JUNGIAN GENEALOGY II
Depth Psychology * Genealogy * Genetic Genealogy * Psychogenealogy * Myth * Culture * Soul-Making *
Hermeneutics * Geni-Us * Bloodlines * Holy Grail * Archetypes * Healing Narratives * Ancestral Wisdom * Gnostic Vision * Relative Autonomy * Genealogical Memoirs * Famous Kin & History * Remembrance
Depth Psychology * Genealogy * Genetic Genealogy * Psychogenealogy * Myth * Culture * Soul-Making *
Hermeneutics * Geni-Us * Bloodlines * Holy Grail * Archetypes * Healing Narratives * Ancestral Wisdom * Gnostic Vision * Relative Autonomy * Genealogical Memoirs * Famous Kin & History * Remembrance
DEPTH GENEALOGY
ANCESTRAL LINES OF ENQUIRY
GENERATIONAL THERAPY
A Life Forever Changed
FRUITION:
"Follow in the footsteps of your ancestors, for the mind is trained through knowledge. Behold, their words endure… follow their wise counsel."
--"The Book of Kheti," The Husia: Sacred Wisdom of Ancient Egypt
"I am not sure that I exist, actually. I am all the writers that I have read, all the people that I have met, all the women that I have loved; all the cities that I have visited, all my ancestors." ~ Jorge Luis Borges
Man “possesses” many things which he has never acquired
but has inherited from his ancestors. ~Carl Jung, CW 4, Para 728
“we are continually overflowing toward those who preceded us, toward our origin, and toward those who seemingly come after us. ... It is our task to imprint this temporary, perishable earth into ourselves so deeply, so painfully and passionately, that its essence can rise again “invisibly,” inside us. We are the bees of the invisible. We wildly collect the honey of the visible, to store it in the great golden hive of the invisible.” ―Rainer Maria Rilke
"Even the next era has no right to judge anything if it lacks the ability to contemplate the past without hatred or envy. But even that judgment would be one-sided, for every subsequent era is the fruit of previous periods and carries much of the past within it. It is fortunate if something of the ancestors lives on in it and continues to be loved and protected; only then does the past become fruitful and effective." --Rilke, Early Journals
Between the Lines
NEVER TOO LATE
Past Imperfect, Future Present
What Everybody Knows, but Most Have Forgotten
Man “possesses” many things which he has never acquired
but has inherited from his ancestors. ~Carl Jung, CW 4, Para 728
YOU ARE THE TREE OF LIFE
ENTANGLED GENERATIONS
This is Strictly Personal
That was the strange mine of souls.
As secret ores of silver they passed
like veins through its darkness. Between the roots
blood welled, flowing onwards to Mankind,
and it looked as hard as Porphyry in the darkness.
Otherwise nothing was red.
- Rilke, "Orpheus. Eurydice. Hermes"
ANCESTRAL LINES OF ENQUIRY
GENERATIONAL THERAPY
A Life Forever Changed
FRUITION:
"Follow in the footsteps of your ancestors, for the mind is trained through knowledge. Behold, their words endure… follow their wise counsel."
--"The Book of Kheti," The Husia: Sacred Wisdom of Ancient Egypt
"I am not sure that I exist, actually. I am all the writers that I have read, all the people that I have met, all the women that I have loved; all the cities that I have visited, all my ancestors." ~ Jorge Luis Borges
Man “possesses” many things which he has never acquired
but has inherited from his ancestors. ~Carl Jung, CW 4, Para 728
“we are continually overflowing toward those who preceded us, toward our origin, and toward those who seemingly come after us. ... It is our task to imprint this temporary, perishable earth into ourselves so deeply, so painfully and passionately, that its essence can rise again “invisibly,” inside us. We are the bees of the invisible. We wildly collect the honey of the visible, to store it in the great golden hive of the invisible.” ―Rainer Maria Rilke
"Even the next era has no right to judge anything if it lacks the ability to contemplate the past without hatred or envy. But even that judgment would be one-sided, for every subsequent era is the fruit of previous periods and carries much of the past within it. It is fortunate if something of the ancestors lives on in it and continues to be loved and protected; only then does the past become fruitful and effective." --Rilke, Early Journals
Between the Lines
NEVER TOO LATE
Past Imperfect, Future Present
What Everybody Knows, but Most Have Forgotten
Man “possesses” many things which he has never acquired
but has inherited from his ancestors. ~Carl Jung, CW 4, Para 728
YOU ARE THE TREE OF LIFE
ENTANGLED GENERATIONS
This is Strictly Personal
That was the strange mine of souls.
As secret ores of silver they passed
like veins through its darkness. Between the roots
blood welled, flowing onwards to Mankind,
and it looked as hard as Porphyry in the darkness.
Otherwise nothing was red.
- Rilke, "Orpheus. Eurydice. Hermes"
This is a depth psychological approach to Ancestry, mythic,
symbolic and metaphorical, not metaphysical, religious, or literal.
Our genealogy is that Tree and cosmic center that keeps us connected and balanced, and upon which we can ascend and descend in a way that keeps deep time, the transcendent, and our family of flesh alive within us. Genetic testing is revealing suppressed identity.
Our genealogies are living systems, which are constantly expanding and correcting. We work with others on the World Tree to create the most accurate droplines we can, and correct as we go, breaking brick walls and lopping off obsolete branches. The tree continues to grow.
Like an arborist, we understand the deep interweaving growth, and just how much time such development takes (for trees, sometimes centuries) and how ecologically interconnected events and lives are. Our relationship really seems to exist in a kind of ancestral tree-time. New routes through life are found; tree intelligence sends signals out through the roots. Tree existence can be lived with warmth and an intimate sense of one’s inner core.
Our unconscious still functions like it did four million years ago. We have discovered that trauma can be passed between generations. The epigenetic inheritance theory holds that environmental factors can affect the genes of future generations. Chemical tags acting like Post-its can latch onto our DNA, switching genes off and on.
Such complexes are usually deeply unconscious, alienating, and distorted. Our legacy conditions us. The conscious and unconscious minds don't speak to one another; they don't even speak the same language. So, we tend to reenact experiences our families have not integrated.
Integration proceeds by perceiving and acknowledging our ancestors with our conscious minds, including our intergenerational wounds and trauma and the weight of the transgenerational history. It is a processing leading toward wholeness.
Jung says, "Take pains to waken the dead. Dig deep mines and throw in sacrificial gifts, so that they reach the dead." (Liber Novus, Page 244). Our genealogy is a psychic treasure house of latent wisdom.
Some conscious contents can vanish into the unconscious, other contents can also arise from intuitive or ancestral wisdom. Jung thought it sufficient that the dead produce effects like symptomatic repetition and unconscious alienation. He thought the repressed, unlived life of the parents exerted some the strongest effect visited upon children. By this he means the potentials of the parents that have remained unrealized and the personal qualities that have been repressed, never been developed or expressed, or authenticity repressed.
"Jung felt that the “unlived lives” of the parents deeply impacted the lives of the children, as if “branding” the children with a particular destiny. The unlived lives of the parents is an ancestral inheritance which has great weight and gravitas, in that it literally shapes the lives of the children. Jung elaborates: “that part of their lives which might have been lived had not certain somewhat threadbare excuses prevented the parents from doing so. To put it bluntly, it is that part of life which they have always shirked, probably by means of a pious lie. That sows the most virulent germs.”
"Psychologically, the central point of a human personality
is the place where the ancestors are reincarnated."
~Carl Jung, Dream Analysis, Page 304
"The ancestral part is given to us by our body, we take over the life of our ancestors in that way. It is the terrace of life because it is here that life renews itself."
~Carl Jung, ETH Lecture 12 July 1935, Pages 240.
"Therefore you should have reverence for what has become, so that the law of love may become redemption through the restoration of the lower end of the past, not prediction to the boundless mastery of the dead. But the spirits of those who died before their time will live, for the sake of our present incompleteness, in the dark chords in the rafters of our houses and beseech our ears with urgent laments, until we grant them redemption through restoring what has existed since ancient times under the rule of love.
What we called temptation is the demand of the Dead who passed away prematurely and incomplete through the guilt of the good and of the law. For no good is so complete that it could not do it justice and break what should not be broken."
---Carl Jung, Nox Secunda: pages 345-346 the Red Book
"He who cannot love can never transform the serpent, and then nothing is changed." ~Carl Jung, Basel Seminar, Para 87
The goal is important only as an idea; the essential thing is the opus which leads to the goal: that is the goal of a lifetime. ~Carl Jung, CW 16, Para 400
I am weary, my soul, my wandering has lasted too long,
my search for myself outside of myself. ~Carl Jung, The Red Book, Page 233.
The answer to human life is not to be found within the limits of human life.
~Carl Jung, Letters Vol. I, Page 127
Take pains to waken the dead.
Dig deep mines and throw in sacrificial gifts, so that they reach the dead.
Reflect in good heart upon evil, this is the way to the ascent.
But before the ascent, everything is night and Hell.
~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 244.
Real life is always tragic, and those who do not know this have never lived.
~Carl Jung, ETH Lectures 1 Feb 1935
It was only quite late that we realized (or rather, that we are beginning to realize) that God is Reality itself and therefore —last but not least —man. This realization is a millennial process. ~Carl Jung, CW 11, Para 631
“The search for physical immortality proceeds from a misunderstanding of the traditional teaching. On the contrary, the basic problem is: to enlarge the pupil of the eye, so that the body with its attendant personality will no longer obstruct the view. Immortality is then experienced as a present fact.”
--Joseph Campbell, Hero With a thousand Faces (2008), pg. 161
“An opus is needed, that one can squander decades on, and do it out of necessity.
I must catch up with a piece of the Middle Ages—within myself. We have only
finished the Middle Ages of—others. I must begin early, in that period when
the hermits died out.” --C.G. Jung, LN p 320 ii; LN 330 n354
At first we do not know what deeds or misdeeds, what destiny, what good and evil we have in us, and only the autumn can show what the spring has engendered, only in the evening will it be seen what the morning began.
~Carl Jung, CW 17, Para 290
Doubt is the crown of life because truth and error come together. Doubt is living, truth is sometimes death and stagnation. ~Carl Jung, Dream Analysis, Page 89
But above all protect me from the serpent of judgment, which only appears to be a healing serpent, yet in your depths is infernal poison and agonizing death. ~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 238.
The spirit of the depths is pregnant with ice, fire, and death. You are right to fear the spirit of the depths, as he is full of horror. You see in these days what the spirit of the depths bore. You did not believe it, but you would have known it if you had taken counsel with your fear. ~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 238.
The black beetle is the death that is necessary for renewal; and so thereafter, a new sun glowed, the sun of the depths, full of riddles, a sun of the night. And as the rising sun of spring quickens the dead earth, so the sun of the depths quickened the dead, and thus began the terrible struggle between light and darkness. ~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 238.
We are like the sun, which nourishes the life of the earth and brings forth every kind of strange, wonderful, and evil thing; we are like the mothers who bear in their wombs untold happiness and suffering. ~Carl Jung, CW 17, Para 290
Your heights are your own mountain, which belongs to you and you alone.
There you are individual and live your very own life. If you live your own life, you do not live the common life, which is always continuing and never-ending, the life of history and the inalienable and ever-present burdens and products of the human race. There you live the endlessness of being, but not the becoming.
Becoming belongs to the heights and is full of torment. ~Carl Jung, The Red Book, Page 267.
Parents must realize that they are trees from which the fruit falls in the autumn. Children don't belong to their parents, and they are only apparently produced by them. ~Carl Jung, Letters Vol. 1, Pages 217-218.
These constituents of the personality—which one may call functions, or Mendelian units, or the primitives would call them remnants of ancestral souls—these constituents don’t always fit. ~Carl Jung, Dream Analysis, Page 453
We have children and grandchildren and even if we don't believe
in immortality for ourselves, we can believe in the right to live of future people.
~Carl Jung, J.E.T., Pages 90-95
"As you know, in olden times the ancestral souls lived in pots in the kitchen."
~Carl Jung, Letters Vol. I, Page 168
"Just as conscious contents can vanish into the unconscious, other contents can also arise from it. Besides a majority of mere recollections, really new thoughts and creative ideas can appear which have never been conscious before.
They grow up from the dark depths like a lotus."
~Carl Jung, Man and His Symbols, Page 37.
symbolic and metaphorical, not metaphysical, religious, or literal.
Our genealogy is that Tree and cosmic center that keeps us connected and balanced, and upon which we can ascend and descend in a way that keeps deep time, the transcendent, and our family of flesh alive within us. Genetic testing is revealing suppressed identity.
Our genealogies are living systems, which are constantly expanding and correcting. We work with others on the World Tree to create the most accurate droplines we can, and correct as we go, breaking brick walls and lopping off obsolete branches. The tree continues to grow.
Like an arborist, we understand the deep interweaving growth, and just how much time such development takes (for trees, sometimes centuries) and how ecologically interconnected events and lives are. Our relationship really seems to exist in a kind of ancestral tree-time. New routes through life are found; tree intelligence sends signals out through the roots. Tree existence can be lived with warmth and an intimate sense of one’s inner core.
Our unconscious still functions like it did four million years ago. We have discovered that trauma can be passed between generations. The epigenetic inheritance theory holds that environmental factors can affect the genes of future generations. Chemical tags acting like Post-its can latch onto our DNA, switching genes off and on.
Such complexes are usually deeply unconscious, alienating, and distorted. Our legacy conditions us. The conscious and unconscious minds don't speak to one another; they don't even speak the same language. So, we tend to reenact experiences our families have not integrated.
Integration proceeds by perceiving and acknowledging our ancestors with our conscious minds, including our intergenerational wounds and trauma and the weight of the transgenerational history. It is a processing leading toward wholeness.
Jung says, "Take pains to waken the dead. Dig deep mines and throw in sacrificial gifts, so that they reach the dead." (Liber Novus, Page 244). Our genealogy is a psychic treasure house of latent wisdom.
Some conscious contents can vanish into the unconscious, other contents can also arise from intuitive or ancestral wisdom. Jung thought it sufficient that the dead produce effects like symptomatic repetition and unconscious alienation. He thought the repressed, unlived life of the parents exerted some the strongest effect visited upon children. By this he means the potentials of the parents that have remained unrealized and the personal qualities that have been repressed, never been developed or expressed, or authenticity repressed.
"Jung felt that the “unlived lives” of the parents deeply impacted the lives of the children, as if “branding” the children with a particular destiny. The unlived lives of the parents is an ancestral inheritance which has great weight and gravitas, in that it literally shapes the lives of the children. Jung elaborates: “that part of their lives which might have been lived had not certain somewhat threadbare excuses prevented the parents from doing so. To put it bluntly, it is that part of life which they have always shirked, probably by means of a pious lie. That sows the most virulent germs.”
"Psychologically, the central point of a human personality
is the place where the ancestors are reincarnated."
~Carl Jung, Dream Analysis, Page 304
"The ancestral part is given to us by our body, we take over the life of our ancestors in that way. It is the terrace of life because it is here that life renews itself."
~Carl Jung, ETH Lecture 12 July 1935, Pages 240.
"Therefore you should have reverence for what has become, so that the law of love may become redemption through the restoration of the lower end of the past, not prediction to the boundless mastery of the dead. But the spirits of those who died before their time will live, for the sake of our present incompleteness, in the dark chords in the rafters of our houses and beseech our ears with urgent laments, until we grant them redemption through restoring what has existed since ancient times under the rule of love.
What we called temptation is the demand of the Dead who passed away prematurely and incomplete through the guilt of the good and of the law. For no good is so complete that it could not do it justice and break what should not be broken."
---Carl Jung, Nox Secunda: pages 345-346 the Red Book
"He who cannot love can never transform the serpent, and then nothing is changed." ~Carl Jung, Basel Seminar, Para 87
The goal is important only as an idea; the essential thing is the opus which leads to the goal: that is the goal of a lifetime. ~Carl Jung, CW 16, Para 400
I am weary, my soul, my wandering has lasted too long,
my search for myself outside of myself. ~Carl Jung, The Red Book, Page 233.
The answer to human life is not to be found within the limits of human life.
~Carl Jung, Letters Vol. I, Page 127
Take pains to waken the dead.
Dig deep mines and throw in sacrificial gifts, so that they reach the dead.
Reflect in good heart upon evil, this is the way to the ascent.
But before the ascent, everything is night and Hell.
~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 244.
Real life is always tragic, and those who do not know this have never lived.
~Carl Jung, ETH Lectures 1 Feb 1935
It was only quite late that we realized (or rather, that we are beginning to realize) that God is Reality itself and therefore —last but not least —man. This realization is a millennial process. ~Carl Jung, CW 11, Para 631
“The search for physical immortality proceeds from a misunderstanding of the traditional teaching. On the contrary, the basic problem is: to enlarge the pupil of the eye, so that the body with its attendant personality will no longer obstruct the view. Immortality is then experienced as a present fact.”
--Joseph Campbell, Hero With a thousand Faces (2008), pg. 161
“An opus is needed, that one can squander decades on, and do it out of necessity.
I must catch up with a piece of the Middle Ages—within myself. We have only
finished the Middle Ages of—others. I must begin early, in that period when
the hermits died out.” --C.G. Jung, LN p 320 ii; LN 330 n354
At first we do not know what deeds or misdeeds, what destiny, what good and evil we have in us, and only the autumn can show what the spring has engendered, only in the evening will it be seen what the morning began.
~Carl Jung, CW 17, Para 290
Doubt is the crown of life because truth and error come together. Doubt is living, truth is sometimes death and stagnation. ~Carl Jung, Dream Analysis, Page 89
But above all protect me from the serpent of judgment, which only appears to be a healing serpent, yet in your depths is infernal poison and agonizing death. ~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 238.
The spirit of the depths is pregnant with ice, fire, and death. You are right to fear the spirit of the depths, as he is full of horror. You see in these days what the spirit of the depths bore. You did not believe it, but you would have known it if you had taken counsel with your fear. ~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 238.
The black beetle is the death that is necessary for renewal; and so thereafter, a new sun glowed, the sun of the depths, full of riddles, a sun of the night. And as the rising sun of spring quickens the dead earth, so the sun of the depths quickened the dead, and thus began the terrible struggle between light and darkness. ~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 238.
We are like the sun, which nourishes the life of the earth and brings forth every kind of strange, wonderful, and evil thing; we are like the mothers who bear in their wombs untold happiness and suffering. ~Carl Jung, CW 17, Para 290
Your heights are your own mountain, which belongs to you and you alone.
There you are individual and live your very own life. If you live your own life, you do not live the common life, which is always continuing and never-ending, the life of history and the inalienable and ever-present burdens and products of the human race. There you live the endlessness of being, but not the becoming.
Becoming belongs to the heights and is full of torment. ~Carl Jung, The Red Book, Page 267.
Parents must realize that they are trees from which the fruit falls in the autumn. Children don't belong to their parents, and they are only apparently produced by them. ~Carl Jung, Letters Vol. 1, Pages 217-218.
These constituents of the personality—which one may call functions, or Mendelian units, or the primitives would call them remnants of ancestral souls—these constituents don’t always fit. ~Carl Jung, Dream Analysis, Page 453
We have children and grandchildren and even if we don't believe
in immortality for ourselves, we can believe in the right to live of future people.
~Carl Jung, J.E.T., Pages 90-95
"As you know, in olden times the ancestral souls lived in pots in the kitchen."
~Carl Jung, Letters Vol. I, Page 168
"Just as conscious contents can vanish into the unconscious, other contents can also arise from it. Besides a majority of mere recollections, really new thoughts and creative ideas can appear which have never been conscious before.
They grow up from the dark depths like a lotus."
~Carl Jung, Man and His Symbols, Page 37.
MYTHIC ANCESTORS
LEGENDARY ANCESTORS
HISTORICAL ANCESTORS
In Paleolithic times, familiarity with different modalities of matter gave rise to imaginative activity. The first signs of ancient religious sense came from burial rites. Early inventions, such as primitive tools and domestic skills gave rise to imaginative analogies. Through activities such as sewing, shaping statuettes, and making hunting tools objects came to be laden with symbolism. The imaginary world was created and enriched by intimacy with matter.
This imaginary realm was inadequately grasped in figurative and geometric creations of various prehistoric cultures. This imaginative experience is still accessible to us. There is a continuity to this plane of imaginative activity which permeates throughout human history and spiritual notions. The imaginal activity of the ancients had a mythological dimension. Many of the supernatural figures and mythological events which appear in later religious traditions, were probably discoveries of the Stone Age. For millennia Mother Earth gave birth by herself,
through parthenogenesis. Born from the Earth, man returned there when he died.
The development of agrarian cultures ushered in notions of circular time and cosmic cycles. The confrontation between two cosmogonic principles, time and space, meant a new orientation to both inner and outer life. A settled existence organizes the "world" differently from a nomadic life. The seed "dies" and is then reborn in order to multiply. Thus death ensures a new birth. Agriculture demands a different relationship to the seasons and weather--to earth and sky, and this had a deep impact on religious values. The theme is one of periodic renewal.
NO BIRTH WITHOUT BLOOD
We are the precious fruit of the Tree of Life, each with the potential of our future, and for self-realization, after the ordeal of abandonment.
“Nothing in all the world welcomes this new birth, although it is the most precious fruit of Mother Nature herself, the most pregnant with the future, signifying a higher stage of self-realization. That is why Nature, the world of the instincts, takes the “child” under its wing: it is nourished or protected by animals” (Jung, CW 9i, para. 285-287).
LEGENDARY ANCESTORS
HISTORICAL ANCESTORS
In Paleolithic times, familiarity with different modalities of matter gave rise to imaginative activity. The first signs of ancient religious sense came from burial rites. Early inventions, such as primitive tools and domestic skills gave rise to imaginative analogies. Through activities such as sewing, shaping statuettes, and making hunting tools objects came to be laden with symbolism. The imaginary world was created and enriched by intimacy with matter.
This imaginary realm was inadequately grasped in figurative and geometric creations of various prehistoric cultures. This imaginative experience is still accessible to us. There is a continuity to this plane of imaginative activity which permeates throughout human history and spiritual notions. The imaginal activity of the ancients had a mythological dimension. Many of the supernatural figures and mythological events which appear in later religious traditions, were probably discoveries of the Stone Age. For millennia Mother Earth gave birth by herself,
through parthenogenesis. Born from the Earth, man returned there when he died.
The development of agrarian cultures ushered in notions of circular time and cosmic cycles. The confrontation between two cosmogonic principles, time and space, meant a new orientation to both inner and outer life. A settled existence organizes the "world" differently from a nomadic life. The seed "dies" and is then reborn in order to multiply. Thus death ensures a new birth. Agriculture demands a different relationship to the seasons and weather--to earth and sky, and this had a deep impact on religious values. The theme is one of periodic renewal.
NO BIRTH WITHOUT BLOOD
We are the precious fruit of the Tree of Life, each with the potential of our future, and for self-realization, after the ordeal of abandonment.
“Nothing in all the world welcomes this new birth, although it is the most precious fruit of Mother Nature herself, the most pregnant with the future, signifying a higher stage of self-realization. That is why Nature, the world of the instincts, takes the “child” under its wing: it is nourished or protected by animals” (Jung, CW 9i, para. 285-287).
If I accept death, then my tree greens, since dying increases life. If I plunge into the death encompassing the world, then my buds break open. How much our life needs death!
~Carl Jung, The Red Book, Page 275.
He who sleeps in the grave of the millennia dreams a wonderful dream. He dreams a primordially ancient dream. He dreams of the rising sun. ~Carl Jung, The Red Book, Page 272
THE TREE OF LIFE IS THE CENTRAL SYMBOL OF MANKIND,
AND THE CENTRAL SYMBOL OF GENEALOGY
~Carl Jung, The Red Book, Page 275.
He who sleeps in the grave of the millennia dreams a wonderful dream. He dreams a primordially ancient dream. He dreams of the rising sun. ~Carl Jung, The Red Book, Page 272
THE TREE OF LIFE IS THE CENTRAL SYMBOL OF MANKIND,
AND THE CENTRAL SYMBOL OF GENEALOGY
The Grail, Arthur and His Knights: A Symbolic Jungian Reading By Maria Zelia de Alvarenga
THE BIRTHING TREE
CURATORIAL NARRATIVE
Soulwork: Holistic Genealogy
THE TREE OF LIFE IS THE CENTRAL SYMBOL OF MANKIND,
AND THE CENTRAL SYMBOL OF GENEALOGY
“The universe is a complete unique entity. Everything and everyone is bound together with some invisible strings. Do not break anyone’s heart; do not look down on weaker than you. One’s sorrow at the other side of the world can make the entire world suffer; one’s happiness can make the entire world smile.”
―Shams Tabrizi
"The deposit of man’s whole ancestral experience—so rich in emotional imagery—of father, mother, child, husband and wife, of the magic personality, of dangers to body and soul, has exalted this group of archetypes into the supreme regulating principles of religious and even of political life, in unconscious recognition of their tremendous psychic power." ~Carl Jung, CW 8, Para 337
The ancestral part is given to us by our body, we take over the life of our ancestors in that way. It is the terrace of life because it is here that life renews itself. ~Carl Jung, ETH Lecture 12July1935, Pages 240.
But no matter how much the parents and grandparents may have sinned against the child, the man who is really adult will accept these sins as his own condition which has to be reckoned with. ~Carl Jung, CW 12, Para 152
My soul is my supreme meaning, my image of God, neither God himself nor the supreme meaning. God becomes apparent in the supreme meaning of the human community. ~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Footnote 92, Page 240.
Individuation is an expression of that biological process—simple or complicated as the case may be —by which every living thing becomes what it was destined to become from the beginning. ~Carl Jung, CW 11, Para 460
"The highest manifestation of life consists in this: that a being governs its own actions. A thing which is always subject to the direction of another is somewhat of a dead thing." --Thomas Aquinas
The mystery showed me in images what I should afterward live. I did not possess any of those boons that the mystery showed me, for I still had to earn all of them. ~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 254.
"The Siddhis (powers) are attained by birth, chemical means [drugs], power of words, mortification or concentration." -- Yoga Sutras of Patanjali, 4:1, translated by Bro∴ Swami Vivekananda
It is questionable whether the union of animus and anima can be described as a unio mystica. The only certain thing is that the hierosgamos is a mythological parallel. The unio mystica is more a dissolution of the ego in the divine Ground--
a very different experience. ~Carl Jung, Letters Vol. I, Pages 564-565
Once you really get it, that anxiety is a manifestation of proximity to God, then any other more personal explanations of the experience, while retaining some validity of course, will be swallowed up by the deeper meaning.
~Edward F. Edinger, Transformation of the God Image, Pages 113-114
"Being naked" often means "accessible to all influences."
~Carl Jung, Letters Vol. 1, Page 319
No one can know what the ultimate things are. We must therefore take them as we experience them. ~Carl Jung, CW 11, Para 167.
There is always an attraction between conscious mind and projected content. Generally it takes the form of a fascination. ~Carl Jung, CW 12, Para 436.
The archetype is, so to speak, an “eternal” presence, and it is only a question of whether it is perceived by the conscious mind or not. ~Carl Jung, CW 12, Para 329
"The insight we obtain by looking at ourselves is generally very bitter, which is why so few people do it; it is pikros—bitter for it corrodes and is very disagreeable to the illusions of consciousness. That is why we speak of bitter truth, for self-knowledge is a bitter experience at the beginning." --Marie-Louise von Franz
“All your rebirths could ultimately make you sick.…a chameleon, a caricature, one prone to changing colors, a crawling shimmering lizard… I recognized the chameleon and no longer want to crawl on the earth and change colors and be reborn; instead I want to exist from my own force, like the sun which gives light and does not suck light…” --Jung 2009: 277
Even the enlightened person remains what he is, and is never more than his own limited ego before the One who dwells within him, whose form has no knowable boundaries, who encompasses him on all sides, fathomless as the abysms of the earth and vast as the sky. ~Carl Jung, CW 11, Para 758
For when the soul vanished at death, it was not lost; in that other world it formed the living counterpole to the state of death in this world. ~Jung, CW 16, Para 493
In the last analysis every life is the realization of a whole, that is, of a self, for which reason this realization can also be called “individuation.”
~Carl Jung, CW 12, Para 330
It seems as if all the personal entanglements and dramatic changes of fortune that make upthe intensity of life were nothing but hesitations, timid shrinking, almost like petty complications and meticulous excuses for not facing the finality of this strange and uncanny process of crystallization.
~Carl Jung, CW 12, Para 326.
In philosophy God is abstract, an idea, imageless.
But the Divine Child is the incarnation of an idea; it permits us personal access to an idea which we could not easily realize without it.
~Carl Jung, Ostroski-Sachs, Pages 38-43.
CURATORIAL NARRATIVE
Soulwork: Holistic Genealogy
THE TREE OF LIFE IS THE CENTRAL SYMBOL OF MANKIND,
AND THE CENTRAL SYMBOL OF GENEALOGY
“The universe is a complete unique entity. Everything and everyone is bound together with some invisible strings. Do not break anyone’s heart; do not look down on weaker than you. One’s sorrow at the other side of the world can make the entire world suffer; one’s happiness can make the entire world smile.”
―Shams Tabrizi
"The deposit of man’s whole ancestral experience—so rich in emotional imagery—of father, mother, child, husband and wife, of the magic personality, of dangers to body and soul, has exalted this group of archetypes into the supreme regulating principles of religious and even of political life, in unconscious recognition of their tremendous psychic power." ~Carl Jung, CW 8, Para 337
The ancestral part is given to us by our body, we take over the life of our ancestors in that way. It is the terrace of life because it is here that life renews itself. ~Carl Jung, ETH Lecture 12July1935, Pages 240.
But no matter how much the parents and grandparents may have sinned against the child, the man who is really adult will accept these sins as his own condition which has to be reckoned with. ~Carl Jung, CW 12, Para 152
My soul is my supreme meaning, my image of God, neither God himself nor the supreme meaning. God becomes apparent in the supreme meaning of the human community. ~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Footnote 92, Page 240.
Individuation is an expression of that biological process—simple or complicated as the case may be —by which every living thing becomes what it was destined to become from the beginning. ~Carl Jung, CW 11, Para 460
"The highest manifestation of life consists in this: that a being governs its own actions. A thing which is always subject to the direction of another is somewhat of a dead thing." --Thomas Aquinas
The mystery showed me in images what I should afterward live. I did not possess any of those boons that the mystery showed me, for I still had to earn all of them. ~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 254.
"The Siddhis (powers) are attained by birth, chemical means [drugs], power of words, mortification or concentration." -- Yoga Sutras of Patanjali, 4:1, translated by Bro∴ Swami Vivekananda
It is questionable whether the union of animus and anima can be described as a unio mystica. The only certain thing is that the hierosgamos is a mythological parallel. The unio mystica is more a dissolution of the ego in the divine Ground--
a very different experience. ~Carl Jung, Letters Vol. I, Pages 564-565
Once you really get it, that anxiety is a manifestation of proximity to God, then any other more personal explanations of the experience, while retaining some validity of course, will be swallowed up by the deeper meaning.
~Edward F. Edinger, Transformation of the God Image, Pages 113-114
"Being naked" often means "accessible to all influences."
~Carl Jung, Letters Vol. 1, Page 319
No one can know what the ultimate things are. We must therefore take them as we experience them. ~Carl Jung, CW 11, Para 167.
There is always an attraction between conscious mind and projected content. Generally it takes the form of a fascination. ~Carl Jung, CW 12, Para 436.
The archetype is, so to speak, an “eternal” presence, and it is only a question of whether it is perceived by the conscious mind or not. ~Carl Jung, CW 12, Para 329
"The insight we obtain by looking at ourselves is generally very bitter, which is why so few people do it; it is pikros—bitter for it corrodes and is very disagreeable to the illusions of consciousness. That is why we speak of bitter truth, for self-knowledge is a bitter experience at the beginning." --Marie-Louise von Franz
“All your rebirths could ultimately make you sick.…a chameleon, a caricature, one prone to changing colors, a crawling shimmering lizard… I recognized the chameleon and no longer want to crawl on the earth and change colors and be reborn; instead I want to exist from my own force, like the sun which gives light and does not suck light…” --Jung 2009: 277
Even the enlightened person remains what he is, and is never more than his own limited ego before the One who dwells within him, whose form has no knowable boundaries, who encompasses him on all sides, fathomless as the abysms of the earth and vast as the sky. ~Carl Jung, CW 11, Para 758
For when the soul vanished at death, it was not lost; in that other world it formed the living counterpole to the state of death in this world. ~Jung, CW 16, Para 493
In the last analysis every life is the realization of a whole, that is, of a self, for which reason this realization can also be called “individuation.”
~Carl Jung, CW 12, Para 330
It seems as if all the personal entanglements and dramatic changes of fortune that make upthe intensity of life were nothing but hesitations, timid shrinking, almost like petty complications and meticulous excuses for not facing the finality of this strange and uncanny process of crystallization.
~Carl Jung, CW 12, Para 326.
In philosophy God is abstract, an idea, imageless.
But the Divine Child is the incarnation of an idea; it permits us personal access to an idea which we could not easily realize without it.
~Carl Jung, Ostroski-Sachs, Pages 38-43.
BORN & BURIED
MEETING IN THE IMAGINATION
FINDING THE WISDOM LEFT BY YOUR ANCESTORS
What the ancients did for their dead!
You seem to believe that you can absolve yourself from the care of the dead, and from the work that they so greatly demand, since what is dead is past.
One shouldn’t attach the dead to the living, otherwise they both get estranged from their proper spheres and are thrown into a state of suffering.
~Carl Jung, Letters Vol. I, Page 53
You excuse yourself with your disbelief in the immortality
of the soul. Do you think that the dead do not exist because you have' devised the impossibility of immortality?
You believe in your idols of words.
The dead produce effects, that is sufficient.
In the inner world there is no explaining away, as little as you can explain away the sea in the outer world.
You must finally understand your purpose in explaining away, namely to seek protection. ~Carl Jung; Red Book, Page 298
You live inasmuch as these Mendelian units are living. They have souls, are endowed with psychic life, the psychic life of that ancestor; or you can call it part of an ancestral soul. ~Carl Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Page 1401.
Thus we remain ignorant of whether our ancestral components find an elementary gratification in our lives, or whether they are repelled. Inner peace and contentment depend in large measure upon whether or not the historical family which is inherent in the individual can be harmonized with the ephemeral conditions of the present. ~Carl Jung; Memories Dreams and Reflections; Page 237.
This image is fundamentally unconscious, an hereditary factor of primordial origin engraved in the living organic system of the man, an imprint or 'archetype' [q.v.] of all the ancestral experiences of the female, a deposit, as it were, of all the impressions ever made by woman . . .Since this image is unconscious, it is always unconsciously projected upon the person of the beloved, and is one of the chief reasons for passionate attraction or aversion." ~Carl Jung; Memories Dreams and Reflections; Page 391.
Psychologically this means that the souls of the ancestors (potential factors, qualities, talents, possibilities, and so on, which we have inherited from all the lines of our ancestry) are waiting in the unconscious, and are ready at any time to begin a new growth. ~Carl Jung, ETH, Alchemy, Page 230.
The ancestral part is given to us by our body, we take over the life of our ancestors in that way. It is the terrace of life because it is here that life renews itself. ~Carl Jung, ETH Lecture 12July1935, Pages 240.
If we became aware of the ancestral lives in us, we might disintegrate. An ancestor might take possession of us and ride us to death.
~Carl Jung, 1925 Seminar, Page 139
There is one ego in the conscious and another made up of unconscious ancestral elements, by the force of which a man who has been fairly himself over a period of years suddenly falls under the sway of an ancestor.
~Carl Jung, 1925 Seminar, page 38.
In the redemption of the individual, the whole past will be redeemed, and that includes all the inferior things as well, the animals, and all the ancestral souls, everything that has not been completed; all creation will be redeemed in the apokatastasis [at the time of the Last Judgement], there will be a complete restoration of things as they have been.
~Carl Jung, Visions Seminar, Page 1280
The deposit of man’s whole ancestral experience—so rich in emotional imagery—of father, mother, child, husband and wife,
of the magic personality, of dangers to body and soul, has exalted this group of archetypes into the supreme regulating principles of religious and even of political life, in unconscious recognition of their tremendous psychic power. ~Carl Jung, CW 8, Para 337
These constituents of the personality—which one may call functions, or Mendelian units, or the primitives would call them remnants of ancestral souls—these constituents don’t always fit. ~Carl Jung, Dream Analysis, Page 453
But if you know what the dead demand, temptation will become the wellspring of your best work, indeed of the work of salvation. ~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 278, Footnote 188.
“The alchemist saw the union of opposites under the symbol of the tree, and it is therefore not surprising that the unconscious of present-day man, who no longer feels at home in his world and can base his existence neither on the past that is no more nor on the future that is yet to be, should hark back to the symbol of the cosmic tree rooted in this world and growing up to heaven - the tree that is also man. In the history of symbols this tree is described as the way of life itself, a growing into that which eternally is and does not change; which springs from the union of opposites and, by its eternal presence, also makes that union possible. It seems as if it were only through an experience of symbolic reality that man, vainly seeking his own “existence” and making a philosophy out of it, can find his way back to a world in which he is no longer a stranger.”
― C.G. Jung, Psychological Types
MEETING IN THE IMAGINATION
FINDING THE WISDOM LEFT BY YOUR ANCESTORS
What the ancients did for their dead!
You seem to believe that you can absolve yourself from the care of the dead, and from the work that they so greatly demand, since what is dead is past.
One shouldn’t attach the dead to the living, otherwise they both get estranged from their proper spheres and are thrown into a state of suffering.
~Carl Jung, Letters Vol. I, Page 53
You excuse yourself with your disbelief in the immortality
of the soul. Do you think that the dead do not exist because you have' devised the impossibility of immortality?
You believe in your idols of words.
The dead produce effects, that is sufficient.
In the inner world there is no explaining away, as little as you can explain away the sea in the outer world.
You must finally understand your purpose in explaining away, namely to seek protection. ~Carl Jung; Red Book, Page 298
You live inasmuch as these Mendelian units are living. They have souls, are endowed with psychic life, the psychic life of that ancestor; or you can call it part of an ancestral soul. ~Carl Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Page 1401.
Thus we remain ignorant of whether our ancestral components find an elementary gratification in our lives, or whether they are repelled. Inner peace and contentment depend in large measure upon whether or not the historical family which is inherent in the individual can be harmonized with the ephemeral conditions of the present. ~Carl Jung; Memories Dreams and Reflections; Page 237.
This image is fundamentally unconscious, an hereditary factor of primordial origin engraved in the living organic system of the man, an imprint or 'archetype' [q.v.] of all the ancestral experiences of the female, a deposit, as it were, of all the impressions ever made by woman . . .Since this image is unconscious, it is always unconsciously projected upon the person of the beloved, and is one of the chief reasons for passionate attraction or aversion." ~Carl Jung; Memories Dreams and Reflections; Page 391.
Psychologically this means that the souls of the ancestors (potential factors, qualities, talents, possibilities, and so on, which we have inherited from all the lines of our ancestry) are waiting in the unconscious, and are ready at any time to begin a new growth. ~Carl Jung, ETH, Alchemy, Page 230.
The ancestral part is given to us by our body, we take over the life of our ancestors in that way. It is the terrace of life because it is here that life renews itself. ~Carl Jung, ETH Lecture 12July1935, Pages 240.
If we became aware of the ancestral lives in us, we might disintegrate. An ancestor might take possession of us and ride us to death.
~Carl Jung, 1925 Seminar, Page 139
There is one ego in the conscious and another made up of unconscious ancestral elements, by the force of which a man who has been fairly himself over a period of years suddenly falls under the sway of an ancestor.
~Carl Jung, 1925 Seminar, page 38.
In the redemption of the individual, the whole past will be redeemed, and that includes all the inferior things as well, the animals, and all the ancestral souls, everything that has not been completed; all creation will be redeemed in the apokatastasis [at the time of the Last Judgement], there will be a complete restoration of things as they have been.
~Carl Jung, Visions Seminar, Page 1280
The deposit of man’s whole ancestral experience—so rich in emotional imagery—of father, mother, child, husband and wife,
of the magic personality, of dangers to body and soul, has exalted this group of archetypes into the supreme regulating principles of religious and even of political life, in unconscious recognition of their tremendous psychic power. ~Carl Jung, CW 8, Para 337
These constituents of the personality—which one may call functions, or Mendelian units, or the primitives would call them remnants of ancestral souls—these constituents don’t always fit. ~Carl Jung, Dream Analysis, Page 453
But if you know what the dead demand, temptation will become the wellspring of your best work, indeed of the work of salvation. ~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 278, Footnote 188.
“The alchemist saw the union of opposites under the symbol of the tree, and it is therefore not surprising that the unconscious of present-day man, who no longer feels at home in his world and can base his existence neither on the past that is no more nor on the future that is yet to be, should hark back to the symbol of the cosmic tree rooted in this world and growing up to heaven - the tree that is also man. In the history of symbols this tree is described as the way of life itself, a growing into that which eternally is and does not change; which springs from the union of opposites and, by its eternal presence, also makes that union possible. It seems as if it were only through an experience of symbolic reality that man, vainly seeking his own “existence” and making a philosophy out of it, can find his way back to a world in which he is no longer a stranger.”
― C.G. Jung, Psychological Types
"Illuminator Series", Christopher Ulrich
Infinity - Oil on canvas 36" x 48"
The red man and the white woman merge and not only give birth to the divine child but absorb its golden aura, which is the backdrop of the whole show. The entire universe spirals above, below, and within. The Royal Wedding heals all wounds, and establishes treaties amongst all houses; a rekindling of friendship; truce between enemies; the harvesting of fruits of labor; the newborn gifts between lovers; a new manifestation between father and son, god and warrior, mother, sister and friend. Illuminator: The Royal Wedding has revealed that there are no mistakes, no regrets and no lies. The bride and groom could be myth and reality or science and religion. Seeming opposites come together.
Infinity - Oil on canvas 36" x 48"
The red man and the white woman merge and not only give birth to the divine child but absorb its golden aura, which is the backdrop of the whole show. The entire universe spirals above, below, and within. The Royal Wedding heals all wounds, and establishes treaties amongst all houses; a rekindling of friendship; truce between enemies; the harvesting of fruits of labor; the newborn gifts between lovers; a new manifestation between father and son, god and warrior, mother, sister and friend. Illuminator: The Royal Wedding has revealed that there are no mistakes, no regrets and no lies. The bride and groom could be myth and reality or science and religion. Seeming opposites come together.
The Felt Presence of Direct Experience
& Direct Experience of Felt Presence
"It sounds very nice to bring back the bodies of the parents and other people whom time has swallowed, but if they should live again, you would have to live with them and that is no simple thing; it might cause no end of trouble."
--C.G. Jung, Visions, p.985
"I drank the cup she gave to me
And saw things past and things to be
And old bodies that I wore before..."
--Manfred Mann, Snakeskin Garter
“The past is never dead. It’s not even past.”
--William Faulkner
Eternal truths are never true at any given moment in history.
~Carl Jung, CW 10, Para 1004
You should be the vessel and womb of life, therefore I shall purify you.
~Carl Jung to his Ego, Liber Novus, Page 330
You rightly emphasize that man in my view is enclosed in the psyche (not in his psyche). ~Carl Jung, Letters Vol. 1, Pages 555-557
It does not seem to have occurred to people that when we say “psyche”
we are alluding to the densest darkness it is possible to imagine.
