Being a very visual thinker makes it hard to fully grasp abstract ideas, and Jung’s theory of the psyche is no exception. So I decided to draw and visualize it in a way that makes it super simple to understand.
Jung believed the goal of life is individuation : becoming your whole, authentic Self by bringing all the hidden pieces of you together.
Usually, textbooks show this as a neat circle diagram:

But for us visual thinkers, let’s swap that circle for something more alive! I welcome you to the Jigsaw Puzzle model

We are the Self : The completed jigsaw puzzle. It includes every piece: Anima/Animus, the shadow, the persona. All fitted together into one big picture.

But here’s the twist: The Ego isn’t a puzzle piece at all. It’s more like a flashlight with hands. It decides (sometimes consciously, often unconsciously) which pieces to shine light on, and which parts stay in the dark.
And until all the pieces are seen and fitted together, the Self isn’t complete.

The Persona: usually the first piece the Ego lights up. It’s our social identity.
How we want to be seen by others.
When unexamined, the Persona is shaped mostly by outside forces: culture, family expectations, social roles, fears, and unconscious desires. This is why it can feel stiff and fake.

The Persona also connects to cultural archetypes, inspired by Jung’s ideas. Characters like the Hero, the Jester, the Sage, the Caregiver, and others in stories and myths all come from these archetypes. They are “masks” we can wear to play different roles in society.

Before individuation, the Persona feels like a stiff mask you can’t take off. After individuation, it’s like a costume you can choose to wear, while still knowing who you truly are underneath.

The Shadow: those puzzle pieces shoved under the table. They aren’t evil or wrong — just the parts of us we’d rather hide: fears, guilt, anger, but also talents and power we’ve buried. Facing the Shadow gives us the missing pieces of the puzzle.

The Anima/Animus: the puzzle pieces that balance our inner masculine and feminine qualities. They help us round out our emotional and rational sides, so the picture becomes fuller and more human
The more the ego light explores and integrates these hidden parts, the more the whole picture (the Self) emerges.
Individuation, then, is completing the puzzle. It’s when the flashlight of the Ego finally illuminates all the pieces — even the ones under the table — and the full picture of the Self emerges.
My next post on this topic will be about how we actually in real life fully integrate the self, in a practical sense.