The Shadow
Intuitive Thinking 45 min read

The Shadow

Confront the hidden, uncomfortable truths about your problem to unlock deep, transformative solutions.

💡 What is The Shadow?

Based on Jungian psychology, the ‘Shadow’ represents the hidden, unacknowledged parts of ourselves or our problems. By consciously engaging with the things you are avoiding—fears, weaknesses, or taboos—you can gain profound insights and release creative energy that was previously blocked by denial.

Facing the Hidden Truth

Every problem has a shadow. It’s the “elephant in the room” that everyone knows about but nobody wants to discuss. When you name the shadow, you take away its power and turn it into a source of information.

Define the Problem

Identify a challenge that feels “stuck” or has a recurring negative pattern.

Example: “Why do our team meetings consistently end without clear decisions?”

Identify the Shadow

Ask: “What are we avoiding? What is the uncomfortable truth?”

📌 Shadow Aspects
  • Fear: We are afraid of conflict or hurting someone’s feelings.
  • Weakness: Our leader has poor facilitation skills but no one says it.
  • Taboo: Discussing the fact that the project itself might be unnecessary.

Personify the Shadow

Give the shadow a form. Is it a “Dragon of Procrastination”? A “Fog of Indecision”? A “Monster of Ego”?

Dialogue with the Shadow

Ask your personified shadow: “What are you trying to tell me? What do you need?”

📌 The Dragon's Message

Question: “Why do you make us procrastinate?” Response: “Because you don’t trust each other to follow through, so it’s safer to just keep talking than to actually start working.”

Integrate and Solve

Translate the shadow’s message into a concrete action.

📌 Integration

Since the shadow revealed a lack of trust, the solution isn’t a better agenda—it’s a trust-building workshop and clear, public accountability for tasks.

Practice

Problem: “I can’t seem to finish my book.” Shadow: “The Monster of Perfectionism.” What is the monster afraid of? What if you gave the monster a “sloppy first draft” to play with?