~Carl Jung, CW 11, Para 448
Indeed, it is quite impossible to define the extent and the ultimate character of psychic existence. ~Carl Jung, CW 11, Para 140
Psychic heredity does exist —that is to say, there is inheritance of psychic characteristics such as predisposition to disease, traits of character, special gifts, and so forth. ~Carl Jung, CW 11, Para 845
Originally we were all born out of a world of wholeness and in the first years of life are still completely contained in it. There we have all knowledge without knowing it. Later we lose it, and call it progress when we remember it again. --C.G. Jung ~Carl Jung, Letters Vol. I, Pages 274-275
'The goal of life is to make your heartbeat match the beat of the universe, to match your nature with Nature.' --Joseph Campbell
He [Man] must know something of God’s nature and of metaphysical processes if he is to understand himself and thereby achieve gnosis of the Divine.
~Carl Jung, CW 11, Para 747.
He [God] fills us with evil as well as with good, otherwise he would not need to be feared; and because he wants to become man, the uniting of his antinomy must take place in man. ~Carl Jung, CW 11, Para 747.
Individuation
"It is not enough to have become aware of the Self’s existence, it is necessary to go on living with it, of acting from this center instead of from the ego.
That is where the river of time comes in our dream and with it the realization that the Self is alive and ever-changing, as well as solid and still.
And both belong to the Self: our transient everyday life and the invisible luminous point which is the “face of God,” the resting pivot in all changes."
~Marie-Louise Von Franz, Psyche and Matter
The labours of the doctor as well as the quest of the patient are directed towards that hidden and as yet unmanifest “whole” man, who is at once the greater and the future man. ~Carl Jung, CW 12, Para 6
It is death to the soul to become unconscious. People die before there is death of the body, because there is death in the soul. ~Carl Jung, Dream Analysis, Page 90.
You must be in the middle of life, surrounded by death on all sides.
~Carl Jung, The Red Book, Page 370.
You still have to learn this, to succumb to no temptation, but to do every~
thing of your own will; then you will be free and beyond Christianity.
~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 235.
The kernel of all jealousy is lack of love.
~Carl Jung; Memories, Dreams and Reflections; Page 137.
One can certainly gain outer freedom through powerful actions,
but one creates inner freedom only through the symbol.
--Jung, C. G.. The Red Book:
The idea that God is necessarily good and spiritual is simply a prejudice made by man. We wish it were so, we wish that the good and spiritual might be supreme, but it is not. ~Carl Jung, Dream Analysis, Pages 512-513.
"The unconscious is not just evil by nature, it is also the source of the highest good: not only dark but also light, not only bestial, semi-human, and demonic but superhuman, spiritual, and, in the classical sense of the word, "divine."
--Jung, The Practice of Psychotherapy
Our psychic prehistory is in truth the spirit of gravity, which needs steps and ladders because, unlike the disembodied airy intellect, it cannot fly at will.
~Carl Jung, CW 12, Para 79
The unconscious wants to flow into consciousness in order to reach the light, but at the same time it continually thwarts itself, because it would rather remain unconscious. That is to say, God wants to become man, but not quite. ~Carl Jung, CW 11, Para 740
Experience of the opposites has nothing whatever to do with intellectual insight or with empathy. It is more what we would call fate. ~Carl Jung, CW 12, Para 23.
...the self by definition represents the virtual union of all opposites.
It cannot be described as a summum bonum even in the metaphorical sense, because it is not a summum desideratum but rather a dira necessitas which is characterized by all the corresponding unpleasant qualities.
Individuation is as much a fatality as a fulfillment.
The psychology of the self is not philosophy but an empirical process which, being a natural process, could run its course smoothly if it did not take a tragic turn in man by colliding with his consciousness. --Carl Jung, Letters Vol. I, Page 529
Yahweh’s decision to become man is a symbol of the development that had to supervene when man becomes conscious of the sort of God-image he is confronted with. ~Carl Jung, CW 11, Para 740
Like plants, so men also grow, some in the light, others in the shadows. There are many who need the shadows and not the light. The image of God throws a shadow that is just as great as itself. ~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 230.
But the small, narrow, and banal is not nonsense, but one of both of the essences of the Godhead. ~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 230.
I resisted recognizing that the everyday belongs to the image of the Godhead. I fled this thought, I hid myself behind the highest and coldest stars. But the spirit of the depths caught up with me, and forced the bitter drink between my lips. ~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 230.
The way is within us, but not in Gods, nor in teachings, nor in laws. Within us is the way, the truth, and the life. ~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 231
"It is in fact true, as Jung has emphasized that the unconscious psyche pays very little attention to the abrupt end of bodily life and behaves as if the psychic life of the individual that is,the individuation process, will simply continue....The unconscious" believes" quite obviously in a life after death."
--Marie-Louise von Franz
& Direct Experience of Felt Presence
"It sounds very nice to bring back the bodies of the parents and other people whom time has swallowed, but if they should live again, you would have to live with them and that is no simple thing; it might cause no end of trouble."
--C.G. Jung, Visions, p.985
"I drank the cup she gave to me
And saw things past and things to be
And old bodies that I wore before..."
--Manfred Mann, Snakeskin Garter
“The past is never dead. It’s not even past.”
--William Faulkner
Eternal truths are never true at any given moment in history.
~Carl Jung, CW 10, Para 1004
You should be the vessel and womb of life, therefore I shall purify you.
~Carl Jung to his Ego, Liber Novus, Page 330
You rightly emphasize that man in my view is enclosed in the psyche (not in his psyche). ~Carl Jung, Letters Vol. 1, Pages 555-557
It does not seem to have occurred to people that when we say “psyche”
we are alluding to the densest darkness it is possible to imagine.
~Carl Jung, CW 11, Para 448
Indeed, it is quite impossible to define the extent and the ultimate character of psychic existence. ~Carl Jung, CW 11, Para 140
Psychic heredity does exist —that is to say, there is inheritance of psychic characteristics such as predisposition to disease, traits of character, special gifts, and so forth. ~Carl Jung, CW 11, Para 845
Originally we were all born out of a world of wholeness and in the first years of life are still completely contained in it. There we have all knowledge without knowing it. Later we lose it, and call it progress when we remember it again. --C.G. Jung ~Carl Jung, Letters Vol. I, Pages 274-275
'The goal of life is to make your heartbeat match the beat of the universe, to match your nature with Nature.' --Joseph Campbell
He [Man] must know something of God’s nature and of metaphysical processes if he is to understand himself and thereby achieve gnosis of the Divine.
~Carl Jung, CW 11, Para 747.
He [God] fills us with evil as well as with good, otherwise he would not need to be feared; and because he wants to become man, the uniting of his antinomy must take place in man. ~Carl Jung, CW 11, Para 747.
Individuation
"It is not enough to have become aware of the Self’s existence, it is necessary to go on living with it, of acting from this center instead of from the ego.
That is where the river of time comes in our dream and with it the realization that the Self is alive and ever-changing, as well as solid and still.
And both belong to the Self: our transient everyday life and the invisible luminous point which is the “face of God,” the resting pivot in all changes."
~Marie-Louise Von Franz, Psyche and Matter
The labours of the doctor as well as the quest of the patient are directed towards that hidden and as yet unmanifest “whole” man, who is at once the greater and the future man. ~Carl Jung, CW 12, Para 6
It is death to the soul to become unconscious. People die before there is death of the body, because there is death in the soul. ~Carl Jung, Dream Analysis, Page 90.
You must be in the middle of life, surrounded by death on all sides.
~Carl Jung, The Red Book, Page 370.
You still have to learn this, to succumb to no temptation, but to do every~
thing of your own will; then you will be free and beyond Christianity.
~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 235.
The kernel of all jealousy is lack of love.
~Carl Jung; Memories, Dreams and Reflections; Page 137.
One can certainly gain outer freedom through powerful actions,
but one creates inner freedom only through the symbol.
--Jung, C. G.. The Red Book:
The idea that God is necessarily good and spiritual is simply a prejudice made by man. We wish it were so, we wish that the good and spiritual might be supreme, but it is not. ~Carl Jung, Dream Analysis, Pages 512-513.
"The unconscious is not just evil by nature, it is also the source of the highest good: not only dark but also light, not only bestial, semi-human, and demonic but superhuman, spiritual, and, in the classical sense of the word, "divine."
--Jung, The Practice of Psychotherapy
Our psychic prehistory is in truth the spirit of gravity, which needs steps and ladders because, unlike the disembodied airy intellect, it cannot fly at will.
~Carl Jung, CW 12, Para 79
The unconscious wants to flow into consciousness in order to reach the light, but at the same time it continually thwarts itself, because it would rather remain unconscious. That is to say, God wants to become man, but not quite. ~Carl Jung, CW 11, Para 740
Experience of the opposites has nothing whatever to do with intellectual insight or with empathy. It is more what we would call fate. ~Carl Jung, CW 12, Para 23.
...the self by definition represents the virtual union of all opposites.
It cannot be described as a summum bonum even in the metaphorical sense, because it is not a summum desideratum but rather a dira necessitas which is characterized by all the corresponding unpleasant qualities.
Individuation is as much a fatality as a fulfillment.
The psychology of the self is not philosophy but an empirical process which, being a natural process, could run its course smoothly if it did not take a tragic turn in man by colliding with his consciousness. --Carl Jung, Letters Vol. I, Page 529
Yahweh’s decision to become man is a symbol of the development that had to supervene when man becomes conscious of the sort of God-image he is confronted with. ~Carl Jung, CW 11, Para 740
Like plants, so men also grow, some in the light, others in the shadows. There are many who need the shadows and not the light. The image of God throws a shadow that is just as great as itself. ~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 230.
But the small, narrow, and banal is not nonsense, but one of both of the essences of the Godhead. ~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 230.
I resisted recognizing that the everyday belongs to the image of the Godhead. I fled this thought, I hid myself behind the highest and coldest stars. But the spirit of the depths caught up with me, and forced the bitter drink between my lips. ~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 230.
The way is within us, but not in Gods, nor in teachings, nor in laws. Within us is the way, the truth, and the life. ~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 231
"It is in fact true, as Jung has emphasized that the unconscious psyche pays very little attention to the abrupt end of bodily life and behaves as if the psychic life of the individual that is,the individuation process, will simply continue....The unconscious" believes" quite obviously in a life after death."
--Marie-Louise von Franz
OUR BONES GO LAST
Riddles of the Bones
There is no real life without archetypal experiences.
[Uniting symbols] arise from the collision between the conscious and the unconscious and from the confusion which this causes (known in alchemy as ‘chaos’ or ‘nigredo’). Empirically, this confusion takes the form of restlessness and disorientation. ~Carl Jung, Aion, CW 9 II, §304.
If we go further and consider the fact that man is also what neither he
himself nor other people know of him—an unknown something which can yet
be proved to exist —the problem of identity becomes more difficult still.
~Carl Jung, CW 11, Para 140
Events signify nothing, they signify only in us. We create the meaning of events.
The meaning is and always was artificial. We make it.
~Carl Jung, The Red Book, Page 239.
"So the mind must be completely still....not conditioned in any belief, in any image, in any experience. It is only when the mind is totally free,then there is the possibility of immense profound stillness and in that stillness that which is eternal comes into being. That is meditation" --J.Krishnamurti 1953
"Man is a gateway, through which you pass from the outer world of Gods, daimons, and souls into the inner world, out of the greater. into the smaller world. Small and inane is man, already he is behind you, and once again you find yourselves in endless space, in the smaller or inner infinity. ... Man here, God there. Weakness and nothingness here, eternally creative power there.
Here nothing but darkness and clammy cold there total sun."
~Carl Jung, Red Book, Page 354.
I was once spiritually ill – we all pass through that – but one day the intelligence in my soul cured me. ~Meister Eckhart, Selected Writings, P.116.
“The purpose of all true symbols is to direct the individual away from the superficial concerns of life towards the center of existence… the true symbol always points beyond the here and now for it is a signpost to another world… each fragment points to the whole and everything ephemeral is in an image of the eternal.” – Manfred Lurker, The Gods and Symbols of Ancient Egypt.
The boon of increased self-awareness is the sufficient answer even
to life's suffering, otherwise it would be meaningless and unendurable.
~Carl Jung, Letters Vol. II, Pages 310-311.
Individuation is not that you become an ego—you would then become an individualist. You know, an individualist is a man who did not succeed in individuating; he is a philosophically distilled egotist. ~Carl Jung, The Psychology of Kundalini Yoga, Pages 39-40.
But the way is my own self, my own life founded upon myself.
The God wants my life. He wants to go with me, sit at the table with me,
work with me. Above all he wants to be ever-present.
~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 292.
Dr. Jung advised me to spend most of my time alone, have a separate room in the house to be used for nothing but inner work, never to join any organization or collectivity. ~C. G. Jung, Emma Jung and Toni Wolff - A Collection of Remembrances; Pages 36-39.
I may define “self” as the totality of the conscious and unconscious psyche, but this totality transcends our vision; it is a veritable lapis invisibilitatis [stone of invisibility]. In so far as the unconscious exists it is not definable; its existence is a mere postulate and nothing whatever can be predicated as to its possible contents. ~Carl Jung, CW 12, Para 247.
For the layman in these matters, [and who isn't a layman?] the identity of a nontemporal, eternal event with a unique historical occurrence is something that is extremely difficult to conceive.
He must, however, accustom himself to the idea that ''time" is a relative concept and needs to be complemented by that of the "simultaneous" existence, in the Bardo or pleroma, of all historical processes.
What exists in the pleroma as an eternal process appears in time as an aperiodic sequence, that is to say, it is repeated many times in an irregular pattern. . . .
When these things occur as modern variants, therefore, they should not be regarded merely as personal episodes, moods, or chance idiosyncrasies in people, but as fragments of the pleromatic process itself, which, broken up into individual events occurring in time, is an essential component or aspect of the divine drama. ~Carl Jung, CW 11, Para 629
Riddles of the Bones
There is no real life without archetypal experiences.
[Uniting symbols] arise from the collision between the conscious and the unconscious and from the confusion which this causes (known in alchemy as ‘chaos’ or ‘nigredo’). Empirically, this confusion takes the form of restlessness and disorientation. ~Carl Jung, Aion, CW 9 II, §304.
If we go further and consider the fact that man is also what neither he
himself nor other people know of him—an unknown something which can yet
be proved to exist —the problem of identity becomes more difficult still.
~Carl Jung, CW 11, Para 140
Events signify nothing, they signify only in us. We create the meaning of events.
The meaning is and always was artificial. We make it.
~Carl Jung, The Red Book, Page 239.
"So the mind must be completely still....not conditioned in any belief, in any image, in any experience. It is only when the mind is totally free,then there is the possibility of immense profound stillness and in that stillness that which is eternal comes into being. That is meditation" --J.Krishnamurti 1953
"Man is a gateway, through which you pass from the outer world of Gods, daimons, and souls into the inner world, out of the greater. into the smaller world. Small and inane is man, already he is behind you, and once again you find yourselves in endless space, in the smaller or inner infinity. ... Man here, God there. Weakness and nothingness here, eternally creative power there.
Here nothing but darkness and clammy cold there total sun."
~Carl Jung, Red Book, Page 354.
I was once spiritually ill – we all pass through that – but one day the intelligence in my soul cured me. ~Meister Eckhart, Selected Writings, P.116.
“The purpose of all true symbols is to direct the individual away from the superficial concerns of life towards the center of existence… the true symbol always points beyond the here and now for it is a signpost to another world… each fragment points to the whole and everything ephemeral is in an image of the eternal.” – Manfred Lurker, The Gods and Symbols of Ancient Egypt.
The boon of increased self-awareness is the sufficient answer even
to life's suffering, otherwise it would be meaningless and unendurable.
~Carl Jung, Letters Vol. II, Pages 310-311.
Individuation is not that you become an ego—you would then become an individualist. You know, an individualist is a man who did not succeed in individuating; he is a philosophically distilled egotist. ~Carl Jung, The Psychology of Kundalini Yoga, Pages 39-40.
But the way is my own self, my own life founded upon myself.
The God wants my life. He wants to go with me, sit at the table with me,
work with me. Above all he wants to be ever-present.
~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 292.
Dr. Jung advised me to spend most of my time alone, have a separate room in the house to be used for nothing but inner work, never to join any organization or collectivity. ~C. G. Jung, Emma Jung and Toni Wolff - A Collection of Remembrances; Pages 36-39.
I may define “self” as the totality of the conscious and unconscious psyche, but this totality transcends our vision; it is a veritable lapis invisibilitatis [stone of invisibility]. In so far as the unconscious exists it is not definable; its existence is a mere postulate and nothing whatever can be predicated as to its possible contents. ~Carl Jung, CW 12, Para 247.
For the layman in these matters, [and who isn't a layman?] the identity of a nontemporal, eternal event with a unique historical occurrence is something that is extremely difficult to conceive.
He must, however, accustom himself to the idea that ''time" is a relative concept and needs to be complemented by that of the "simultaneous" existence, in the Bardo or pleroma, of all historical processes.
What exists in the pleroma as an eternal process appears in time as an aperiodic sequence, that is to say, it is repeated many times in an irregular pattern. . . .
When these things occur as modern variants, therefore, they should not be regarded merely as personal episodes, moods, or chance idiosyncrasies in people, but as fragments of the pleromatic process itself, which, broken up into individual events occurring in time, is an essential component or aspect of the divine drama. ~Carl Jung, CW 11, Para 629
FAMILY TREE IS THE UNCONSCIOUS DIAGRAM
OF A PSYCHIC EVENT
MAMA
"With words you pull up the underworld. Word, the paltriest and the mightiest. In words the emptiness and the fullness flow together. Hence the word is an image of God. The word is the greatest and the smallest that man created, just as what is created through man is the greatest and the smallest."
~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 299.
“Our dreams recover what the world forgets.”
―James Hillman, Animal Presences
"It's only in the stories, our stories that the gods will still show."
--James Hillman
It [myth] is something that happens to man, and men have mythical fates just as much as the Greek heroes do. ~Carl Jung, CW 11, Para 648.
Eros is born of chaos, implying that out of every chaotic moment ...creativity...can be born --Hillman 1978a, p. 98
Birth is difficult, but a thousand times more difficult is the hellish afterbirth. All the dragons and monstrous serpents of eternal emptiness follow behind the divine son. ~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 287.
" ...the psychological feeling requires courage. There is a civil courage, moral courage, physical and intellectual, and therefore also a courage of the soul to meet herself ." --James Hillman
...the real task of religion would be to cure psychic suffering.
--C.G. Jung ~Carl Jung, Letters Vol. 1, Page 133.
The disease which the experience of death cures is the rage to live.
--James Hillman, A Blue Fire
Death is an existential recognition of our finitude.
OF A PSYCHIC EVENT
MAMA
"With words you pull up the underworld. Word, the paltriest and the mightiest. In words the emptiness and the fullness flow together. Hence the word is an image of God. The word is the greatest and the smallest that man created, just as what is created through man is the greatest and the smallest."
~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 299.
“Our dreams recover what the world forgets.”
―James Hillman, Animal Presences
"It's only in the stories, our stories that the gods will still show."
--James Hillman
It [myth] is something that happens to man, and men have mythical fates just as much as the Greek heroes do. ~Carl Jung, CW 11, Para 648.
Eros is born of chaos, implying that out of every chaotic moment ...creativity...can be born --Hillman 1978a, p. 98
Birth is difficult, but a thousand times more difficult is the hellish afterbirth. All the dragons and monstrous serpents of eternal emptiness follow behind the divine son. ~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 287.
" ...the psychological feeling requires courage. There is a civil courage, moral courage, physical and intellectual, and therefore also a courage of the soul to meet herself ." --James Hillman
...the real task of religion would be to cure psychic suffering.
--C.G. Jung ~Carl Jung, Letters Vol. 1, Page 133.
The disease which the experience of death cures is the rage to live.
--James Hillman, A Blue Fire
Death is an existential recognition of our finitude.
Otto Geiss - The Alegory of Genesis, 1995
Pious Eros
The Numinous, Sensed Presence & Transcendent Function
Numinous perception carries a sense of the divine or ecstatic. This expansion of consciousness from contact with numinous archetypal energy is felt as an expansion of consciousness or awe, 'calling,' and a deepening of soul. But we tend to reify the limits of our knowledge and place our notions of God just beyond what we can conceptualize and understand, which is why physics has become so seemingly mystical recently. God = the Unknown or currently unknowable.
Phantoms In the Brain
With no other psychobiological explanation for sensed presence in his day, Jung took experiences of the Self, or archetypes, 'spirits,' or other positive and negative visitations and impressions phenomenologically. As epistemological metaphors, "how we know what we know", they cannot be ontological realities. Research shows "the person feels that the 'presence' is a being they know, like a deity they pray to, the spirit of a person they have known who has died, or a spiritual teacher." It is an excitation of the amygdala. (Murphy)
Jung believed the unconscious has "absolute knowledge." So Corbin, Jung and others mistook it for a psychospiritual perception ability attributed to the subtle organ of the heart or soul, rather than a psychobiological function [though the archetype is defined as psychophysical]. Common images, often seen in NDE's, include "angels, monks in hooded robes, knights on horseback in shining armor, spirit familiars, deities, aliens, and a variety of other images" (Murphy).
Sensed presence is more easily evoked in the suggestible. We now know that awareness of the divine is an altered state of consciousness with neurological roots involving the excitation and dampening of brain regions. Under certain kinds of electromagnetic effects or oxygen deprivation/CO2 buildup, Jung's 'transcendent function' appears as active unconscious systems, urges, and percepts.
Sensed presence appears as the Self, archetypes, divinities, personifications, projections, ancestors, ghosts, or a 'visitation'. Some sense a presence; others hear a voice; others see a vision, or combination of percepts. Sensed presence can be a coping resource. When the personal level collapses into the archetypal core, we have a unitive experience.
There is a contrast between conscious and unconscious processes that are refreshed in a conscious/unconscious cycle. Thus, complex ideas can enter consciousness automatically. Unintentional, high-level symbol manipulation is generated involuntarily. Consciousness is an interpreter in the passive frame theory -- more of a conduit for information in the brain and nervous system rather than an active creator of information.
Morsella's “Passive Frame Theory,” claims: nearly all of your brain’s work is conducted in different lobes and regions at the unconscious level, completely without your knowledge. “The information we perceive in our consciousness is not created by conscious thought,” Morsella claims. “Nor is it reacted to by conscious processes. Consciousness is the middle-man and it doesn’t do as much work as you think.”
Such epiphanies, and pleasant or unpleasant perceptions include gut feelings, visions, tastes, smells, vibrations, buzzing, tingles, sensations of falling or rising, etc. The emotional component comes from the right temporal region, while the explanatory narrative arises in the left hemisphere. The left brain 'knows' that it can't have two selves, it experiences the intruder as an external 'presence'. (Persinger, Murphy)
https://www.god-helmet.com/sp.htm
https://www.god-helmet.com/neuromed.htm
This neurological frame illuminates Jung's commentary as well as other deeply engrained spiritual and religious belief systems [interpretations] surrounding such phenomena:
Holiness is also revelatory: it is the illuminative power emanating from an archetypal figure. ~Carl Jung, CW 11, Para 225.
The numinosum is either a quality belonging to a visible object or the influence of an invisible presence that causes a peculiar alteration of consciousness.
~Carl Jung, CW 11, Para 6
But the fact is that the approach to the numinous is the real therapy and in as much as you attain to the numinous experiences you are released from the curse of pathology. ~Carl Jung, Letters Vol. I, Page 377
There is religious sentimentality instead of the numinosum of divine experience.
This is the well-known characteristic of a religion that has lost its living mystery. ~Carl Jung, CW 11, Para 52
We cannot tell whether God and the unconscious are two different entities. Both are border-line concepts for transcendental contents. ~Carl Jung, CW 11, Para 757
We are all inventors, each sailing out on a voyage of discovery, guided each by a private chart, of which there is no duplicate. The world is all gates, all opportunities. --Ralph Waldo Emerson
The Great Unknown
Imagine one of our ancient ancestors, suddenly stricken by illness or a near-fatal accident. Hovering near the brink of death, an ordinary person suddenly finds him or herself locked in an immersive visionary experience of shadowy figures, muted voices and blinding luminescence.
The cosmos opens its enfolding arms and infinity spreads out in a timeless panoply that dissolves all fear, all separation from the Divine. Fear of death vanishes in a comforting flood of bliss, peace and dazzling light, the ultimate ‘holy’ connection. Overwhelming conviction arises that this is the more fundamental Reality. The welcoming gates of a personal heaven open.
Suddenly back in the body, returned to ordinary reality, one is left to interpret that transcendent experience to oneself and others. This near-death experience may not have resulted in physical demise, but it has led to the death of the old self, the personal self -- and the rebirth, rapture, or resurrection of the soul or spirit. It brings a surge of emotions, conviction and even transformation in its wake. The soul has taken a journey from which one cannot return the same.
A descent into psychobiological hell can lead to a transcendent journey toward Heaven or perhaps the yawning abyss of the Void. Shamans, priests, prophets, mystics, and gurus arose to show the Way of navigating these nether regions, of finding healing, the eternal moment, a peaceful heart, and unity.
Our human progenitors had to directly confront existential issues of survival, adaptation, stress, mating, birth, loss, and death. They gradually developed stories about the basics of life, social, physical, emotional, mental, and spiritual existence. They created myths, beliefs about creation and our creation to give meaning to life. They developed rituals, ceremonies, and practices to heal body and mind, mark life passages, and placate forces beyond their control. These accounted for their origins as well as voices, visions and experiences that seemed to come from the great Beyond.
The brain is hard-wired for mystical experiences to modify the threat of our hostile existential reality (Alper). Metaphysical explanations developed for the essentially unknowable, for sudden and irresistible seizures of ecstasy. Some of these accounts were more sophisticated than others depending on their cultural background, but all shared a common core by defining the mystery of the relationship between mankind and the Unknown. It might be called a peak experience, spirit possession, epiphany, religious rapture, nirvana, satori, shaktiput, clear light, or illumination. The difference is only one of degrees of absorption, of fulfillment.
The god-experience is a process, a subjective perception, rather than an objectively provable reality. Distractions cease, replaced by the direct impact of oceanic expansion, sudden insight, childlike wonder, ecstatic exaltation above bodily and personal existence, dissolution in a timeless moment, fusion, gnosis.
It is direct perception coupled with high emotion and deep realization of what appears to be ultimate truth. It rips away the veil of illusion, revealing the pure ground state of our existence without any emotional, mental, or belief filters. Left with only pure awareness, the natural mind is finally free of earthly trappings. Bathed in emotions of joy, assurance and salvation, Cosmos becomes a living presence. Immortality is sensed, so fear of death vanishes.
Many called that numinous mystery God. In some sense, religion is a reaction to what actually is. But to many, when it comes to their religion, those are fighting words, for theirs is the true way, the only way. Heaven on Earth cannot be achieved so long as those two realms are separated. God comes down to earth in our own psychophysiology, dwelling within us.
The Numinous, Sensed Presence & Transcendent Function
Numinous perception carries a sense of the divine or ecstatic. This expansion of consciousness from contact with numinous archetypal energy is felt as an expansion of consciousness or awe, 'calling,' and a deepening of soul. But we tend to reify the limits of our knowledge and place our notions of God just beyond what we can conceptualize and understand, which is why physics has become so seemingly mystical recently. God = the Unknown or currently unknowable.
Phantoms In the Brain
With no other psychobiological explanation for sensed presence in his day, Jung took experiences of the Self, or archetypes, 'spirits,' or other positive and negative visitations and impressions phenomenologically. As epistemological metaphors, "how we know what we know", they cannot be ontological realities. Research shows "the person feels that the 'presence' is a being they know, like a deity they pray to, the spirit of a person they have known who has died, or a spiritual teacher." It is an excitation of the amygdala. (Murphy)
Jung believed the unconscious has "absolute knowledge." So Corbin, Jung and others mistook it for a psychospiritual perception ability attributed to the subtle organ of the heart or soul, rather than a psychobiological function [though the archetype is defined as psychophysical]. Common images, often seen in NDE's, include "angels, monks in hooded robes, knights on horseback in shining armor, spirit familiars, deities, aliens, and a variety of other images" (Murphy).
Sensed presence is more easily evoked in the suggestible. We now know that awareness of the divine is an altered state of consciousness with neurological roots involving the excitation and dampening of brain regions. Under certain kinds of electromagnetic effects or oxygen deprivation/CO2 buildup, Jung's 'transcendent function' appears as active unconscious systems, urges, and percepts.
Sensed presence appears as the Self, archetypes, divinities, personifications, projections, ancestors, ghosts, or a 'visitation'. Some sense a presence; others hear a voice; others see a vision, or combination of percepts. Sensed presence can be a coping resource. When the personal level collapses into the archetypal core, we have a unitive experience.
There is a contrast between conscious and unconscious processes that are refreshed in a conscious/unconscious cycle. Thus, complex ideas can enter consciousness automatically. Unintentional, high-level symbol manipulation is generated involuntarily. Consciousness is an interpreter in the passive frame theory -- more of a conduit for information in the brain and nervous system rather than an active creator of information.
Morsella's “Passive Frame Theory,” claims: nearly all of your brain’s work is conducted in different lobes and regions at the unconscious level, completely without your knowledge. “The information we perceive in our consciousness is not created by conscious thought,” Morsella claims. “Nor is it reacted to by conscious processes. Consciousness is the middle-man and it doesn’t do as much work as you think.”
Such epiphanies, and pleasant or unpleasant perceptions include gut feelings, visions, tastes, smells, vibrations, buzzing, tingles, sensations of falling or rising, etc. The emotional component comes from the right temporal region, while the explanatory narrative arises in the left hemisphere. The left brain 'knows' that it can't have two selves, it experiences the intruder as an external 'presence'. (Persinger, Murphy)
https://www.god-helmet.com/sp.htm
https://www.god-helmet.com/neuromed.htm
This neurological frame illuminates Jung's commentary as well as other deeply engrained spiritual and religious belief systems [interpretations] surrounding such phenomena:
Holiness is also revelatory: it is the illuminative power emanating from an archetypal figure. ~Carl Jung, CW 11, Para 225.
The numinosum is either a quality belonging to a visible object or the influence of an invisible presence that causes a peculiar alteration of consciousness.
~Carl Jung, CW 11, Para 6
But the fact is that the approach to the numinous is the real therapy and in as much as you attain to the numinous experiences you are released from the curse of pathology. ~Carl Jung, Letters Vol. I, Page 377
There is religious sentimentality instead of the numinosum of divine experience.
This is the well-known characteristic of a religion that has lost its living mystery. ~Carl Jung, CW 11, Para 52
We cannot tell whether God and the unconscious are two different entities. Both are border-line concepts for transcendental contents. ~Carl Jung, CW 11, Para 757
We are all inventors, each sailing out on a voyage of discovery, guided each by a private chart, of which there is no duplicate. The world is all gates, all opportunities. --Ralph Waldo Emerson
The Great Unknown
Imagine one of our ancient ancestors, suddenly stricken by illness or a near-fatal accident. Hovering near the brink of death, an ordinary person suddenly finds him or herself locked in an immersive visionary experience of shadowy figures, muted voices and blinding luminescence.
The cosmos opens its enfolding arms and infinity spreads out in a timeless panoply that dissolves all fear, all separation from the Divine. Fear of death vanishes in a comforting flood of bliss, peace and dazzling light, the ultimate ‘holy’ connection. Overwhelming conviction arises that this is the more fundamental Reality. The welcoming gates of a personal heaven open.
Suddenly back in the body, returned to ordinary reality, one is left to interpret that transcendent experience to oneself and others. This near-death experience may not have resulted in physical demise, but it has led to the death of the old self, the personal self -- and the rebirth, rapture, or resurrection of the soul or spirit. It brings a surge of emotions, conviction and even transformation in its wake. The soul has taken a journey from which one cannot return the same.
A descent into psychobiological hell can lead to a transcendent journey toward Heaven or perhaps the yawning abyss of the Void. Shamans, priests, prophets, mystics, and gurus arose to show the Way of navigating these nether regions, of finding healing, the eternal moment, a peaceful heart, and unity.
Our human progenitors had to directly confront existential issues of survival, adaptation, stress, mating, birth, loss, and death. They gradually developed stories about the basics of life, social, physical, emotional, mental, and spiritual existence. They created myths, beliefs about creation and our creation to give meaning to life. They developed rituals, ceremonies, and practices to heal body and mind, mark life passages, and placate forces beyond their control. These accounted for their origins as well as voices, visions and experiences that seemed to come from the great Beyond.
The brain is hard-wired for mystical experiences to modify the threat of our hostile existential reality (Alper). Metaphysical explanations developed for the essentially unknowable, for sudden and irresistible seizures of ecstasy. Some of these accounts were more sophisticated than others depending on their cultural background, but all shared a common core by defining the mystery of the relationship between mankind and the Unknown. It might be called a peak experience, spirit possession, epiphany, religious rapture, nirvana, satori, shaktiput, clear light, or illumination. The difference is only one of degrees of absorption, of fulfillment.
The god-experience is a process, a subjective perception, rather than an objectively provable reality. Distractions cease, replaced by the direct impact of oceanic expansion, sudden insight, childlike wonder, ecstatic exaltation above bodily and personal existence, dissolution in a timeless moment, fusion, gnosis.
It is direct perception coupled with high emotion and deep realization of what appears to be ultimate truth. It rips away the veil of illusion, revealing the pure ground state of our existence without any emotional, mental, or belief filters. Left with only pure awareness, the natural mind is finally free of earthly trappings. Bathed in emotions of joy, assurance and salvation, Cosmos becomes a living presence. Immortality is sensed, so fear of death vanishes.
Many called that numinous mystery God. In some sense, religion is a reaction to what actually is. But to many, when it comes to their religion, those are fighting words, for theirs is the true way, the only way. Heaven on Earth cannot be achieved so long as those two realms are separated. God comes down to earth in our own psychophysiology, dwelling within us.
From Eternity to Eternity
Consciousness is Primary
Awareness of Soul; The Gnoosies
The well-known idea of the "behaviour pattern" in biology is synonymous with that of the archetype in psychology.
As the term "archetypus" clearly shows, the idea is not even original; this notion is found with the same significance as early as in Philo Judaeus, in the Corpus Hermeticum, and in Dionysius the Areopagite.
My inventiveness consists in nothing but the fact that I believe I have proved that archetypes do not appear only in the "migration of symbols" but in the individual unconscious fantasies of everyone without exception.
--C.G. Jung ~Carl Jung, Letters Vol. 1, Pages 524-527
Primordial Human Consciousness
"The first Adam/Eve is called by Kabbalists Adam Ha-Rishon (primeval human consciousness). This in no way resembled the human form as we know it. The Jewish sages speak of it in hyperbole. It had stupendous proportions, reaching from earth to heaven; it stood astride earth from one end to the other. It could see to the far reaches of the universe, for the light at that time was called Ohr Ein Sof, the limitless light, a metaphor for pure awareness.
Adam Ha-Rishon did not see with eyes, it saw with an immeasurable "knowing." This teaches that as each and every mortal being is a spark from the original Adam Ha-Rishon, we all have the potential to perceive everything knowable in this universe.
Adam and Eve were born simultaneously side-by-side, or back-to-back, attached like Siamese twins. As it says twice in Genesis, "male and female It created them." To separate them, in biblical language it says that God took one of Adam's "sides;" in zoharic language, it says, "God sawed Eve off from him." (For those who say Adam and Eve were attached back-to-back, this sawing is viewed as the cause of the bumps all humans have along the back of the spine.)
Non-Differentiated Knowingness
The Midrash Rabbah says, "When the Holy One created Adam [Ha-Rishon], it was androgynous. God created Adam Ha-Rishon double faced, and split him/her so there were two backs, one on this side and one on the other." The idea that Adam and Eve were co-equal at birth is not a kabbalistic secret; it was openly discussed in ancient midrashic literature.
Moreover, it was known two thousand years ago that the idea that Eve came from Adam's rib was a common misunderstanding. The Torah is unambiguous on this point. It repeats a second time, "Male and female It created them," and goes on to say, "and blessed them, and called their name Adam on the day they were created." Whenever the Torah repeats something, the emphasis always suggests deeper implications. Here, it is impossible to ignore that the creation of male and female was simultaneous.
It was only after the "sin" that Adam Ha-Rishon was diminished in size. This means that Eve and Adam became separate entities while both were still of gigantic proportions, that is, when both could see to the ends of the universe. The Garden of Eden, of course, was also viewed as enormous. The Tree of Life, at the center of the garden, was over twelve thousand miles high and approximately fifty thousand miles in diameter. Some midrashic sources suggest that it would take a person five hundred years to walk its diameter; this would make it millions of miles across.
This enormous size is described to suggest that the Tree of Life is all inclusive; it shelters under its branches every living thing, plant or animal. Even though today we know that the universe is significantly larger than a few million miles, ancient astronomers may have assumed that the entire universe could be enclosed in a space of such magnitude.Exaggeration in size and numbers is used purposefully in wisdom teachings to shatter the boundaries of our minds.
http://www.rabbidavidcooper.com/newsletters/2010/10/4/primordial-human-consciousness-n.html
Thoughts are real, they are the consciousness. ~Carl Jung, J.E.T., Pages 90-95
Consciousness is a precondition of being. ~Carl Jung, CW 10, Para 528
"The conscious mind allows itself to be trained like a parrot, but the unconscious does not..." —Jung, Psychology and Alchemy, 1953
"The dream is the small hidden door in the deepest and most intimate sanctum of the soul, which opens into that primeval cosmic night that was soul long before there was a conscious ego and will be soul far beyond what a conscious ego could ever reach." —Jung, The Meaning of Psychology for Modern Man, 1934
Just as there is a relationship of mind to body, so there is a relationship
of body to earth. ~Carl Jung, CW 10, Para 19
“Until you make the unconscious conscious, it will direct your life
and you will call it fate.” ―C.G. Jung
It is not I who create myself, rather I happen to myself.
~Carl Jung, CW11, Para 391
You have the one God, and you become your one God in the innumerable number of Gods. ~Carl Jung’s Soul, The Red Book, Page 371.
The word religio comes from religere, according to the ancient view, and not from the patristic religare. The former means “to consider or observe carefully.” ~Carl Jung, Letters; Vol. II, Page 517
When, towards middle life, the last gleam of childhood illusion fades—this it must be owned is true only of an almost ideal life, for many go as children to their graves—then the archetype of the mature man or woman emerges from the
parental imago: an image of man as woman has known him from the beginning of time, and an image of woman that man carries within him eternally.
~Carl Jung, CW 10, Para 74
My own understanding is the sole treasure I possess, and the greatest.
Though infinitely small and fragile in comparison with the powers of darkness, it is still a light, my only light. --Carl Jung, MDR, Page 88.
It [Eros] is not form-giving but form-fulfilling; it is the wine that will be poured into the vessel; it is not the bed and direction of the stream but the impetuous water flowing in it. ~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 365.
God needs man in order to become conscious, just as he needs limitation in time and space. Let us therefore be for him limitation in time and space an earthly tabernacle. ~Carl Jung, Letters, Volume 1, Page 65.
"Myths are clues to the spiritual potentialities of the human life."
--Joseph Campbell
It is the privilege and the task of maturer people, who have passed the meridian of life, to create culture. ~Carl Jung, CW 10, Para 272
Life is a battleground. It always has been, and always will be; and if it were not so, existence would come to an end. ~Carl Jung; Man and His Symbols; Page 75
The feeling of immortality, it seems to me, has its origin in a peculiar feeling of extension in space and time, and I am inclined to regard the deification rites
in the mysteries as a projection of this same psychic phenomenon.
~Carl Jung, CW 9i, Para 248-249
In the unconscious it is not so terribly important whether a man is alive or dead, that seems to make very little impression upon the unconscious. (Pg 903)
But your attitude to it matters, how you will take it, whether you believe in immortality or not, how you react to such and such an event, that matters to the unconscious. (Pg 903) No matter what your conscious attitude may be, the unconscious has an absolutely free hand and can do what it pleases. (Pg 27)
The unconscious on one side is nothing but nature, and on the other hand it is the overcoming of nature; it is yea and nay in itself, two things in one. So we shall never understand what the unconscious is, as we shall never understand what the world is,because it is and it is not. (Page 89)
~Carl Jung, Visions Seminar
The evolution of consciousness is, as the philosopher of language Owen Barfield remarked, “the concept of man’s self-consciousness as a process in time.” That is to say, our present consciousness is not consciousness per se, but has been arrived at over time. This suggests that there have been other forms of consciousness before it. As Barfield and others have suggested, earlier peoples not only had different ideas about the world than we have, they also saw a different world than we do. Their consciousness differed from ours, which suggests that the consciousness of people of a future time may also differ from ours. Gnosis I see as the cognitive character of mystical consciousness, the ‘knowledge content’ provided by its immediate, direct, non-discursive perception of reality. --Gary Lachman, Mystical Experience & the Evolution of Consciousness: A 21st Century Gnosis
“When we speak… about consciousness, about the point at which consciousness arose and so forth, we are speaking not merely about human nature, as we call it, but also about nature itself. When we study consciousness historically, contrasting perhaps what men perceive and think now with what they perceived and thought at the same period in the past, when we study long-term changes in consciousness, we are studying changes in the world itself, and not simply changes in the human brain. We are not studying some so-called “inner” world, divided off, by a skin or a skull, from a so-called “outer” world; we are trying to study the world itself from its inner aspect.” --Barfield, (History, Guilt, and Habit 11)
The assumption “that, because consciousness is contingent on a physical organism, it must be the product of such an organism” (Rediscovery of Meaning 31), though currently common sense, must be incorrect, for “[Consciousness] resembles a spark located within the brain much less than it resembles a diffused light focused into the whole body from without” (Language, Evolution of Consciousness, and the Recovery of Human Meaning).
The question of consciousness is much more than an abstruse epistemological dilemma, for “If civilization is to be saved, people must come more and more to realize that our consciousness is not something spatially enclosed in the skin or in the skull or in the brain; that it is not only our inside, but the inside of the world as a whole. That people should not merely be able to propound as a theory . . . but that it should become more and more their actual experience. . . . That, and also the overcoming of the total obsession there is today, with the Darwinian view of evolution—of consciousness or mind having emerged from a material, but entirely unconscious universe. Putting it very shortly, to realize, not simply as a theory but as a conviction of common sense, that in the history of the world, matter has emerged from mind and not mind from matter.” --Barfield, Towards Interview
Archetypes Are Means of Volition
The archetype—let us never forget this—is a psychic organ present in all of us. ~Carl Jung, CW 9i, Para 271
I am of the opinion that the psyche is the most tremendous fact of human life. Indeed, it is the mother of all human facts; of civilization and of its destroyer, war. ~Carl Jung, CW 9i, Para 206.
The psyche is part of the inmost mystery of life, and it has its own peculiar structure and form like every other organism. ~Carl Jung, CW 9i, Para 187.
Therefore a wise man does not want to be a charioteer, for he knows that will and intention certainly attain goals but disturb the becoming of the future.
~Carl Jung to his Ego, Liber Novus, Page 311.
I know people who feel that the strange power in their own psyche is something divine, for the very simple reason that it has given them an understanding of what is meant by religious experience. ~Carl Jung, CW 10, Para 312.
