Spiritual Awakening
2 episodes tagged "Spiritual Awakening".

How Carl Jung Helped Start AA!
🔑 Carl Jung’s Fingerprints on AA 🔑 Here’s the twist most people don’t know: Swiss psychiatrist Carl Jung had a massive influence on AA’s origin story. Back in 1931, Jung treated Roland Hazard, a wealthy alcoholic. Jung didn’t sugarcoat it—he basically told him: “Medically, you’re screwed. Only a spiritual conversion can save you now.” Brutal honesty, but it worked. Roland joined the Oxford Group, got sober, and carried that message forward. He then influenced Ebby Thatcher, who passed the spark to Bill W., AA’s co-founder. By 1961, Bill was so grateful he wrote Jung a fan letter, crediting him for sparking the chain that led to AA. Jung’s reply? Pure Jung: alcoholism is a spiritual thirst that only a higher power can fix. So while AA feels like its own creation, the fingerprints of Carl Jung—the man who believed psychology and spirituality were inseparable—are all over its DNA.

Carl Jung's Shocking Insights on Addiction & Spirituality
🔥 “Before AA was born, Carl Jung cracked open the soul of addiction.” Let’s rewind the tape to the roots of recovery. Before 12 steps, before The Big Book, before “Hi, I’m [insert name here], and I’m an alcoholic” — there was a Swiss psychiatrist named Carl Jung, staring addiction in the face and saying, “This isn’t just a disease. This is a spiritual crisis.” Yeah. Jung — the same guy who gave us shadow work, archetypes, and the collective unconscious — was the spark behind AA’s origin story. When nothing else worked, when psych wards and theories failed, he had the audacity to say what no one in the scientific world dared: the alcoholic needs a spiritual awakening to recover. And that insight passed from one man to another… until it landed with Ebby Thatcher, who carried it to Bill Wilson, the founder of Alcoholics Anonymous. That chain of conversations? It wasn’t just small talk. It was a spiritual transmission that launched the recovery movement. In this episode, I break down the forgotten psychological and spiritual backbone of addiction recovery — and why ignoring either is like trying to fix a sinking boat with duct tape and denial. Jung wasn’t just ahead of his time. He defined the time that came next.