The Psychic Infrastructure of Power
The modern boardroom is not merely a place of financial calculation; it is a ritual space where the unconscious forces of the collective psyche play out in high definition. While MBA programs teach strategy, they rarely address the psychic infrastructure that actually drives decision-making. Carl Jung, in Aion (CW 9ii), warned that “The psychological rule says that when an inner situation is not made conscious, it happens outside as fate.”
In corporate leadership, this “fate” manifests as market crashes, toxic cultures, and inexplicable strategic failures. These are not merely errors of judgment but eruptions of the Shadow—the repressed, inferior, and often primal aspects of the personality that the executive has disowned in their ascent to power. This phenomenon is deeply tied to the somatic cost of capital, where economic systems begin to live in and degrade the bodies and minds of those who serve them.
The Shadow Mechanism: Why “Efficiency” Becomes “Cruelty”
The Shadow is not simply “evil”; it is the counter-pole to the conscious Persona. The Persona is the mask we wear to interface with the world. A CEO’s Persona is often constructed around competence, rationality, and strength. Jung noted in Two Essays on Analytical Psychology (CW 7) that the thicker the Persona, the darker the Shadow.
When an executive identifies too strongly with their role (“I am the CEO”), they unconsciously repress any trait that contradicts that image—doubt, softness, fear, or confusion. These repressed traits do not vanish. They form a constellation in the unconscious that Jung called the “Shadow Personality.”
- The Dynamic: A leader who prides themselves on “ruthless efficiency” is often repressing a deep fear of their own laziness or chaos.
- The Projection: Because they cannot acknowledge this chaos within, they project it onto their employees. They begin to see “laziness” everywhere, implementing draconian surveillance measures (like keystroke loggers) not because the data supports it, but to soothe their own unconscious anxiety. This is why it is essential to understand how the Jungian Shadow explores the hidden depths of the psyche before making high-stakes personnel decisions.
The “Mana Personality” and Executive Inflation
Jung described a specific danger for those in positions of power: the possession by the Mana Personality. This occurs when an individual confuses their office with their self. They become “inflated,” believing they possess god-like intuition or invincibility. In ancient societies, the King was ritually humiliated to prevent this inflation. In modern capitalism, we do the opposite—we surround the CEO with “Yes Men” who act as a mirror for their grandiosity.
This creates what psychoanalyst Karen Horney called the “Idealized Self-Image.” The leader begins to make decisions based on preserving this god-like image rather than the reality of the market. The collapse of entities like WeWork under Adam Neumann is a textbook case of Mana Inflation—where the leader’s charisma (a projection of the collective unconscious) detached completely from the reality of the business model. To understand this dynamic, one must look at cults in the lens of modern capitalism, as the psychological mechanics of a startup cult and a religious cult are frighteningly similar.
The Puer Aeternus in Silicon Valley
A specific archetype dominating modern tech leadership is the Puer Aeternus (“Eternal Boy”). As Marie-Louise von Franz explored in her seminal work on the Puer, this archetype is characterized by:
- High Creativity: The ability to envision new futures (visionary founders).
- Provisional Living: A refusal to commit to the boring, structural reality of the present (“Move fast and break things”).
- Flying High: A desire to ascend (literally, via rockets, or metaphorically, via valuation) to escape the “Mother” (matter/reality).
The “Shadow of the Puer” is the Senex (The Old Man)—structure, limitation, and death. When a Puer-driven company (like early Uber or Facebook) refuses to integrate the Senex (regulation, ethics, HR structures), the Senex eventually returns as a vengeance—usually in the form of government regulators or massive lawsuits. The “crashing to earth” of the Puer is an archetypal inevitability. This tension is often elaborated in the archetypal psychology of James Hillman, who argued that we must re-vision the foundations of culture to balance these forces.
Clinical Application: Shadow Work for the C-Suite
True leadership development is not about learning “active listening”; it is about withdrawal of projections. In our executive coaching practice, this involves:
- Locating the Hook: Identifying who in the organization triggers an irrational emotional reaction in the leader. That person is holding a piece of the leader’s Shadow.
- Dialoguing with the Inner Saboteur: Using Active Imagination to converse with the part of the psyche that wants the company to fail. This part often holds vital information about burnout or ethical breaches.
- Reclaiming the Anima: For male leaders, the Anima represents the function of relationship and feeling. A leader cut off from his Anima creates a “soulless” culture where human beings are reduced to “Human Resources”—mere units of production. This is not just a moral failing; it is a strategic error that destroys talent retention.
As Jung wrote in The Practice of Psychotherapy (CW 16): “The doctor who realizes that in the patient’s struggle he has a struggle of his own… will know that his own personality is the principal remedy.” The same applies to the CEO. The health of the organization can never exceed the psychological health of its leader.



























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