They [Religions] express the whole range of the psychic problem in mighty images; they are the avowal and recognition of the soul, and at the same time the revelation of the soul’s nature. ~Carl Jung, CW 10, Para 367
The symbol of the mandala has exactly this meaning of a holy place, a temenos, to protect the centre. And it is a symbol which is one of the most important motifs in the objectivation of unconscious images. It is a means of protecting the centre of the personality from being drawn out and from being influenced from outside. --Jung, “The Tavistock Lectures,” --CW 18, par. 410
But if the depths have conceived, then the symbol grows out of itself and is born from the mind, as befits a God. ~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 311.
The souls or spirits of the dead are identical with the psychic activity of the living; they merely continue it. ~Carl Jung, CW 9i, Para 38
Great is the need of the dead.
But the God needs no sacrificial prayer.
He has neither goodwill nor ill will.
He is kind and fearful, though not actually so, but only seems to you thus.
But the dead hear your prayers since they are still of human nature and not free of goodwill and ill will. ~Unknown woman to Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 339.
Dr.Jung: Yes, personified autonomous contents.
For instance, a person might have a spirit of pride or of hostility, and the content would be essentially that emotion, or it might be personified as the spirit of an old aunt, or the grandfather, or anybody else.
But it can be proved that it is a memory image still alive, contents of the unconscious that act as if they were persons. . . .
All the products of the collective unconscious, if too hard pressed, evaporate into nothingness; the moment you get at them with your personal problems and desires, with your human soul, you destroy them. They are exactly like exceedingly delicate flowers which only blossom for one night and then wither.
You must take them as they are, the truth of a moment; if you treat them as flesh and blood you make the mistake of your life. ~Jung, Visions Seminar, Page 944
Consciousness is Primary
Awareness of Soul; The Gnoosies
The well-known idea of the "behaviour pattern" in biology is synonymous with that of the archetype in psychology.
As the term "archetypus" clearly shows, the idea is not even original; this notion is found with the same significance as early as in Philo Judaeus, in the Corpus Hermeticum, and in Dionysius the Areopagite.
My inventiveness consists in nothing but the fact that I believe I have proved that archetypes do not appear only in the "migration of symbols" but in the individual unconscious fantasies of everyone without exception.
--C.G. Jung ~Carl Jung, Letters Vol. 1, Pages 524-527
Primordial Human Consciousness
"The first Adam/Eve is called by Kabbalists Adam Ha-Rishon (primeval human consciousness). This in no way resembled the human form as we know it. The Jewish sages speak of it in hyperbole. It had stupendous proportions, reaching from earth to heaven; it stood astride earth from one end to the other. It could see to the far reaches of the universe, for the light at that time was called Ohr Ein Sof, the limitless light, a metaphor for pure awareness.
Adam Ha-Rishon did not see with eyes, it saw with an immeasurable "knowing." This teaches that as each and every mortal being is a spark from the original Adam Ha-Rishon, we all have the potential to perceive everything knowable in this universe.
Adam and Eve were born simultaneously side-by-side, or back-to-back, attached like Siamese twins. As it says twice in Genesis, "male and female It created them." To separate them, in biblical language it says that God took one of Adam's "sides;" in zoharic language, it says, "God sawed Eve off from him." (For those who say Adam and Eve were attached back-to-back, this sawing is viewed as the cause of the bumps all humans have along the back of the spine.)
Non-Differentiated Knowingness
The Midrash Rabbah says, "When the Holy One created Adam [Ha-Rishon], it was androgynous. God created Adam Ha-Rishon double faced, and split him/her so there were two backs, one on this side and one on the other." The idea that Adam and Eve were co-equal at birth is not a kabbalistic secret; it was openly discussed in ancient midrashic literature.
Moreover, it was known two thousand years ago that the idea that Eve came from Adam's rib was a common misunderstanding. The Torah is unambiguous on this point. It repeats a second time, "Male and female It created them," and goes on to say, "and blessed them, and called their name Adam on the day they were created." Whenever the Torah repeats something, the emphasis always suggests deeper implications. Here, it is impossible to ignore that the creation of male and female was simultaneous.
It was only after the "sin" that Adam Ha-Rishon was diminished in size. This means that Eve and Adam became separate entities while both were still of gigantic proportions, that is, when both could see to the ends of the universe. The Garden of Eden, of course, was also viewed as enormous. The Tree of Life, at the center of the garden, was over twelve thousand miles high and approximately fifty thousand miles in diameter. Some midrashic sources suggest that it would take a person five hundred years to walk its diameter; this would make it millions of miles across.
This enormous size is described to suggest that the Tree of Life is all inclusive; it shelters under its branches every living thing, plant or animal. Even though today we know that the universe is significantly larger than a few million miles, ancient astronomers may have assumed that the entire universe could be enclosed in a space of such magnitude.Exaggeration in size and numbers is used purposefully in wisdom teachings to shatter the boundaries of our minds.
http://www.rabbidavidcooper.com/newsletters/2010/10/4/primordial-human-consciousness-n.html
Thoughts are real, they are the consciousness. ~Carl Jung, J.E.T., Pages 90-95
Consciousness is a precondition of being. ~Carl Jung, CW 10, Para 528
"The conscious mind allows itself to be trained like a parrot, but the unconscious does not..." —Jung, Psychology and Alchemy, 1953
"The dream is the small hidden door in the deepest and most intimate sanctum of the soul, which opens into that primeval cosmic night that was soul long before there was a conscious ego and will be soul far beyond what a conscious ego could ever reach." —Jung, The Meaning of Psychology for Modern Man, 1934
Just as there is a relationship of mind to body, so there is a relationship
of body to earth. ~Carl Jung, CW 10, Para 19
“Until you make the unconscious conscious, it will direct your life
and you will call it fate.” ―C.G. Jung
It is not I who create myself, rather I happen to myself.
~Carl Jung, CW11, Para 391
You have the one God, and you become your one God in the innumerable number of Gods. ~Carl Jung’s Soul, The Red Book, Page 371.
The word religio comes from religere, according to the ancient view, and not from the patristic religare. The former means “to consider or observe carefully.” ~Carl Jung, Letters; Vol. II, Page 517
When, towards middle life, the last gleam of childhood illusion fades—this it must be owned is true only of an almost ideal life, for many go as children to their graves—then the archetype of the mature man or woman emerges from the
parental imago: an image of man as woman has known him from the beginning of time, and an image of woman that man carries within him eternally.
~Carl Jung, CW 10, Para 74
My own understanding is the sole treasure I possess, and the greatest.
Though infinitely small and fragile in comparison with the powers of darkness, it is still a light, my only light. --Carl Jung, MDR, Page 88.
It [Eros] is not form-giving but form-fulfilling; it is the wine that will be poured into the vessel; it is not the bed and direction of the stream but the impetuous water flowing in it. ~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 365.
God needs man in order to become conscious, just as he needs limitation in time and space. Let us therefore be for him limitation in time and space an earthly tabernacle. ~Carl Jung, Letters, Volume 1, Page 65.
"Myths are clues to the spiritual potentialities of the human life."
--Joseph Campbell
It is the privilege and the task of maturer people, who have passed the meridian of life, to create culture. ~Carl Jung, CW 10, Para 272
Life is a battleground. It always has been, and always will be; and if it were not so, existence would come to an end. ~Carl Jung; Man and His Symbols; Page 75
The feeling of immortality, it seems to me, has its origin in a peculiar feeling of extension in space and time, and I am inclined to regard the deification rites
in the mysteries as a projection of this same psychic phenomenon.
~Carl Jung, CW 9i, Para 248-249
In the unconscious it is not so terribly important whether a man is alive or dead, that seems to make very little impression upon the unconscious. (Pg 903)
But your attitude to it matters, how you will take it, whether you believe in immortality or not, how you react to such and such an event, that matters to the unconscious. (Pg 903) No matter what your conscious attitude may be, the unconscious has an absolutely free hand and can do what it pleases. (Pg 27)
The unconscious on one side is nothing but nature, and on the other hand it is the overcoming of nature; it is yea and nay in itself, two things in one. So we shall never understand what the unconscious is, as we shall never understand what the world is,because it is and it is not. (Page 89)
~Carl Jung, Visions Seminar
The evolution of consciousness is, as the philosopher of language Owen Barfield remarked, “the concept of man’s self-consciousness as a process in time.” That is to say, our present consciousness is not consciousness per se, but has been arrived at over time. This suggests that there have been other forms of consciousness before it. As Barfield and others have suggested, earlier peoples not only had different ideas about the world than we have, they also saw a different world than we do. Their consciousness differed from ours, which suggests that the consciousness of people of a future time may also differ from ours. Gnosis I see as the cognitive character of mystical consciousness, the ‘knowledge content’ provided by its immediate, direct, non-discursive perception of reality. --Gary Lachman, Mystical Experience & the Evolution of Consciousness: A 21st Century Gnosis
“When we speak… about consciousness, about the point at which consciousness arose and so forth, we are speaking not merely about human nature, as we call it, but also about nature itself. When we study consciousness historically, contrasting perhaps what men perceive and think now with what they perceived and thought at the same period in the past, when we study long-term changes in consciousness, we are studying changes in the world itself, and not simply changes in the human brain. We are not studying some so-called “inner” world, divided off, by a skin or a skull, from a so-called “outer” world; we are trying to study the world itself from its inner aspect.” --Barfield, (History, Guilt, and Habit 11)
The assumption “that, because consciousness is contingent on a physical organism, it must be the product of such an organism” (Rediscovery of Meaning 31), though currently common sense, must be incorrect, for “[Consciousness] resembles a spark located within the brain much less than it resembles a diffused light focused into the whole body from without” (Language, Evolution of Consciousness, and the Recovery of Human Meaning).
The question of consciousness is much more than an abstruse epistemological dilemma, for “If civilization is to be saved, people must come more and more to realize that our consciousness is not something spatially enclosed in the skin or in the skull or in the brain; that it is not only our inside, but the inside of the world as a whole. That people should not merely be able to propound as a theory . . . but that it should become more and more their actual experience. . . . That, and also the overcoming of the total obsession there is today, with the Darwinian view of evolution—of consciousness or mind having emerged from a material, but entirely unconscious universe. Putting it very shortly, to realize, not simply as a theory but as a conviction of common sense, that in the history of the world, matter has emerged from mind and not mind from matter.” --Barfield, Towards Interview
Archetypes Are Means of Volition
The archetype—let us never forget this—is a psychic organ present in all of us. ~Carl Jung, CW 9i, Para 271
I am of the opinion that the psyche is the most tremendous fact of human life. Indeed, it is the mother of all human facts; of civilization and of its destroyer, war. ~Carl Jung, CW 9i, Para 206.
The psyche is part of the inmost mystery of life, and it has its own peculiar structure and form like every other organism. ~Carl Jung, CW 9i, Para 187.
Therefore a wise man does not want to be a charioteer, for he knows that will and intention certainly attain goals but disturb the becoming of the future.
~Carl Jung to his Ego, Liber Novus, Page 311.
I know people who feel that the strange power in their own psyche is something divine, for the very simple reason that it has given them an understanding of what is meant by religious experience. ~Carl Jung, CW 10, Para 312.
They [Religions] express the whole range of the psychic problem in mighty images; they are the avowal and recognition of the soul, and at the same time the revelation of the soul’s nature. ~Carl Jung, CW 10, Para 367
The symbol of the mandala has exactly this meaning of a holy place, a temenos, to protect the centre. And it is a symbol which is one of the most important motifs in the objectivation of unconscious images. It is a means of protecting the centre of the personality from being drawn out and from being influenced from outside. --Jung, “The Tavistock Lectures,” --CW 18, par. 410
But if the depths have conceived, then the symbol grows out of itself and is born from the mind, as befits a God. ~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 311.
The souls or spirits of the dead are identical with the psychic activity of the living; they merely continue it. ~Carl Jung, CW 9i, Para 38
Great is the need of the dead.
But the God needs no sacrificial prayer.
He has neither goodwill nor ill will.
He is kind and fearful, though not actually so, but only seems to you thus.
But the dead hear your prayers since they are still of human nature and not free of goodwill and ill will. ~Unknown woman to Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 339.
Dr.Jung: Yes, personified autonomous contents.
For instance, a person might have a spirit of pride or of hostility, and the content would be essentially that emotion, or it might be personified as the spirit of an old aunt, or the grandfather, or anybody else.
But it can be proved that it is a memory image still alive, contents of the unconscious that act as if they were persons. . . .
All the products of the collective unconscious, if too hard pressed, evaporate into nothingness; the moment you get at them with your personal problems and desires, with your human soul, you destroy them. They are exactly like exceedingly delicate flowers which only blossom for one night and then wither.
You must take them as they are, the truth of a moment; if you treat them as flesh and blood you make the mistake of your life. ~Jung, Visions Seminar, Page 944
INFINITY KNOT
There are a number of variations that are considered to be a “Celtic Eternity Knot” or a Celtic Infinity knot. They are all some kind of variation of the infinity symbol. The Celtic eternity knot looks like a sideways figure 8. Nariations of this symbol are often used on wedding bands or engagement rings to represent the eternal bond of marriage. The Mobius strip is another concept from math that is very similar to the infinity knot symbol. Another one is the ouroboros. This a symbol or drawing of a snake eating its own tail. Sometimes the snake is shown in a figure 8 pattern in these pictures. These are both closely related to the eternity knot symbol.
Celtic knots are like circles that have no beginning or end. The circle is another symbol of eternity or infinity. It is believed that knots represents the Celts’ beliefs in eternal life and in humans’ complex relationship with the natural and and spiritual worlds.
There are a number of variations that are considered to be a “Celtic Eternity Knot” or a Celtic Infinity knot. They are all some kind of variation of the infinity symbol. The Celtic eternity knot looks like a sideways figure 8. Nariations of this symbol are often used on wedding bands or engagement rings to represent the eternal bond of marriage. The Mobius strip is another concept from math that is very similar to the infinity knot symbol. Another one is the ouroboros. This a symbol or drawing of a snake eating its own tail. Sometimes the snake is shown in a figure 8 pattern in these pictures. These are both closely related to the eternity knot symbol.
Celtic knots are like circles that have no beginning or end. The circle is another symbol of eternity or infinity. It is believed that knots represents the Celts’ beliefs in eternal life and in humans’ complex relationship with the natural and and spiritual worlds.
THE COLOR OF POMEGRANATES
“Your shoots are an orchard of pomegranates with pleasant fruits, henna
and nard.” --Song of Songs, The Bible
"The pomegranate is the mystic fruit of the Eleusinian rites; by eating it, Prosperine bound herself to the realms of Pluto. The fruit here signifies the sensuous life which, once tasted, temporarily deprives man of immortality."
--Manly Palmer Hall, Secret Teachings of All Ages
Womb of Mother Earth
We travel backwards to the Garden of Pomegranates in the Garden of the Well of Living Waters. Many believe it was the true forbidden fruit in the garden of Eden.
Multiple seeds reflect the progeny of a bloodline; red-gold apples can be interchanged for pomegranates with their serrated calyx 'crown.'
Pomegranate symbolizes life and acquired many cultic roles. It translates as apple with many seeds; thus, the pomegranate symbol invites the planting of seeds. Mother is everything that has been. Father is everything that will be. They manifest now. The pre-natal belly swells like a pomegranate.
Creative Core
A rich set of symbols is associated with the Tree of Life and Family Tree. Myth is allegorical and symbolic. Our ancestors venerated the pomegranate as long ago as 4000 B.C.E. or even earlier by the shadows of forgotten ancestors. Pomegranate is the badge of The Feminine for Hebrews, Eleusis, Plantagenets, Rosicrucians, royalty, Kabbalists, Gnostics, Freemasons, and other ritual rebirth unions of male and female as a paranormal remedy for longevity, hope and blessing of numerous progeny.
Blood of Life
Pomegranate flowers, seed, and juice are red like blood, denoting the fruit which symbolized the sephirah of the Tree of Life glyph and the glands of the female body in the sacred chemical wedding in the Garden of Love. The the pomegranate wine of The Triple Goddess, Demeter/Persephone, Cybele, Ishtar, Mary, and Hera denotes a lineal descent of living goddesses and their sensual, cyclic sexual, and menstrual symbolism. Rasa, or taste, refers to the Tantric synonyms for semen (serpent-dragons) and mercury.
Womb Blood of the Grail
The pomegranate or Vase is the initiatic center of the mandala -- female genital symbols. Beer mixed with rejuvenating pomegranate juice resembled blood. In the myth of Persephone and the pomegranate, the initiate must enter Hel or the Underworld to draw the wine of the fruit of life from her. She lost her innocence and became guardian of underworld secrets and a soul guide.
This unconscious inner world hides our undeveloped potential and individual destiny we glimpse in shadowy dreams and intuition. Transcending ambivalence and depression, we can draw from this deep source -- the mysterious rhythms of natural law working in the depths of the soul as primal life force.
House of Pomegranates
Persephone's "burial and resurrection" turns the whole process into a meaningful cyclic ritual. Individualized consciousness assimilates the experience of mankind's common roots, the instincts of the collective unconscious, but returns to the day world at the summons of the Spirit. She now guides others.
Demeter/Persephone expresses the mystery of mother and daughters--"my Mother, myself"--which is a union of sames, unto 15 generations of mitochondrial DNA. Marion Woodman notes, "Ultimately, the feminine mysteries have to do with the sanctification of matter, and being aware of ourselves and others as human beings in the reality of the moment."
Fruit of the Earth
Demeter is Persephone in her renascent form. Modern women experience this force in the continuity of generations. The uterine or matrilinear line extends back to one's grandmother and mother, and forward in one's daughters. Sons are distinctly other, as our fathers are. There is an essential blood-bond between female members of a family who share the mystery of the generation of life from their own substance.
In Gaelic pomegranate juice is called dergflaith, the red beer of the queen of sovereignty -- cosmic conduit of the holy grail, the Tau womb of goddess Nut -- intimate space. The common name for abstract self-externality is Space, but Absolute Space is imminent -- the universe inside you, the root of our Being.
The Shining Mirror
The Royal Secret is that we each have the same opposites, such as: good and evil, virtue and vice, life and death within us. Our task is to reconcile those parallel forces to become the Middle Pillar.
Symbolizing the polarity of opposites to be united, the entrance of sacred and mysterious places is traditionally guarded by two pillars. The Druids believed trees where gateways to other worlds. In art or architecture, twin pillars represent an archetypal gateway or passage towards the unknown, sacred, and otherworldly. The palm-headed Pillars of the Temple before the door are topped with pomegranates, reflecting the spheres of The Tree of Life, as on The High Priestess trump.
Theseus, like Orpheus, must travel through a subterranean realm to find his love and, like the mistletoe bard, at the center of Hades he will win the Chalice of Persephone’s pomegranate wine. Theseus decides to tackle the Minotaur and armed with a sword given him by Ariadne he enters the labyrinth with a golden thread tied about his waist.
Goddess of Easy Delivery, Giver & Guardian of Children
Ancient Egyptians regarded the pomegranate as a symbol of prosperity and ambition. For the Jews it was a symbol of righteousness and the indissolubility of marriage. In Ancient Greek mythology, the pomegranate was the "fruit of the dead," seal of fate, or gift of love and passion.
Pomegranate was known as the Tree of Hera. This goddess of fecundity renews her uterine fertility in the river at the new moon. The powerful wife archetype has marriage and fidelity as its goal, meaning, and identity.
Layered meanings are like rows of pomegranate seeds. The feminine path implies self-compassion, embodied relationships, and contemporary mysteries of the feminine. Blood mysteries, personal myths, and lived experiences flow through feminine consciousness and transformation into the sacred sanctuary of
woman's deepest instinctual source.
Natural Cycles, Rebirth, and Renewal
In Aryan myth, pomegranate is Punica granitum, a Vedic fertility symbol. Daalom Gaach, Dadima is a term for wise old women in India as well as the plant, so both are called 'grandmother.' Punica granatum (Punicaceae) has DMT in its root cortex. A substantial body of mythology in India connects the pomegranate with various mother goddesses and the hoama or soma drink. Very few plants and trees are named outright in Rig Veda.
Secrets & Symbolism of Nature
Nature pervades our Consciousness & Infuses our Actions
Perhaps this is the Queen to the King Soma as a goddess that evolved to be called Mahadevi or Kali who are both often iconically associated with dwelling in or holding pomegranates. The chambered pomegranate also refers to the poppy's narcotic capsule, with its comparable shape and chambered interior. Pomegranate plays a distinct role in the herbo-metallic Tibetan Tantric Buddhist Jewel pills that at once spiritually empower and heal.
Soul Made Visible as Authentic Self
Pomegranate re-emerges and continues to be used in alchemy. Pomegranate carpets express a longing for the mythical original garden -- an experience which can be shared by different generations that creates a bridge, a commonality of feeling and a spiritual affinity. Biting into its fruit means to invoke the eye of intuition, to discern what is true and what is false.
In “A Garden of Pomegranates,” Israel Regardie states of Da’ath (pg. 103): “Some Qabalists postulate a Sephirah named Da’ath, or “Knowledge.” As being the child of Binah and Chokmah, or a sublimation of the Ruach, supposed to appear in the Abyss in the course of man’s evolutions as an evolved faculty. It is a false Sephirah, however, and the Sepher Yetzirah in anticipation, most emphatically warns us that “Ten are the ineffable Sephiroth. Ten and not nine. Ten and not eleven. Understand with Wisdom, and apprehend with care.” It is a non-existent Sephirah because, for one thing, Knowledge when examined contains within itself – as the progeny of Ruach – the same element of contradiction, and being situate in the Abyss, dispersion and so of self-destruction. It is false, because as soon as Knowledge is Critically and Logically Analyzed, it breaks up into the dust and sand of the Abyss. The Unity of the various faculties mentioned, however, comprises the Ruach, which is called the Human Soul.”
The Ecstatic School
The source of our body is the ground; Neshamah, the breath of life and source of spirit, is the element that forms the human spirit. Union on the four planes, including the Neshamah, or glorious body is experience of the true intellect emerging from the source of life - well-spring of intelligence awe, wisdom, and understanding. This unique life potential is the bridge between human and divine that serves creation and life in the world by providing it with substance forming light, creating darkness, and making in the middle.
Love, Judgment & Mercy
The mystic creates this integrated subtle body by concentrating attention at the eye center. The energy normally is flowing outward into the senses or world. It must be withdrawn or made to 'flow backward'. This is the 'death" of the senses. Then comes the eternal moment of enlightenment when thoughts cease. This is the "death of the mind." The aspirant is "reborn" when his attention goes sin and the radiant Light is perceived. They merge with this Light in enlightenment of the causal level. The causal body is formed by the fixation and crystallization of this living Light. --Iona Miller, Holistic Qabala, 1976
Divine Presence
Planting an Anar Tree (Pomegranate) in your house alludes to the 'royal wedding' or coniunctio, a recollection of the divine form in its unitive aspect. The most powerful sexual rite, of re-integration, requires intercourse with the female partner when she is menstruating. Her 'red' sexual energy and purely spiritual fecundity is at its peak for the physical/spiritual union achieved during Tantric Yoga -- a symbol of the repetitive cycle of material birth/rebirth.
Fertility, Generosity & Rebirth
In art it alludes to the beauty and exuberance of the vagina, vesica, lotus, jewel, or 'boat of heaven', but it specifically represents the ovary and ova cells. The Great Goddess always had snakes entwined around her to represent birth, regeneration, and overall protection."The snake is endless time," says Jung, (Meetings with Jung, Page 303). Apples, cherries, and pomegranates symbolized the Virgin Goddess: bearing her sacred blood color and bearing its seed within, like a womb.
On a Mycenaean seal illustrated in Joseph Campbell's Occidental Mythology 1964, figure 19, the seated Goddess of the double-headed axe (the labrys) offers three poppy pods in her right hand and supports her breast with her left. She embodies both aspects of the dual goddess, life-giving and death-dealing at once. The Titan Orion was represented as "marrying" Side, a name that in Boeotia means "pomegranate", thus consecrating the primal hunter to the Goddess. Other Greek dialects call the pomegranate rhoa; its possible connection with the name of the earth goddess Rhea.
Polycleitus sculpted Hera in her temple, with a scepter in one hand and a pomegranate orb in the other. She wears the calyx of the pomegranate as her serrated crown. The Madonna del Granato, "Our Lady of the Pomegranate", must be the Christian successor of the ancient Greek goddess Hera, as her epithet suggests.
Red-Stain Metaphor
The name pomegranate derives from medieval Latin pōmum "apple" and grānātum "seeded". Perhaps stemming from the old French word for the fruit, pomme-grenade, the pomegranate was known in early English as "apple of Grenada"—a term which today survives only in heraldic blazons. The Latin granatus sounds like the Spanish city of Granada, which derives from Arabic.
The Phoenician priesthood of the Cabiri from Crete claimed the meaning of the pomegranate was "the forbidden secret." Pausanias declared, "About the pomegranate I must say nothing, for its story is somewhat of a holy mystery."
Jung's Garden of Pomegranates
“I myself was, so it seemed, in the Pardes Rimmonim, the garden of pomegranates, and the wedding of Tifereth with Malchuth was taking place. Or else I was Rabbi Simon ben Jochai, whose wedding in the afterlife was being celebrated. It was the mystic marriage as it appears in the Cabbalistic tradition. I cannot tell you how wonderful it was. I could only think continually, “Now this is the garden of pomegranates! Now this is the marriage of Malchuth with Tifereth!” I do not know exactly what part I played in it. At bottom it was I myself: I was the marriage. And my beatitude was that of a blissful wedding.” --Jung, 1961, p. 294
References
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pomegranate
The Assyrian Tree of Life: Tracing the Origins of Jewish Monotheism and Greek Philosophy by Simo Parpola, Journal of Near Eastern Studies, Vol. 52, No. 3, pp. 161-208 (1993)
and nard.” --Song of Songs, The Bible
"The pomegranate is the mystic fruit of the Eleusinian rites; by eating it, Prosperine bound herself to the realms of Pluto. The fruit here signifies the sensuous life which, once tasted, temporarily deprives man of immortality."
--Manly Palmer Hall, Secret Teachings of All Ages
Womb of Mother Earth
We travel backwards to the Garden of Pomegranates in the Garden of the Well of Living Waters. Many believe it was the true forbidden fruit in the garden of Eden.
Multiple seeds reflect the progeny of a bloodline; red-gold apples can be interchanged for pomegranates with their serrated calyx 'crown.'
Pomegranate symbolizes life and acquired many cultic roles. It translates as apple with many seeds; thus, the pomegranate symbol invites the planting of seeds. Mother is everything that has been. Father is everything that will be. They manifest now. The pre-natal belly swells like a pomegranate.
Creative Core
A rich set of symbols is associated with the Tree of Life and Family Tree. Myth is allegorical and symbolic. Our ancestors venerated the pomegranate as long ago as 4000 B.C.E. or even earlier by the shadows of forgotten ancestors. Pomegranate is the badge of The Feminine for Hebrews, Eleusis, Plantagenets, Rosicrucians, royalty, Kabbalists, Gnostics, Freemasons, and other ritual rebirth unions of male and female as a paranormal remedy for longevity, hope and blessing of numerous progeny.
Blood of Life
Pomegranate flowers, seed, and juice are red like blood, denoting the fruit which symbolized the sephirah of the Tree of Life glyph and the glands of the female body in the sacred chemical wedding in the Garden of Love. The the pomegranate wine of The Triple Goddess, Demeter/Persephone, Cybele, Ishtar, Mary, and Hera denotes a lineal descent of living goddesses and their sensual, cyclic sexual, and menstrual symbolism. Rasa, or taste, refers to the Tantric synonyms for semen (serpent-dragons) and mercury.
Womb Blood of the Grail
The pomegranate or Vase is the initiatic center of the mandala -- female genital symbols. Beer mixed with rejuvenating pomegranate juice resembled blood. In the myth of Persephone and the pomegranate, the initiate must enter Hel or the Underworld to draw the wine of the fruit of life from her. She lost her innocence and became guardian of underworld secrets and a soul guide.
This unconscious inner world hides our undeveloped potential and individual destiny we glimpse in shadowy dreams and intuition. Transcending ambivalence and depression, we can draw from this deep source -- the mysterious rhythms of natural law working in the depths of the soul as primal life force.
House of Pomegranates
Persephone's "burial and resurrection" turns the whole process into a meaningful cyclic ritual. Individualized consciousness assimilates the experience of mankind's common roots, the instincts of the collective unconscious, but returns to the day world at the summons of the Spirit. She now guides others.
Demeter/Persephone expresses the mystery of mother and daughters--"my Mother, myself"--which is a union of sames, unto 15 generations of mitochondrial DNA. Marion Woodman notes, "Ultimately, the feminine mysteries have to do with the sanctification of matter, and being aware of ourselves and others as human beings in the reality of the moment."
Fruit of the Earth
Demeter is Persephone in her renascent form. Modern women experience this force in the continuity of generations. The uterine or matrilinear line extends back to one's grandmother and mother, and forward in one's daughters. Sons are distinctly other, as our fathers are. There is an essential blood-bond between female members of a family who share the mystery of the generation of life from their own substance.
In Gaelic pomegranate juice is called dergflaith, the red beer of the queen of sovereignty -- cosmic conduit of the holy grail, the Tau womb of goddess Nut -- intimate space. The common name for abstract self-externality is Space, but Absolute Space is imminent -- the universe inside you, the root of our Being.
The Shining Mirror
The Royal Secret is that we each have the same opposites, such as: good and evil, virtue and vice, life and death within us. Our task is to reconcile those parallel forces to become the Middle Pillar.
Symbolizing the polarity of opposites to be united, the entrance of sacred and mysterious places is traditionally guarded by two pillars. The Druids believed trees where gateways to other worlds. In art or architecture, twin pillars represent an archetypal gateway or passage towards the unknown, sacred, and otherworldly. The palm-headed Pillars of the Temple before the door are topped with pomegranates, reflecting the spheres of The Tree of Life, as on The High Priestess trump.
Theseus, like Orpheus, must travel through a subterranean realm to find his love and, like the mistletoe bard, at the center of Hades he will win the Chalice of Persephone’s pomegranate wine. Theseus decides to tackle the Minotaur and armed with a sword given him by Ariadne he enters the labyrinth with a golden thread tied about his waist.
Goddess of Easy Delivery, Giver & Guardian of Children
Ancient Egyptians regarded the pomegranate as a symbol of prosperity and ambition. For the Jews it was a symbol of righteousness and the indissolubility of marriage. In Ancient Greek mythology, the pomegranate was the "fruit of the dead," seal of fate, or gift of love and passion.
Pomegranate was known as the Tree of Hera. This goddess of fecundity renews her uterine fertility in the river at the new moon. The powerful wife archetype has marriage and fidelity as its goal, meaning, and identity.
Layered meanings are like rows of pomegranate seeds. The feminine path implies self-compassion, embodied relationships, and contemporary mysteries of the feminine. Blood mysteries, personal myths, and lived experiences flow through feminine consciousness and transformation into the sacred sanctuary of
woman's deepest instinctual source.
Natural Cycles, Rebirth, and Renewal
In Aryan myth, pomegranate is Punica granitum, a Vedic fertility symbol. Daalom Gaach, Dadima is a term for wise old women in India as well as the plant, so both are called 'grandmother.' Punica granatum (Punicaceae) has DMT in its root cortex. A substantial body of mythology in India connects the pomegranate with various mother goddesses and the hoama or soma drink. Very few plants and trees are named outright in Rig Veda.
Secrets & Symbolism of Nature
Nature pervades our Consciousness & Infuses our Actions
Perhaps this is the Queen to the King Soma as a goddess that evolved to be called Mahadevi or Kali who are both often iconically associated with dwelling in or holding pomegranates. The chambered pomegranate also refers to the poppy's narcotic capsule, with its comparable shape and chambered interior. Pomegranate plays a distinct role in the herbo-metallic Tibetan Tantric Buddhist Jewel pills that at once spiritually empower and heal.
Soul Made Visible as Authentic Self
Pomegranate re-emerges and continues to be used in alchemy. Pomegranate carpets express a longing for the mythical original garden -- an experience which can be shared by different generations that creates a bridge, a commonality of feeling and a spiritual affinity. Biting into its fruit means to invoke the eye of intuition, to discern what is true and what is false.
In “A Garden of Pomegranates,” Israel Regardie states of Da’ath (pg. 103): “Some Qabalists postulate a Sephirah named Da’ath, or “Knowledge.” As being the child of Binah and Chokmah, or a sublimation of the Ruach, supposed to appear in the Abyss in the course of man’s evolutions as an evolved faculty. It is a false Sephirah, however, and the Sepher Yetzirah in anticipation, most emphatically warns us that “Ten are the ineffable Sephiroth. Ten and not nine. Ten and not eleven. Understand with Wisdom, and apprehend with care.” It is a non-existent Sephirah because, for one thing, Knowledge when examined contains within itself – as the progeny of Ruach – the same element of contradiction, and being situate in the Abyss, dispersion and so of self-destruction. It is false, because as soon as Knowledge is Critically and Logically Analyzed, it breaks up into the dust and sand of the Abyss. The Unity of the various faculties mentioned, however, comprises the Ruach, which is called the Human Soul.”
The Ecstatic School
The source of our body is the ground; Neshamah, the breath of life and source of spirit, is the element that forms the human spirit. Union on the four planes, including the Neshamah, or glorious body is experience of the true intellect emerging from the source of life - well-spring of intelligence awe, wisdom, and understanding. This unique life potential is the bridge between human and divine that serves creation and life in the world by providing it with substance forming light, creating darkness, and making in the middle.
Love, Judgment & Mercy
The mystic creates this integrated subtle body by concentrating attention at the eye center. The energy normally is flowing outward into the senses or world. It must be withdrawn or made to 'flow backward'. This is the 'death" of the senses. Then comes the eternal moment of enlightenment when thoughts cease. This is the "death of the mind." The aspirant is "reborn" when his attention goes sin and the radiant Light is perceived. They merge with this Light in enlightenment of the causal level. The causal body is formed by the fixation and crystallization of this living Light. --Iona Miller, Holistic Qabala, 1976
Divine Presence
Planting an Anar Tree (Pomegranate) in your house alludes to the 'royal wedding' or coniunctio, a recollection of the divine form in its unitive aspect. The most powerful sexual rite, of re-integration, requires intercourse with the female partner when she is menstruating. Her 'red' sexual energy and purely spiritual fecundity is at its peak for the physical/spiritual union achieved during Tantric Yoga -- a symbol of the repetitive cycle of material birth/rebirth.
Fertility, Generosity & Rebirth
In art it alludes to the beauty and exuberance of the vagina, vesica, lotus, jewel, or 'boat of heaven', but it specifically represents the ovary and ova cells. The Great Goddess always had snakes entwined around her to represent birth, regeneration, and overall protection."The snake is endless time," says Jung, (Meetings with Jung, Page 303). Apples, cherries, and pomegranates symbolized the Virgin Goddess: bearing her sacred blood color and bearing its seed within, like a womb.
On a Mycenaean seal illustrated in Joseph Campbell's Occidental Mythology 1964, figure 19, the seated Goddess of the double-headed axe (the labrys) offers three poppy pods in her right hand and supports her breast with her left. She embodies both aspects of the dual goddess, life-giving and death-dealing at once. The Titan Orion was represented as "marrying" Side, a name that in Boeotia means "pomegranate", thus consecrating the primal hunter to the Goddess. Other Greek dialects call the pomegranate rhoa; its possible connection with the name of the earth goddess Rhea.
Polycleitus sculpted Hera in her temple, with a scepter in one hand and a pomegranate orb in the other. She wears the calyx of the pomegranate as her serrated crown. The Madonna del Granato, "Our Lady of the Pomegranate", must be the Christian successor of the ancient Greek goddess Hera, as her epithet suggests.
Red-Stain Metaphor
The name pomegranate derives from medieval Latin pōmum "apple" and grānātum "seeded". Perhaps stemming from the old French word for the fruit, pomme-grenade, the pomegranate was known in early English as "apple of Grenada"—a term which today survives only in heraldic blazons. The Latin granatus sounds like the Spanish city of Granada, which derives from Arabic.
The Phoenician priesthood of the Cabiri from Crete claimed the meaning of the pomegranate was "the forbidden secret." Pausanias declared, "About the pomegranate I must say nothing, for its story is somewhat of a holy mystery."
Jung's Garden of Pomegranates
“I myself was, so it seemed, in the Pardes Rimmonim, the garden of pomegranates, and the wedding of Tifereth with Malchuth was taking place. Or else I was Rabbi Simon ben Jochai, whose wedding in the afterlife was being celebrated. It was the mystic marriage as it appears in the Cabbalistic tradition. I cannot tell you how wonderful it was. I could only think continually, “Now this is the garden of pomegranates! Now this is the marriage of Malchuth with Tifereth!” I do not know exactly what part I played in it. At bottom it was I myself: I was the marriage. And my beatitude was that of a blissful wedding.” --Jung, 1961, p. 294
References
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pomegranate
The Assyrian Tree of Life: Tracing the Origins of Jewish Monotheism and Greek Philosophy by Simo Parpola, Journal of Near Eastern Studies, Vol. 52, No. 3, pp. 161-208 (1993)
The Tree of Life is Simplified Man;
And Man is the Simplified Cosmic Tree
And Man is the Simplified Cosmic Tree
In every adult there lurks a child--an eternal child, something that is always becoming, is never completed, and calls for unceasing care, attention, and education. That is the part of the personality which wants to develop and become whole. -C. G. Jung CW 17, Page 286
How does psychology define this inner dynamic which guides the process of individuation, leading toward the goal of wholeness? In Jungian Psychology, this symbol-forming power of the psyche is called the transcendent function. Before the transforming power of the higher Self is perceived in imagination (personified through one's Angel, Guide, or Guru), it is known as a symbol-forming function.
Whatever man’s wholeness, or the self, may mean per se, empirically it is an image of the goal of life spontaneously produced by the unconscious, irrespective of the wishes and fears of the conscious mind. ~Carl Jung, CW 11, Para 745.
Its purpose is to mediate between that which is unknown and that which is manifest. It performs its function by creating unifying symbols from pairs of opposites. In this manner, it gradually unites the fragments of psychic life. It creates a series of symbols which transfer consciousness to a higher perspective or awareness by reconciling opposites.
By synthesizing pairs of opposites into a symbol, the transcendent mode creates a method of transition from one set of attitudes to the next. An individual ego may work more effectively with subconscious processes by consciously attaching value to these symbols presented by the transcendent function.
The process of energy which produces the union of the opposites in this case is the human personality which is the carrier of consciousness. ~Carl Jung, Modern Psychology, Vol. 1, Pages 71-72.
Our task is to discover these transpersonal meanings, whether they are presented to us through dreams, attitudes, or behavior patterns. If the meaning were consciously understood, it would not be presented as a symbol. Therefore, once its meaning is realized over a period of time, another symbol appears to take its place, reflecting the new situation.
The transcendent function (seen as one's Inner Guide, Angel, or Guru), embodies the transmuting power of the symbol. The personification of the higher Self allows us to take up a relationship with the inner Self, and encourages dialogue and the development of feelings of loving devotion for this inner friend.
All the symbols and archetypal figures in which the transformative process is embodied are vehicles of the transcendent function. It is the union of different pairs of psychological opposites (like male/female, good/evil, Sol/Luna) in a synthesis which transcends them both.
The uniting symbol only appears when the inner psychic life is experienced as just as valid, effective, and psychologically "real" as the world of daily life. Fantasy animates both our inner and outer "realities." This is why mystics call time, space, and the ego three great illusions.
The transcendent function, or Inner Guide, restores the balance between the ego and the unconscious. It belongs to neither, yet possesses access to each. It forms a bridge for the soul to ascend, by lying in-between and participating in both inner and outer life. By relating to each independently, it unites ego and the unconscious.
The first glimmerings of "Knowledge and Conversation" with one's Angel are very similar to the descriptions of "peak experience" developed by Abraham Maslow. A peak experience is the result of the drive of the spirit in search of itself. The experience is self-validating, self-justified and has intrinsic value of a unique nature for each individual.
There is an intense experience of the nearness of God, or divinity. This is the first state of grace, or mind-expansion. It is a response experience where one feels a sense of Presence. The true mystic takes this experience as his point-of-departure, and grows in grace from it. The poet or artist uses this recurrent experience as a basis for artistic production (or inspiration) and personal euphoria.
When the contact is stabilized, the Guide can take the Soul up to the heights of mystic rapture. A by-product of this contact is that the adept may consult at will with his guide for directions in any matter. Images of the Self appear spontaneously throughout the entire transformative process. It appears in all symbols from the highest to the lowest.
At the beginning of the great work it appears in animal forms such as snakes, birds, fish, horses, or beetles. It shows through the plant forms of flowers and tree symbolism, sacred geometry, then symbols of the Self in human form.
--Iona Miller, The Modern Alchemist
" oh what a disaster, such as mutilation of love is when this is reduced to a mere personal feeling, detached from the rising and setting of the sun, and isolated from the magical report of the solstice and equinox! Our roots are bleeding because we severed from the earth and the sun and the stars, and the love is nothing but a ridiculous parody since, poor flower, we have been disconnected from the tree of life and we think we can keep it alive in our civilized Vase on the table." --D.H.Lawrence
How does psychology define this inner dynamic which guides the process of individuation, leading toward the goal of wholeness? In Jungian Psychology, this symbol-forming power of the psyche is called the transcendent function. Before the transforming power of the higher Self is perceived in imagination (personified through one's Angel, Guide, or Guru), it is known as a symbol-forming function.
Whatever man’s wholeness, or the self, may mean per se, empirically it is an image of the goal of life spontaneously produced by the unconscious, irrespective of the wishes and fears of the conscious mind. ~Carl Jung, CW 11, Para 745.
Its purpose is to mediate between that which is unknown and that which is manifest. It performs its function by creating unifying symbols from pairs of opposites. In this manner, it gradually unites the fragments of psychic life. It creates a series of symbols which transfer consciousness to a higher perspective or awareness by reconciling opposites.
By synthesizing pairs of opposites into a symbol, the transcendent mode creates a method of transition from one set of attitudes to the next. An individual ego may work more effectively with subconscious processes by consciously attaching value to these symbols presented by the transcendent function.
The process of energy which produces the union of the opposites in this case is the human personality which is the carrier of consciousness. ~Carl Jung, Modern Psychology, Vol. 1, Pages 71-72.
Our task is to discover these transpersonal meanings, whether they are presented to us through dreams, attitudes, or behavior patterns. If the meaning were consciously understood, it would not be presented as a symbol. Therefore, once its meaning is realized over a period of time, another symbol appears to take its place, reflecting the new situation.
The transcendent function (seen as one's Inner Guide, Angel, or Guru), embodies the transmuting power of the symbol. The personification of the higher Self allows us to take up a relationship with the inner Self, and encourages dialogue and the development of feelings of loving devotion for this inner friend.
All the symbols and archetypal figures in which the transformative process is embodied are vehicles of the transcendent function. It is the union of different pairs of psychological opposites (like male/female, good/evil, Sol/Luna) in a synthesis which transcends them both.
The uniting symbol only appears when the inner psychic life is experienced as just as valid, effective, and psychologically "real" as the world of daily life. Fantasy animates both our inner and outer "realities." This is why mystics call time, space, and the ego three great illusions.
The transcendent function, or Inner Guide, restores the balance between the ego and the unconscious. It belongs to neither, yet possesses access to each. It forms a bridge for the soul to ascend, by lying in-between and participating in both inner and outer life. By relating to each independently, it unites ego and the unconscious.
