Turning Toward Mental Health is the introductory hinge of the Turning Toward series, a philosophy-of-psychology companion to the author's On ——ing essays. Part testimony, part prospectus, it announces a sequence of first-person philosophical examinations of depression, addiction, suicidal thoughts, anxiety, and attention deficit — in the order the author overcame them — to be followed by research-informed studies of conditions observed rather than lived. The essay traces the author's path from agnosticism toward conviction through meditative practice, reads that path against Jung's 1959 "I don't need to believe. I know," and situates the ego/Self threshold within a lineage running from the Upanishads through Plotinus, Eckhart, Emerson, and James. Explicitly philosophical and testimonial rather than clinical, it proposes that turning toward what hurts, rather than away from it, is the first key to healing.
Jamison Johsnon (Sat,) studied this question.
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