7. Midlife awakening and identity transformation.
  8. Accountability, integrity, and conscious living.

Key Takeaways
  1. Your shadow isn’t evil, it’s exiled
  2. The “dark parts” are often natural emotions or desires that were punished, shamed, or rejected.
  3. Your triggers are your trail
  4. If someone annoys you irrationally, there’s usually something in you asking to be acknowledged.
  5. Midlife forces truth
  6. This is why men in midlife start asking: “Is this really my life? Is this really me?”
  7. Bring the unconscious into the light
  8. The shadow has power when it’s hidden.
  9. Once seen clearly, it becomes something you can integrate instead of fear.

Recommended Resource
Todavía no hay opiniones