The first glimmerings of "Knowledge and Conversation" with one's Angel are very similar to the descriptions of "peak experience" developed by Abraham Maslow. A peak experience is the result of the drive of the spirit in search of itself. The experience is self-validating, self-justified and has intrinsic value of a unique nature for each individual.
There is an intense experience of the nearness of God, or divinity. This is the first state of grace, or mind-expansion. It is a response experience where one feels a sense of Presence. The true mystic takes this experience as his point-of-departure, and grows in grace from it. The poet or artist uses this recurrent experience as a basis for artistic production (or inspiration) and personal euphoria.
When the contact is stabilized, the Guide can take the Soul up to the heights of mystic rapture. A by-product of this contact is that the adept may consult at will with his guide for directions in any matter. Images of the Self appear spontaneously throughout the entire transformative process. It appears in all symbols from the highest to the lowest.
At the beginning of the great work it appears in animal forms such as snakes, birds, fish, horses, or beetles. It shows through the plant forms of flowers and tree symbolism, sacred geometry, then symbols of the Self in human form.
--Iona Miller, The Modern Alchemist
" oh what a disaster, such as mutilation of love is when this is reduced to a mere personal feeling, detached from the rising and setting of the sun, and isolated from the magical report of the solstice and equinox! Our roots are bleeding because we severed from the earth and the sun and the stars, and the love is nothing but a ridiculous parody since, poor flower, we have been disconnected from the tree of life and we think we can keep it alive in our civilized Vase on the table." --D.H.Lawrence
In the history of symbols this tree is described as the way of life itself, a growing into that which eternally is and does not change; which springs from the union of opposites and, by its eternal presence, also makes that union possible.
~Carl Jung, CW 9i, Para 198
~Carl Jung, CW 9i, Para 198
BE LONGING
ACCESSING THE EXCEPTIONAL IN YOUR FAMILY TREE
Intensified Awareness of Your Ancestors
by Iona Miller, 2016
The souls or spirits of the dead are identical with the psychic activity of the living; they merely continue it.
~Carl Jung, CW 9i, Para 38
Every life is many days, day after day. We walk through ourselves, meeting robbers, ghosts, giants, old men, young men, wives, widows, brothers-in-law. But always meeting ourselves.” ―James Joyce, Ulysses
“Where are we really going? Always home.” ―Novalis
Life is born only of the spark of opposites.
~Carl Jung, CW 7, Para 78
You begin to have a presentiment of the whole when you embrace your opposite principle, since the whole belongs to both principles, which grow from one root. ~Carl Jung, The Red Book, LN 248
The fact that individual consciousness means separation and opposition is something that man has experienced countless times in his long history.
~Carl Jung, CW 10, Para 290
The soul demands your folly; not your wisdom.
~Carl Jung, The Red Book, Page 264
For when the soul vanished at death, it was not lost; in that other world it formed the living counterpole to the state of death in this world.
~Carl Jung, CW 16, Para 493
Thus your soul is your own self in the spiritual world.
As the abode of the spirits, however, the spiritual world is also an outer world.
~Carl Jung, The Red Book, Page 288.
For the conscious mind knows nothing beyond the opposites and, as a result,
has no knowledge of the thing that unites them. ~Carl Jung, CW 9i, Para 285
An opus is needed, that one can squander decades on, and do it out of necessity I must catch up with a piece of the Middle Ages. ~Jung, The Red Book, Page 354.
You must be in the middle of life, surrounded by death on all sides.
~Carl Jung, The Red Book, Page 370.
The unconscious is the only available source of religious experience.
~Carl Jung, CW 10, Para 289
Complimentarian Self
You begin to have a presentiment of the whole when you embrace your opposite principle, since the whole belongs to both principles, which grow from one root. ~Carl Jung, The Red Book, LN 248
First: these qualities are differentiated and separate in us; therefore they do not cancel each other out, but are effective. Thus we are the victims of the pairs of opposites. The Pleroma is rent within us. ~Carl Jung, The Red Book, Page 348.
Many ancient cultures depict a divine being, a central figure, a forward-facing male or female figure with outstretched hands holding a pair of identical symbols (animals, staffs, scepters, etc.). These symbolic objects represent opposing principles, including conscious and unconscious -- the co-existence of contradictory essences in human reality. They can result in a third thing like the offspring of male and female, like the in and out breath that creates life.
Being & Nonbeing
Opposites have central significance in genealogy. The unity of opposites occurs in the coinciding of opposites at any time and place in history by means of sacred rituals, including genealogy. Our whole genealogy is made of pairs of opposites. We are not always necessarily aware we are performing a ritual or know the thought behind our myth. That is, we are not always aware of the implications of the coincidentia oppositorum in the myth or ritual.
"As the power of being, being-itself cannot have a beginning and an end. Otherwise it would have arisen out of non-being. But nonbeing is literally nothing except in relation to being. Being precedes nonbeing in ontological validity...Being is the beginning without a beginning, the end without an end. It is its own beginning and end, the initial power of everything that is. However, everything which participates in the power of being is 'mixed' with nonbeing. It is finite." --Paul Tillich, SYSTEMATIC THEOLOGY, Vol. I, U. of Chicago Press, 1951, pp. 188-189.
But we can transcend them by learning to hold the tensions between the opposites inherent in the human condition. We experience the same oppositions, but not as
such. The unity of the sacred is experienced instead. The two modes of being exist paradoxically. The wholeness of the sacred is experienced as mutual coexistence in the temporal human condition. An integral part of all reality or sacrality, oppositions and tensions of reality harmonize into a unity or a "mystery of totality" -- psyche as sacrament in a fully inhabited life.
What a thinker does not think he believes does not exist, and what one who feels does not feel he believes does not exist. You begin to have a presentiment of the whole when you embrace your opposite principle, since the whole belongs to both principles, which grow from one root. ~Jung and Elijah, Liber Novus, Page 248.
Much has been made in recent years of the power of Presence in the Here and Now, but perhaps our HERE/NOW awareness can be used to violate energy conservation. We might think that moments when we are fully present would be more powerful. But flights of spiritual or religious ecstasy take us out of ourselves, beyond our ordinary boundaries of being and perception.
Nonetheless, when the time dimension collapses in non-ordinary awareness, we are still a consciousness present in some manner at a particular time and space, while simultaneously connected in a peculiar way to the ground of being.
Perhaps there is a third Zen-like quantity or Observer Self that also needs to be present to break Time/space symmetry. Then concurrently maximizing all three variables becomes maximally conducive to producing transformative experiences. For example, during meditation, activity in the parietal lobe slows down processing sensory information about the surrounding world, orienting us in time and space.
Those on the inner journey attest to phenomena such as, "being laid out, flattened into Earth, body and mind completely separate with no control over the physical, but more concentrated awareness than if being fully grounded in body... In those moments, the concentration of energy into mind and spirit [beyond] the limitations of physical suffering ("body" is burden and blessing) allow for the manifestation of clearer thoughts, creating a more focused reality. The reality may only be experienced by the individual self in the immediate moment, and thoughts may take time to come to physical fruition. But in such a truly prescient time we may be able to consciously co-create the reality of our choosing."
Primeval Ground of Being
"We are here face to face with the very old symbolism of the coincidentia oppositorum, universally wide spread, well attested in primitive stages of culture, and which served more or less to define both the fundamental reality (the
Urgrund, primal cause or ultimate cosmic principle; original archetype), and the paradoxical state of the totality, the perfection and consequently the sacredness of God," Mircea Eliade claims.
Jung called this the coincidentia oppositorum, central to the meaning of paradigm, paradox and the structure of reality. Archetypal opposites include the pro-historical and anti-historical.
We seek meaning in the transhistorical, the transgenerational. The dualities remain the same across time: unconscious dynamics of good and evil, light and dark, male and female, sun and moon, sacred and profane, chthonic (earth underworld) and pneumatic (airy, upper world), pleasure and pain, sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous system.
The sacred figure depicts the hero/sage combining two opposing principles to create a spiritual balance -- our divine nature. This principle involves family, the community, the nation, the environment, and god, embracing all aspects of existence, including a moral imperative, the basic equilibrium of the universe and the weighing of the heart in the afterlife.
This balance or centeredness opens new doors of perception. In ancient Egypt this ruling principle was called Ma'at, the concept of truth, balance, order, harmony, law, morality, and justice. Ma'at regulated the stars, seasons, and the actions of both mortals and the deities, who set the order of the universe from chaos at the moment of creation.
In the moment of transformation we realize the effulgence of meaning in the plurality of common life. We don't forget ourselves when we partake of cosmic myth or ritual; we find or remember ourselves in larger realities of our own being.
"Hence man's situation in existence is depicted in the tension between his experience of his essential self and his existential distance and alienation from it. Tillich believes that man cannot destroy the groundedness of his essential being in God, but neither can he regain it or confer it upon himself...The movement towards or back to the essential...is still the basic movement of life..."
Jung speaks of this process as one of coming into a fuller or more compendious personality through the progressive integration of the unconscious, but like Tillich he believes that man can neither reject this movement in his life with impunity nor bring it to a definitive completion within a lifetime.
--John P. Dourley, The Psyche as Sacrament: A Comparative Study of C.G. Jung and Paul Tillich, Inner City Books, 1981, p. 56.
The sacred dimension is realized in opposition to and harmony with ordinary existence. In Tantra, there is a ’’rupture of planes," the unification of the two polar principles (Siva and Sakti). The transcending of all opposites is the union of polarities without and within the body in a coincidence of time and eternity.
We are of the same substance; our paradoxical I/Self awareness is the difference. The symmetrical balance of duality is the icon of centeredness. The mind is a “difference-seeker” -- a pattern recognizer that helps us order and navigate the overwhelming complexity of reality. But this gift also creates blind spots and biases, as we fill in what we don’t know with our limited knowing.
“The universe is a complete unique entity. Everything and everyone is bound together with some invisible strings. Do not break anyone’s heart; do not look down on weaker than you. One’s sorrow at the other side of the world can make the entire world suffer; one’s happiness can make the entire world smile.” ―Shams Tabrizi
Our primitive origins link mythological thinking to our lineage and modern disciplines, connecting us to our inherent cultural roots from which we have been dangerously estranged. In Egypt, the primordial couple was Isis and Osiris. Isis is the ancient Egyptian goddess of magic, fertility and motherhood, and death, healing and rebirth.
The tension between above and below in ancient Egypt is in my opinion the real source of the Near Eastern saviour figures, whose patriarch is Osiris.
He is also the source of the idea of an individual (immortal) soul. ("The Osiris of N. N.") The purpose of nearly all rebirth rites is to unite the above with the below.
The baptism in the Jordan is an eloquent example: water below, Holy Ghost above. --Carl Jung, Letters Vol. I, Pages 259-261
One of the oldest gods, Osiris was the God of the Dead and Vegetation. He is also called in various names and spelling such as Usiris, Oser, Usire, Asar, Aser, Ausar, Ausir, Wesir or Ausare and usually referred as god of Afterlife. He rules the underworld, and is god of resurrection to eternal life, protector, and vegetation.
The ankh or the ´nh in ancient Egyptian hieroglyphs represent life and signify “the breath of life”, and reproductive organs. It is commonly found in the hands of the funerary deities conferring the gift of afterlife into a mummy of a dead person.
Our breath goes from the outside to the inside, from the inside to the outside of the body. It is a Spirit that connects the life of the universe to the depths of the soul, not separate from the cosmic breath. The breath eternally unites the earth to the sky when we listen to our own calm breath.
The dead are often referred to as the ankhu and the sarcophagus is known as the neb-ankh or “the possessor of life.” Ankh as key of life is often depicted with outstretched hands of the god-self holding two staffs or scepters. It was created by ancient genius to express the past, present and future. In timeless existence, time transforms into eternity in awakened consciousness of the moment.
The scarab is a classical rebirth symbol. According to the description in the ancient Egyptian book Am-Tuat, the dead sun God transforms himself at the tenth station into Khepri, the scarab, and as such mounts the barge at the twelfth station, which raises the rejuvenated sun into the morning sky.
~Carl Jung, CW 8, §843.
We can enrich, amplify and verify our roots and the course of historical development by consciously searching the deepest unconscious layers of psyche. If the unconscious is a magical powerhouse that speaks in archetypes and symbols, our notion of the unconscious is also a symbol of the power of the primordial field.
Our ancestor hunt is an individual search in which we descend to our psychological depths to find common human roots, renew and recreate ourselves, and come back with this secret treasure of inherent meaning, having stirred both our breadth and the unknown depths and a new sense of our Presence in the world and Cosmos.
Through this journey we engender the 'eternal child,' our own rebirth and immortality. As in yoga, we discover spiritual balance by uniting opposites within the mindbody. "Therefore a wise man does not want to be a charioteer, for he knows that will and intention certainly attain goals but disturb the becoming of the future." (Jung to his Ego, Liber Novus, Page 311.)
This unified field of pure consciousness is therefore that one element in Nature on the ground of the infinite variety of creation, continuously emerging, growing, and dissolving. The whole field of temporal change emerges from this field of non-change, from this self-referential, immortal state of consciousness.
Consciousness, ab origine, is intuitive. Primordial Awareness is the groundstate of the human mindbody, seeing through illusion to primal reality and emptiness. Uniting Above and Below, we mirror Transcendent Consciousness.
The uninterrupted narrative of self is embodied as short and longterm memory and genetic memory. The Mystery level of consciousness or abyss of consciousness includes prophetic intuition. An abyss of consciousness opens the way for intellectual freedom as liberation from the outer limits and internal biological determinism.
"Nor should we omit to mention one final turn of the screw: like the devil who delights in disguising himself as an angel of light, the inferior function secretly and mischievously influences the superior function most of all, just as the latter represses the former most strongly." ~Carl Jung, CW 9i, Para 431.
The natural cycle of sympathetic and parasympathetic systems mediates cycles of arousal and calm, implicated in hyperarousal and hypoarousal. They are mediated by the neurotransmiters noradrenalin (norepinephrine) and serotonin. Such linked systems exert "rein control."
Interhemispheric balancing mediates the harmonization of the left and right hemispheres of the brainmind -- fight-flight-freeze responses, and pain-pleasure cycles. Chemically related cycles of addiction and inflation, desire, acting out, guilt, remorse, high well-being, self-acceptance, and self-esteem reflect psychological and physiological paradox. Meditative and exalted states are the extremes.
The unconscious is useless without the human mind. It always seeks its collective purposes and never your individual destiny. Your destiny is the result of the collaboration between the conscious and the unconscious. --Jung Letters, vol. 1, p. 283.
Archetypes are images in the soul that represent the course of one's life.
--Jung, Conversations with CG Jung, Archetypes, pg 21.
The brokennesss of life contrasts with the redemption we feel in our lives. By bearing the opposites, we expose ourselves to life in our humanity, according to Jung. We have to battle through our not-knowing to find our way on the strength of personal experiences and insights.
ACCESSING THE EXCEPTIONAL IN YOUR FAMILY TREE
Intensified Awareness of Your Ancestors
by Iona Miller, 2016
The souls or spirits of the dead are identical with the psychic activity of the living; they merely continue it.
~Carl Jung, CW 9i, Para 38
Every life is many days, day after day. We walk through ourselves, meeting robbers, ghosts, giants, old men, young men, wives, widows, brothers-in-law. But always meeting ourselves.” ―James Joyce, Ulysses
“Where are we really going? Always home.” ―Novalis
Life is born only of the spark of opposites.
~Carl Jung, CW 7, Para 78
You begin to have a presentiment of the whole when you embrace your opposite principle, since the whole belongs to both principles, which grow from one root. ~Carl Jung, The Red Book, LN 248
The fact that individual consciousness means separation and opposition is something that man has experienced countless times in his long history.
~Carl Jung, CW 10, Para 290
The soul demands your folly; not your wisdom.
~Carl Jung, The Red Book, Page 264
For when the soul vanished at death, it was not lost; in that other world it formed the living counterpole to the state of death in this world.
~Carl Jung, CW 16, Para 493
Thus your soul is your own self in the spiritual world.
As the abode of the spirits, however, the spiritual world is also an outer world.
~Carl Jung, The Red Book, Page 288.
For the conscious mind knows nothing beyond the opposites and, as a result,
has no knowledge of the thing that unites them. ~Carl Jung, CW 9i, Para 285
An opus is needed, that one can squander decades on, and do it out of necessity I must catch up with a piece of the Middle Ages. ~Jung, The Red Book, Page 354.
You must be in the middle of life, surrounded by death on all sides.
~Carl Jung, The Red Book, Page 370.
The unconscious is the only available source of religious experience.
~Carl Jung, CW 10, Para 289
Complimentarian Self
You begin to have a presentiment of the whole when you embrace your opposite principle, since the whole belongs to both principles, which grow from one root. ~Carl Jung, The Red Book, LN 248
First: these qualities are differentiated and separate in us; therefore they do not cancel each other out, but are effective. Thus we are the victims of the pairs of opposites. The Pleroma is rent within us. ~Carl Jung, The Red Book, Page 348.
Many ancient cultures depict a divine being, a central figure, a forward-facing male or female figure with outstretched hands holding a pair of identical symbols (animals, staffs, scepters, etc.). These symbolic objects represent opposing principles, including conscious and unconscious -- the co-existence of contradictory essences in human reality. They can result in a third thing like the offspring of male and female, like the in and out breath that creates life.
Being & Nonbeing
Opposites have central significance in genealogy. The unity of opposites occurs in the coinciding of opposites at any time and place in history by means of sacred rituals, including genealogy. Our whole genealogy is made of pairs of opposites. We are not always necessarily aware we are performing a ritual or know the thought behind our myth. That is, we are not always aware of the implications of the coincidentia oppositorum in the myth or ritual.
"As the power of being, being-itself cannot have a beginning and an end. Otherwise it would have arisen out of non-being. But nonbeing is literally nothing except in relation to being. Being precedes nonbeing in ontological validity...Being is the beginning without a beginning, the end without an end. It is its own beginning and end, the initial power of everything that is. However, everything which participates in the power of being is 'mixed' with nonbeing. It is finite." --Paul Tillich, SYSTEMATIC THEOLOGY, Vol. I, U. of Chicago Press, 1951, pp. 188-189.
But we can transcend them by learning to hold the tensions between the opposites inherent in the human condition. We experience the same oppositions, but not as
such. The unity of the sacred is experienced instead. The two modes of being exist paradoxically. The wholeness of the sacred is experienced as mutual coexistence in the temporal human condition. An integral part of all reality or sacrality, oppositions and tensions of reality harmonize into a unity or a "mystery of totality" -- psyche as sacrament in a fully inhabited life.
What a thinker does not think he believes does not exist, and what one who feels does not feel he believes does not exist. You begin to have a presentiment of the whole when you embrace your opposite principle, since the whole belongs to both principles, which grow from one root. ~Jung and Elijah, Liber Novus, Page 248.
Much has been made in recent years of the power of Presence in the Here and Now, but perhaps our HERE/NOW awareness can be used to violate energy conservation. We might think that moments when we are fully present would be more powerful. But flights of spiritual or religious ecstasy take us out of ourselves, beyond our ordinary boundaries of being and perception.
Nonetheless, when the time dimension collapses in non-ordinary awareness, we are still a consciousness present in some manner at a particular time and space, while simultaneously connected in a peculiar way to the ground of being.
Perhaps there is a third Zen-like quantity or Observer Self that also needs to be present to break Time/space symmetry. Then concurrently maximizing all three variables becomes maximally conducive to producing transformative experiences. For example, during meditation, activity in the parietal lobe slows down processing sensory information about the surrounding world, orienting us in time and space.
Those on the inner journey attest to phenomena such as, "being laid out, flattened into Earth, body and mind completely separate with no control over the physical, but more concentrated awareness than if being fully grounded in body... In those moments, the concentration of energy into mind and spirit [beyond] the limitations of physical suffering ("body" is burden and blessing) allow for the manifestation of clearer thoughts, creating a more focused reality. The reality may only be experienced by the individual self in the immediate moment, and thoughts may take time to come to physical fruition. But in such a truly prescient time we may be able to consciously co-create the reality of our choosing."
Primeval Ground of Being
"We are here face to face with the very old symbolism of the coincidentia oppositorum, universally wide spread, well attested in primitive stages of culture, and which served more or less to define both the fundamental reality (the
Urgrund, primal cause or ultimate cosmic principle; original archetype), and the paradoxical state of the totality, the perfection and consequently the sacredness of God," Mircea Eliade claims.
Jung called this the coincidentia oppositorum, central to the meaning of paradigm, paradox and the structure of reality. Archetypal opposites include the pro-historical and anti-historical.
We seek meaning in the transhistorical, the transgenerational. The dualities remain the same across time: unconscious dynamics of good and evil, light and dark, male and female, sun and moon, sacred and profane, chthonic (earth underworld) and pneumatic (airy, upper world), pleasure and pain, sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous system.
The sacred figure depicts the hero/sage combining two opposing principles to create a spiritual balance -- our divine nature. This principle involves family, the community, the nation, the environment, and god, embracing all aspects of existence, including a moral imperative, the basic equilibrium of the universe and the weighing of the heart in the afterlife.
This balance or centeredness opens new doors of perception. In ancient Egypt this ruling principle was called Ma'at, the concept of truth, balance, order, harmony, law, morality, and justice. Ma'at regulated the stars, seasons, and the actions of both mortals and the deities, who set the order of the universe from chaos at the moment of creation.
In the moment of transformation we realize the effulgence of meaning in the plurality of common life. We don't forget ourselves when we partake of cosmic myth or ritual; we find or remember ourselves in larger realities of our own being.
"Hence man's situation in existence is depicted in the tension between his experience of his essential self and his existential distance and alienation from it. Tillich believes that man cannot destroy the groundedness of his essential being in God, but neither can he regain it or confer it upon himself...The movement towards or back to the essential...is still the basic movement of life..."
Jung speaks of this process as one of coming into a fuller or more compendious personality through the progressive integration of the unconscious, but like Tillich he believes that man can neither reject this movement in his life with impunity nor bring it to a definitive completion within a lifetime.
--John P. Dourley, The Psyche as Sacrament: A Comparative Study of C.G. Jung and Paul Tillich, Inner City Books, 1981, p. 56.
The sacred dimension is realized in opposition to and harmony with ordinary existence. In Tantra, there is a ’’rupture of planes," the unification of the two polar principles (Siva and Sakti). The transcending of all opposites is the union of polarities without and within the body in a coincidence of time and eternity.
We are of the same substance; our paradoxical I/Self awareness is the difference. The symmetrical balance of duality is the icon of centeredness. The mind is a “difference-seeker” -- a pattern recognizer that helps us order and navigate the overwhelming complexity of reality. But this gift also creates blind spots and biases, as we fill in what we don’t know with our limited knowing.
“The universe is a complete unique entity. Everything and everyone is bound together with some invisible strings. Do not break anyone’s heart; do not look down on weaker than you. One’s sorrow at the other side of the world can make the entire world suffer; one’s happiness can make the entire world smile.” ―Shams Tabrizi
Our primitive origins link mythological thinking to our lineage and modern disciplines, connecting us to our inherent cultural roots from which we have been dangerously estranged. In Egypt, the primordial couple was Isis and Osiris. Isis is the ancient Egyptian goddess of magic, fertility and motherhood, and death, healing and rebirth.
The tension between above and below in ancient Egypt is in my opinion the real source of the Near Eastern saviour figures, whose patriarch is Osiris.
He is also the source of the idea of an individual (immortal) soul. ("The Osiris of N. N.") The purpose of nearly all rebirth rites is to unite the above with the below.
The baptism in the Jordan is an eloquent example: water below, Holy Ghost above. --Carl Jung, Letters Vol. I, Pages 259-261
One of the oldest gods, Osiris was the God of the Dead and Vegetation. He is also called in various names and spelling such as Usiris, Oser, Usire, Asar, Aser, Ausar, Ausir, Wesir or Ausare and usually referred as god of Afterlife. He rules the underworld, and is god of resurrection to eternal life, protector, and vegetation.
The ankh or the ´nh in ancient Egyptian hieroglyphs represent life and signify “the breath of life”, and reproductive organs. It is commonly found in the hands of the funerary deities conferring the gift of afterlife into a mummy of a dead person.
Our breath goes from the outside to the inside, from the inside to the outside of the body. It is a Spirit that connects the life of the universe to the depths of the soul, not separate from the cosmic breath. The breath eternally unites the earth to the sky when we listen to our own calm breath.
The dead are often referred to as the ankhu and the sarcophagus is known as the neb-ankh or “the possessor of life.” Ankh as key of life is often depicted with outstretched hands of the god-self holding two staffs or scepters. It was created by ancient genius to express the past, present and future. In timeless existence, time transforms into eternity in awakened consciousness of the moment.
The scarab is a classical rebirth symbol. According to the description in the ancient Egyptian book Am-Tuat, the dead sun God transforms himself at the tenth station into Khepri, the scarab, and as such mounts the barge at the twelfth station, which raises the rejuvenated sun into the morning sky.
~Carl Jung, CW 8, §843.
We can enrich, amplify and verify our roots and the course of historical development by consciously searching the deepest unconscious layers of psyche. If the unconscious is a magical powerhouse that speaks in archetypes and symbols, our notion of the unconscious is also a symbol of the power of the primordial field.
Our ancestor hunt is an individual search in which we descend to our psychological depths to find common human roots, renew and recreate ourselves, and come back with this secret treasure of inherent meaning, having stirred both our breadth and the unknown depths and a new sense of our Presence in the world and Cosmos.
Through this journey we engender the 'eternal child,' our own rebirth and immortality. As in yoga, we discover spiritual balance by uniting opposites within the mindbody. "Therefore a wise man does not want to be a charioteer, for he knows that will and intention certainly attain goals but disturb the becoming of the future." (Jung to his Ego, Liber Novus, Page 311.)
This unified field of pure consciousness is therefore that one element in Nature on the ground of the infinite variety of creation, continuously emerging, growing, and dissolving. The whole field of temporal change emerges from this field of non-change, from this self-referential, immortal state of consciousness.
Consciousness, ab origine, is intuitive. Primordial Awareness is the groundstate of the human mindbody, seeing through illusion to primal reality and emptiness. Uniting Above and Below, we mirror Transcendent Consciousness.
The uninterrupted narrative of self is embodied as short and longterm memory and genetic memory. The Mystery level of consciousness or abyss of consciousness includes prophetic intuition. An abyss of consciousness opens the way for intellectual freedom as liberation from the outer limits and internal biological determinism.
"Nor should we omit to mention one final turn of the screw: like the devil who delights in disguising himself as an angel of light, the inferior function secretly and mischievously influences the superior function most of all, just as the latter represses the former most strongly." ~Carl Jung, CW 9i, Para 431.
The natural cycle of sympathetic and parasympathetic systems mediates cycles of arousal and calm, implicated in hyperarousal and hypoarousal. They are mediated by the neurotransmiters noradrenalin (norepinephrine) and serotonin. Such linked systems exert "rein control."
Interhemispheric balancing mediates the harmonization of the left and right hemispheres of the brainmind -- fight-flight-freeze responses, and pain-pleasure cycles. Chemically related cycles of addiction and inflation, desire, acting out, guilt, remorse, high well-being, self-acceptance, and self-esteem reflect psychological and physiological paradox. Meditative and exalted states are the extremes.
The unconscious is useless without the human mind. It always seeks its collective purposes and never your individual destiny. Your destiny is the result of the collaboration between the conscious and the unconscious. --Jung Letters, vol. 1, p. 283.
Archetypes are images in the soul that represent the course of one's life.
--Jung, Conversations with CG Jung, Archetypes, pg 21.
The brokennesss of life contrasts with the redemption we feel in our lives. By bearing the opposites, we expose ourselves to life in our humanity, according to Jung. We have to battle through our not-knowing to find our way on the strength of personal experiences and insights.
Inner Marriage
Symbolized in the alchemical Rebis or the Hermaprodite, the paradox of creative opposites is a coniuntio, or royal wedding as shown in The Rosarium. Healing is a natural by-product of bridging the unconscious depths with the conscious mind, illuminating our roots, instinctive wholeness and primordial mind. Alchemy calls this union the Unus Mundus "one world."
Spirit or energy merges completely with soul or matter. In the mystical union of opposites, spirit is represented by the Bridegroom as discarnate self and soul by the Bride as incarnate self or matter -- giving birth to the divine self or androgyne. It symbolizes wholeness -- the countless novel textures and interdependencies of the different values of consciousness. Meaning terms only have reality only in human consciousness. Human consciousness makes meaning with divine unconsciousness.
Transformational Understanding & Integration
If both “being” and “non-being” are illusory concepts, the truth exists beyond that dual state… beyond the rational. We may mistakenly identify with “present conscious experience.” In this perspective things either are or aren’t. But a non-dualistic state-space of possible experiences is the broader frame of expanded awareness.
The "maternal darkness" compensates "paternal light,"
so light and dark are made one in the transcendent symbol.
“The hermaphrodite means nothing less than a union of the strongest and most striking opposites… The primordial idea has become a symbol of the creative union of opposites, “uniting symbol” in the literal sense.”. . . .“…a symbol of the unity of personality, a symbol of the self, where the war of opposites finds peace. In this way the primordial being becomes the distant goal of man’s self-development.” --Jung, CW 9i, para. 292-4.
On a personal level this means this reuniting of spirit, soul, and body indicates a full knowledge of both the heights and depths of one's character. When the hieros gamos is consummated in our daily lives, it means that we have learned to apply our insights in practice.
The Mysterium showed me the things which lay before me and had to be fulfilled. … What happened was my wandering with myself, through whose suffering
I had to earn what served for the completion of the Mysterium I had seen.
~Carl Jung, The Red Book, Page 255.
If you look into yourselves, you will see … the nearby as far-off and infinite,
since the world of the inner is as infinite as the world of the outer.
~Carl Jung, The Red Book, Page 264.
The queen symbolizes the body, the king stands for the spirit, while the soul unites the two. So, our psyche is a half bodily and half spiritual substance. When king and queen (animus/anima) are united, they form a magical hermaphroditic being which unites opposite energies in the glorified body.
Symbolized in the alchemical Rebis or the Hermaprodite, the paradox of creative opposites is a coniuntio, or royal wedding as shown in The Rosarium. Healing is a natural by-product of bridging the unconscious depths with the conscious mind, illuminating our roots, instinctive wholeness and primordial mind. Alchemy calls this union the Unus Mundus "one world."
Spirit or energy merges completely with soul or matter. In the mystical union of opposites, spirit is represented by the Bridegroom as discarnate self and soul by the Bride as incarnate self or matter -- giving birth to the divine self or androgyne. It symbolizes wholeness -- the countless novel textures and interdependencies of the different values of consciousness. Meaning terms only have reality only in human consciousness. Human consciousness makes meaning with divine unconsciousness.
Transformational Understanding & Integration
If both “being” and “non-being” are illusory concepts, the truth exists beyond that dual state… beyond the rational. We may mistakenly identify with “present conscious experience.” In this perspective things either are or aren’t. But a non-dualistic state-space of possible experiences is the broader frame of expanded awareness.
The "maternal darkness" compensates "paternal light,"
so light and dark are made one in the transcendent symbol.
“The hermaphrodite means nothing less than a union of the strongest and most striking opposites… The primordial idea has become a symbol of the creative union of opposites, “uniting symbol” in the literal sense.”. . . .“…a symbol of the unity of personality, a symbol of the self, where the war of opposites finds peace. In this way the primordial being becomes the distant goal of man’s self-development.” --Jung, CW 9i, para. 292-4.
On a personal level this means this reuniting of spirit, soul, and body indicates a full knowledge of both the heights and depths of one's character. When the hieros gamos is consummated in our daily lives, it means that we have learned to apply our insights in practice.
The Mysterium showed me the things which lay before me and had to be fulfilled. … What happened was my wandering with myself, through whose suffering
I had to earn what served for the completion of the Mysterium I had seen.
~Carl Jung, The Red Book, Page 255.
If you look into yourselves, you will see … the nearby as far-off and infinite,
since the world of the inner is as infinite as the world of the outer.
~Carl Jung, The Red Book, Page 264.
The queen symbolizes the body, the king stands for the spirit, while the soul unites the two. So, our psyche is a half bodily and half spiritual substance. When king and queen (animus/anima) are united, they form a magical hermaphroditic being which unites opposite energies in the glorified body.
You should be the vessel and womb of life, therefore I shall purify you.
~Carl Jung to his Ego, Liber Novus, Page 330.
The “eternal” child in man is an indescribable experience, an incongruity, a handicap, and a divine prerogative; an imponderable that determines the ultimate worth or worthlessness of a personality. ~Carl Jung, CW 9i, Para 300
To find out what is truly individual in ourselves, profound reflection is needed; and suddenly we realize how uncommonly difficult the discovery of individuality is. ~Carl Jung, CW 7, Para 242.
The urge and compulsion to self-realization is a law of nature and thus of invincible power, even though its effect, at the start, is insignificant and improbable. ~Carl Jung, CW 9i, Para 289
"All...Mysteries appear to come from the same source, having a complete cosmogony and an explanation of the primitive nature and origin of man. ...The Initiate was first subjected to horrifying trials by darkness, fire and water, long fasts, visions, etc., and if he surmounted these and remained sane, which many did not, he was received among the priests." --Inquire Within (A Ruling Chief of the Mother Temple of the Stella Matutina and R.R. et A.C.), The Trail of the Serpent, p. 12 (1936)
The ego keeps its integrity only if it does not identify with one of the opposites,
and if it understands how to hold the balance between them.
~Carl Jung, CW 8, Para 425.
It is sufficiently obvious that life, like any other process, has a beginning
and an end and that every beginning is also the beginning of the end.
~Carl Jung, CW 7, Para 34.
From the middle of life, only he who is willing to die with life remains living. ~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 274, Footnote 75.
But when we penetrate the depths of the soul and when we try to understand its mysterious life, we shall discern that death is not a meaningless end, the mere vanishing into nothingness—it is an accomplishment, a ripe fruit on the tree of life. ~Carl Jung, CW 18, Para 1705-7
Death is a drawing together of two worlds, not an end.
We are the bridge. ~Carl Jung, J.E.T., Page 95.
Take pains to waken the dead.
Dig deep mines and throw in sacrificial gifts,
so that they reach the dead.
Reflect in good heart upon evil, this is the way to the ascent.
But before the ascent, everything is night and Hell.
~Carl Jung, The Red Book, Page 244.
When you step into your own Hell, never think that you come like one suffering in beauty; or as a proud pariah, but you come like a stupid and curious fool and gaze in wonder at the scraps that have fallen from your table.
~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 262.
The way to your beyond leads through Hell and in fact through your own wholly particular Hell, whose bottom consists of knee-deep rubble, whose air is the spent breath of millions, whose -fires are dwarflike passions, and whose devils are chimerical sign-boards. ~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 262.
The deposit of man’s whole ancestral experience—so rich in emotional imagery—of father, mother, child, husband and wife, of the magic personality, of dangers to body and soul, has exalted this group of archetypes into the supreme regulating principles of religious and even of political life, in unconscious recognition of their tremendous psychic power. ~Carl Jung, CW 8, Para 337
Childhood is important not only because various warpings of instinct have their origin there, but because this is the time when, terrifying or encouraging, those far-seeing dreams and images appear before the soul of the child, shaping his whole destiny, as well as those retrospective intuitions which reach back far beyond the range of childhood experience into the life of our ancestors.
~Carl Jung, CW 8, Para 989-70)
~Carl Jung to his Ego, Liber Novus, Page 330.
The “eternal” child in man is an indescribable experience, an incongruity, a handicap, and a divine prerogative; an imponderable that determines the ultimate worth or worthlessness of a personality. ~Carl Jung, CW 9i, Para 300
To find out what is truly individual in ourselves, profound reflection is needed; and suddenly we realize how uncommonly difficult the discovery of individuality is. ~Carl Jung, CW 7, Para 242.
The urge and compulsion to self-realization is a law of nature and thus of invincible power, even though its effect, at the start, is insignificant and improbable. ~Carl Jung, CW 9i, Para 289
"All...Mysteries appear to come from the same source, having a complete cosmogony and an explanation of the primitive nature and origin of man. ...The Initiate was first subjected to horrifying trials by darkness, fire and water, long fasts, visions, etc., and if he surmounted these and remained sane, which many did not, he was received among the priests." --Inquire Within (A Ruling Chief of the Mother Temple of the Stella Matutina and R.R. et A.C.), The Trail of the Serpent, p. 12 (1936)
The ego keeps its integrity only if it does not identify with one of the opposites,
and if it understands how to hold the balance between them.
~Carl Jung, CW 8, Para 425.
It is sufficiently obvious that life, like any other process, has a beginning
and an end and that every beginning is also the beginning of the end.
~Carl Jung, CW 7, Para 34.
From the middle of life, only he who is willing to die with life remains living. ~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 274, Footnote 75.
But when we penetrate the depths of the soul and when we try to understand its mysterious life, we shall discern that death is not a meaningless end, the mere vanishing into nothingness—it is an accomplishment, a ripe fruit on the tree of life. ~Carl Jung, CW 18, Para 1705-7
Death is a drawing together of two worlds, not an end.
We are the bridge. ~Carl Jung, J.E.T., Page 95.
Take pains to waken the dead.
Dig deep mines and throw in sacrificial gifts,
so that they reach the dead.
Reflect in good heart upon evil, this is the way to the ascent.
But before the ascent, everything is night and Hell.
~Carl Jung, The Red Book, Page 244.
When you step into your own Hell, never think that you come like one suffering in beauty; or as a proud pariah, but you come like a stupid and curious fool and gaze in wonder at the scraps that have fallen from your table.
~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 262.
The way to your beyond leads through Hell and in fact through your own wholly particular Hell, whose bottom consists of knee-deep rubble, whose air is the spent breath of millions, whose -fires are dwarflike passions, and whose devils are chimerical sign-boards. ~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 262.
The deposit of man’s whole ancestral experience—so rich in emotional imagery—of father, mother, child, husband and wife, of the magic personality, of dangers to body and soul, has exalted this group of archetypes into the supreme regulating principles of religious and even of political life, in unconscious recognition of their tremendous psychic power. ~Carl Jung, CW 8, Para 337
Childhood is important not only because various warpings of instinct have their origin there, but because this is the time when, terrifying or encouraging, those far-seeing dreams and images appear before the soul of the child, shaping his whole destiny, as well as those retrospective intuitions which reach back far beyond the range of childhood experience into the life of our ancestors.
~Carl Jung, CW 8, Para 989-70)
- Metaphor and aesthetics
- Metaphor and performance
- Metaphor and affect
- Metaphor and embodiment
- Perceiving and understanding metaphor
- Metaphoric meaning making
- Narrativity, figuration and metaphor
- Metaphor and expression
- Metaphor and representation
- Metaphor and temporality
- Motifs, representations and metaphor
- Rhetorics and metaphor (sketching out a family picture of metaphor: metaphor, metonymy, oxymoron, synecdoche, simile etc.)
- Actions, applications and metaphor (e.g. art therapy, media pedagogy)
- Metaphor and creativity
- Multimodal metaphor (advertisement, comics, music, face-to-face communication including gesture with speech, film, television, video games etc.)
- Conceptual metaphor in media and the arts
- The symbolic expression of birth and prenatal consciousness can be found in art, mythology, and creative expression. Through clinical and empirical evidence our knowledge of the origins of awareness and memory is being pushed ever earlier. If pre- and perinatal experience affects personality, then we should see its tentacles in creative expression. Art flows from the deepest realms of the unconscious where the early roots of the human psyche are most active. As well, the creative act is often non-verbal which may be closely allied with the pre-verbal consciousness. Birth and prenatal experience which may not be readily accessed or discussed with the later developed language mind may be more aptly expressed with the non-verbal articulation of art. Throughout history natalistic images have often vividly depicted pre- and perinatal experience with no conscious recognition on the part of the creator of the early origin of the work. The similarity and commonality of these images is due to the universality of the environment of the womb and process of birth. Looking at meanings behind natalistic symbols found in art we can add a valuable resource for developing our understanding of pre- and perinatal issues in history, culture and personality.
- https://birthpsychology.com/journals/volume-4-issue-2/natalism-pre-and-perinatal-metaphor
ONE-SIDEDNESS
Jung’s definition of one-sidedness rests on his image of the structure of the psyche. Drawing on Heraclitus’ idea of the enantiodromia,[12] Jung envisioned the psyche as existing in an equilibrium between two poles. “Psychic processes … behave like a scale along which consciousness ‘slides.’ At one moment it finds itself in the vicinity of instinct,…; at another, it slides along to the other end where spirit predominates…”[13] and
“… everything rests on an inner polarity,… a pre-existing polarity, without which there could be no energy…”.[14] By “energy” Jung means “libido,” including all forms of psychic energy, rather than just the sexual energy of Freud.[15] As we go through life, Jung felt, this energy ideally is moving between the poles in a fluid, dynamic way. I say “ideally,” because many situations in life, as well as our personal preferences, innate qualities of temperament and our life history will influence the energetic flow, often causing it to get unbalanced or one-sided.
Jung used a variety of terms for one-sidedness, calling it a “defect,”[16] a “lack of moderation—bad measure in general,”[17] the result of repression,[18] a “mark of barbarism.”[19] But Jung also recognized that one-sidedness is “an unavoidable and necessary characteristic… an advantage and a drawback at the same time,”[20] and an “inevitable” feature of our conscious life, because consciousness “… is continually being corrected and compensated by the universal human being in us, whose goal is the ultimate integration of conscious and unconscious, or better, the assimilation of the ego to a wider personality.”[21]
So one-sidedness is something we all manifest as we go through life. It takes on negative coloration when it is carried too far, “… so far that the complementary opposite is lost sight of, and the blackness of the white, the evil of the good, the depth of the heights, and so on, is no longer seen, …”.[22] When we cling to persona stuff, or focus exclusively on sweetness and light, repressing all forms of shadow, we create a condition in which the inner dynamic flow gets stuck, and the equilibrium of libido is lost. In extreme cases, the result is a compulsion, which causes the libido to become “untamed” as it “streams off to one side,” becoming more daemonic the more the situation remains unbalanced.[23]
http://jungiancenter.org/jung-on-one-sidedness/
We Must Live Our Own Vision
Intrinsic Meaning
But to have soul is the whole venture of life, for soul is a life-giving daemon who plays his elfin game above and below human existence, for which reason-in the realm of dogma he is threatened and propitiated with superhuman punishments and blessings that go far beyond the possible deserts of human
beings. ~Carl Jung, CW 9ii, Pages 26-27
In Psychology Types (1923) Jung described intuition as "a perception of realities which are not known to the conscious, and which goes via the unconscious." Intuition, he said, is not merely a perception, but a creative process with the capacity to inspire. The intellect requires intuition to function at maximum performance, and dream symbols cannot be interpreted without intuition and imagination.
But the way is my own self my own life founded upon myself. The God wants my life. He wants to go with me, sit at the table with me, work with me. Above all he wants to be ever-present.
~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 292.
With words you pull up the underworld.
Word, the paltriest and the mightiest. In words the emptiness and the fullness flow together. Hence the word is an image of God.
The word is the greatest and the smallest that man created, just as what is created through man is the greatest and the smallest.
~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 299.
