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Drawing on Sherry Turkle's observation that smartphone-raised kids "know how to be lonely, but not how to be alone," this episode explores what Jungian psychology calls the vas hermeticum, and it's antithesis the validation hole.
The validation hole represents the impulse to reach for our devices the moment internal tension rises, bleeding pressure through likes, comments, and digital echo chambers before it can do its alchemical work.
To illustrate the alternative, the episode turns to Jung himself, who built the Bollingen Tower on Lake Zurich without electricity, running water, or a telephon, a literal stone container where he sat with half-formed ideas, chopped his own wood, and endured the discomfort of his own mind long enough to produce some of his most profound work.
The takeaway: we aren't starved for meaning because we lack information, but because we've lost the psychological containment required to let raw experience cook into something real.
By Aqua Flamingo MediaDrawing on Sherry Turkle's observation that smartphone-raised kids "know how to be lonely, but not how to be alone," this episode explores what Jungian psychology calls the vas hermeticum, and it's antithesis the validation hole.
The validation hole represents the impulse to reach for our devices the moment internal tension rises, bleeding pressure through likes, comments, and digital echo chambers before it can do its alchemical work.
To illustrate the alternative, the episode turns to Jung himself, who built the Bollingen Tower on Lake Zurich without electricity, running water, or a telephon, a literal stone container where he sat with half-formed ideas, chopped his own wood, and endured the discomfort of his own mind long enough to produce some of his most profound work.
The takeaway: we aren't starved for meaning because we lack information, but because we've lost the psychological containment required to let raw experience cook into something real.