The transcendent function is not something one does oneself; it comes rather from experiencing the conflict of opposites. ~Carl Jung, Letters Vol. I, Page 269
"Western man has no need of more superiority over nature whether outside or inside. He has both in an almost devilish perfection. What he lacks is conscious recognition of his inferiority to the nature around him and within him. He must learn that he may not do exactly as he wills. If he does not learn this, his own nature will destroy him. He does not know that his own soul is rebelling against him in a suicidal way." --C. G. Jung (CW 11, par. 869-70)
Intrinsic Meaning
But to have soul is the whole venture of life, for soul is a life-giving daemon who plays his elfin game above and below human existence, for which reason-in the realm of dogma he is threatened and propitiated with superhuman punishments and blessings that go far beyond the possible deserts of human
beings. ~Carl Jung, CW 9ii, Pages 26-27
In Psychology Types (1923) Jung described intuition as "a perception of realities which are not known to the conscious, and which goes via the unconscious." Intuition, he said, is not merely a perception, but a creative process with the capacity to inspire. The intellect requires intuition to function at maximum performance, and dream symbols cannot be interpreted without intuition and imagination.
But the way is my own self my own life founded upon myself. The God wants my life. He wants to go with me, sit at the table with me, work with me. Above all he wants to be ever-present.
~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 292.
With words you pull up the underworld.
Word, the paltriest and the mightiest. In words the emptiness and the fullness flow together. Hence the word is an image of God.
The word is the greatest and the smallest that man created, just as what is created through man is the greatest and the smallest.
~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 299.
The transcendent function is not something one does oneself; it comes rather from experiencing the conflict of opposites. ~Carl Jung, Letters Vol. I, Page 269
"Western man has no need of more superiority over nature whether outside or inside. He has both in an almost devilish perfection. What he lacks is conscious recognition of his inferiority to the nature around him and within him. He must learn that he may not do exactly as he wills. If he does not learn this, his own nature will destroy him. He does not know that his own soul is rebelling against him in a suicidal way." --C. G. Jung (CW 11, par. 869-70)
Your Family Tree: Living Presence in Spirit
IT EXISTS WITHOUT SUBSTANCE
It's In Your Nature
Humans have always been connected to trees, since our arboreal days. They speak to our soul as a metaphor of Life.
The Tree of Life represents creation.
We have 3.8 billion years of successful ancestors behind us. That’s a lot of ancestors who sacrificed for us.
Can we do any less?
Some are able to able to tap into the consciousness of their relatives and ancestors. Many have consciousness of relatives, ancestors, and historical personages, sometimes during pregnancy.
Through sacrifice we appreciate our ancestors' strength.
Our forebears honored select landforms, trees, plants, and animals as their ancestors. They understood the deep wisdom in the rhythms of the Earth. An infinite variety of life experience is stored by our fellow creatures and by spirits. They believed in mutual interdependence between these forms and humanity. We've sought such reassurance since our ancestors first learned to anticipate the future, including their own mortality.
It is a privilege and gift just to be able to trace
the names of our ancestors.
Experiential Excursions
We can surround ourselves with our ancestors by listening to their wisdom, deepening our gratitude, reconnecting past and present, and passing on the blessings for which we are responsible. There is no evolution, only nonlocal and nonlinear co-evolution -- acting together throughout the universe. To know them is to breath with them and listen deeply. To listen deeply is to connect to the sound of deep calling to Deep. We call on it and it calls on us, moving with the flowing current of life -- the quiet, still awareness of the deep spring in the soul that makes us whole and gives us peace -- the deep presence of emotional revisioning and completion.
IT EXISTS WITHOUT SUBSTANCE
It's In Your Nature
Humans have always been connected to trees, since our arboreal days. They speak to our soul as a metaphor of Life.
The Tree of Life represents creation.
We have 3.8 billion years of successful ancestors behind us. That’s a lot of ancestors who sacrificed for us.
Can we do any less?
Some are able to able to tap into the consciousness of their relatives and ancestors. Many have consciousness of relatives, ancestors, and historical personages, sometimes during pregnancy.
Through sacrifice we appreciate our ancestors' strength.
Our forebears honored select landforms, trees, plants, and animals as their ancestors. They understood the deep wisdom in the rhythms of the Earth. An infinite variety of life experience is stored by our fellow creatures and by spirits. They believed in mutual interdependence between these forms and humanity. We've sought such reassurance since our ancestors first learned to anticipate the future, including their own mortality.
It is a privilege and gift just to be able to trace
the names of our ancestors.
Experiential Excursions
We can surround ourselves with our ancestors by listening to their wisdom, deepening our gratitude, reconnecting past and present, and passing on the blessings for which we are responsible. There is no evolution, only nonlocal and nonlinear co-evolution -- acting together throughout the universe. To know them is to breath with them and listen deeply. To listen deeply is to connect to the sound of deep calling to Deep. We call on it and it calls on us, moving with the flowing current of life -- the quiet, still awareness of the deep spring in the soul that makes us whole and gives us peace -- the deep presence of emotional revisioning and completion.
Ours is a shamanic journey back to meet our ancestors and discover the power of our lineage. More than any defects we may have inherited, we need to travel back discovering our inherited ancestral power. Working with the ancestors is vitally important since we are the ancestors of future generations to come.
"There would be no hope for the world if we all continued to carry in us
hatred for the deeds committed by our ancestors." --Stan Grof
"Like a rose that is made of earth, air, water, sunlight, human care, and compost from the garbage, the Buddha was made of this mother and father, his ancestors, his culture, he was also made of suffering and joy. This is true of each of our lives." --Joan Halifax
"Each of us is influenced by 'history's hundred channels' which 'show' culture at work in the channels of the soul. The land of the dead is the country of ancestors, and the images who walk in on us are our ancestors.... They are the historical progenitor, or archetypes, of our particular spirit informing it with ancestral culture. So, perhaps less and emphasis on historical events and facts at this juncture, and more on the nature of a historical sensibility imaginally kindled that arouses one's soul within a larger fabric of meaning and intentions, can assist us in reclaiming the ancestral imagination to allow for a fuller vision of our place in historical time." --Harvesting Darkness, By Dennis Slattery
"There would be no hope for the world if we all continued to carry in us
hatred for the deeds committed by our ancestors." --Stan Grof
"Like a rose that is made of earth, air, water, sunlight, human care, and compost from the garbage, the Buddha was made of this mother and father, his ancestors, his culture, he was also made of suffering and joy. This is true of each of our lives." --Joan Halifax
"Each of us is influenced by 'history's hundred channels' which 'show' culture at work in the channels of the soul. The land of the dead is the country of ancestors, and the images who walk in on us are our ancestors.... They are the historical progenitor, or archetypes, of our particular spirit informing it with ancestral culture. So, perhaps less and emphasis on historical events and facts at this juncture, and more on the nature of a historical sensibility imaginally kindled that arouses one's soul within a larger fabric of meaning and intentions, can assist us in reclaiming the ancestral imagination to allow for a fuller vision of our place in historical time." --Harvesting Darkness, By Dennis Slattery
Alex Grey
People report reliving or observing episodes of the lives of their ancestors. In non ordinary realities, you can identify with other forms, as you become those people, animals, gods, ancestors, collective unconscious, mythological archetypes.
"Transpersonal experience often contain new accurate information about
other people, animals, plants, life of our ancestors, historical periods and events,
and even mythological beings and realms from various cultures of
the world. In many instances, this information is very specific, transcends the subject’s educational and cultural background. and its veracity can be confirmed by independent research. I have described many examples of this kind in my book
When the Impossible Happens."
"Careful study of transpersonal experiences shows that they cannot be
explained as products of pathological processes in the brain, but are ontologically
real. To distinguish transpersonal experiences from imaginary products of
individual fantasy, Jungian psychologists refer to this domain as imaginal.
French scholar, philosopher, and mystic, Henri Corbin, who first used the term
mundus imaginalis,was inspired in this regard by his study of Islamic mystical
literature (Corbin 2000). Islamic theosophers call the imaginal world, where
everything existing in the sensory world has its analogue, ‘alam a mithal.’ ...The imaginal world possesses extension and dimensions, forms and colors, but these are not perceptible to our senses as they would be when they are properties of physical objects. However, this realm is in every respect as fully ontologically real and susceptible to consensual validation by other people as the material world perceived."
"The second category of transpersonal experiences is characterized primarily by
overcoming of temporal rather than spatial boundaries, by transcendence of linear time. We have already talked about the possibility of vivid reliving of important memories from infancy and of the trauma of birth. This historical regression can continue farther and involve authentic fetal and embryonal memories from different periods of intrauterine life. It is not even unusual to experience, on the level of cellular consciousness, full identification with the sperm and the ovum at the time of conception."
"But the historical regression does not stop here and it is possible to have experiences from the lives of one's human or animal ancestors, or even those that seem to be coming from the racial and collective unconscious as described by C. G. Jung (Jung 1956, 1959). Quite frequently, the experiences that seem to be happening in other cultures and historical periods are associated with a sense of personal remembering; people then talk about reliving of memories from past lives, from previous incarnations." --Stan Grof
Grof: The problems start when you go further back, when, let’s say, you start having experiences of early embryonal stage or I have a number of instances where people experience something from the life of their ancestors or identify with their father at the time 15 years before their conception.
Paulson: You’re saying somehow that they can perceive this, something that happened to their own parents.
Grof: Yes and then you have this whole area of the Jungian collective unconscious where you can evict experiences from human history, from different periods of human history. Jung also talked about the archetypal collective unconscious where we can experience mythology of other cultures that we have never studied in this lifetime. So there we really get to the problem of where does that come from.
"Transpersonal experience often contain new accurate information about
other people, animals, plants, life of our ancestors, historical periods and events,
and even mythological beings and realms from various cultures of
the world. In many instances, this information is very specific, transcends the subject’s educational and cultural background. and its veracity can be confirmed by independent research. I have described many examples of this kind in my book
When the Impossible Happens."
"Careful study of transpersonal experiences shows that they cannot be
explained as products of pathological processes in the brain, but are ontologically
real. To distinguish transpersonal experiences from imaginary products of
individual fantasy, Jungian psychologists refer to this domain as imaginal.
French scholar, philosopher, and mystic, Henri Corbin, who first used the term
mundus imaginalis,was inspired in this regard by his study of Islamic mystical
literature (Corbin 2000). Islamic theosophers call the imaginal world, where
everything existing in the sensory world has its analogue, ‘alam a mithal.’ ...The imaginal world possesses extension and dimensions, forms and colors, but these are not perceptible to our senses as they would be when they are properties of physical objects. However, this realm is in every respect as fully ontologically real and susceptible to consensual validation by other people as the material world perceived."
"The second category of transpersonal experiences is characterized primarily by
overcoming of temporal rather than spatial boundaries, by transcendence of linear time. We have already talked about the possibility of vivid reliving of important memories from infancy and of the trauma of birth. This historical regression can continue farther and involve authentic fetal and embryonal memories from different periods of intrauterine life. It is not even unusual to experience, on the level of cellular consciousness, full identification with the sperm and the ovum at the time of conception."
"But the historical regression does not stop here and it is possible to have experiences from the lives of one's human or animal ancestors, or even those that seem to be coming from the racial and collective unconscious as described by C. G. Jung (Jung 1956, 1959). Quite frequently, the experiences that seem to be happening in other cultures and historical periods are associated with a sense of personal remembering; people then talk about reliving of memories from past lives, from previous incarnations." --Stan Grof
Grof: The problems start when you go further back, when, let’s say, you start having experiences of early embryonal stage or I have a number of instances where people experience something from the life of their ancestors or identify with their father at the time 15 years before their conception.
Paulson: You’re saying somehow that they can perceive this, something that happened to their own parents.
Grof: Yes and then you have this whole area of the Jungian collective unconscious where you can evict experiences from human history, from different periods of human history. Jung also talked about the archetypal collective unconscious where we can experience mythology of other cultures that we have never studied in this lifetime. So there we really get to the problem of where does that come from.
Tree Of Life by Robert Cornelius
GHOST WRITERS WITH LIVING EYES
Transpersonal Participation & Comprehension
by Iona Miller, 2016
"Follow in the footsteps of your ancestors, for the mind is trained through knowledge. Behold, their words endure… follow their wise counsel."
--"The Book of Kheti," The Husia: Sacred Wisdom of Ancient Egypt
And yet the attainment of consciousness was the most precious fruit of the tree of knowledge, the magical weapon which gave man victory over the earth, and which we hope will give him a still greater victory over himself.
~Carl Jung, CW 10, Para 289
The feeling of immortality, it seems to me, has its origin in a peculiar feeling of extension in space and time, and I am inclined to regard the deification rites in the mysteries as a projection of this same psychic phenomenon.
~Carl Jung, CW 9i, Para 248-249
It is only possible to live the fullest life when we are in harmony with these symbols; wisdom is a return to them. ~Carl Jung, CW 8, Para 794
“Why do you want to trace your ancestors?”
Your answer to this question may change wildly over time as new options and opportunities arise broadening your horizons and perceptions about the value of your transgenerational inheritance.
Some ancestor-hunters are merely curious. Some hope to find a famous or important relative, or join historical societies. Others want to know about their ethnic backgrounds and migration patterns., or simply want an increased understanding of just who they are and where they came from.
A depth approach to genealogy is not a question of our relation to the world.
It is an inner problem, the question of what our relation to ourselves will be -- naked awareness of our place in the cosmos, and our relations to the stars and the elemental forces.
Terra Nostra
Genealogy can be pursued in many domains. It can be done in the traditional socio-historical manner, in the psycho-historical and psychospiritual dimensions of imagination, myth, and legend. Participating in that process takes us on a journey to our ancestral home, to the heart of our family tree. It isn't you who writes their story; they have already doneso. But you write your own tale of discovery of them that is unique for you, your qualities, and situation.
We learn to see our individual lives as the convergence of all our ancestral experiences. We embody their history, sense of purpose, what they loved and what they yearned for, their triumphs and tragedies. In each of these is electric awareness of events and emotions beyond your own. You come to understand yourselves and the story of your ancestors.
With your next breath, allow your awareness to drop down into your heart, relax your breath and release your immediate environment as you enter sacred space and approach your family tree and its members.
Open to your own presence of being. Intensify your awareness and concentration; just let it happen now. Welcome your ancestors, your fellow travelers, from the deep fathoms of your awareness. Perception changes. They may see through your eyes or you may see through theirs. Consciously hold the truth with compassion, without fleeing, or fighting, fixing, or denying.
Make yourself available to the in-forming flows...whatever arises in your field of awareness. Feel the ambient atmosphere and how the earth feels around your body. Embrace your roots and the bones of the past as you settle into this new space. The relics of your psyche are ready to transform with moisture and minerals. Allow this hunger -- the yearning to satisfy the highest in you -- to intensify and expand into a knowing all through you.
Hunger for change, feed on the truth, rock to the rhythms of this yearning. Undulate in the birthing dance, where conscious flesh encircles all. When the earth permeates your center, call on the cosmic transformative energies, on your ancestors, opening to their vast experience and wisdom. The underworld and heavens meet -- the source of life itself.
Life Is 'I Am What You Are'
Rest in the matrix of life and death; feel your center transmuting. The small self is dying as the larger self washes over you, informing your being. Images emerge, unfurl, and pass in an epic panoply, fertilizing new forms, not yet born. You move into something new -- the living truth of who you are -- which now infuses your entire being.
The remnants of ancestral trauma and unresolved hopes and dreams mesh with our own, descending with our long lines of survivors. We are their legacy, wounds and all, and we are challenged to make them conscious and carry them gracefully.
Reveal Thyself
Healing our ancestral patterns means liberating some of our deepest unconscious issues, and freeing creative energy. Reclaiming the ancestors is reclaiming the body, and reclaiming the earth. The planet itself must be held as a gift which opens a re-enchantment of the world...the Mysteries of the renewal of life.
The utterances of the heart— unlike those of the discriminating intellect—always relate to the whole. The heartstrings sing like an Aeolian harp only under the gentle breath of a mood, an intuition, which does not drown the song but listens. What the heart hears are the great, all-embracing things of life, the experiences which we do not arrange ourselves but which happen to us.
~Carl Jung, CW 18, Para 1719
A circumambulation of the magical circle of your lineage includes exploring and moving around our sacred landscape from many different angles. That landscape imagines itself through you. Their superposition is our aspiration. With them we live more consciously. Those noble and otherwise ennoble our existence. We circle the problems and images from many different ways with a depth perspective.
By circling a problem we filter and distill it, getting to the essence. There is only circumambulation rather than linear evolution. The essence of nature is passion. Remembrance is pilgrimage and veneration. They gave birth to you and now you bring them forth from yourself.
Our lines of descent converge on themselves at the source, like the ouroboros serpent -- the unbroken circle of familial descent. That circle is our home and refuge.
This is the attempt at creating the magic circle again, by which she may be protected against the influences of the world above and the world below.
She must keep in the center in order not to be torn asunder.
~Carl Jung, Visions Seminar, Page 819
*
Being that has soul is living being.
Soul is the living thing in man, that which lives of itself and causes life.
Therefore God breathed into Adam a living breath, that he might live. With her cunning play of illusions the soul lures into life the inertness of matter that does not want to live. She makes us believe incredible things, that life may be lived. She is full of snares and traps, in order that man should fall, should reach the earth, entangle himself there, and stay caught, so that life should be lived; as Eve in the garden of Eden could not rest content until she had convinced Adam of the goodness of the forbidden apple.
Were it not for the leaping and twinkling of the soul, man would rot away in his greatest passion, idleness. A certain kind of reasonableness is its advocate, and a certain kind of morality adds its blessing. But to have soul is the whole venture of life, for soul is a life-giving daemon who plays his elfin game above and below human existence, for which reason-in the realm of dogma he is threatened and propitiated with superhuman punishments and blessings that go far beyond the possible deserts of human beings.
Heaven and hell are the fates meted out to the soul and not to civilized man, who in his nakedness and timidity would have no idea of what to do with himself in a heavenly Jerusalem. ~Carl Jung, CW 9ii, Pages 26-27
Disalliance with the unconscious is synonymous with loss of instinct
and rootlessness. ~Carl Jung, CW 7, Para 195
Instinct is not only biological, it is also, you might say, spiritual.
~Carl Jung, C.G. Jung Speaking: Interviews and Encounters, Pages 410-423
Our instincts do not express themselves only in our actions and reactions,
but also in the way we formulate what we imagine.
~Carl Jung, C.G. Jung Speaking: Interviews and Encounters, Pages 410-423
No one who has undergone the process of assimilating the unconscious will deny that it gripped his very vitals and changed him. ~Carl Jung, CW 7, Para 361
Complexes are in truth the living units of the unconscious psyche, and it is only through them that we are able to deduce its existence and its constitution.
~Carl Jung, CW 8, Para 210
Where the realm of the complexes begins the freedom of the ego comes to an end, for complexes are psychic agencies whose deepest nature is still unfathomed. ~Carl Jung, CW 8, Para 216.
"The sad truth is that man's real life consists of a complex and inexorable opposites - day and night, birth and death, happiness and misery, good and evil. We are not even sure that one will prevail against the other, that good will overcome evil, or joy defeat pain. Life is a battleground. It always has been, and always will be; and if it were not so, existence would come to an end."
--Jung, Man & His Symbols, (p.73)
Consciousness is a precondition of being. Thus the psyche is endowed with the dignity of a cosmic principle, which philosophically and in fact gives it a position coequal with the principle of physical being. The carrier of this consciousness is the individual, who does not produce the psyche of his own volition but is, on the contrary, preformed by it and nourished by the gradual awakening of consciousness during childhood. If therefore the psyche is of overriding empirical importance, so also is the individual, who is the only immediate manifestation of the psyche. ~Carl Jung, CW 10, Para 528
Most people confuse “self-knowledge” with knowledge of their conscious ego-personalities. Anyone who has any ego-consciousness at all takes it for granted that he knows himself. But the ego knows only its own contents, not the unconscious and its contents. ~Carl Jung, CW 10, Para 491
The fact that individual consciousness means separation and opposition is something that man has experienced countless times in his long history. ~Carl Jung, CW 10, Para 290
There are plenty of people who are not yet born.
They all seem to be here, they walk about—but as a matter of fact, they are not yet born, because they are behind a glass wall, they are in the womb.
~Carl Jung, Kundalini Seminar, Page 28
Man “possesses” many things which he has never acquired
but has inherited from his ancestors. ~Carl Jung, CW 4, Para 728
The souls or spirits of the dead are identical with the psychic activity of the living; they merely continue it. ~Carl Jung, CW 9i, Para 38
Outward circumstances are no substitute for inner experience.
Jung, Memories, Dreams, Reflections, p.5
For as the son of his father, he must, as if often the case with children, re-enact under unconscious compulsion the unlived lives of his parents.
~Carl Jung, CW 6, Para 307v
Unlived life is a destructive, irresistible force that works softly but inexorably. ~Carl Jung, CW 10, Para 252
But besides that [Intellect] there is a thinking in primordial images, in symbols which are older than the historical man, which are inborn in him from the earliest times, and, eternally living, outlasting all generations, still make up the groundwork of the human psyche. ~Carl Jung, CW 8, Para 794
The meaning and purpose of a problem seem to lie not in its solution but in our working at it incessantly. ~Carl Jung, CW 8, Para 771
The “absolute knowledge” which is characteristic of synchronistic phenomena,
a knowledge not mediated by the sense organs, supports the hypothesis
of a self-subsistent meaning, or even expresses its existence.
~Carl Jung, CW, Para 948.
Transpersonal Participation & Comprehension
by Iona Miller, 2016
"Follow in the footsteps of your ancestors, for the mind is trained through knowledge. Behold, their words endure… follow their wise counsel."
--"The Book of Kheti," The Husia: Sacred Wisdom of Ancient Egypt
And yet the attainment of consciousness was the most precious fruit of the tree of knowledge, the magical weapon which gave man victory over the earth, and which we hope will give him a still greater victory over himself.
~Carl Jung, CW 10, Para 289
The feeling of immortality, it seems to me, has its origin in a peculiar feeling of extension in space and time, and I am inclined to regard the deification rites in the mysteries as a projection of this same psychic phenomenon.
~Carl Jung, CW 9i, Para 248-249
It is only possible to live the fullest life when we are in harmony with these symbols; wisdom is a return to them. ~Carl Jung, CW 8, Para 794
“Why do you want to trace your ancestors?”
Your answer to this question may change wildly over time as new options and opportunities arise broadening your horizons and perceptions about the value of your transgenerational inheritance.
Some ancestor-hunters are merely curious. Some hope to find a famous or important relative, or join historical societies. Others want to know about their ethnic backgrounds and migration patterns., or simply want an increased understanding of just who they are and where they came from.
A depth approach to genealogy is not a question of our relation to the world.
It is an inner problem, the question of what our relation to ourselves will be -- naked awareness of our place in the cosmos, and our relations to the stars and the elemental forces.
Terra Nostra
Genealogy can be pursued in many domains. It can be done in the traditional socio-historical manner, in the psycho-historical and psychospiritual dimensions of imagination, myth, and legend. Participating in that process takes us on a journey to our ancestral home, to the heart of our family tree. It isn't you who writes their story; they have already doneso. But you write your own tale of discovery of them that is unique for you, your qualities, and situation.
We learn to see our individual lives as the convergence of all our ancestral experiences. We embody their history, sense of purpose, what they loved and what they yearned for, their triumphs and tragedies. In each of these is electric awareness of events and emotions beyond your own. You come to understand yourselves and the story of your ancestors.
With your next breath, allow your awareness to drop down into your heart, relax your breath and release your immediate environment as you enter sacred space and approach your family tree and its members.
Open to your own presence of being. Intensify your awareness and concentration; just let it happen now. Welcome your ancestors, your fellow travelers, from the deep fathoms of your awareness. Perception changes. They may see through your eyes or you may see through theirs. Consciously hold the truth with compassion, without fleeing, or fighting, fixing, or denying.
Make yourself available to the in-forming flows...whatever arises in your field of awareness. Feel the ambient atmosphere and how the earth feels around your body. Embrace your roots and the bones of the past as you settle into this new space. The relics of your psyche are ready to transform with moisture and minerals. Allow this hunger -- the yearning to satisfy the highest in you -- to intensify and expand into a knowing all through you.
Hunger for change, feed on the truth, rock to the rhythms of this yearning. Undulate in the birthing dance, where conscious flesh encircles all. When the earth permeates your center, call on the cosmic transformative energies, on your ancestors, opening to their vast experience and wisdom. The underworld and heavens meet -- the source of life itself.
Life Is 'I Am What You Are'
Rest in the matrix of life and death; feel your center transmuting. The small self is dying as the larger self washes over you, informing your being. Images emerge, unfurl, and pass in an epic panoply, fertilizing new forms, not yet born. You move into something new -- the living truth of who you are -- which now infuses your entire being.
The remnants of ancestral trauma and unresolved hopes and dreams mesh with our own, descending with our long lines of survivors. We are their legacy, wounds and all, and we are challenged to make them conscious and carry them gracefully.
Reveal Thyself
Healing our ancestral patterns means liberating some of our deepest unconscious issues, and freeing creative energy. Reclaiming the ancestors is reclaiming the body, and reclaiming the earth. The planet itself must be held as a gift which opens a re-enchantment of the world...the Mysteries of the renewal of life.
The utterances of the heart— unlike those of the discriminating intellect—always relate to the whole. The heartstrings sing like an Aeolian harp only under the gentle breath of a mood, an intuition, which does not drown the song but listens. What the heart hears are the great, all-embracing things of life, the experiences which we do not arrange ourselves but which happen to us.
~Carl Jung, CW 18, Para 1719
A circumambulation of the magical circle of your lineage includes exploring and moving around our sacred landscape from many different angles. That landscape imagines itself through you. Their superposition is our aspiration. With them we live more consciously. Those noble and otherwise ennoble our existence. We circle the problems and images from many different ways with a depth perspective.
By circling a problem we filter and distill it, getting to the essence. There is only circumambulation rather than linear evolution. The essence of nature is passion. Remembrance is pilgrimage and veneration. They gave birth to you and now you bring them forth from yourself.
Our lines of descent converge on themselves at the source, like the ouroboros serpent -- the unbroken circle of familial descent. That circle is our home and refuge.
This is the attempt at creating the magic circle again, by which she may be protected against the influences of the world above and the world below.
She must keep in the center in order not to be torn asunder.
~Carl Jung, Visions Seminar, Page 819
*
Being that has soul is living being.
Soul is the living thing in man, that which lives of itself and causes life.
Therefore God breathed into Adam a living breath, that he might live. With her cunning play of illusions the soul lures into life the inertness of matter that does not want to live. She makes us believe incredible things, that life may be lived. She is full of snares and traps, in order that man should fall, should reach the earth, entangle himself there, and stay caught, so that life should be lived; as Eve in the garden of Eden could not rest content until she had convinced Adam of the goodness of the forbidden apple.
Were it not for the leaping and twinkling of the soul, man would rot away in his greatest passion, idleness. A certain kind of reasonableness is its advocate, and a certain kind of morality adds its blessing. But to have soul is the whole venture of life, for soul is a life-giving daemon who plays his elfin game above and below human existence, for which reason-in the realm of dogma he is threatened and propitiated with superhuman punishments and blessings that go far beyond the possible deserts of human beings.
Heaven and hell are the fates meted out to the soul and not to civilized man, who in his nakedness and timidity would have no idea of what to do with himself in a heavenly Jerusalem. ~Carl Jung, CW 9ii, Pages 26-27
Disalliance with the unconscious is synonymous with loss of instinct
and rootlessness. ~Carl Jung, CW 7, Para 195
Instinct is not only biological, it is also, you might say, spiritual.
~Carl Jung, C.G. Jung Speaking: Interviews and Encounters, Pages 410-423
Our instincts do not express themselves only in our actions and reactions,
but also in the way we formulate what we imagine.
~Carl Jung, C.G. Jung Speaking: Interviews and Encounters, Pages 410-423
No one who has undergone the process of assimilating the unconscious will deny that it gripped his very vitals and changed him. ~Carl Jung, CW 7, Para 361
Complexes are in truth the living units of the unconscious psyche, and it is only through them that we are able to deduce its existence and its constitution.
~Carl Jung, CW 8, Para 210
Where the realm of the complexes begins the freedom of the ego comes to an end, for complexes are psychic agencies whose deepest nature is still unfathomed. ~Carl Jung, CW 8, Para 216.
"The sad truth is that man's real life consists of a complex and inexorable opposites - day and night, birth and death, happiness and misery, good and evil. We are not even sure that one will prevail against the other, that good will overcome evil, or joy defeat pain. Life is a battleground. It always has been, and always will be; and if it were not so, existence would come to an end."
--Jung, Man & His Symbols, (p.73)
Consciousness is a precondition of being. Thus the psyche is endowed with the dignity of a cosmic principle, which philosophically and in fact gives it a position coequal with the principle of physical being. The carrier of this consciousness is the individual, who does not produce the psyche of his own volition but is, on the contrary, preformed by it and nourished by the gradual awakening of consciousness during childhood. If therefore the psyche is of overriding empirical importance, so also is the individual, who is the only immediate manifestation of the psyche. ~Carl Jung, CW 10, Para 528
Most people confuse “self-knowledge” with knowledge of their conscious ego-personalities. Anyone who has any ego-consciousness at all takes it for granted that he knows himself. But the ego knows only its own contents, not the unconscious and its contents. ~Carl Jung, CW 10, Para 491
The fact that individual consciousness means separation and opposition is something that man has experienced countless times in his long history. ~Carl Jung, CW 10, Para 290
There are plenty of people who are not yet born.
They all seem to be here, they walk about—but as a matter of fact, they are not yet born, because they are behind a glass wall, they are in the womb.
~Carl Jung, Kundalini Seminar, Page 28
Man “possesses” many things which he has never acquired
but has inherited from his ancestors. ~Carl Jung, CW 4, Para 728
The souls or spirits of the dead are identical with the psychic activity of the living; they merely continue it. ~Carl Jung, CW 9i, Para 38
Outward circumstances are no substitute for inner experience.
Jung, Memories, Dreams, Reflections, p.5
For as the son of his father, he must, as if often the case with children, re-enact under unconscious compulsion the unlived lives of his parents.
~Carl Jung, CW 6, Para 307v
Unlived life is a destructive, irresistible force that works softly but inexorably. ~Carl Jung, CW 10, Para 252
But besides that [Intellect] there is a thinking in primordial images, in symbols which are older than the historical man, which are inborn in him from the earliest times, and, eternally living, outlasting all generations, still make up the groundwork of the human psyche. ~Carl Jung, CW 8, Para 794
The meaning and purpose of a problem seem to lie not in its solution but in our working at it incessantly. ~Carl Jung, CW 8, Para 771
The “absolute knowledge” which is characteristic of synchronistic phenomena,
a knowledge not mediated by the sense organs, supports the hypothesis
of a self-subsistent meaning, or even expresses its existence.
~Carl Jung, CW, Para 948.
It is the mourning of the dead in me,
which precedes burial and rebirth.
~Jung, Liber Novus, Page 242.
To be that which you are is the bath of rebirth.
~Carl Jung, The Red Book, Page 266
What & Who is Reborn?
Our ancestors inhabit our energetic being,
tissues, and central nervous system.
The world comes to live in the symbol. Images can interact with bodily tissues in a dialogue with cells, organs, tissues, and CNS, effecting change. When the whole body is involved in a strong emotional state, the autonomic nervous system is activated, hormones secreted, as a primal arousal grips us.
We cannot leave the body behind in our self-exploration and neither do our dearly departed, who give us hand-me-down genes and epigenetics. The dead are entangled with our psychophysical being. Reincarnation is a transfer metaphor. This is not reincarnation, but perpetual incarnation which requires no theory or philosophy to close the carnal gap. Soul migration is incremental.
Ancestral patterns also inform the gut (gut wisdom, gut rumbling, digestive disorders) and the heart with its EM field -- symbolically, metaphorically, and literally. In some sense, they 'live' there within us. What does your heart think about your metaphors? What does you gut feel? Structural metaphors ground our conceptual, behavioral, and functional systems, directly relating two ideas.
The coherent structure of experience is partly metaphorical and partly emergent. Therefore, it is well-suited to spontaneous transformation through experiential process work. Working through conscious and unconscious resistance gives a voice to repressed wisdom.
Symbolically Modelling the Internal Landscape
Metaphor is a connective pattern. The whole range of affect is bound up with embedded tissue memory and coherent metaphor -- how we know what we know about self, world, and cosmos. Such reactions are inherently linked to the human nervous system.
The spine is the trunk of the neurological tree of life. And 'climbing that tree' is analogous to moving up through the nerve plexus of chakras. Dysfunction has the potential to cause effects in the physical body and unusual states in the mind but unconscious skill also resides in the parasympathetic nervous system.
Metaphor in Language, Thought, & Action
Body and culture can be the source domain for metaphors. The body is our most important object of knowledge. One kind of experience is understood in terms of another.
Many idiomatic phrases and ideomotor responses use body parts metaphorically. An unconscious finger twitch can tell as much or more than the conscious mind. Pupils dilate, heart-rate increases, filters are triggered, skin electrical charge changes, etc.
Metaphors function as conduits and spatial or temporal orientations. Imagination has tangible effects on the body; changing attitudes has physical, emotional, and behavior effects. Attending to such body language can be grounding and calming to the nervous system. Your body may be a wonderland, but it is also an 'underland.'
Our 'physical presence', large or small is an embodiment of our ancestors and our experience. We bury not only relatives, but our feelings; we stuff them down. Different 'parts' of ourselves go through changes in physiology and function. We can despise our behaviors by dissociating, attempts to vacate the body, saying we were 'beside ourselves.' Ideomotor responses can be used to by-pass the conscious mind and access the emotional body and unconscious mind.
Touch, kinesthesia, and proprioception help us sense the dark body, as do magnetoreception, thermal sensing, haptics (pressure), balance, thirst, hunger and 'skin talk'. Metaphor pervades everyday language. We can act out such sensory metaphors, as the 'thirst' for knowledge, 'hunger' for affection, feelings of vertigo when triggered by issues, blowing hot or cold, getting 'chills' being on or off balance, grounded or ungrounded feelings.
Metaphors give meaning to form, helping us move from the known to the unknown. We talk about others being 'a thorn in the side,' 'a pain in the neck,' or elsewhere. Anger 'chaps my hide,' we grind our teeth and clench our jaws, and a variety of other descriptions of our reactions, that sometimes become literal or pathological as they are so unconscious. Even reason is not disembodied. Our ideas, concepts, and worldviews have a genealogy of their own development. Metaphors function within the worldview of the individual.
Emotions 'touch' us. All kinds of conflicting ways of knowing abide within us. Recognizing our pain leads us toward wisdom and self-knowledge, and how our immediate and ancestral family might be embodied in more or less meaningful ways. This leads us toward transgenerational integration, new insights and self-healing.
Processes below the threshold of sensory awareness are associated with the autonomic nervous system. There is a cycle of meaning and understanding that plays out in symbols, mythology, rituals, and physical experience. Recurrent patterns are embodied in form and functionality.
Linguistic, cognitive, sensory-affective, and neuropsychological processes play a role in therapeutic changes resulting from self-generated metaphors. Over time we learn what such experiences feel like in our particular body. With internal scrutiny, subjective insights can be useful or productive sources of knowledge.
Lakoff & Johnson describe experiential gestalts rooted in our bodies, and interactions with the physical environment and interactions with others. Cultures are grounded in conceptual metaphors.
In the reciprocal relationship of mind-body we also apply a broad range of metaphysical and philosophical notions that have no ontological reality to ourselves. Metaphors inform human awareness through reinforcement of the power of enacted symbols that take us deeper into the mind. The primordial serpent bites its tail.
Our unconscious is surely located in the body, and you mustn't think this a contradiction to the statement I usually make, that the collective unconscious is everywhere; for if you could put yourself into your sympathetic system, you would know what sympathy is-you would understand why the nervous system is called sympathetic. ~Carl Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Pages 749-751.
If consciousness had never split off from the unconscious—an eternally repeated event symbolized as the fall of the
angels and the disobedience of the first parents—this problem would never have arisen, any more than would the question of environmental adaptation. ~Carl Jung, CW 8, Para 339.
Value of working with Images
“..everything seemed difficult and incomprehensible. I was living in a constant state of tension; often I felt as if gigantic blocks of stone were tumbling down on me. . my enduring these storms was a question of brute strength…
To the extent that I managed to translate the emotions into images– that is to say, to find the images which were concealed in the emotions– I was inwardly calmed and reassured. Had I left those images hidden in the emotions, I might have been torn to pieces by them.
There is a chance that I might have succeeded in splitting them off; but in that case I would inexorably have fallen into a neurosis and so been ultimately destroyed by them.
As a result of my experiment I learned how helpful it can be, from the therapeutic point of view, to find the particular images which lie behind the emotions.”
~Carl Jung; Memories Dreams and Reflections; Page 177.
There are no longer any gods whom we can invoke to help us. The great religions of the world suffer from increasing anemia, because the helpful numina have fled from the woods, rivers, and mountains, and from animals, and the god-men have disappeared underground in to the unconscious. There we fool ourselves that they lead an ignominious existence among the relics of our past. Our present lives are dominated by the goddess Reason, who is our greatest and most tragic illusion. By the aid of reason, we assure ourselves, we have “conquered nature.” --Jung, 1964, p. 91
Sooner or later it will be found that nothing really new happens in history. There could be talk of something really novel only if the unimaginable happened: if reason, humanity and love won a lasting victory. ~Carl Jung, CW 18, Para 1356.
The deeper layers of the psyche lose their individual uniqueness as they retreat farther and farther into the darkness. Here they become increasingly collective until they are universalized, merging with the body’s instinctual and biological functions and eventually with nature itself. Hence, ‘at bottom’ the psyche is simply ‘world.’ --Jung, in Ryan, 2002, p. 26
Since psyche and matter are contained in one and the same world, and moreover are in continuous contact with one another and ultimately rest on the irrepresentable transcendental factors ...psyche and matter are two different aspects of one and the same thing. --Jung, 1970 , p.5
I do not think that so-called personal messages from the dead can be dismissed in globo as self-deceptions. ~Carl Jung, Letters Vol. II, Pages 333-334.
One needs death to be able to harvest the fruit. Without death, life would be meaningless, since the long-lasting rises again and denies its own meaning.
To be, and to enjoy your being, you need death, and limitation enables you to fulfill your being. --Carl Jung, The Red Book, Page 275.
Death is the hardest thing from the outside and as long as we are outside of it.
But once inside you taste of such completeness and peace and fulfillment that you don’t want to return. ~Carl Jung, Letters Vol. I, Pages 357-358
But the fact is that the approach to the numinous is the real therapy and in as much as you attain to the numinous experiences you are released from the curse of pathology. ~Carl Jung, Letters Vol. I, Page 377
I frequently have a feeling that [the deceased] are standing directly behind us, waiting to hear what answer we will give to them, and what answer to destiny. It seems to me as if they were dependent on the living for receiving answers to their questions, that is, on those who have survived them and exist in a world of change: as if omniscience or, as I might put it, omniconsciousness, were not at their disposal, but could flow only into the psyche of the living, into a soul bound to a body.” --Jung, Memories, Dreams & Reflections
No one can know what the ultimate things are.
We must therefore take them as we experience them.
And if such experience helps to make life healthier, more beautiful, more complete and more satisfactory to yourself and to those you love, you may safely say: “This was the grace of God.” ~Carl Jung, CW 11, Para 167.
Great is the need of the dead.
But the God needs no sacrificial prayer.
He has neither goodwill nor ill will.
He is kind and fearful, though not actually so, but only seems to you thus.
But the dead hear your prayers since they are still of human nature and not free of goodwill and ill will. ~Unknown woman to Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 339.
But one is not a number; the first number is two,
and with it multiplicity and reality begin. ~Carl Jung, CW 14, Para 659
The Great Mother is impregnated by the loneliness of him that seeks her.
~Carl Jung to Hermann Hesse, Letters Volume 1, Pages 573-574.
At the bottom of the psyche is simply the world.
—Carl Jung
The very center of your heart is where life begins.
The most beautiful place on earth. ~Rumi
Just as there is a relationship of mind to body, so there is a relationship of body to earth. ~Carl Jung, CW 10, Para 19
The Symbol always says; in some such form as this a new manifestation of life will become possible, a release from bondage and world-weariness.
~Carl Jung, CW 6, Para 425.
The creation of a symbol is not a rational process, for a rational process could never produce an image that represents a content which is at bottom incomprehensible. ~Carl Jung, CW 6, Para 171, CW 6, Para 425
“There is a thinking in primordial images, in symbols which are older than the historical man, which are inborn in him from the earliest times, eternally living, outlasting all generations, still make up the groundwork of the human psyche. It is only possible to live the fullest life when we are in harmony with these symbols; wisdom is a return to them.” ~Carl G. Jung
As the individual is not just a single, separate being, but by his very existence presupposes a collective relationship, it follows that the process of individuation must lead to more intense and broader collective relationships and not to isolation. ~Carl Jung, CW 6, Para 758
The redeeming symbol is a highway, a way upon which life can move forward without torment and compulsion. ~Carl Jung, CW 6, Para 445.
The art of it consists only in allowing our invisible partner to make herself heard, in putting the mechanism of expression momentarily at her disposal, without being overcome by the distaste one naturally feels at playing such an apparently ludicrous game with oneself, or by doubts as to the genuineness of the voice of one’s interlocutor. ~Carl Jung, CW 7, Para 323.
which precedes burial and rebirth.
~Jung, Liber Novus, Page 242.
To be that which you are is the bath of rebirth.
~Carl Jung, The Red Book, Page 266
What & Who is Reborn?
Our ancestors inhabit our energetic being,
tissues, and central nervous system.
The world comes to live in the symbol. Images can interact with bodily tissues in a dialogue with cells, organs, tissues, and CNS, effecting change. When the whole body is involved in a strong emotional state, the autonomic nervous system is activated, hormones secreted, as a primal arousal grips us.
We cannot leave the body behind in our self-exploration and neither do our dearly departed, who give us hand-me-down genes and epigenetics. The dead are entangled with our psychophysical being. Reincarnation is a transfer metaphor. This is not reincarnation, but perpetual incarnation which requires no theory or philosophy to close the carnal gap. Soul migration is incremental.
Ancestral patterns also inform the gut (gut wisdom, gut rumbling, digestive disorders) and the heart with its EM field -- symbolically, metaphorically, and literally. In some sense, they 'live' there within us. What does your heart think about your metaphors? What does you gut feel? Structural metaphors ground our conceptual, behavioral, and functional systems, directly relating two ideas.
The coherent structure of experience is partly metaphorical and partly emergent. Therefore, it is well-suited to spontaneous transformation through experiential process work. Working through conscious and unconscious resistance gives a voice to repressed wisdom.
Symbolically Modelling the Internal Landscape
Metaphor is a connective pattern. The whole range of affect is bound up with embedded tissue memory and coherent metaphor -- how we know what we know about self, world, and cosmos. Such reactions are inherently linked to the human nervous system.
The spine is the trunk of the neurological tree of life. And 'climbing that tree' is analogous to moving up through the nerve plexus of chakras. Dysfunction has the potential to cause effects in the physical body and unusual states in the mind but unconscious skill also resides in the parasympathetic nervous system.
Metaphor in Language, Thought, & Action
Body and culture can be the source domain for metaphors. The body is our most important object of knowledge. One kind of experience is understood in terms of another.
Many idiomatic phrases and ideomotor responses use body parts metaphorically. An unconscious finger twitch can tell as much or more than the conscious mind. Pupils dilate, heart-rate increases, filters are triggered, skin electrical charge changes, etc.
Metaphors function as conduits and spatial or temporal orientations. Imagination has tangible effects on the body; changing attitudes has physical, emotional, and behavior effects. Attending to such body language can be grounding and calming to the nervous system. Your body may be a wonderland, but it is also an 'underland.'
Our 'physical presence', large or small is an embodiment of our ancestors and our experience. We bury not only relatives, but our feelings; we stuff them down. Different 'parts' of ourselves go through changes in physiology and function. We can despise our behaviors by dissociating, attempts to vacate the body, saying we were 'beside ourselves.' Ideomotor responses can be used to by-pass the conscious mind and access the emotional body and unconscious mind.
Touch, kinesthesia, and proprioception help us sense the dark body, as do magnetoreception, thermal sensing, haptics (pressure), balance, thirst, hunger and 'skin talk'. Metaphor pervades everyday language. We can act out such sensory metaphors, as the 'thirst' for knowledge, 'hunger' for affection, feelings of vertigo when triggered by issues, blowing hot or cold, getting 'chills' being on or off balance, grounded or ungrounded feelings.
Metaphors give meaning to form, helping us move from the known to the unknown. We talk about others being 'a thorn in the side,' 'a pain in the neck,' or elsewhere. Anger 'chaps my hide,' we grind our teeth and clench our jaws, and a variety of other descriptions of our reactions, that sometimes become literal or pathological as they are so unconscious. Even reason is not disembodied. Our ideas, concepts, and worldviews have a genealogy of their own development. Metaphors function within the worldview of the individual.
Emotions 'touch' us. All kinds of conflicting ways of knowing abide within us. Recognizing our pain leads us toward wisdom and self-knowledge, and how our immediate and ancestral family might be embodied in more or less meaningful ways. This leads us toward transgenerational integration, new insights and self-healing.
Processes below the threshold of sensory awareness are associated with the autonomic nervous system. There is a cycle of meaning and understanding that plays out in symbols, mythology, rituals, and physical experience. Recurrent patterns are embodied in form and functionality.
Linguistic, cognitive, sensory-affective, and neuropsychological processes play a role in therapeutic changes resulting from self-generated metaphors. Over time we learn what such experiences feel like in our particular body. With internal scrutiny, subjective insights can be useful or productive sources of knowledge.
Lakoff & Johnson describe experiential gestalts rooted in our bodies, and interactions with the physical environment and interactions with others. Cultures are grounded in conceptual metaphors.
In the reciprocal relationship of mind-body we also apply a broad range of metaphysical and philosophical notions that have no ontological reality to ourselves. Metaphors inform human awareness through reinforcement of the power of enacted symbols that take us deeper into the mind. The primordial serpent bites its tail.
Our unconscious is surely located in the body, and you mustn't think this a contradiction to the statement I usually make, that the collective unconscious is everywhere; for if you could put yourself into your sympathetic system, you would know what sympathy is-you would understand why the nervous system is called sympathetic. ~Carl Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Pages 749-751.
If consciousness had never split off from the unconscious—an eternally repeated event symbolized as the fall of the
angels and the disobedience of the first parents—this problem would never have arisen, any more than would the question of environmental adaptation. ~Carl Jung, CW 8, Para 339.
Value of working with Images
“..everything seemed difficult and incomprehensible. I was living in a constant state of tension; often I felt as if gigantic blocks of stone were tumbling down on me. . my enduring these storms was a question of brute strength…
To the extent that I managed to translate the emotions into images– that is to say, to find the images which were concealed in the emotions– I was inwardly calmed and reassured. Had I left those images hidden in the emotions, I might have been torn to pieces by them.
There is a chance that I might have succeeded in splitting them off; but in that case I would inexorably have fallen into a neurosis and so been ultimately destroyed by them.
As a result of my experiment I learned how helpful it can be, from the therapeutic point of view, to find the particular images which lie behind the emotions.”
~Carl Jung; Memories Dreams and Reflections; Page 177.
There are no longer any gods whom we can invoke to help us. The great religions of the world suffer from increasing anemia, because the helpful numina have fled from the woods, rivers, and mountains, and from animals, and the god-men have disappeared underground in to the unconscious. There we fool ourselves that they lead an ignominious existence among the relics of our past. Our present lives are dominated by the goddess Reason, who is our greatest and most tragic illusion. By the aid of reason, we assure ourselves, we have “conquered nature.” --Jung, 1964, p. 91
Sooner or later it will be found that nothing really new happens in history. There could be talk of something really novel only if the unimaginable happened: if reason, humanity and love won a lasting victory. ~Carl Jung, CW 18, Para 1356.
The deeper layers of the psyche lose their individual uniqueness as they retreat farther and farther into the darkness. Here they become increasingly collective until they are universalized, merging with the body’s instinctual and biological functions and eventually with nature itself. Hence, ‘at bottom’ the psyche is simply ‘world.’ --Jung, in Ryan, 2002, p. 26
Since psyche and matter are contained in one and the same world, and moreover are in continuous contact with one another and ultimately rest on the irrepresentable transcendental factors ...psyche and matter are two different aspects of one and the same thing. --Jung, 1970 , p.5
I do not think that so-called personal messages from the dead can be dismissed in globo as self-deceptions. ~Carl Jung, Letters Vol. II, Pages 333-334.
One needs death to be able to harvest the fruit. Without death, life would be meaningless, since the long-lasting rises again and denies its own meaning.
To be, and to enjoy your being, you need death, and limitation enables you to fulfill your being. --Carl Jung, The Red Book, Page 275.
Death is the hardest thing from the outside and as long as we are outside of it.
But once inside you taste of such completeness and peace and fulfillment that you don’t want to return. ~Carl Jung, Letters Vol. I, Pages 357-358
But the fact is that the approach to the numinous is the real therapy and in as much as you attain to the numinous experiences you are released from the curse of pathology. ~Carl Jung, Letters Vol. I, Page 377
I frequently have a feeling that [the deceased] are standing directly behind us, waiting to hear what answer we will give to them, and what answer to destiny. It seems to me as if they were dependent on the living for receiving answers to their questions, that is, on those who have survived them and exist in a world of change: as if omniscience or, as I might put it, omniconsciousness, were not at their disposal, but could flow only into the psyche of the living, into a soul bound to a body.” --Jung, Memories, Dreams & Reflections
No one can know what the ultimate things are.
We must therefore take them as we experience them.
And if such experience helps to make life healthier, more beautiful, more complete and more satisfactory to yourself and to those you love, you may safely say: “This was the grace of God.” ~Carl Jung, CW 11, Para 167.
Great is the need of the dead.
But the God needs no sacrificial prayer.
He has neither goodwill nor ill will.
He is kind and fearful, though not actually so, but only seems to you thus.
But the dead hear your prayers since they are still of human nature and not free of goodwill and ill will. ~Unknown woman to Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 339.
But one is not a number; the first number is two,
and with it multiplicity and reality begin. ~Carl Jung, CW 14, Para 659
The Great Mother is impregnated by the loneliness of him that seeks her.
~Carl Jung to Hermann Hesse, Letters Volume 1, Pages 573-574.
At the bottom of the psyche is simply the world.
—Carl Jung
The very center of your heart is where life begins.
The most beautiful place on earth. ~Rumi
Just as there is a relationship of mind to body, so there is a relationship of body to earth. ~Carl Jung, CW 10, Para 19
The Symbol always says; in some such form as this a new manifestation of life will become possible, a release from bondage and world-weariness.
~Carl Jung, CW 6, Para 425.
The creation of a symbol is not a rational process, for a rational process could never produce an image that represents a content which is at bottom incomprehensible. ~Carl Jung, CW 6, Para 171, CW 6, Para 425
“There is a thinking in primordial images, in symbols which are older than the historical man, which are inborn in him from the earliest times, eternally living, outlasting all generations, still make up the groundwork of the human psyche. It is only possible to live the fullest life when we are in harmony with these symbols; wisdom is a return to them.” ~Carl G. Jung
As the individual is not just a single, separate being, but by his very existence presupposes a collective relationship, it follows that the process of individuation must lead to more intense and broader collective relationships and not to isolation. ~Carl Jung, CW 6, Para 758
The redeeming symbol is a highway, a way upon which life can move forward without torment and compulsion. ~Carl Jung, CW 6, Para 445.
The art of it consists only in allowing our invisible partner to make herself heard, in putting the mechanism of expression momentarily at her disposal, without being overcome by the distaste one naturally feels at playing such an apparently ludicrous game with oneself, or by doubts as to the genuineness of the voice of one’s interlocutor. ~Carl Jung, CW 7, Para 323.
The symbol is a living body, corpus et anima; hence the "child" is such an apt formula for the symbol. The uniqueness of the psyche can never enter wholly into reality, it can only be realized approximately, though it still remains the absolute basis of all consciousness. The deeper "layers" of the psyche lose their individual uniqueness as they retreat farther and farther into darkness. "Lower down," that is to say as they approach the autonomous functional systems, they become increasingly collective until they are universalized and extinguished in the body's materiality, i.e., in chemical substances. The body's carbon is simply carbon. Hence "at bottom" the psyche is simply "world." In this sense I hold Kerenyi to be absolutely right when he says that in the symbol the world itself is speaking. The more archaic and "deeper," that is the more physiological, the symbol is, the more collective and universal, the more "material" it is. The more abstract, differentiated, and specified it is, and the more its nature approximates to conscious uniqueness and individuality, the more it sloughs off its universal character. Having finally attained full consciousness, it runs the risk of becoming a mere allegory which nowhere oversteps the bounds of conscious comprehension, and is then exposed to all sorts of attempts at rationalistic and therefore inadequate explanation.
--Jung, "The Psychology of the Child Archetype" (1940), CW 9, Part I:
The Archetypes and the Collective Unconscious. P.291
We are entangled in the roots, and we ourselves are the roots.
We make roots, we cause roots to be, we are rooted in the soil, and there is no getting away for us, because we must be there as long as we live.
That idea, that we can sublimate ourselves and become entirely spiritual and no hair left, is an inflation. I am sorry, that is impossible; it makes no sense.
~Carl Jung, Kundalini Seminar, Page 29
The collective unconscious is simply Nature — and since Nature contains everything it also contains the unknown. ... So far as we can see, the collective unconscious is identical with Nature to the extent that Nature herself, including matter, is unknown to us. I have nothing against the assumption that the psyche is a quality of matter or matter the concrete aspect of the psyche, provided that 'psyche' is defined as the collective unconscious. ~Carl Jung; Letters, vol. 2, P 450
Whenever we touch nature we get clean. People who have got dirty through too much civilization take a walk in the woods, or a bath in the sea. They shake off the fetters and allow nature to touch them. It can be done within or without. Walking in the woods, lying on the grass, taking a bath in the sea, are from the outside; entering the unconscious, entering yourself through dreams, is touching nature from the inside and this is the same thing, things are put right again. ~Carl Jung; Dream Analysis: Notes on a Lecture Given in 1928-1930.
The origin of the archetypes is a crucial question. Where space and time are relative it is not possible to speak of developments in time. Everything is present, altogether and all at once, in the constant presence of the Pleroma.
~Carl Jung, ETH Lectures, Page 22
The way of nature will bring you quite naturally wherever you have to go.
~Carl Jung, Visions Seminar, Pages 402-403
We must give nature a chance to fulfill itself. Then only can we detach, and then it comes about quite naturally. ~Carl Jung, Visions Seminar, Page 402
This integration of the instincts is a prerequisite for individuation.
~Carl Jung, CW 9i, Para 660
It must not be forgotten that it is just in the imagination that a man’s highest value may lie. ~Carl Jung, CW 6, Para 93
Wisdom and the instincts are forever the same; every word of wisdom is the truth of the instincts, it simply reveals the image which is buried behind the instincts. ~Carl Jung, Visions Seminar, Page 684.
Then there are the archetypes, those images of instinct.
For instinct is not just an outward thrust, it also takes part in the representation of forms. The animal, for example, has a certain idea of the plant, since he recognizes it. Our instincts do not express themselves only in our actions and reactions, but also in the way we formulate what we imagine. Instinct is not only biological, it is also, you might say, spiritual. And it always repeats certain forms which can be studied down the ages among all peoples. These are the archetypes. ~Carl Jung, C.G. Jung Speaking, Pages 410-423
Symbol-formation, therefore, must obviously be an extremely important biological function. ~Carl Jung, CW 6, Para 402
Childlikeness or lack of prior assumptions is of the very essence of the symbol
and its function. ~Carl Jung, CW 6, Para 442
Only those individuals can attain to a higher degree of consciousness who are destined to it and called to it from the beginning, i.e., who have a capacity and an urge for higher differentiation.
In this matter men differ extremely, as also do the animal species, among whom there are conservatives and progressives.
Nature is aristocratic, but not in the sense of having reserved the possibility of differentiation exclusively for species high in the scale.
So too with the possibility of psychic development: it is not reserved for specially gifted individuals.
In other words, in order to undergo a far-reaching psychological development, neither outstanding intelligence nor any other talent is necessary, since in this development moral qualities can make up for intellectual shortcomings. ~Carl Jung, CW 7, Para 198
Where instinct predominates, psychoid processes set in which pertain to the sphere of the unconscious as elements incapable of consciousness.
The psychoid process is not the unconscious as such, for this has a far greater extension. ~Carl Jung, CW 8, Para 380
The autonomy of the unconscious therefore begins where emotions are generated.
Emotions are instinctive, involuntary reactions which upset the rational order of consciousness by their elemental outbursts.
Affects are not “made” or willfully produced; they simply happen.
In a state of affect a trait of character sometimes appears which is strange even to the person concerned, or hidden contents may irrupt involuntarily.
The more violent an affect the closer it comes to the pathological, to a condition in which the ego-consciousness is thrust aside by autonomous contents that were unconscious before.
So long as the unconscious is in a dormant condition, it seems as if there were absolutely nothing in this hidden region.
Hence we are continually surprised when something unknown suddenly appears “from nowhere.” ~Carl Jung, CW 9i, Para 497
The “child” is therefore renatus in novam infantiam [reborn into a new infancy].
It is thus both beginning and end, an initial and a terminal creature.
The initial creature existed before man was not, and the terminal creature will be when man is not.
Psychologically speaking, this means that the “child” symbolizes the pre-conscious and the post-conscious essence of man.
His pre-conscious essence is the unconscious state of earliest childhood; his post-conscious essence is an anticipation by
analogy of life after death.
In this idea the all-embracing nature of psychic wholeness is expressed.
Wholeness is never comprised within the compass of the conscious mind—it includes the indefinite and indefinable extent
of the unconscious as well.
Wholeness, empirically speaking, is therefore of immeasurable extent, older and younger than consciousness and enfolding it in time and space.
This is no speculation, but an immediate psychic experience.
Not only is the conscious process continually accompanied, it is often guided, helped, or interrupted, by unconscious happenings.
The child had a psychic life before it had consciousness. ~Jung, CW 9i, Para 299
The symbol is the middle way along which the opposites flow together in a new movement, like a watercourse bringing fertility after a long drought.
~Carl Jung, CW 6, Para 443.
A symbol loses its magical or, if you prefer, its redeeming power as soon as its liability to dissolve is recognized. To be effective, a symbol must be by its very nature unassailable.
It must be the best possible expression of the prevailing world-view, an unsurpassed container of meaning; it must also be sufficiently remote from comprehension to resist all attempts of the critical intellect to break it down; and finally, its aesthetic form must appeal so convincingly to our feelings that no argument can be raised against it on that score. --Carl Jung, CW 6, Para 401
All knowledge of the psyche is itself psychic; in spite of all this the soul is the only experient of life and existence. ~Carl Jung, CW 5, Para 344
Yet every descent is followed by an ascent; the vanishing shapes are shaped anew, and a truth is valid in the end only if it suffers change, and bears new witnesses in new images, in new tongues, like a new wine that is put into old bottles.
~Carl Jung, CW 5, Para 533
If I am not conjoined through the uniting of the Below and the Above, I break down into three parts: the serpent, and in that or some other animal form I roam, living nature daimonically, arousing fear and longing. The human soul, living forever within you. The celestial soul, as such dwelling with the Gods, far from you and unknown to you, appearing in the form of a bird.
~Carl Jung’s Soul to him, Black Books, Appendix C., Page 370.
To live oneself means: to be one's own task.
Never say that it is a pleasure to live oneself It will be no joy but a long suffering, since you must become your own creator. ~Carl Jung, The Red Book, Page 249
“Trust thyself: every heart vibrates to that iron string.
Nothing is at last sacred but the integrity of your own mind. A man should learn to detect and watch that gleam of light which flashes across his mind from within, more than the lustre of the firmament of bards and sages... In every work of genius we recognize our own rejected thoughts: they come back to us with a certain alienated majesty.
The power which resides in him is new in nature, and none but he knows what that is which he can do, nor does he know until he has tried.”
―Ralph Waldo Emerson
--Jung, "The Psychology of the Child Archetype" (1940), CW 9, Part I:
The Archetypes and the Collective Unconscious. P.291
We are entangled in the roots, and we ourselves are the roots.
We make roots, we cause roots to be, we are rooted in the soil, and there is no getting away for us, because we must be there as long as we live.
That idea, that we can sublimate ourselves and become entirely spiritual and no hair left, is an inflation. I am sorry, that is impossible; it makes no sense.
~Carl Jung, Kundalini Seminar, Page 29
The collective unconscious is simply Nature — and since Nature contains everything it also contains the unknown. ... So far as we can see, the collective unconscious is identical with Nature to the extent that Nature herself, including matter, is unknown to us. I have nothing against the assumption that the psyche is a quality of matter or matter the concrete aspect of the psyche, provided that 'psyche' is defined as the collective unconscious. ~Carl Jung; Letters, vol. 2, P 450
Whenever we touch nature we get clean. People who have got dirty through too much civilization take a walk in the woods, or a bath in the sea. They shake off the fetters and allow nature to touch them. It can be done within or without. Walking in the woods, lying on the grass, taking a bath in the sea, are from the outside; entering the unconscious, entering yourself through dreams, is touching nature from the inside and this is the same thing, things are put right again. ~Carl Jung; Dream Analysis: Notes on a Lecture Given in 1928-1930.
The origin of the archetypes is a crucial question. Where space and time are relative it is not possible to speak of developments in time. Everything is present, altogether and all at once, in the constant presence of the Pleroma.
~Carl Jung, ETH Lectures, Page 22
The way of nature will bring you quite naturally wherever you have to go.
~Carl Jung, Visions Seminar, Pages 402-403
We must give nature a chance to fulfill itself. Then only can we detach, and then it comes about quite naturally. ~Carl Jung, Visions Seminar, Page 402
This integration of the instincts is a prerequisite for individuation.
~Carl Jung, CW 9i, Para 660
It must not be forgotten that it is just in the imagination that a man’s highest value may lie. ~Carl Jung, CW 6, Para 93
Wisdom and the instincts are forever the same; every word of wisdom is the truth of the instincts, it simply reveals the image which is buried behind the instincts. ~Carl Jung, Visions Seminar, Page 684.
Then there are the archetypes, those images of instinct.
For instinct is not just an outward thrust, it also takes part in the representation of forms. The animal, for example, has a certain idea of the plant, since he recognizes it. Our instincts do not express themselves only in our actions and reactions, but also in the way we formulate what we imagine. Instinct is not only biological, it is also, you might say, spiritual. And it always repeats certain forms which can be studied down the ages among all peoples. These are the archetypes. ~Carl Jung, C.G. Jung Speaking, Pages 410-423
Symbol-formation, therefore, must obviously be an extremely important biological function. ~Carl Jung, CW 6, Para 402
Childlikeness or lack of prior assumptions is of the very essence of the symbol
and its function. ~Carl Jung, CW 6, Para 442
Only those individuals can attain to a higher degree of consciousness who are destined to it and called to it from the beginning, i.e., who have a capacity and an urge for higher differentiation.
In this matter men differ extremely, as also do the animal species, among whom there are conservatives and progressives.
Nature is aristocratic, but not in the sense of having reserved the possibility of differentiation exclusively for species high in the scale.
So too with the possibility of psychic development: it is not reserved for specially gifted individuals.
In other words, in order to undergo a far-reaching psychological development, neither outstanding intelligence nor any other talent is necessary, since in this development moral qualities can make up for intellectual shortcomings. ~Carl Jung, CW 7, Para 198
Where instinct predominates, psychoid processes set in which pertain to the sphere of the unconscious as elements incapable of consciousness.
The psychoid process is not the unconscious as such, for this has a far greater extension. ~Carl Jung, CW 8, Para 380
The autonomy of the unconscious therefore begins where emotions are generated.
Emotions are instinctive, involuntary reactions which upset the rational order of consciousness by their elemental outbursts.
Affects are not “made” or willfully produced; they simply happen.
In a state of affect a trait of character sometimes appears which is strange even to the person concerned, or hidden contents may irrupt involuntarily.
The more violent an affect the closer it comes to the pathological, to a condition in which the ego-consciousness is thrust aside by autonomous contents that were unconscious before.
So long as the unconscious is in a dormant condition, it seems as if there were absolutely nothing in this hidden region.
Hence we are continually surprised when something unknown suddenly appears “from nowhere.” ~Carl Jung, CW 9i, Para 497
The “child” is therefore renatus in novam infantiam [reborn into a new infancy].
It is thus both beginning and end, an initial and a terminal creature.
The initial creature existed before man was not, and the terminal creature will be when man is not.
Psychologically speaking, this means that the “child” symbolizes the pre-conscious and the post-conscious essence of man.
His pre-conscious essence is the unconscious state of earliest childhood; his post-conscious essence is an anticipation by
analogy of life after death.
In this idea the all-embracing nature of psychic wholeness is expressed.
Wholeness is never comprised within the compass of the conscious mind—it includes the indefinite and indefinable extent
of the unconscious as well.
Wholeness, empirically speaking, is therefore of immeasurable extent, older and younger than consciousness and enfolding it in time and space.
This is no speculation, but an immediate psychic experience.
Not only is the conscious process continually accompanied, it is often guided, helped, or interrupted, by unconscious happenings.
The child had a psychic life before it had consciousness. ~Jung, CW 9i, Para 299
The symbol is the middle way along which the opposites flow together in a new movement, like a watercourse bringing fertility after a long drought.
~Carl Jung, CW 6, Para 443.
A symbol loses its magical or, if you prefer, its redeeming power as soon as its liability to dissolve is recognized. To be effective, a symbol must be by its very nature unassailable.
It must be the best possible expression of the prevailing world-view, an unsurpassed container of meaning; it must also be sufficiently remote from comprehension to resist all attempts of the critical intellect to break it down; and finally, its aesthetic form must appeal so convincingly to our feelings that no argument can be raised against it on that score. --Carl Jung, CW 6, Para 401
All knowledge of the psyche is itself psychic; in spite of all this the soul is the only experient of life and existence. ~Carl Jung, CW 5, Para 344
Yet every descent is followed by an ascent; the vanishing shapes are shaped anew, and a truth is valid in the end only if it suffers change, and bears new witnesses in new images, in new tongues, like a new wine that is put into old bottles.
~Carl Jung, CW 5, Para 533
If I am not conjoined through the uniting of the Below and the Above, I break down into three parts: the serpent, and in that or some other animal form I roam, living nature daimonically, arousing fear and longing. The human soul, living forever within you. The celestial soul, as such dwelling with the Gods, far from you and unknown to you, appearing in the form of a bird.
~Carl Jung’s Soul to him, Black Books, Appendix C., Page 370.
To live oneself means: to be one's own task.
Never say that it is a pleasure to live oneself It will be no joy but a long suffering, since you must become your own creator. ~Carl Jung, The Red Book, Page 249
“Trust thyself: every heart vibrates to that iron string.
Nothing is at last sacred but the integrity of your own mind. A man should learn to detect and watch that gleam of light which flashes across his mind from within, more than the lustre of the firmament of bards and sages... In every work of genius we recognize our own rejected thoughts: they come back to us with a certain alienated majesty.
The power which resides in him is new in nature, and none but he knows what that is which he can do, nor does he know until he has tried.”
―Ralph Waldo Emerson
The tree is the world tree.
Odin was hanged on a tree.
Also, the wood for the Christian cross comes from the tree of paradise.
Christ is crucified on the tree of life.
Strangely enough, the cross has a feminine meaning.
It symbolizes the woman, the cruel woman, in whose arms Christ died.
There is a legend that Mary talks to the cross, which she addresses as
“mother cross,” how cruelly she would treat her son.
Here, too, the tree as a cross takes the place of the mother who, however,
was completely depersonalized.
She is the mother of death.
The mother gives birth, and at the end of life, as earth,
she again receives the dead in herself.
Dionysus is the dismembered one.
~Carl Jung, Children’s Dreams Seminar, Pages 83-84.
I, your soul, am your mother, who tenderly and frightfully surrounds you...I, your soul, am your mother, who tenderly and frightfully surrounds you, your nourisher and corrupter; I prepare good things and poison for you.
I am your intercessor with Abraxas.
I teach you the arts that protect you from Abraxas.
I stand between you and Abraxas the all-encompassing.
I am your body, your shadow, your effectiveness in this world, your manifestation in the world of the Gods, your effulgence, your breath, your odor, your magical force.
You should call me if you want to live with men, but the one God if you want to rise above the human world to the divine and eternal solitude of the star. ~Carl Jung; The Red Book; Appendix C; Page 371.
Odin was hanged on a tree.
Also, the wood for the Christian cross comes from the tree of paradise.
Christ is crucified on the tree of life.
Strangely enough, the cross has a feminine meaning.
It symbolizes the woman, the cruel woman, in whose arms Christ died.
There is a legend that Mary talks to the cross, which she addresses as
“mother cross,” how cruelly she would treat her son.
Here, too, the tree as a cross takes the place of the mother who, however,
was completely depersonalized.
She is the mother of death.
The mother gives birth, and at the end of life, as earth,
she again receives the dead in herself.
Dionysus is the dismembered one.
~Carl Jung, Children’s Dreams Seminar, Pages 83-84.
I, your soul, am your mother, who tenderly and frightfully surrounds you...I, your soul, am your mother, who tenderly and frightfully surrounds you, your nourisher and corrupter; I prepare good things and poison for you.
I am your intercessor with Abraxas.
I teach you the arts that protect you from Abraxas.
I stand between you and Abraxas the all-encompassing.
I am your body, your shadow, your effectiveness in this world, your manifestation in the world of the Gods, your effulgence, your breath, your odor, your magical force.
You should call me if you want to live with men, but the one God if you want to rise above the human world to the divine and eternal solitude of the star. ~Carl Jung; The Red Book; Appendix C; Page 371.
He sees the tree of life, whose roots reach into Hell and whose top touches Heaven. He also no longer knows differences: Who is right? What is holy? What is genuine? What is good? What is correct? He knows only one difference: the difference between below and above. For he sees that the tree of life grows from below to above, and that it has its crown at the top, clearly differentiated from the roots. To him this is unquestionable. Hence he knows the way to salvation.
To unlearn all distinctions save that concerning direction is part of your salvation. Hence you free yourself from the old curse of the knowledge of good and evil. Because you separated good from evil according to your best appraisal and aspired only to the good and denied the evil that you committed nevertheless and ailed to accept, your roots no longer suckled the dark nourishment of the depths and your tree became sick and withered.
Therefore the ancients said that after Adam had eaten the apple, the tree of paradise withered. Your life needs the dark. But if you know that it is evil, you can no longer accept it and you suffer anguish and you do not know why: Nor can you accept it as evil, else your good will reject you. Nor can you deny it since you know good and evil. Because of this the knowledge of good and evil was an insurmountable curse.
But if you return to primal chaos and if you feel and recognize that which hangs stretched between the two unbearable poles of fire, you will notice that you can no longer separate good and evil conclusively, neither through feeling nor through knowledge, but that you can discern the direction of growth only from below to above. You thus forget the distinction between good and evil, and you no longer know it as long as your tree grows from below to above. But as soon as growth stops, what was united in growth falls apart and once more you recognize good and evil.
You can never deny your knowledge of good and evil to yourself so that you could betray your good in order to live evil. For as soon as you separate good and evil, you recognize them. They are united only in growth. But you grow if you stand still in the greatest doubt, and therefore steadfastness in great doubt is' a veritable flower of life.
He who cannot bear doubt does not bear himself. Such a one is doubtful; he does not grow and hence he does not live. Doubt is the sign of the strongest and the weakest. The strong have doubt, but doubt has the weak. Therefore the weakest is close to the strongest, and if he can say to his doubt: "I have you," then he is the strongest. But no one can say yes to his doubt, unless he endures wide-open chaos. Because there are so many among us who can talk about anything, pay heed to what they live. What someone says can be very much or very little. Thus examine his life.
My speech is neither light nor dark, since it is the speech of someone who is growing. ~Carl Jung, Red Book, Page 301
To unlearn all distinctions save that concerning direction is part of your salvation. Hence you free yourself from the old curse of the knowledge of good and evil. Because you separated good from evil according to your best appraisal and aspired only to the good and denied the evil that you committed nevertheless and ailed to accept, your roots no longer suckled the dark nourishment of the depths and your tree became sick and withered.
Therefore the ancients said that after Adam had eaten the apple, the tree of paradise withered. Your life needs the dark. But if you know that it is evil, you can no longer accept it and you suffer anguish and you do not know why: Nor can you accept it as evil, else your good will reject you. Nor can you deny it since you know good and evil. Because of this the knowledge of good and evil was an insurmountable curse.
But if you return to primal chaos and if you feel and recognize that which hangs stretched between the two unbearable poles of fire, you will notice that you can no longer separate good and evil conclusively, neither through feeling nor through knowledge, but that you can discern the direction of growth only from below to above. You thus forget the distinction between good and evil, and you no longer know it as long as your tree grows from below to above. But as soon as growth stops, what was united in growth falls apart and once more you recognize good and evil.
You can never deny your knowledge of good and evil to yourself so that you could betray your good in order to live evil. For as soon as you separate good and evil, you recognize them. They are united only in growth. But you grow if you stand still in the greatest doubt, and therefore steadfastness in great doubt is' a veritable flower of life.
He who cannot bear doubt does not bear himself. Such a one is doubtful; he does not grow and hence he does not live. Doubt is the sign of the strongest and the weakest. The strong have doubt, but doubt has the weak. Therefore the weakest is close to the strongest, and if he can say to his doubt: "I have you," then he is the strongest. But no one can say yes to his doubt, unless he endures wide-open chaos. Because there are so many among us who can talk about anything, pay heed to what they live. What someone says can be very much or very little. Thus examine his life.
My speech is neither light nor dark, since it is the speech of someone who is growing. ~Carl Jung, Red Book, Page 301
Jung on the importance of being Born
There are plenty of people who are not yet born.
They all seem to be here, they walk about—but as a matter of fact, they are not yet born, because they are behind a glass wall, they are in the womb.
They are in the world only on parole and are soon to be returned to the pleroma [fullness] where they started originally.
They have not formed a connection with this world; they are suspended in the air; they are neurotic, living the provisional life. ~Jung, Kundalini Seminar, Page 28
It is most important that you should be born; you ought to come into this world—otherwise you cannot realize the self, and the purpose of this world has been missed.
It is utterly important that one should be in this world, that one really fulfills one’s entelechia, the germ of life which one is.
Otherwise you can never start Kundalini; you can never detach.
You simply are thrown back, and nothing has happened; it is an absolutely valueless experience.
You must believe in this world, make roots, do the best you can, even if you have to believe in the most absurd things—to believe,
for instance, that this world is very definite, that it matters absolutely whether such-and-such a treaty is made or not.
It may be completely futile, but you have to believe in it, have to make it almost a religious conviction, merely for the purpose of putting
your signature under the treaty, so that trace is left of you.
For you should leave some trace in this world which notifies that you have been here, that something has happened.
If nothing happens of this kind you have not realized yourself; the germ of life has fallen, say, into a thick layer of air that kept it suspended.
It never touched the ground, and so never could produce the plant.
But if you touch the reality in which you live, and stay for several decades if you leave your trace, then the impersonal process can begin.
You see, the shoot must come out of the ground, and if the personal spark has never gotten into the ground, nothing will come out of it; no linga
[creative core] or Kundalini will be there, because you are still staying in the infinity that was before. ~Carl Jung, Kundalini Seminar, Page 29
Even if you don’t become a complete realization of yourself, you become at least a person; you have a certain conscious form.
Of course, it is not a totality; it is only a part, perhaps, and your true individuality is still behind the screen—yet what is manifested on the surface is surely a unit.
One is not necessarily conscious of the totality, and perhaps other people see more clearly who you are than you do yourself.
So individuality is always. It is everywhere.
Everything that has life is individual—a dog, a plant, everything living—but of course it is far from being conscious of its individuality.
A dog has probably an exceedingly limited idea of himself as compared with the sum total of his individuality.
As most people, no matter how much they think of themselves, are egos, yet at the same time they are individuals, almost as if they were individuated.
For they are in a way individuated from the very beginning of their lives, yet they are not conscious of it.
Individuation only takes place when you are conscious of it, but individuation is always there from the beginning of your existence.
~Carl Jung, Kundalini Seminar, Page 5
But such a thing [Individuation] is only possible if the individual in every moment of existence fulfills his complete being, lives the primitive pattern, fulfills all the expectations that he was originally born with. ~Carl Jung, Visions Seminar, Pages 760-761
The instinct of individuation is found everywhere in life, for there is no life on earth that is not individual. Each form of life is manifested in a differentiated being naturally, otherwise life could not exist. An innate urge of life is to produce an individual as complete as possible. ~Carl Jung, Kundalini Seminar, Page 4
When we have succeeded in making a God, and if through this creation our whole force has entered into this design, we are filled with an overwhelming desire to rise with the divine sun and to become a part of its magnificence. ~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 288.
Death is a drawing together of two worlds, not an end. We are the bridge.
~Carl Jung, J.E.T., Page 95.
For when the soul vanished at death, it was not lost; in that other world
it formed the living counter-pole to the state of death in this world.
~Carl Jung, CW 16, Para 493
One needs death to be able to harvest the fruit. ~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 275.
"There is a deep-seated repugnance in the human breast against understanding the processes in which we are involved. Such understanding implies far too much responsibility for our actions" (Letters of Marshall McLuhan, p. 370)
Again, no psychological fact can ever be exhaustively explained in terms of causality alone; as a living phenomenon, it is always indissolubly bound up with the continuity of the vital process, so that it is not only something evolved but also continually evolving and creative. ~Carl Jung, CW 6, Para 717
The day comes when you are outgrown and then you are approaching the void, which seems to me to be the most desirable thing, the thing which contains the most meaning. ~Carl Jung, Visions Seminar, Page 1026.
This function of mediation between the opposites I have termed the transcendent function, by which I mean nothing mysterious, but merely a combined function of conscious and unconscious elements, or, as in mathematics, a common
function of real and imaginary qualities. ~Carl Jung, CW 6, Para 184
Life is born only of the spark of opposites. ~Carl Jung, CW 7, Para 78
The Coincidence of Opposites: According to the Kabbalists, Ein-sof is the union of both Yesh (being) and Ayin (nothingness) (Elior, 1993,Ch. 14ff.), as well as male and female and good and evil and all other basic oppositions. For the 13th century Kabbalist, Azriel of Gerona, the godhead not only unites being and "the nought" (Scholem, 1987, p. 416) but also the visible and invisible as well as faith and unbelief (p. 441-2), and His emanations are the "union of everything and its opposite" (Dan, 1966, p. 94). The Lurianists, and the Hasidim who followed in their path, referred to Ein-sof as ha-achdut ha-shawah, a coincidentia oppositorum, (Elior, 1987, pp. 114, 163, 166, 167) a term which Jung reserved for the essence of the human psyche. "The self", Jung tells us, "is made manifest in the opposites and the conflicts between them; it is a coincidentia oppositorum" (Jung, p. 186)
There are plenty of people who are not yet born.
They all seem to be here, they walk about—but as a matter of fact, they are not yet born, because they are behind a glass wall, they are in the womb.
They are in the world only on parole and are soon to be returned to the pleroma [fullness] where they started originally.
They have not formed a connection with this world; they are suspended in the air; they are neurotic, living the provisional life. ~Jung, Kundalini Seminar, Page 28
It is most important that you should be born; you ought to come into this world—otherwise you cannot realize the self, and the purpose of this world has been missed.
It is utterly important that one should be in this world, that one really fulfills one’s entelechia, the germ of life which one is.
Otherwise you can never start Kundalini; you can never detach.
You simply are thrown back, and nothing has happened; it is an absolutely valueless experience.
You must believe in this world, make roots, do the best you can, even if you have to believe in the most absurd things—to believe,
for instance, that this world is very definite, that it matters absolutely whether such-and-such a treaty is made or not.
It may be completely futile, but you have to believe in it, have to make it almost a religious conviction, merely for the purpose of putting
your signature under the treaty, so that trace is left of you.
For you should leave some trace in this world which notifies that you have been here, that something has happened.
If nothing happens of this kind you have not realized yourself; the germ of life has fallen, say, into a thick layer of air that kept it suspended.
It never touched the ground, and so never could produce the plant.
But if you touch the reality in which you live, and stay for several decades if you leave your trace, then the impersonal process can begin.
You see, the shoot must come out of the ground, and if the personal spark has never gotten into the ground, nothing will come out of it; no linga
[creative core] or Kundalini will be there, because you are still staying in the infinity that was before. ~Carl Jung, Kundalini Seminar, Page 29
Even if you don’t become a complete realization of yourself, you become at least a person; you have a certain conscious form.
Of course, it is not a totality; it is only a part, perhaps, and your true individuality is still behind the screen—yet what is manifested on the surface is surely a unit.
One is not necessarily conscious of the totality, and perhaps other people see more clearly who you are than you do yourself.
So individuality is always. It is everywhere.
Everything that has life is individual—a dog, a plant, everything living—but of course it is far from being conscious of its individuality.
A dog has probably an exceedingly limited idea of himself as compared with the sum total of his individuality.
As most people, no matter how much they think of themselves, are egos, yet at the same time they are individuals, almost as if they were individuated.
For they are in a way individuated from the very beginning of their lives, yet they are not conscious of it.
Individuation only takes place when you are conscious of it, but individuation is always there from the beginning of your existence.
~Carl Jung, Kundalini Seminar, Page 5
But such a thing [Individuation] is only possible if the individual in every moment of existence fulfills his complete being, lives the primitive pattern, fulfills all the expectations that he was originally born with. ~Carl Jung, Visions Seminar, Pages 760-761
The instinct of individuation is found everywhere in life, for there is no life on earth that is not individual. Each form of life is manifested in a differentiated being naturally, otherwise life could not exist. An innate urge of life is to produce an individual as complete as possible. ~Carl Jung, Kundalini Seminar, Page 4
When we have succeeded in making a God, and if through this creation our whole force has entered into this design, we are filled with an overwhelming desire to rise with the divine sun and to become a part of its magnificence. ~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 288.
Death is a drawing together of two worlds, not an end. We are the bridge.
~Carl Jung, J.E.T., Page 95.
For when the soul vanished at death, it was not lost; in that other world
it formed the living counter-pole to the state of death in this world.
~Carl Jung, CW 16, Para 493
One needs death to be able to harvest the fruit. ~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 275.
"There is a deep-seated repugnance in the human breast against understanding the processes in which we are involved. Such understanding implies far too much responsibility for our actions" (Letters of Marshall McLuhan, p. 370)
Again, no psychological fact can ever be exhaustively explained in terms of causality alone; as a living phenomenon, it is always indissolubly bound up with the continuity of the vital process, so that it is not only something evolved but also continually evolving and creative. ~Carl Jung, CW 6, Para 717
The day comes when you are outgrown and then you are approaching the void, which seems to me to be the most desirable thing, the thing which contains the most meaning. ~Carl Jung, Visions Seminar, Page 1026.
This function of mediation between the opposites I have termed the transcendent function, by which I mean nothing mysterious, but merely a combined function of conscious and unconscious elements, or, as in mathematics, a common
function of real and imaginary qualities. ~Carl Jung, CW 6, Para 184
Life is born only of the spark of opposites. ~Carl Jung, CW 7, Para 78
The Coincidence of Opposites: According to the Kabbalists, Ein-sof is the union of both Yesh (being) and Ayin (nothingness) (Elior, 1993,Ch. 14ff.), as well as male and female and good and evil and all other basic oppositions. For the 13th century Kabbalist, Azriel of Gerona, the godhead not only unites being and "the nought" (Scholem, 1987, p. 416) but also the visible and invisible as well as faith and unbelief (p. 441-2), and His emanations are the "union of everything and its opposite" (Dan, 1966, p. 94). The Lurianists, and the Hasidim who followed in their path, referred to Ein-sof as ha-achdut ha-shawah, a coincidentia oppositorum, (Elior, 1987, pp. 114, 163, 166, 167) a term which Jung reserved for the essence of the human psyche. "The self", Jung tells us, "is made manifest in the opposites and the conflicts between them; it is a coincidentia oppositorum" (Jung, p. 186)
FROM HERE TO ETERNITY
THE SLEEP THAT KNOWS NO WAKING
Convergence: Many Lines, Many Ancestors
The psychology of an individual can never be exhaustively explained
from himself alone: a clear recognition is needed of the way it is also conditioned by historical and environmental circumstances. ~Carl Jung, CW 6, Para 717
"We conceptualize self in terms of dynamic multiplicity of relatively autonomous I positions in an imaginal landscape. The I has the possibility to move, as in a space, from one position to another in accordance with changes in situation and time. The I fluctuates among different and even opposed positions. The I has the capacity to imaginatively endow each position with a voice so that dialogical relations between positions can be established. The voices function like interacting characters in a story." --Hermans, Kempen & van Loon, "The Dialogical Self"
Are imaginal experiences real? What is the nature of the beings that live in that space between matters of the natural world, and ideas of the reasonable mind? How do they help us live a life imbued with wonder and mystery?
Henry Corbin called this imaginal realm the mundus imaginalis, not a flight of fantasy, but a borderline reality between waking experience, and a regenerative kind of knowing and being. Our lives are filled with dream figures, intuitive presences, and powerful, even healing, visionary beings. Even those who explicitly deny life after death implicitly hold that the dead possess epistemic and emotional states.
According to Bering (2002), in "Intuitive Conceptions of Dead Agents’ Minds:
The Natural Foundations of Afterlife Beliefs as Phenomenological Boundary":
THE SLEEP THAT KNOWS NO WAKING
Convergence: Many Lines, Many Ancestors
The psychology of an individual can never be exhaustively explained
from himself alone: a clear recognition is needed of the way it is also conditioned by historical and environmental circumstances. ~Carl Jung, CW 6, Para 717
"We conceptualize self in terms of dynamic multiplicity of relatively autonomous I positions in an imaginal landscape. The I has the possibility to move, as in a space, from one position to another in accordance with changes in situation and time. The I fluctuates among different and even opposed positions. The I has the capacity to imaginatively endow each position with a voice so that dialogical relations between positions can be established. The voices function like interacting characters in a story." --Hermans, Kempen & van Loon, "The Dialogical Self"
Are imaginal experiences real? What is the nature of the beings that live in that space between matters of the natural world, and ideas of the reasonable mind? How do they help us live a life imbued with wonder and mystery?
Henry Corbin called this imaginal realm the mundus imaginalis, not a flight of fantasy, but a borderline reality between waking experience, and a regenerative kind of knowing and being. Our lives are filled with dream figures, intuitive presences, and powerful, even healing, visionary beings. Even those who explicitly deny life after death implicitly hold that the dead possess epistemic and emotional states.
According to Bering (2002), in "Intuitive Conceptions of Dead Agents’ Minds:
The Natural Foundations of Afterlife Beliefs as Phenomenological Boundary":
Ancestors are each a transpersonal “other,” stand-ins for a central dynamic Jung called the Self. This guiding principle or impulse fosters growth and transformation through an interactive field of imaginal figures that call to us and inform us -- mixtures of archetype, energy and image. If we respond, we find renewal, transformation, ascent, growth, rebirth. If we reject the call we face death, stagnation, coagulation, depression, fear, and loss of soul.
We need to retain and build awareness of the power and transformative nature of the unconscious, by exploring its fluid regions, which includes our ancestral lines. This dark world is irrational, chaotic, and still -- the very depths of human experience. Take the time to accept the dead.
Images that emerge from the unconscious are naturally meaningful. Meaning is acausal, both in root and end, unrelated to any physical occurrence. Coming to terms with the unconscious is a profound encounter that transcends the gap between conscious ego and unconscious archetype. Wholeness is found within each transcendent experience.
Our ancestors are “imaginal figures” –dream figures, visionary beings, guides, intuitive forces, legends and figures from myth and fairy tales. They represent different dimensions of unconscious life. They seek engagement with us so that they can assist as guiding forces. They may use our embodied nature to complete something left unfinished in their lives. Even when they want us to complete something on their behalf, we are also transforming something within our personal path. This realm of inter-being is not a place of distinct either/or – either your life or mine, either your inner work or mine.
This extraordinary world, the mundus imaginalis, has a borderland quality transcending time and space -- a lens that frames our own anomalous experiences. Because the unconscious is the home of imaginal figures, we can find them there, when we, and they, are ready to collaborate. Nurturing inner life invites re-enchantment of the world and vitality of soul.
Psyche brings us all a world rich in dreams, intuitions, feelings, and visionary encounters; the portals to a wellspring of intrapsychic life, through which we can awaken to their voices and numinous encounters that help us move through time and space in new ways.
Suffering can transform into meaning, compassion and love. Synchronicities in times of suffering open the imaginal world, animated by a host of figures that seek to guide us back home. The shadows conceal glimpses of imaginal experience. The archetypes to find grounding in lived experience -- in stories of the imaginal and direct experience. The ground of uncertainty is where we incubate pain and let it birth something new.
Symbols are not allegories and not signs; they are images of contents which for the most part transcend consciousness. ~Carl Jung, CW 5, Para 114
But if the depths have conceived, then the symbol grows out of itself and is born from the mind, as befits a God. ~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 311.
Cosmos evolves through meaningful informational codes. Order is transmitted through cosmic evolution that in-forms matter, life and consciousness. This ordered negentropic universe is structured as a quantum field, plenum of meaningful local and nonlocal information.
This Cosmic Mind is a Plenum full of information or Cosmic Consciousness. This vision of the mind and the universe sees consciousness and intelligence as superimposed meaningful information, always present in all organizational
levels of nature. Matter, life and consciousness are not separate entities but a holistic indivisible unity, an infinite self-organizing intelligent field.
We need to retain and build awareness of the power and transformative nature of the unconscious, by exploring its fluid regions, which includes our ancestral lines. This dark world is irrational, chaotic, and still -- the very depths of human experience. Take the time to accept the dead.
Images that emerge from the unconscious are naturally meaningful. Meaning is acausal, both in root and end, unrelated to any physical occurrence. Coming to terms with the unconscious is a profound encounter that transcends the gap between conscious ego and unconscious archetype. Wholeness is found within each transcendent experience.
Our ancestors are “imaginal figures” –dream figures, visionary beings, guides, intuitive forces, legends and figures from myth and fairy tales. They represent different dimensions of unconscious life. They seek engagement with us so that they can assist as guiding forces. They may use our embodied nature to complete something left unfinished in their lives. Even when they want us to complete something on their behalf, we are also transforming something within our personal path. This realm of inter-being is not a place of distinct either/or – either your life or mine, either your inner work or mine.
This extraordinary world, the mundus imaginalis, has a borderland quality transcending time and space -- a lens that frames our own anomalous experiences. Because the unconscious is the home of imaginal figures, we can find them there, when we, and they, are ready to collaborate. Nurturing inner life invites re-enchantment of the world and vitality of soul.
Psyche brings us all a world rich in dreams, intuitions, feelings, and visionary encounters; the portals to a wellspring of intrapsychic life, through which we can awaken to their voices and numinous encounters that help us move through time and space in new ways.
Suffering can transform into meaning, compassion and love. Synchronicities in times of suffering open the imaginal world, animated by a host of figures that seek to guide us back home. The shadows conceal glimpses of imaginal experience. The archetypes to find grounding in lived experience -- in stories of the imaginal and direct experience. The ground of uncertainty is where we incubate pain and let it birth something new.
Symbols are not allegories and not signs; they are images of contents which for the most part transcend consciousness. ~Carl Jung, CW 5, Para 114
But if the depths have conceived, then the symbol grows out of itself and is born from the mind, as befits a God. ~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 311.
Cosmos evolves through meaningful informational codes. Order is transmitted through cosmic evolution that in-forms matter, life and consciousness. This ordered negentropic universe is structured as a quantum field, plenum of meaningful local and nonlocal information.
This Cosmic Mind is a Plenum full of information or Cosmic Consciousness. This vision of the mind and the universe sees consciousness and intelligence as superimposed meaningful information, always present in all organizational
levels of nature. Matter, life and consciousness are not separate entities but a holistic indivisible unity, an infinite self-organizing intelligent field.
For him who looks backwards the whole world, even the starry sky, becomes the mother who bends over him and enfolds him on all sides, and from the renunciation of this image, and of the longing for it arises the picture of the world as we know it today. ~Carl Jung, CW 5, Para 643
It seems as if all the personal entanglements and dramatic changes of fortune that make up the intensity of life were nothing but hesitations, timid shrinking, almost like petty complications and meticulous excuses for not facing the finality of this strange and uncanny process of crystallization. ~ Jung, CW 12, Para 326.
Often one has the impression that the personal psyche is running around this central point like a shy animal, at
once fascinated and frightened, always in flight, and yet steadily drawing nearer. ~Carl Jung, CW 12, Para 326.
In the last analysis every life is the realization of a whole, that is, of a self, for which reason this realization can also be called “individuation.”
~Carl Jung, CW 12, Para 330
All life is bound to individual carriers who realize it, and it is simply inconceivable without them. ~Carl Jung, CW 12, Para 330
But every carrier is charged with an individual destiny and destination, and the realization of these alone makes
sense of life. ~Carl Jung, CW 12, Para 330
Experience, not books, is what leads to understanding. ~Jung, CW 12, Para 564
It seems as if all the personal entanglements and dramatic changes of fortune that make up the intensity of life were nothing but hesitations, timid shrinking, almost like petty complications and meticulous excuses for not facing the finality of this strange and uncanny process of crystallization. ~ Jung, CW 12, Para 326.
Often one has the impression that the personal psyche is running around this central point like a shy animal, at
once fascinated and frightened, always in flight, and yet steadily drawing nearer. ~Carl Jung, CW 12, Para 326.
In the last analysis every life is the realization of a whole, that is, of a self, for which reason this realization can also be called “individuation.”
~Carl Jung, CW 12, Para 330
All life is bound to individual carriers who realize it, and it is simply inconceivable without them. ~Carl Jung, CW 12, Para 330
But every carrier is charged with an individual destiny and destination, and the realization of these alone makes
sense of life. ~Carl Jung, CW 12, Para 330
Experience, not books, is what leads to understanding. ~Jung, CW 12, Para 564
Our Journey of Self Discovery
JUNGIAN GENEALOGY: AGELESS THERAPIES
Where Your Story Began; You Take It With You From This Day Forward.
Celebrate the magical place you choose to live with your family. The journey into our past is a journey of self-discovery.
"What is radically new does not follow the current, even when it is apparently a contemporary event . [ ... ] We are immersed in the psyche . How insisted the alchemists, the gold of the potential lies in the bad waste of what we have at hand. Working this raw material has always been the real unconscious by the task which not only expressed his personal suffering, but reflected the torment Soul mundi, the suffering in the roots. For the artist, I mean ' artifex,' the author, be it artist, alchemist or analyst. He who collects the wood carried by the current, the cacophonous sounds, DIY parts, and returns this inconscietà to its roots. The artifex works with the soul in ' Anima mundi." --James Hillman
It is utterly important that one should be in this world,
that one really fulfills one’s entelechia, the germ of life which one is.
~Carl Jung, Kundalini Seminar, Page 28
JUNGIAN GENEALOGY: AGELESS THERAPIES
Where Your Story Began; You Take It With You From This Day Forward.
Celebrate the magical place you choose to live with your family. The journey into our past is a journey of self-discovery.
"What is radically new does not follow the current, even when it is apparently a contemporary event . [ ... ] We are immersed in the psyche . How insisted the alchemists, the gold of the potential lies in the bad waste of what we have at hand. Working this raw material has always been the real unconscious by the task which not only expressed his personal suffering, but reflected the torment Soul mundi, the suffering in the roots. For the artist, I mean ' artifex,' the author, be it artist, alchemist or analyst. He who collects the wood carried by the current, the cacophonous sounds, DIY parts, and returns this inconscietà to its roots. The artifex works with the soul in ' Anima mundi." --James Hillman
It is utterly important that one should be in this world,
that one really fulfills one’s entelechia, the germ of life which one is.
~Carl Jung, Kundalini Seminar, Page 28
Art Credit: Odilon Redon, "The Buddha," 1904
For you should leave some trace in this world which notifies that you have been here, that something has happened. If nothing happens of this kind you have not realized yourself; the germ of life has fallen, say, into a thick layer of air that kept it suspended. ~Carl Jung, Kundalini Seminar, Page 28
You see, the shoot must come out of the ground, and if the personal spark has never gotten into the ground, nothing will come out of it; no linga [creative core] or Kundalini will be there, because you are still staying in the infinity that was before. ~Carl Jung, Kundalini Seminar, Page 29
"Trees are sanctuaries.
Whoever knows how to listen to them, can learn the truth."
~Herman Hesse
“If we have souls, they're made of the love we share.
Undimmed by time, unbound by death.” ― Jack Harper
"The ancients lived their symbols, since the world had not yet become real for them." ~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 236.
Where Space and time do not exist there is only oneness (monotes).
There is no differentiation; there is only pleroma.
Pleroma is always with us, under our feet and above our heads.
Man is the point that has become visible, stepping out from the pleroma, knowing what he is doing, and able to name the things about him.
Although the earth existed before there were any human beings, it could not be seen or known by anyone. ~Carl Jung, ETH Lectures, Page 22.
“If there be light, then there is darkness; if cold, heat; if height, depth; if solid, fluid; if hard, soft; if rough, smooth; if calm, tempest; if prosperity, adversity;
if life, death.” ―Pythagoras
We ask the question: how did creatura originate? Created beings (creatures) indeed originated but not the creatura itself, for the creatura is a quality of the Pleroma, in the same way as the non-creation [non-creatura or non-created non-world], which is the eternal death [dark abyss]. Creation is always and everywhere, and death is always and everywhere. The Pleroma possesses all: differentiation and non-differentiation. --Jung, Seven Sermons, Sermon 1
Jacob Boehme said the basis of the world is nonbeing…because the beginning [of the world] is desire, longing, and only an absolute vacuum can have a longing.
A vacuum, nonbeing, can by longing draw or attract into itself...something exceedingly positive because it creates the world. ~Carl Jung, Visions Seminar, Pages 424-425.
We cannot slay death, as we have already taken all life from it. If we still want to overcome death, then we must enliven it. Therefore on your journey be sure to take golden cups full of the sweet drink of life, red wine, and give it to dead matter, so that it can win life back. ~Carl Jung; The Red Book; Page 244.
The day comes when you are outgrown and then you are approaching the void, which seems to me to be the most desirable thing,
the thing which contains the most meaning.
And you end where you started. This is the philosophy of the East.
--Carl Jung, Visions Seminar, Page 1026.
The great asset of the East is that they are based on instinct.
~Carl Jung, Visions Seminar, Page 1066.
The Eastern philosophy is a sort of yoga, it is alive, it is an art, the art of making something of oneself. ~Carl Jung, Visions Seminar, Page 1024
And who can not be awed by the quote from the Corpus Hermeticum 10.24-25 ,
"So let us not be afraid to tell the truth. The true man is above them [the
celestial gods], or at least equal to them. For no god leaves his sphere to come to earth, whereas man ascends to heaven and measures it. Let us dare to say that a man is a mortal god and a celestial god is an immortal man." --Corpus Hermeticum
The further development of the individual can be brought about only by means of symbols which represent something far in advance of himself and whose intellectual meanings cannot yet be grasped entirely. ~Carl Jung, CW 4, Para 680
Concrete values cannot take the place of the symbol; only new and more effective symbols can be substituted for those that are antiquated and outworn and have lost their efficacy through the progress of intellectual analysis and understanding. ~Carl Jung, CW 4, Para 680
For you should leave some trace in this world which notifies that you have been here, that something has happened. If nothing happens of this kind you have not realized yourself; the germ of life has fallen, say, into a thick layer of air that kept it suspended. ~Carl Jung, Kundalini Seminar, Page 28
You see, the shoot must come out of the ground, and if the personal spark has never gotten into the ground, nothing will come out of it; no linga [creative core] or Kundalini will be there, because you are still staying in the infinity that was before. ~Carl Jung, Kundalini Seminar, Page 29
"Trees are sanctuaries.
Whoever knows how to listen to them, can learn the truth."
~Herman Hesse
“If we have souls, they're made of the love we share.
Undimmed by time, unbound by death.” ― Jack Harper
"The ancients lived their symbols, since the world had not yet become real for them." ~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 236.
Where Space and time do not exist there is only oneness (monotes).
There is no differentiation; there is only pleroma.
Pleroma is always with us, under our feet and above our heads.
Man is the point that has become visible, stepping out from the pleroma, knowing what he is doing, and able to name the things about him.
Although the earth existed before there were any human beings, it could not be seen or known by anyone. ~Carl Jung, ETH Lectures, Page 22.
“If there be light, then there is darkness; if cold, heat; if height, depth; if solid, fluid; if hard, soft; if rough, smooth; if calm, tempest; if prosperity, adversity;
if life, death.” ―Pythagoras
We ask the question: how did creatura originate? Created beings (creatures) indeed originated but not the creatura itself, for the creatura is a quality of the Pleroma, in the same way as the non-creation [non-creatura or non-created non-world], which is the eternal death [dark abyss]. Creation is always and everywhere, and death is always and everywhere. The Pleroma possesses all: differentiation and non-differentiation. --Jung, Seven Sermons, Sermon 1
Jacob Boehme said the basis of the world is nonbeing…because the beginning [of the world] is desire, longing, and only an absolute vacuum can have a longing.
A vacuum, nonbeing, can by longing draw or attract into itself...something exceedingly positive because it creates the world. ~Carl Jung, Visions Seminar, Pages 424-425.
We cannot slay death, as we have already taken all life from it. If we still want to overcome death, then we must enliven it. Therefore on your journey be sure to take golden cups full of the sweet drink of life, red wine, and give it to dead matter, so that it can win life back. ~Carl Jung; The Red Book; Page 244.
The day comes when you are outgrown and then you are approaching the void, which seems to me to be the most desirable thing,
the thing which contains the most meaning.
And you end where you started. This is the philosophy of the East.
--Carl Jung, Visions Seminar, Page 1026.
The great asset of the East is that they are based on instinct.
~Carl Jung, Visions Seminar, Page 1066.
The Eastern philosophy is a sort of yoga, it is alive, it is an art, the art of making something of oneself. ~Carl Jung, Visions Seminar, Page 1024
And who can not be awed by the quote from the Corpus Hermeticum 10.24-25 ,
"So let us not be afraid to tell the truth. The true man is above them [the
celestial gods], or at least equal to them. For no god leaves his sphere to come to earth, whereas man ascends to heaven and measures it. Let us dare to say that a man is a mortal god and a celestial god is an immortal man." --Corpus Hermeticum
The further development of the individual can be brought about only by means of symbols which represent something far in advance of himself and whose intellectual meanings cannot yet be grasped entirely. ~Carl Jung, CW 4, Para 680
Concrete values cannot take the place of the symbol; only new and more effective symbols can be substituted for those that are antiquated and outworn and have lost their efficacy through the progress of intellectual analysis and understanding. ~Carl Jung, CW 4, Para 680
SOIL
The darkness that you find yourself now in
is like the darkness that surrounds a seed,
the one from which a new life will begin,
a darkness you resent and yet you need.
You yearn for days when you felt you were part
of something larger, branching in the sun,
and fear that you can only fall apart
and wish for light though now you can see none.
But if you probe the darkness, you will find
the light you felt you had forever lost
and not look to the life you left behind
nor hate that into darkness you were tossed:
within the darkness, you can take deep root,
and reach to light and bear from it much fruit.
--Mario A. Pita
The darkness that you find yourself now in
is like the darkness that surrounds a seed,
the one from which a new life will begin,
a darkness you resent and yet you need.
You yearn for days when you felt you were part
of something larger, branching in the sun,
and fear that you can only fall apart
and wish for light though now you can see none.
But if you probe the darkness, you will find
the light you felt you had forever lost
and not look to the life you left behind
nor hate that into darkness you were tossed:
within the darkness, you can take deep root,
and reach to light and bear from it much fruit.
--Mario A. Pita
“Remember the trees who make this life possible,
who some call grandmother,
because they, like us,
have parents, ancestors, live in community.
I have seen them dancing in their ceremony
Of bending low
When the wind rushes in from the north.”
Ann Filemyr
Artwork by Kai Orton
who some call grandmother,
because they, like us,
have parents, ancestors, live in community.
I have seen them dancing in their ceremony
Of bending low
When the wind rushes in from the north.”
Ann Filemyr
Artwork by Kai Orton
The patient must be alone if he is to find out what it is that supports him when he can no longer support himself. Only this experience can give him an indestructible foundation. ~Carl Jung, CW 12, Para 32
The experience of the unconscious is a personal secret communicable only to very few, and that with difficulty. ~Carl Jung, CW 12, Para 61
The archetype is, so to speak, an “eternal” presence, and it is only a question of whether it is perceived by the conscious mind or not. ~Carl Jung, CW 12, Para 329
There is always an attraction between conscious mind and projected content. Generally it takes the form of a fascination. ~Carl Jung, CW 12, Para 436.
So long as a content remains in the projected state it is inaccessible.
~Carl Jung, CW 12, Para 555.
The experience of the unconscious is a personal secret communicable only to very few, and that with difficulty. ~Carl Jung, CW 12, Para 61
But no matter how much the parents and grandparents may have sinned against the child, the man who is really adult will accept these sins as his own condition which has to be reckoned with. ~Carl Jung, CW 12, Para 152
Our psychic prehistory is in truth the spirit of gravity, which needs steps and ladders because, unlike the disembodied airy intellect, it cannot fly at will. ~Carl Jung, CW 12, Para 79
Experience of the opposites has nothing whatever to do with intellectual insight or with empathy. It is more what we would call fate. ~Carl Jung, CW 12, Para 23.
Without the experience of the opposites there is no experience of wholeness and hence no inner approach to the sacred figures. ~Carl Jung, CW 12, Para 24.
Since the psychological condition of any unconscious content is one of potential reality, characterized by the polar opposites of “being” and “non-being,” it follows that the union of opposites must play a decisive role in the alchemical process. ~Carl Jung, CW 12, Para 557
It has yet to be understood that the Mysterium magnum [the great mystery] is not only an actuality but is first and foremost rooted in the human psyche.
~Carl Jung, CW 12, Para 13.
The alchemist related himself not only to the unconscious but directly to the very substance which he hoped to transform through the power of imagination. ~Carl Jung, CW 12, Para 394
However remote alchemy may seem to us today, we should not underestimate its cultural importance for the Middle Ages. Today is the child of the Middle Ages and it cannot disown its parents. ~Carl Jung, CW 12, Para 432
It is clear enough from this material what the ultimate aim of alchemy really was: it was trying to produce a corpus subtile, a transfigured and resurrected body, i.e., a body that was at the same time spirit. ~Carl Jung, CW 12, Para 511
There the main concern is the “diamond body,” in other words, the attainment of immortality through the transformation of the body. ~Carl Jung, CW 12, Para 511
John Dockus
THE LIVING TRUTH
Genealogy As Primal Symbol
Ancestral Reality
“In general, emotional ties are very important to human beings. But they still contain projections, and it is essential to withdraw these projections in order to attain to oneself and to objectivity. Emotional relationships are relationships of desire, tainted by coercion and constraint; something is expected from the other person, and that makes them and we unfree. Objective cognition lies hidden behind the attraction of the emotional relationship; it seems to be the central secret. Only through objective cognition is the real coniunctio possible.”
--C. G. Jung, Memories Dreams and Reflections, pp. 296-297.
PUT YOUR QUESTIONS TO THE TREES
Genealogical myths have always pervaded literature
and politics.
Aside from the symbols used within genealogy, the Family Tree itself is a foundational symbol of one's living connections to life, to history, and to transformation. It is the "prime symbol" of gestation and prima materia -- the archetypal human being. To mix metaphors, when it comes to our 'entangled branches,' we have to "read between the lines."
The symbolical names of the prima materia all point to the anima mundi, Plato's Primordial Man, the Anthropos, and mystic Adam. Adam Kadmon is the "man of light" and therefore identical with the alchemical filius philosophorum. Paracelsus says of this astral man, "the true man is the star in us...for heaven is man and man is heaven, and all men are one heaven, and heaven is only one man."
The ancient teachings about the Anthropos assert that God, or the world-creating principle, was manifested in the form of a "first-created" man, usually of cosmic size, such as Prajapati, Purusha, and Metatron.
The Primordial Man is the means for conquering darkness, and shares his role with a feminine being, Sophia, who coexisted with him in the Gnostic Pleroma. The Cosmic Man or archetypal man is both macrocosm and microcosm and contains the Feminine or anima within himself. Technically it is a hermaphroditic figure, recapitulating the entire evolutionary process.
The Anthropos originates in Manichaean doctrine. It is akin to the true man of Chinese alchemy, which like the Anthropos is akin to God. This inner man remains partly unconscious because consciousness is only part of a man and cannot comprehend the whole. But this whole man is always present.
Psychic content becomes conscious when it possesses a certain energy-charge, or it sinks back into unconsciousness. This "Man[Woman]" is an indescribable, intuitive or mystical experience which demonstrates the continuity of this idea over the millennia. In later centuries there was a relationship between Christ, the Son of Man and this cosmogonic Man.
In alchemical philosophy it corresponds to the homunculus and lapis, the product of the hieros gamos, Royal Marriage. According to Jungian, Edward Edinger, the anthropos has been likened in Gnostic texts to a corpse, "buried in the body like a mummy in a tomb."
The mummy is symbolically identical with the original man or anthropos, and is thus an image of the Self and the product of mortificatio--the incorruptible body that grows out of the death of the corruptible seed. It corresponds to the alchemical idea that death is the conception of the Philosopher's Stone.
From its death, the "child of the philosophers" is born--the Philosophical Stone. The regenerated king in alchemy corresponds to the cosmic Anthropos, the First Man. He is the inner, spiritual, psychic man created in the image of the Nous.
The alchemist experienced the Anthropos in a form that was imbued with a new vitality, freshness and immediacy--psychic totality. It has a complex Egyptian, Persian and Hellenistic background--Homo Maximus.
Primary Relations
It is an epic picture story book. It is a text, showing the relation between signs and the things to which they refer; their signified content, or meaning. It is a discourse on your specific and mythic ancestry -- your ground in pure and limitless space. Each ancestor is a sign deployed in space and time to produce "texts", whose meanings are construed by the mutually contextualizing relations among them. As a conceptual model it helps us conceive the whole.
The self-referential symbol fully represents the whole of which it is a part -- more than a romantic symbol or allegory. There are ordinary people and "giants" of history who felt an intense desire to achieve great deeds and heroic immortality.
"Let there be no doubt that I am the assemblage of our ancestors, the arena in which they exercise my moments. They are my cells and I am their body. This is the favrashi of which I speak, the soul, the collective unconscious, the source of archetypes, the repository of all trauma and joy. I am the choice of their awakening. My Samadhi is their Samadhi. Their experiences are mine! Their knowledge distilled is my inheritance. Those billions are my one." --Frank Herbert, The God-Emperor of Dune, p. 260.
Genealogy As Primal Symbol
Ancestral Reality
“In general, emotional ties are very important to human beings. But they still contain projections, and it is essential to withdraw these projections in order to attain to oneself and to objectivity. Emotional relationships are relationships of desire, tainted by coercion and constraint; something is expected from the other person, and that makes them and we unfree. Objective cognition lies hidden behind the attraction of the emotional relationship; it seems to be the central secret. Only through objective cognition is the real coniunctio possible.”
--C. G. Jung, Memories Dreams and Reflections, pp. 296-297.
PUT YOUR QUESTIONS TO THE TREES
Genealogical myths have always pervaded literature
and politics.
Aside from the symbols used within genealogy, the Family Tree itself is a foundational symbol of one's living connections to life, to history, and to transformation. It is the "prime symbol" of gestation and prima materia -- the archetypal human being. To mix metaphors, when it comes to our 'entangled branches,' we have to "read between the lines."
The symbolical names of the prima materia all point to the anima mundi, Plato's Primordial Man, the Anthropos, and mystic Adam. Adam Kadmon is the "man of light" and therefore identical with the alchemical filius philosophorum. Paracelsus says of this astral man, "the true man is the star in us...for heaven is man and man is heaven, and all men are one heaven, and heaven is only one man."
The ancient teachings about the Anthropos assert that God, or the world-creating principle, was manifested in the form of a "first-created" man, usually of cosmic size, such as Prajapati, Purusha, and Metatron.
The Primordial Man is the means for conquering darkness, and shares his role with a feminine being, Sophia, who coexisted with him in the Gnostic Pleroma. The Cosmic Man or archetypal man is both macrocosm and microcosm and contains the Feminine or anima within himself. Technically it is a hermaphroditic figure, recapitulating the entire evolutionary process.
The Anthropos originates in Manichaean doctrine. It is akin to the true man of Chinese alchemy, which like the Anthropos is akin to God. This inner man remains partly unconscious because consciousness is only part of a man and cannot comprehend the whole. But this whole man is always present.
Psychic content becomes conscious when it possesses a certain energy-charge, or it sinks back into unconsciousness. This "Man[Woman]" is an indescribable, intuitive or mystical experience which demonstrates the continuity of this idea over the millennia. In later centuries there was a relationship between Christ, the Son of Man and this cosmogonic Man.
In alchemical philosophy it corresponds to the homunculus and lapis, the product of the hieros gamos, Royal Marriage. According to Jungian, Edward Edinger, the anthropos has been likened in Gnostic texts to a corpse, "buried in the body like a mummy in a tomb."
The mummy is symbolically identical with the original man or anthropos, and is thus an image of the Self and the product of mortificatio--the incorruptible body that grows out of the death of the corruptible seed. It corresponds to the alchemical idea that death is the conception of the Philosopher's Stone.
From its death, the "child of the philosophers" is born--the Philosophical Stone. The regenerated king in alchemy corresponds to the cosmic Anthropos, the First Man. He is the inner, spiritual, psychic man created in the image of the Nous.
The alchemist experienced the Anthropos in a form that was imbued with a new vitality, freshness and immediacy--psychic totality. It has a complex Egyptian, Persian and Hellenistic background--Homo Maximus.
Primary Relations
It is an epic picture story book. It is a text, showing the relation between signs and the things to which they refer; their signified content, or meaning. It is a discourse on your specific and mythic ancestry -- your ground in pure and limitless space. Each ancestor is a sign deployed in space and time to produce "texts", whose meanings are construed by the mutually contextualizing relations among them. As a conceptual model it helps us conceive the whole.
The self-referential symbol fully represents the whole of which it is a part -- more than a romantic symbol or allegory. There are ordinary people and "giants" of history who felt an intense desire to achieve great deeds and heroic immortality.
"Let there be no doubt that I am the assemblage of our ancestors, the arena in which they exercise my moments. They are my cells and I am their body. This is the favrashi of which I speak, the soul, the collective unconscious, the source of archetypes, the repository of all trauma and joy. I am the choice of their awakening. My Samadhi is their Samadhi. Their experiences are mine! Their knowledge distilled is my inheritance. Those billions are my one." --Frank Herbert, The God-Emperor of Dune, p. 260.
Anthropos, Io Miller
"Here we must follow nature as a guide, and what the doctor then does is less a question of treatment than of developing the creative possibilities latent in the patient himself." ~Carl Jung, CW 16, Para 82
The united personality will never quite lose the painful sense of innate discord. Complete redemption from the sufferings of this world is and must remain an illusion. ~Carl Jung, CW 16, Para 400
In Ghostly Surroundings
Genealogically based, Quadrant IV asks the question 'Are there ancestral, or pre-morbid expressions of the symptoms you carry?'. From whom does the symptomology originate? Often the symptomology is not biographical to the client's lifetime but rather originates from out of their lineage. A traumatic experience that took place generations and/or cultures before the life of the client can be passed on through the generations to manifest in the client's life, and then it continues to be passed on in one way or another by them. More conventional modes of therapy would miss this possibility which can be found to be quite a common occurrence.
In Quadrant IV we are looking for the healing down the ancestral line to heal the T-1 situation. In Quadrant II, in working with trauma, we are working with just the one experience. If it is only one event then it is possible to heal the one memory. But some memories have extensive roots and we have to get at the whole thing before it can heal. So we need to look at what might be constellated around the one experience. If we don't, then quite often what we have is what seems to be a great piece of work but there won't be much change in the client's behavior. In Quadrant II we get one memory and one event whereas in Quadrant IV we may get 10 or 20 events that lead to the current problematic experience. We need to clean up the whole lot.
The redemptive metaphor is discovered by pulling time back from T-1 through T-6.
Once discovered and developed the redemptive metaphor is invited to go to T-1 to bring about a healing (and movement to T+1). The product of this interaction is a new metaphor which will then be 'washed through' all the T- experiences in the lineage to heal each one of them. This will cause the 'expression of the history' to change. In other words, the client will no longer 'carry the baggage' of that experience. A healing has taken place.
OUTLINE OF BASIC INTER-GENERATIONAL
HEALING PROCESS
The united personality will never quite lose the painful sense of innate discord. Complete redemption from the sufferings of this world is and must remain an illusion. ~Carl Jung, CW 16, Para 400
In Ghostly Surroundings
Genealogically based, Quadrant IV asks the question 'Are there ancestral, or pre-morbid expressions of the symptoms you carry?'. From whom does the symptomology originate? Often the symptomology is not biographical to the client's lifetime but rather originates from out of their lineage. A traumatic experience that took place generations and/or cultures before the life of the client can be passed on through the generations to manifest in the client's life, and then it continues to be passed on in one way or another by them. More conventional modes of therapy would miss this possibility which can be found to be quite a common occurrence.
- Two basic questions used are pulling back questions that deal with either time or space:
- Time: 'And what happens just before ... ?'
Space: 'And where did that ... come from?'
- 'And is there anything else (about ...)?'
'And what kind of ...?'
- Time: 'And what happens just before ... ?'
In Quadrant IV we are looking for the healing down the ancestral line to heal the T-1 situation. In Quadrant II, in working with trauma, we are working with just the one experience. If it is only one event then it is possible to heal the one memory. But some memories have extensive roots and we have to get at the whole thing before it can heal. So we need to look at what might be constellated around the one experience. If we don't, then quite often what we have is what seems to be a great piece of work but there won't be much change in the client's behavior. In Quadrant II we get one memory and one event whereas in Quadrant IV we may get 10 or 20 events that lead to the current problematic experience. We need to clean up the whole lot.
The redemptive metaphor is discovered by pulling time back from T-1 through T-6.
Once discovered and developed the redemptive metaphor is invited to go to T-1 to bring about a healing (and movement to T+1). The product of this interaction is a new metaphor which will then be 'washed through' all the T- experiences in the lineage to heal each one of them. This will cause the 'expression of the history' to change. In other words, the client will no longer 'carry the baggage' of that experience. A healing has taken place.
OUTLINE OF BASIC INTER-GENERATIONAL
HEALING PROCESS
- The client locates self and the therapist in the room (or outdoors). The conversation then begins by the client talking. (Quadrant I)
- As the client describes their symptoms, likely from T-1, (QII)
- Eye movements, gestures, etc. are observed and a question such as, "Where are you going with your eyes?" is asked to locate sources of information in space. (QIII)
- Then questions that define that space and develop information are asked such as, "What's it like?, "What kind of ____?", and "anything else about_____?". (QIII)
- For the first 2-3 sessions the client develops their 'map' of their 'perceptual space'. As their eyes source out of different directions or locations (perhaps in the same direction) each location is developed. There may be connections between some locations. The 'map' becomes the 'co-therapist'. (QIII)
- A key word, phrase, feeling, gesture is 'pulled back' in time to T-2 with a question such as "And where did _____come from?" or "What happened just before_____?" (QIV)
- Then something about that source of causation is developed downward until it reveals its information.
- The subject of this source is now pulled back in time, again with a question such as, "And where did _____ come from?" This process continues all the way back through T-6. Remember 'pulling back' is hard work for the therapist and the client.
- A 'redemptive metaphor' is discovered outside of the 'problem domain' before T-6 occurred. It is found when there are no more traumatic information sources.
- The 'redemptive metaphor' is developed in order to discover all of its resources with the same developing questions.
- The 'redemptive metaphor' is invited to go to T-1 (in QII) to heal the client's symptoms (and the result is matured to T+1)
- The product of the T+1 healing is now 'washed through' each T- experience in turn and then back again (and again if necessary) to heal the entire 'expression of history' that has been problematic. This 'problem domain' now no longer exists. The client's (original QIII) space has been healed (cleared).
- http://www.cleanlanguage.co.uk/problemdomains.html
IDENTIFY YOURSELF
Your Search for Your Identity
Order and meaning are things that have become and
are no longer becoming. --Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 235
And, in fine, the ancient precept, "Know thyself," and the modern precept, "Study nature," become at last one maxim.--Ralph Waldo Emerson
Hillman said we have an extreme need to expand our psychological space. The soul is restricted or forced because of his own imagination is withered or blocked. Genealogy expands our psychological space exponentially.
Many people have no dream, no clear image of the future. Some have a dream, even a clear image of the future but they are not in love with it—they may feel that it is not really them.
How might we search for our identity and discover a dream and fall in love with it? This search for identity is one of the most important things that a person ever does. Sometimes a story—even a fantasy—can capture the essence of a problem such as this and distill the powerful truth. A story can be transformative.
For the important thing is not to interpret and understand the fantasies, but primarily to experience them. ~Carl Jung, CW 7, Para 342.
The hero goes forth to come to grips with a merciless opponent, the truth about him- or herself, and to reshape that life from inherent inner resources. The dreadful importance of finding one’s identity is reflected in the following speech:
"It is my heart to learn the truth about myself. I will not stop short of it. Were I to do so, who I am would forever be unknown and through all my life I would feel a part of me lacking."
Exactly the same idea is expressed in the Epistles of St. Paul where he says that all living beings, the whole of creation, is waiting for the revelation of the children of God; they are waiting to celebrate their apokatastasis, their reinstallation with the redemption of the children of God.
In the redemption of the individual, the whole past will be redeemed, and that includes all the inferior things as well, the animals, and all the ancestral souls, everything that has not been completed; all creation will be redeemed in the apokatastasis [at the time of the Last Judgement], there will be a complete restoration of things as they have been.
Primitives express that quite plainly; they say that when the hero steps out of the belly of the monster, not only he comes out but his dead parents who have also been swallowed by the time dragon, and not only his parents but all the people of the tribe who have disappeared in time, and even rivers and mountains and woods, whole countries come out of the whale-dragon.
All the vanished memories of former situations will be restored,
everything will be brought back to its original condition.
~Carl Jung, Visions Seminar, Page 1280
From the Core of Stillness to The Unboundedness of Life
"I warn you, whoever you are, Oh! You who want to probe the arcana of nature, that if you do not find within yourself that which you are looking for, you shall not find it outside either! If you ignore the excellences of your own house, how do you pretend to find other excellencies? Within you is hidden the treasure of treasures! Know thyself and you will know the Universe and the Gods."
-- Inscription on the frontispiece of the Temple of Apollo on Mount Parnassus, Greece, 2500 B.C.
To ‘Know Thyself” is to be ‘Thyself” – without compromise. What an incredibly daunting task. Not because it is hard, but because it is so simple, and simplicity may be the most difficult experience to truly live. Difficult - because it is ‘world saving’, without external recognition. In fact, those who do set out on such a path are likely to go unnoticed and, in some instances shunned. Thus, the inner life is typically pursed separately from our presence in public life, social life, work life, and often even in intimate relationships.
Self-division is no longer tenable. Bridging the inner life and outer life, we can see how we need to find ourselves. As we shed our adopted and adapted programming, we sweep away externalized notions of ourselves and open an inner light to the true beauty of the living spirit we are.
Individuation is a process of psychological and spiritual development with the fulfillment of one's personal destiny as its goal. An on-going dynamic dialectic confrontation takes place between collective and personal, between the unconscious and consciousness.
In 1831, Ralph Waldo Emerson wrote a poem entitled 'Know Thyself', on the theme of 'God in thee.' Wherever we go, whatever we do, self is the sole subject we study and learn. --Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882), Journals (1833)
Each day we have the potential of opening to ‘revelatory moments’ of seeing through. Utterly simple and cumulative practices open us to the core of our spirit.
Stillness, the sensory truth of being ourselves, means living with death and immortality.
The black beetle is the death that is necessary for renewal; and so thereafter, a new sun glowed, the sun of the depths, full of riddles, a sun of the night. And as the rising sun of spring quickens the dead earth, so the sun of the depths quickened the dead, and thus began the terrible struggle between light and darkness. ~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 238.
In the center is the individual where the opposites are united, the one peaceful spot in man, the space where nothing moves embedded in a world of chaos.
~Carl Jung, Visions Seminar, Page 263
If he is intent only on the outer reality, he must live his myth; if he is turned only towards the inner reality, he must dream his outer, so-called real life.
~Carl Jung, CW 6, Para 280
There are two offshoots from all the Aeons, having neither beginning nor end, from one root, and this root is a certain Power, an invisible and incomprehensible Silence. One of them appears on high and is a great power, the mind of the whole, who rules all things and is a male; the other below is a great Thought, a female giving birth to all things. ~Carl Jung, Mysterium Coniunctionis, 136.
The principal pair of opposites is the conscious world and the unconscious world, and when the two come together, it is as if man and woman were coming together, the union of the male and the female, of the light and the darkness. Then a birth will take place. ~Carl Jung, Visions Seminar, Page 574
If you marry the ordered to the chaos you produce the divine child, the supreme meaning beyond meaning and meaninglessness. --Jung, Liber Novus, Page 235
The symbol is the middle way along which the opposites flow together in a new movement, like a watercourse bringing fertility after a long drought.
~Carl Jung, CW 6, Para 443.
It is the world of water, where all life floats in suspension; where the realm of the sympathetic system, the soul of everything living, begins; where I am indivisibly this and that; where I experience the other in myself and the other-than myself experiences me. ~Carl Jung, CW 9i, Para 45.
In this deification mystery you make yourself into the vessel,
and are a vessel of creation in which the opposites reconcile.
~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 253. Footnote 211
Childlikeness or lack of prior assumptions is of the very essence of the symbol and its function. ~Carl Jung, CW 6, Para 442
Your Search for Your Identity
Order and meaning are things that have become and
are no longer becoming. --Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 235
And, in fine, the ancient precept, "Know thyself," and the modern precept, "Study nature," become at last one maxim.--Ralph Waldo Emerson
Hillman said we have an extreme need to expand our psychological space. The soul is restricted or forced because of his own imagination is withered or blocked. Genealogy expands our psychological space exponentially.
Many people have no dream, no clear image of the future. Some have a dream, even a clear image of the future but they are not in love with it—they may feel that it is not really them.
How might we search for our identity and discover a dream and fall in love with it? This search for identity is one of the most important things that a person ever does. Sometimes a story—even a fantasy—can capture the essence of a problem such as this and distill the powerful truth. A story can be transformative.
For the important thing is not to interpret and understand the fantasies, but primarily to experience them. ~Carl Jung, CW 7, Para 342.
The hero goes forth to come to grips with a merciless opponent, the truth about him- or herself, and to reshape that life from inherent inner resources. The dreadful importance of finding one’s identity is reflected in the following speech:
"It is my heart to learn the truth about myself. I will not stop short of it. Were I to do so, who I am would forever be unknown and through all my life I would feel a part of me lacking."
Exactly the same idea is expressed in the Epistles of St. Paul where he says that all living beings, the whole of creation, is waiting for the revelation of the children of God; they are waiting to celebrate their apokatastasis, their reinstallation with the redemption of the children of God.
In the redemption of the individual, the whole past will be redeemed, and that includes all the inferior things as well, the animals, and all the ancestral souls, everything that has not been completed; all creation will be redeemed in the apokatastasis [at the time of the Last Judgement], there will be a complete restoration of things as they have been.
Primitives express that quite plainly; they say that when the hero steps out of the belly of the monster, not only he comes out but his dead parents who have also been swallowed by the time dragon, and not only his parents but all the people of the tribe who have disappeared in time, and even rivers and mountains and woods, whole countries come out of the whale-dragon.
All the vanished memories of former situations will be restored,
everything will be brought back to its original condition.
~Carl Jung, Visions Seminar, Page 1280
From the Core of Stillness to The Unboundedness of Life
"I warn you, whoever you are, Oh! You who want to probe the arcana of nature, that if you do not find within yourself that which you are looking for, you shall not find it outside either! If you ignore the excellences of your own house, how do you pretend to find other excellencies? Within you is hidden the treasure of treasures! Know thyself and you will know the Universe and the Gods."
-- Inscription on the frontispiece of the Temple of Apollo on Mount Parnassus, Greece, 2500 B.C.
To ‘Know Thyself” is to be ‘Thyself” – without compromise. What an incredibly daunting task. Not because it is hard, but because it is so simple, and simplicity may be the most difficult experience to truly live. Difficult - because it is ‘world saving’, without external recognition. In fact, those who do set out on such a path are likely to go unnoticed and, in some instances shunned. Thus, the inner life is typically pursed separately from our presence in public life, social life, work life, and often even in intimate relationships.
Self-division is no longer tenable. Bridging the inner life and outer life, we can see how we need to find ourselves. As we shed our adopted and adapted programming, we sweep away externalized notions of ourselves and open an inner light to the true beauty of the living spirit we are.
Individuation is a process of psychological and spiritual development with the fulfillment of one's personal destiny as its goal. An on-going dynamic dialectic confrontation takes place between collective and personal, between the unconscious and consciousness.
In 1831, Ralph Waldo Emerson wrote a poem entitled 'Know Thyself', on the theme of 'God in thee.' Wherever we go, whatever we do, self is the sole subject we study and learn. --Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882), Journals (1833)
Each day we have the potential of opening to ‘revelatory moments’ of seeing through. Utterly simple and cumulative practices open us to the core of our spirit.
Stillness, the sensory truth of being ourselves, means living with death and immortality.
The black beetle is the death that is necessary for renewal; and so thereafter, a new sun glowed, the sun of the depths, full of riddles, a sun of the night. And as the rising sun of spring quickens the dead earth, so the sun of the depths quickened the dead, and thus began the terrible struggle between light and darkness. ~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 238.
In the center is the individual where the opposites are united, the one peaceful spot in man, the space where nothing moves embedded in a world of chaos.
~Carl Jung, Visions Seminar, Page 263
If he is intent only on the outer reality, he must live his myth; if he is turned only towards the inner reality, he must dream his outer, so-called real life.
~Carl Jung, CW 6, Para 280
There are two offshoots from all the Aeons, having neither beginning nor end, from one root, and this root is a certain Power, an invisible and incomprehensible Silence. One of them appears on high and is a great power, the mind of the whole, who rules all things and is a male; the other below is a great Thought, a female giving birth to all things. ~Carl Jung, Mysterium Coniunctionis, 136.
The principal pair of opposites is the conscious world and the unconscious world, and when the two come together, it is as if man and woman were coming together, the union of the male and the female, of the light and the darkness. Then a birth will take place. ~Carl Jung, Visions Seminar, Page 574
If you marry the ordered to the chaos you produce the divine child, the supreme meaning beyond meaning and meaninglessness. --Jung, Liber Novus, Page 235
The symbol is the middle way along which the opposites flow together in a new movement, like a watercourse bringing fertility after a long drought.
~Carl Jung, CW 6, Para 443.
It is the world of water, where all life floats in suspension; where the realm of the sympathetic system, the soul of everything living, begins; where I am indivisibly this and that; where I experience the other in myself and the other-than myself experiences me. ~Carl Jung, CW 9i, Para 45.
In this deification mystery you make yourself into the vessel,
and are a vessel of creation in which the opposites reconcile.
~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 253. Footnote 211
Childlikeness or lack of prior assumptions is of the very essence of the symbol and its function. ~Carl Jung, CW 6, Para 442
Advice from a Tree
Stand Tall and Proud
Sink your roots deeply into the Earth
Reflect the light of a greater source
Think long term
Go out on a limb
Remember your place among all living beings
Embrace with joy the changing seasons
For each yields its own abundance
The Energy and Birth of Spring
The Growth and Contentment of Summer
The Wisdom to let go of leaves in the Fall
The Rest and Quiet Renewal of Winter
Feel the wind and the Sun
And delight in their presence
Look up at the Moon that shines down upon you
And the mystery of the stars at night.
Seek nourishment from the good things in life
Simple pleasures
Earth, fresh air, light
Be content with your natural beauty.
Stand Tall and Proud
Sink your roots deeply into the Earth
Reflect the light of a greater source
Think long term
Go out on a limb
Remember your place among all living beings
Embrace with joy the changing seasons
For each yields its own abundance
The Energy and Birth of Spring
The Growth and Contentment of Summer
The Wisdom to let go of leaves in the Fall
The Rest and Quiet Renewal of Winter
Feel the wind and the Sun
And delight in their presence
Look up at the Moon that shines down upon you
And the mystery of the stars at night.
Seek nourishment from the good things in life
Simple pleasures
Earth, fresh air, light
Be content with your natural beauty.
image by Daniel O'Connell with additional treatment
The Great Mother is impregnated by the loneliness of him that seeks her.
~Carl Jung to Hermann Hesse, Letters Volume 1, Pages 573-574.
The Great Mother is impregnated by the loneliness of him that seeks her.
~Carl Jung to Hermann Hesse, Letters Volume 1, Pages 573-574.
SIDE LINES
Realm of the Mothers
The Great Mother is impregnated by the loneliness of him that seeks her.
~Jung to Hermann Hesse, Letters Volume 1, Pages 573-574.
When the mother replaces the Father, Magic Replaces the ' Logos '
A host of possibilities is still embedded in the archetypes, in the realm of the Mothers. The abundance of possibilities eludes our comprehension.
~Carl Jung, ETH Lectures, Page 22
The ‘realm of the Mothers’ has not a few connections with the womb, with the matrix, which frequently symbolizes the creative aspect of the unconscious. ~Carl Jung, CW 5, Para 182.
"the mother archetype may connote anything secret, hidden…" ~Carl Jung, CW 9i, para. 158.
“Many things arousing devotion or feelings of awe, as for instance the… earth…can be mother-symbols.” --Carl Jung, 9i, para. 156
Just as the father represents collective consciousness, the traditional spirit, so the mother stands for the collective unconscious, the source of the water of life. ~Carl Jung, Psychology and Alchemy, Page 71.
"The mother is the absolutely universal giver and preserver of life, and as such she may be compared to the unconscious which is the source and origin of all psychic life." ~The Grail Legend by Emma Jung and Marie Louie von Franz.
He who stems from two mothers is the hero: the first birth makes him a mortal man, the second an immortal half-god. ~Carl Jung (Cited in Segal 155-156)
"Know that the sun is your father, the moon your mother. The wind bears you in its womb and the earth nurses you. You are more than your body, more than your emotions, and more than your mind. You are something else. From you will come the golden flower, the alchemical essence. Of this no man may speak. Such matters must be transmitted in mystical terms like employing fables and parables. The purpose of life is to square the circle. The four, the three and the two must become one. From the marriage of the opposites, the royal marriage of king and the queen, is born the philosophers stone, the fifth essence."
- Carl Gustav Jung
I, your soul, am your mother, who tenderly and frightfully surrounds you,
your nourisher and corrupter; I prepare good things and poison for you.
I am your intercessor with Abraxas.
I teach you the arts that protect you from Abraxas.
I stand between you and Abraxas the all-encompassing.
I am your body, your shadow, your effectiveness in this world, your manifestation in the world of the Gods, your effulgence, your breath, your odor, your magical force.
You should call me if you want to live with men, but the one God if you want to rise above the human world to the divine and eternal solitude of the star.
~Carl Jung; The Red Book; Appendix C; Page 371.
The Great Mother is the nurturer. The Great Mother appears in your dreams as your own mother, grandmother, or other nurturing figure. She provides you with positive reassurance. Negatively, they may be depicted as a witch or old bag lady in which case they can be associated with seduction, dominance and death. This juxtaposition is rooted in the belief by some experts that the real mother who is the giver of life is also at the same time jealous of our growth away from her.
When, in the development of this child, the great amnesia will have obscured the Bardo world with its primeval images, such a dream will shine like a spark from the lost paradise, and remind him that he, who lives down on earth, also has an immortal, versatile soul of divine nature. ~Carl Jung, Children's Dreams Seminar, Page 290.
Birth, Randy Mack
Realm of the Mothers
The Great Mother is impregnated by the loneliness of him that seeks her.
~Jung to Hermann Hesse, Letters Volume 1, Pages 573-574.
When the mother replaces the Father, Magic Replaces the ' Logos '
A host of possibilities is still embedded in the archetypes, in the realm of the Mothers. The abundance of possibilities eludes our comprehension.
~Carl Jung, ETH Lectures, Page 22
The ‘realm of the Mothers’ has not a few connections with the womb, with the matrix, which frequently symbolizes the creative aspect of the unconscious. ~Carl Jung, CW 5, Para 182.
"the mother archetype may connote anything secret, hidden…" ~Carl Jung, CW 9i, para. 158.
“Many things arousing devotion or feelings of awe, as for instance the… earth…can be mother-symbols.” --Carl Jung, 9i, para. 156
Just as the father represents collective consciousness, the traditional spirit, so the mother stands for the collective unconscious, the source of the water of life. ~Carl Jung, Psychology and Alchemy, Page 71.
"The mother is the absolutely universal giver and preserver of life, and as such she may be compared to the unconscious which is the source and origin of all psychic life." ~The Grail Legend by Emma Jung and Marie Louie von Franz.
He who stems from two mothers is the hero: the first birth makes him a mortal man, the second an immortal half-god. ~Carl Jung (Cited in Segal 155-156)
"Know that the sun is your father, the moon your mother. The wind bears you in its womb and the earth nurses you. You are more than your body, more than your emotions, and more than your mind. You are something else. From you will come the golden flower, the alchemical essence. Of this no man may speak. Such matters must be transmitted in mystical terms like employing fables and parables. The purpose of life is to square the circle. The four, the three and the two must become one. From the marriage of the opposites, the royal marriage of king and the queen, is born the philosophers stone, the fifth essence."
- Carl Gustav Jung
I, your soul, am your mother, who tenderly and frightfully surrounds you,
your nourisher and corrupter; I prepare good things and poison for you.
I am your intercessor with Abraxas.
I teach you the arts that protect you from Abraxas.
I stand between you and Abraxas the all-encompassing.
I am your body, your shadow, your effectiveness in this world, your manifestation in the world of the Gods, your effulgence, your breath, your odor, your magical force.
You should call me if you want to live with men, but the one God if you want to rise above the human world to the divine and eternal solitude of the star.
~Carl Jung; The Red Book; Appendix C; Page 371.
The Great Mother is the nurturer. The Great Mother appears in your dreams as your own mother, grandmother, or other nurturing figure. She provides you with positive reassurance. Negatively, they may be depicted as a witch or old bag lady in which case they can be associated with seduction, dominance and death. This juxtaposition is rooted in the belief by some experts that the real mother who is the giver of life is also at the same time jealous of our growth away from her.
When, in the development of this child, the great amnesia will have obscured the Bardo world with its primeval images, such a dream will shine like a spark from the lost paradise, and remind him that he, who lives down on earth, also has an immortal, versatile soul of divine nature. ~Carl Jung, Children's Dreams Seminar, Page 290.
Birth, Randy Mack
Know Thyself” is one of the most important things we can do. Without self-knowledge, we are absent from ourselves, easily controlled by others, and lose all direction in our lives.
Most people take the admonition to “KNOW THYSELF” as a primarily intellectual endeavor, neglecting the deeply felt presence of our embodied experience. We’ve polarized our intelligence to our heads, often ignoring the “gut instinct” and deeper awareness of the body. To truly “Know Thyself” requires a deeper gnosis, experiencing the full presence of our psychosomatic body-mind, fully sensitive, present, and receptive to life with every sensation we experience as a form of thought and direct perception.
He [Man] must know something of God’s nature and of metaphysical processes if he is to understand himself and thereby achieve gnosis of the Divine.
~Carl Jung, CW 11, Para 747.
" The forlornness of consciousness in our world is due primarily to the loss of instinct, and the reason for this lies in the development of the human mind over the past aeon. The more power man had over nature , the more his knowledge and skill went to his head, and the deeper became his contempt for the merely natural and accidental, for that which is irrationally given - including the objective psyche , which is all that consciousness is not. " --Jung, The Undiscovered Self
How do we know what we know and do what we do? Magic, religion, science, technology, and ethics are coexisting interconnected cultural categories. They morph and evolve our social life. At the deepest levels some of their contradictions disappear into complementarity. The opposites are a dynamic tension.
Underneath all the top-down authoritarian games we play from our cultural indoctrination, we know that intellect alone will not suffice for the deepest sense of ‘Knowing Thyself.” It's not just cognitive understanding but the fully embodied presence of Being in every moment.
Getting into the body means regularly allowing ourselves to slow down. Breathe slowly and deeply in to your stomach and even deeper in to your pelvic bowl, releasing the clenched pelvic muscles, vocalizing and moving as needed, stretching and feeling your energy body expand as you breathe. Feel the breath enter in to you from all over your body, including its negentropic potential.
Be still and silent until you can hear your own heartbeat. Feel the tightness melt away as your armor dissolves and your dormant senses begin to rejuvenate. Be present with your breath, letting thoughts come and go, without attaching to them. You can embody this process in your daily relationship to sacred self and ancestors. We begin to awaken the inherent embodied wisdom of full presence and deeper gnosis. Deeper layers of awareness are already in you, awaiting your conscious care to nurture them back to the foreground of your awareness.
The most intimate, real, and authentic parts of you are ecstatically invigorating and deeply ever-present. We willingly surrender control of our intellectualized notions of “what should be” and allow the vulnerable, spontaneous “messiness” of pure Being to emerge.
When “Doing” comes from our “Being”, effort becomes effortless. We act not from the conditioned constructs of our identity, but from ourselves in the present moment in harmony with our environment and greater awareness of the world. This fully experienced embodied connection -- with all its ineffable joy, sadness, silliness, passion, fear, presence, wonder, and love -- is the essence of what it means to truly “Know Thyself”.
Most people take the admonition to “KNOW THYSELF” as a primarily intellectual endeavor, neglecting the deeply felt presence of our embodied experience. We’ve polarized our intelligence to our heads, often ignoring the “gut instinct” and deeper awareness of the body. To truly “Know Thyself” requires a deeper gnosis, experiencing the full presence of our psychosomatic body-mind, fully sensitive, present, and receptive to life with every sensation we experience as a form of thought and direct perception.
He [Man] must know something of God’s nature and of metaphysical processes if he is to understand himself and thereby achieve gnosis of the Divine.
~Carl Jung, CW 11, Para 747.
" The forlornness of consciousness in our world is due primarily to the loss of instinct, and the reason for this lies in the development of the human mind over the past aeon. The more power man had over nature , the more his knowledge and skill went to his head, and the deeper became his contempt for the merely natural and accidental, for that which is irrationally given - including the objective psyche , which is all that consciousness is not. " --Jung, The Undiscovered Self
How do we know what we know and do what we do? Magic, religion, science, technology, and ethics are coexisting interconnected cultural categories. They morph and evolve our social life. At the deepest levels some of their contradictions disappear into complementarity. The opposites are a dynamic tension.
Underneath all the top-down authoritarian games we play from our cultural indoctrination, we know that intellect alone will not suffice for the deepest sense of ‘Knowing Thyself.” It's not just cognitive understanding but the fully embodied presence of Being in every moment.
Getting into the body means regularly allowing ourselves to slow down. Breathe slowly and deeply in to your stomach and even deeper in to your pelvic bowl, releasing the clenched pelvic muscles, vocalizing and moving as needed, stretching and feeling your energy body expand as you breathe. Feel the breath enter in to you from all over your body, including its negentropic potential.
Be still and silent until you can hear your own heartbeat. Feel the tightness melt away as your armor dissolves and your dormant senses begin to rejuvenate. Be present with your breath, letting thoughts come and go, without attaching to them. You can embody this process in your daily relationship to sacred self and ancestors. We begin to awaken the inherent embodied wisdom of full presence and deeper gnosis. Deeper layers of awareness are already in you, awaiting your conscious care to nurture them back to the foreground of your awareness.
The most intimate, real, and authentic parts of you are ecstatically invigorating and deeply ever-present. We willingly surrender control of our intellectualized notions of “what should be” and allow the vulnerable, spontaneous “messiness” of pure Being to emerge.
When “Doing” comes from our “Being”, effort becomes effortless. We act not from the conditioned constructs of our identity, but from ourselves in the present moment in harmony with our environment and greater awareness of the world. This fully experienced embodied connection -- with all its ineffable joy, sadness, silliness, passion, fear, presence, wonder, and love -- is the essence of what it means to truly “Know Thyself”.
"If you do not know yourself, your unconscious as well as your conscious states, all your inquiry will be twisted, given a bias. You will have no foundation for thinking which is rational, clear, logical, sane. Your thinking will be according to a certain pattern, formula, or set of ideas - but that is not really thinking. To think clearly, logically, without becoming neurotic, without being caught in any form of illusion, you have to know this whole process of your own consciousness." --J. Krishnamurti
"You see, inasmuch as the living body contains the secret of life, it is an intelligence. It is also a plurality which is gathered up in one mind, for the body is extended in space, and the here and the there are two things; what is in your toes is not in your fingers, and what is in your fingers is not in your ears or your stomach or your knees or anywhere else in your body.
"Each part is always something in itself. The different forms and localizations are all represented in your mind as more or less different facts, so there is a plurality.
What you think with your head doesn’t necessarily coincide with what you feel in your heart, and what your belly thinks is not what your mind thinks.
The extension in space, therefore, creates a pluralistic quality in the mind.
"Since psyche and matter are contained in one and the same world, and moreover are in continuous contact with one another and ultimately rest on irreprehensible, transcendental factors, it is not only possible but fairly probable, even, that psyche and matter are two different aspects of one and the same thing. The synchronicity phenomena point, it seems to me, in this direction, for they show that the nonpsychic can behave like the psychic, and vice versa, without there being any causal connection between them."
~ Carl Jung, "On the Nature of the Psyche"
"That is probably the reason why consciousness is possible. Different things are represented, and these are always supposed to be in a field of consciousness, in a sort of extension, that is. Yet you feel that the whole, that plurality, is drawn together and referred to something you call "I"; it is referred to a center which you cannot say has extension, as little as you can say of a thought that it has extension.
"Thought is a disembodied something because it has no spatial qualities. So "I" is as if it were something abstract, yet in a vague way it coincides with your body; when you say "I" you beat your chest for instance, to emphasize the "I."
--Carl Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Page 360.
"If a story is seed, then we are its soil. Just hearing the story allows us to experience it as though we ourselves were the heroine who either falters or wins out in the end. If we hear a story about a wolf, then afterward we rove about and know like a wolf for a time. If we hear a story about a dove finding her young at last, then for a time after, something moves behind our own feathered breasts. If it be a story of wresting the sacred pearl from beneath the claw of the ninth dragon, we feel exhausted afterward, and satisfied. In a very real way, we are imprinted with knowing just by listening to the tale."
--Clarissa Pinkola Estes
"You see, inasmuch as the living body contains the secret of life, it is an intelligence. It is also a plurality which is gathered up in one mind, for the body is extended in space, and the here and the there are two things; what is in your toes is not in your fingers, and what is in your fingers is not in your ears or your stomach or your knees or anywhere else in your body.
"Each part is always something in itself. The different forms and localizations are all represented in your mind as more or less different facts, so there is a plurality.
What you think with your head doesn’t necessarily coincide with what you feel in your heart, and what your belly thinks is not what your mind thinks.
The extension in space, therefore, creates a pluralistic quality in the mind.
"Since psyche and matter are contained in one and the same world, and moreover are in continuous contact with one another and ultimately rest on irreprehensible, transcendental factors, it is not only possible but fairly probable, even, that psyche and matter are two different aspects of one and the same thing. The synchronicity phenomena point, it seems to me, in this direction, for they show that the nonpsychic can behave like the psychic, and vice versa, without there being any causal connection between them."
~ Carl Jung, "On the Nature of the Psyche"
"That is probably the reason why consciousness is possible. Different things are represented, and these are always supposed to be in a field of consciousness, in a sort of extension, that is. Yet you feel that the whole, that plurality, is drawn together and referred to something you call "I"; it is referred to a center which you cannot say has extension, as little as you can say of a thought that it has extension.
"Thought is a disembodied something because it has no spatial qualities. So "I" is as if it were something abstract, yet in a vague way it coincides with your body; when you say "I" you beat your chest for instance, to emphasize the "I."
--Carl Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Page 360.
"If a story is seed, then we are its soil. Just hearing the story allows us to experience it as though we ourselves were the heroine who either falters or wins out in the end. If we hear a story about a wolf, then afterward we rove about and know like a wolf for a time. If we hear a story about a dove finding her young at last, then for a time after, something moves behind our own feathered breasts. If it be a story of wresting the sacred pearl from beneath the claw of the ninth dragon, we feel exhausted afterward, and satisfied. In a very real way, we are imprinted with knowing just by listening to the tale."
--Clarissa Pinkola Estes
"Consciousness, no matter how extensive it may be, must always remain the smaller circle within the greater circle of the unconscious, an island surrounded by the sea; and, like the sea itself, the unconscious yields an endless and self-replenishing abundance of living creatures, a wealth beyond our fathoming." ~Carl Jung, CW 16, Para 366.
SPONTANEOUS PRESENCE
LONG AGO & FAR AWAY
Uncanny Intelligence
“Ye are Blood of my Blood, and Bone of my Bone,
I give ye my Body, that we Two might be One.
I give ye my Spirit, 'til our Life shall be Done.”
--Diana Gabaldon, Outlander
Love is a force of destiny whose power reaches from heaven to hell.
~Carl Jung, CW 10, Para 198.
Life inevitably leads down into reality.
~Carl Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Page 508
Inasmuch as the living body contains the secret of life, it is an intelligence.
~Carl Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Page 360.
If you fulfill the pattern that is peculiar to yourself, you have loved yourself, you have accumulated and have abundance; you bestow virtue then because you have luster. ~Carl Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Page 502
You see, life wants to be real; if you love life you want to live really, not as a mere promise hovering above things. ~Carl Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Page 508
And if you lose yourself in the crowd, in the whole of humanity, you also never arrive at yourself; just as you can get lost in your isolation, you can also get lost in utter abandonment to the crowd. ~Carl Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Page 1020
The spirit consists of possibilities-one could say the world of possibilities was the world of the spirit. The spirit can be anything, but the earth can only be something definite. So remaining true to the earth would mean maintaining your conscious relationship to the body. Don't run away and make yourself unconscious of bodily facts, for they keep you in real life and help you not to lose your way in the world of mere possibilities where you are simply blindfolded. ~Carl Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Pages 66-67
Wisdom begins only when one takes things as they are; otherwise we get nowhere, we simply become inflated balloons with no feet on the earth.
So it is a healing attitude when one can agree with the facts as they are; only then can we live in our body on this earth, only then can we thrive.
~Carl Jung, Visions Seminar, Page 545
"Life, so-called, is a short episode between two great mysteries, which yet are one. I cannot mourn the dead. They endure, but we pass over. .."
~Carl Jung, Letters Vol. 1, Page 483.
Life is of the nature of water: it always seeks the deepest place, which is always below in the darkness and heaviness of the earth.
~Carl Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Page 508
We cannot say the side of the spirit is twice as good as the other side; we must bring the pairs of opposites together in an altogether different way, where the rights of the body are just as much recognized as the rights of the spirit.
~Carl Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Page 235.
In the center is the individual where the opposites are united, the one peaceful spot in man, the space where nothing moves embedded in a world of chaos.
The task is now to bring about order, the alchemistic process must begin, namely, the production of the valuable substance, the transformation into the light.
~Carl Jung, Visions Seminar, Page 263
Psyche (or soul) is the “third, mediating standpoint” or terrain upon which the fundamentally opposite worlds of inner and outer, idea and thing, can be “joined together in living union.” ~Jeffrey C. Miller, The Transcendent Function, Page 36.
“If there be light, then there is darkness; if cold, heat; if height, depth; if solid, fluid; if hard, soft; if rough, smooth; if calm, tempest; if prosperity, adversity;
if life, death.” ―Pythagoras
“I love him who justifieth the future ones, and redeemeth the past ones: for he is willing to succumb through the present ones.” [Nietzsche]
That complete surrender to the present necessities means of course a fulfilment,
a redemption of the past generations, and of the unfulfilled lives that are
waiting to be fulfilled.
If we live completely, we surrender to their lives and redeem them.
Also, we prepare for a future generation, because we have lived out our own lives; we have fulfilled them, and we leave no curse for the
following generations—the curse of economized life.
~Carl Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Page 89.
LONG AGO & FAR AWAY
Uncanny Intelligence
“Ye are Blood of my Blood, and Bone of my Bone,
I give ye my Body, that we Two might be One.
I give ye my Spirit, 'til our Life shall be Done.”
--Diana Gabaldon, Outlander
Love is a force of destiny whose power reaches from heaven to hell.
~Carl Jung, CW 10, Para 198.
Life inevitably leads down into reality.
~Carl Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Page 508
Inasmuch as the living body contains the secret of life, it is an intelligence.
~Carl Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Page 360.
If you fulfill the pattern that is peculiar to yourself, you have loved yourself, you have accumulated and have abundance; you bestow virtue then because you have luster. ~Carl Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Page 502
You see, life wants to be real; if you love life you want to live really, not as a mere promise hovering above things. ~Carl Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Page 508
And if you lose yourself in the crowd, in the whole of humanity, you also never arrive at yourself; just as you can get lost in your isolation, you can also get lost in utter abandonment to the crowd. ~Carl Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Page 1020
The spirit consists of possibilities-one could say the world of possibilities was the world of the spirit. The spirit can be anything, but the earth can only be something definite. So remaining true to the earth would mean maintaining your conscious relationship to the body. Don't run away and make yourself unconscious of bodily facts, for they keep you in real life and help you not to lose your way in the world of mere possibilities where you are simply blindfolded. ~Carl Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Pages 66-67
Wisdom begins only when one takes things as they are; otherwise we get nowhere, we simply become inflated balloons with no feet on the earth.
So it is a healing attitude when one can agree with the facts as they are; only then can we live in our body on this earth, only then can we thrive.
~Carl Jung, Visions Seminar, Page 545
"Life, so-called, is a short episode between two great mysteries, which yet are one. I cannot mourn the dead. They endure, but we pass over. .."
~Carl Jung, Letters Vol. 1, Page 483.
Life is of the nature of water: it always seeks the deepest place, which is always below in the darkness and heaviness of the earth.
~Carl Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Page 508
We cannot say the side of the spirit is twice as good as the other side; we must bring the pairs of opposites together in an altogether different way, where the rights of the body are just as much recognized as the rights of the spirit.
~Carl Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Page 235.
In the center is the individual where the opposites are united, the one peaceful spot in man, the space where nothing moves embedded in a world of chaos.
The task is now to bring about order, the alchemistic process must begin, namely, the production of the valuable substance, the transformation into the light.
~Carl Jung, Visions Seminar, Page 263
Psyche (or soul) is the “third, mediating standpoint” or terrain upon which the fundamentally opposite worlds of inner and outer, idea and thing, can be “joined together in living union.” ~Jeffrey C. Miller, The Transcendent Function, Page 36.
“If there be light, then there is darkness; if cold, heat; if height, depth; if solid, fluid; if hard, soft; if rough, smooth; if calm, tempest; if prosperity, adversity;
if life, death.” ―Pythagoras
“I love him who justifieth the future ones, and redeemeth the past ones: for he is willing to succumb through the present ones.” [Nietzsche]
That complete surrender to the present necessities means of course a fulfilment,
a redemption of the past generations, and of the unfulfilled lives that are
waiting to be fulfilled.
If we live completely, we surrender to their lives and redeem them.
Also, we prepare for a future generation, because we have lived out our own lives; we have fulfilled them, and we leave no curse for the
following generations—the curse of economized life.
~Carl Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Page 89.
Treehuggers, DFA, Iona MIller
The capacity for imagination is one of the most fascinating features of the human mind. Not only is it useful in problem-solving but it also conjures up all kinds of stories to delight our hearts and minds. Some of these stories are partly true, others are wholly made up. In any case, as far as stories go, truth and falsity is beside the point. Some stories capture our imagination or otherwise resonate so deeply that they acquire epic status. The heroes and heroines of these tales acquire legendary abilities; their beauty has the capacity to “launch a thousand ships”; and their strength the ability to lift mountains. Eventually, some of them are bestowed with divine status. While some people may scoff at the powers we bestow upon our deities, others delight in these tales, and yet others sincerely believe them to be true. Whatever the case may be, both the nay-sayers and the believers come together on important occasions and in times of grand festivities to invoke their deities and to propitiate them for continued happiness. These stories and epics also provide the raw material for deep philosophical discussions and serve as a foundation for ethics or even political theory. In this manner, entire civilizations may coalesce around their epics. http://swarajyamag.com/ideas/the-myth-of-secularism-a-primer-for-pagans
The capacity for imagination is one of the most fascinating features of the human mind. Not only is it useful in problem-solving but it also conjures up all kinds of stories to delight our hearts and minds. Some of these stories are partly true, others are wholly made up. In any case, as far as stories go, truth and falsity is beside the point. Some stories capture our imagination or otherwise resonate so deeply that they acquire epic status. The heroes and heroines of these tales acquire legendary abilities; their beauty has the capacity to “launch a thousand ships”; and their strength the ability to lift mountains. Eventually, some of them are bestowed with divine status. While some people may scoff at the powers we bestow upon our deities, others delight in these tales, and yet others sincerely believe them to be true. Whatever the case may be, both the nay-sayers and the believers come together on important occasions and in times of grand festivities to invoke their deities and to propitiate them for continued happiness. These stories and epics also provide the raw material for deep philosophical discussions and serve as a foundation for ethics or even political theory. In this manner, entire civilizations may coalesce around their epics. http://swarajyamag.com/ideas/the-myth-of-secularism-a-primer-for-pagans
Genealogical Research is a Marathon, Not a Sprint
ORESTES: Here is the last labor
To spend on humanity. I saw a vision of us move in the dark:
all that we did or dreamed of
Regarded each other, the man pursued the woman, the woman
clung to the man, warriors and kings
Strained at each other in the darkness, all loved or fought inward,
each one of the lost people
Sought the eyes of another that another should praise him; sought
never his own but another's; the net of desire
Had every nerve drawn to the center, so that they writhed like a
full draught of fishes, all matted
In the one mesh; when they look backward they see only a man
standing at the beginning,
Or forward, a man at the end; or if upward, men in the shining
bitter sky striding and feasting,
Whom you call Gods . . .
It is all turned inward, all your desires incestuous, the woman the
serpent, the man the rose-red cavern,
Both human, worship forever . . .
--Robinson Jeffers, "The Tower Beyond Tragedy"
“ … If a person were to stop all his outer and inner movements at a given moment in order to see what is acting in him, he would nearly always feel a tendency which has about it something narrow, something heavy, something with a negative aspect that tends to be against, to be egoistic. All that is usually going on unseen. But if he tries to awaken to what is going on in himself, to be sincere, he will be able to witness, in addition to what could be called the “coarse” life in him, another life of another quality–much subtler, much higher, lighter–that is also part of himself. The contact with this other quality of life helps him to have a quieter presence, as deeper vision. And he feels an urge at that moment to be open to a quality of this sort that would have a force that would be a center of gravity. He begins to search for a way to serve what he feels would be his real being."
--Pauline de Dampierre, “Engines of Our Nature”, PARABOLA Vol.X, No.4; & Spring 2015
ORESTES: Here is the last labor
To spend on humanity. I saw a vision of us move in the dark:
all that we did or dreamed of
Regarded each other, the man pursued the woman, the woman
clung to the man, warriors and kings
Strained at each other in the darkness, all loved or fought inward,
each one of the lost people
Sought the eyes of another that another should praise him; sought
never his own but another's; the net of desire
Had every nerve drawn to the center, so that they writhed like a
full draught of fishes, all matted
In the one mesh; when they look backward they see only a man
standing at the beginning,
Or forward, a man at the end; or if upward, men in the shining
bitter sky striding and feasting,
Whom you call Gods . . .
It is all turned inward, all your desires incestuous, the woman the
serpent, the man the rose-red cavern,
Both human, worship forever . . .
--Robinson Jeffers, "The Tower Beyond Tragedy"
“ … If a person were to stop all his outer and inner movements at a given moment in order to see what is acting in him, he would nearly always feel a tendency which has about it something narrow, something heavy, something with a negative aspect that tends to be against, to be egoistic. All that is usually going on unseen. But if he tries to awaken to what is going on in himself, to be sincere, he will be able to witness, in addition to what could be called the “coarse” life in him, another life of another quality–much subtler, much higher, lighter–that is also part of himself. The contact with this other quality of life helps him to have a quieter presence, as deeper vision. And he feels an urge at that moment to be open to a quality of this sort that would have a force that would be a center of gravity. He begins to search for a way to serve what he feels would be his real being."
--Pauline de Dampierre, “Engines of Our Nature”, PARABOLA Vol.X, No.4; & Spring 2015
Vera Pavlova
UP A TREE - YOUR ANCESTRY
For you should leave some trace in this world which notifies that you have been here, that something has happened. If nothing happens of this kind you have not realized yourself; the germ of life has fallen, say, into a thick layer of air that kept it suspended. ~Carl Jung, Kundalini Seminar, Page 28
It is utterly important that one should be in this world, that one really fulfills one’s entelechia, the germ of life which one is. ~Jung, Kundalini Seminar, Page 28
Selfish desire ultimately desires itself. You find yourself in your desire, so do not say that desire is vain. If you desire yourself you produce the divine son in your embrace with yourself. Your desire is the father of the God, your self is the mother of the God, but the son is the new God, your master.
~Carl Jung, The Red Book, Page 245.
But the spirit of the depths said: "No one can or should halt sacrifice. Sacrifice is not destruction; sacrifice is the foundation stone of what is to come. Have you not had monasteries? Have not countless thousands gone into the desert? You should carry the monastery in yourself. The desert is within you.
~Carl Jung, The Red Book, Page 230.
When the flame of your greed consumes you, and nothing remains of you but ash, so nothing of you was steadfast. Yet the flame in which you consumed yourself has illuminated many. But if you flee from your fire full of fear, you scorch your fellow men, and the burning torment of your greed cannot die out, so long as you do not desire yourself. ~Carl Jung, The Red Book, Page 311.
The solitary went into the desert to find himself. But he did not want to find himself but rather the manifold meaning of holy scripture. You can suck the immensity of the small and the great into yourself and you will become emptier and emptier, since immense fullness and immense emptiness are one and the same. ~Carl Jung, The Red Book, Page 273.
Remember that you can know yourself and with that you know enough. But you cannot know others and everything else. Beware of knowing what lies beyond yourself or else your presumed knowledge will suffocate the life of those who know themselves. A knower may know himself. That is his limit.
~Carl Jung; The Red Book; Page 306.
You should always ask yourself what you desire, since all too many do not know what they want. ~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 249, Footnote 190.
This is how madness begins, this is madness ... You cannot get conscious of these unconscious facts without giving yourself to them. If you can overcome your fear of the unconscious and can let yourself go down, then these facts take on a life of their own. ~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 253. Footnote 211.
In this deification mystery you make yourself into the vessel, and are a vessel of creation in which the opposites reconcile. ~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 253. Footnote 211.
You announced yourself to me in advance in dreams. They burned in my heart and drove me to all the boldest acts of daring, and forced me to rise above myself. You let me see truths of which I had no previous inkling. You let me undertake journeys, whose endless length would have scared me, if the knowledge of them had not been secure in you. ~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 233.
What is meant is, that you should be with yourself, not alone but with yourself, and you can be with yourself even in a crowd. ~Carl Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Page 1484.
To love someone else is easy, but to love what you are, the thing that is yourself, is just as if you were embracing a glowing red-hot iron: it burns into you and that is very painful. ~Carl Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Page 1473.
Therefore my formula: for the love of mankind and for the love of yourself-of mankind in yourself-create a devil. That is an act of devotion, I should say; you have to put something where there is nothing, for the sake of mankind.
~Carl Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Page 1322.
You see, in the actual functioning of the psyche, it does not matter whether you do a thing or whether it happens to you; whether it reaches you from without or happens within, fate moves through yourself and outside circumstances equally. ~Carl Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Page 896.
If you succeed in remembering yourself, if you succeed in making a difference between yourself and that outburst of passion, then you discover the self; you begin to individuate. ~~Carl Jung, The Psychology of Kundalini Yoga, Pages 39-40.
If the projected conflict is to be healed, it must return into the psyche of the individual, where it had its unconscious beginnings. He must celebrate a Last Supper with himself, and eat his own flesh and drink his own blood; which means that he must recognize and accept the other in himself. . . . Is this perhaps the meaning of Christ’s teaching, that each must bear his own cross? For if you have to endure yourself, how will you be able to rend others also? ~Carl Jung; Mysterium Coniunctionis
You are light and life, like God the Father of whom Man was born. If therefore you learn to know yourself... you will return to life. ~Corpus Hermeticum I, Poimandres, 21.
Whenever we touch nature we get clean. People who have got dirty through too much civilization take a walk in the woods or a bath in the sea. They shake off the fetters and allow nature to touch them. It can be done within or without. Walking in the woods or laying on the grass, taking a bath in the sea are from the outside entering the unconscious, entering yourself through dreams is touching nature from the inside and this is the same thing, things are put right again. ~Carl Jung, Dream Analysis; Notes on a Lecture given 1928-1930.
It will be good for your humility if you can accept the gifts of the unconscious guide that dwells in yourself, and it is good for your pride to humiliate itself to such an extent that you can accept what you receive. ~Carl Jung, Letters Vol. 1, Page 458-459.
You yourself are a conflict that rages in itself and against itself, in order to melt its incompatible substances, the male and the female, in the fire of suffering, and thus create that fixed and unalterable form which is the goal of life. ~Carl Jung, Letters Vol. 1, Page 375.
You must go in quest of yourself, and you will find yourself again only in the simple and forgotten things. Why not go into the forest for a time, literally? Sometimes a tree tells you more than can be read in books… ~Carl Jung, Letters Vol. 1, Page 479.
There is no point in delivering yourself over to the last drop. . . . In my view it is absolutely essential always to have our consciousness well enough in hand to pay sufficient attention to our reality, to the Here and Now. ~Carl Jung, Letters Vol. 1, Page 239.
The experience of wholeness is, quite to the contrary, an extremely simple matter of feeling yourself in harmony with the world within and without. ~Carl Jung, Letters Vol. II, Page 456.
It is legitimate to ask yourself what it is that carries the qualities of the archetypal and synchronistic, and to pose the question, for instance, of the intrinsic nature of the psyche or of matter. ~Carl Jung, Letters Vol. II, Page 445-449
If you fulfil the pattern that is peculiar to yourself, you have loved yourself, you have accumulated and have abundance; you bestow virtue then because you have luster. ~Carl Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Page 502
But if you hate and despise yourself—if you have not accepted your pattern— then there are hungry animals (prowling cats and other beasts and vermin) in your constitution which get at your neighbours like flies in order to satisfy the appetites which you have failed to satisfy. ~Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Page 502
Don’t run away and make yourself unconscious of bodily facts, for they keep you in real life and help you not to lose your real way in the world of mere possibilities where you are simply blindfolded. ~Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, P. 66
The great lure of the archetypal situation is that you yourself suddenly cease to be. You cease to think and are acted upon as though carried by a great river with no end. You are suddenly eternal. ~Carl Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Page 240.
You can only know yourself if you get into yourself, and you can only do that when you accept the lead of the animal. ~Carl Jung, Visions Seminar, Page 458.
By removing yourself from the dogma you get into the world which is increasingly chaotic and primitive, in which you must find
or create a new orientation. ~Carl Jung, Visions Seminar, Page 905
You see, the shoot must come out of the ground, and if the personal spark has never gotten into the ground, nothing will come out of it; no linga [creative core] or Kundalini will be there, because you are still staying in the infinity that was before. ~Carl Jung, Kundalini Seminar, Page 29
You must believe in this world, make roots, do the best you can, even if you have to believe in the most absurd things—to believe, for instance, that this world is very definite, that it matters absolutely whether such-and-such a treaty is made or not. ~Carl Jung, Kundalini Seminar, Page 29
For you should leave some trace in this world which notifies that you have been here, that something has happened. If nothing happens of this kind you have not realized yourself; the germ of life has fallen, say, into a thick layer of air that kept it suspended. ~Carl Jung, Kundalini Seminar, Page 28
It is utterly important that one should be in this world, that one really fulfills one’s entelechia, the germ of life which one is. ~Jung, Kundalini Seminar, Page 28
Selfish desire ultimately desires itself. You find yourself in your desire, so do not say that desire is vain. If you desire yourself you produce the divine son in your embrace with yourself. Your desire is the father of the God, your self is the mother of the God, but the son is the new God, your master.
~Carl Jung, The Red Book, Page 245.
But the spirit of the depths said: "No one can or should halt sacrifice. Sacrifice is not destruction; sacrifice is the foundation stone of what is to come. Have you not had monasteries? Have not countless thousands gone into the desert? You should carry the monastery in yourself. The desert is within you.
~Carl Jung, The Red Book, Page 230.
When the flame of your greed consumes you, and nothing remains of you but ash, so nothing of you was steadfast. Yet the flame in which you consumed yourself has illuminated many. But if you flee from your fire full of fear, you scorch your fellow men, and the burning torment of your greed cannot die out, so long as you do not desire yourself. ~Carl Jung, The Red Book, Page 311.
The solitary went into the desert to find himself. But he did not want to find himself but rather the manifold meaning of holy scripture. You can suck the immensity of the small and the great into yourself and you will become emptier and emptier, since immense fullness and immense emptiness are one and the same. ~Carl Jung, The Red Book, Page 273.
Remember that you can know yourself and with that you know enough. But you cannot know others and everything else. Beware of knowing what lies beyond yourself or else your presumed knowledge will suffocate the life of those who know themselves. A knower may know himself. That is his limit.
~Carl Jung; The Red Book; Page 306.
You should always ask yourself what you desire, since all too many do not know what they want. ~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 249, Footnote 190.
This is how madness begins, this is madness ... You cannot get conscious of these unconscious facts without giving yourself to them. If you can overcome your fear of the unconscious and can let yourself go down, then these facts take on a life of their own. ~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 253. Footnote 211.
In this deification mystery you make yourself into the vessel, and are a vessel of creation in which the opposites reconcile. ~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 253. Footnote 211.
You announced yourself to me in advance in dreams. They burned in my heart and drove me to all the boldest acts of daring, and forced me to rise above myself. You let me see truths of which I had no previous inkling. You let me undertake journeys, whose endless length would have scared me, if the knowledge of them had not been secure in you. ~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 233.
What is meant is, that you should be with yourself, not alone but with yourself, and you can be with yourself even in a crowd. ~Carl Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Page 1484.
To love someone else is easy, but to love what you are, the thing that is yourself, is just as if you were embracing a glowing red-hot iron: it burns into you and that is very painful. ~Carl Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Page 1473.
Therefore my formula: for the love of mankind and for the love of yourself-of mankind in yourself-create a devil. That is an act of devotion, I should say; you have to put something where there is nothing, for the sake of mankind.
~Carl Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Page 1322.
You see, in the actual functioning of the psyche, it does not matter whether you do a thing or whether it happens to you; whether it reaches you from without or happens within, fate moves through yourself and outside circumstances equally. ~Carl Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Page 896.
If you succeed in remembering yourself, if you succeed in making a difference between yourself and that outburst of passion, then you discover the self; you begin to individuate. ~~Carl Jung, The Psychology of Kundalini Yoga, Pages 39-40.
If the projected conflict is to be healed, it must return into the psyche of the individual, where it had its unconscious beginnings. He must celebrate a Last Supper with himself, and eat his own flesh and drink his own blood; which means that he must recognize and accept the other in himself. . . . Is this perhaps the meaning of Christ’s teaching, that each must bear his own cross? For if you have to endure yourself, how will you be able to rend others also? ~Carl Jung; Mysterium Coniunctionis
You are light and life, like God the Father of whom Man was born. If therefore you learn to know yourself... you will return to life. ~Corpus Hermeticum I, Poimandres, 21.
Whenever we touch nature we get clean. People who have got dirty through too much civilization take a walk in the woods or a bath in the sea. They shake off the fetters and allow nature to touch them. It can be done within or without. Walking in the woods or laying on the grass, taking a bath in the sea are from the outside entering the unconscious, entering yourself through dreams is touching nature from the inside and this is the same thing, things are put right again. ~Carl Jung, Dream Analysis; Notes on a Lecture given 1928-1930.
It will be good for your humility if you can accept the gifts of the unconscious guide that dwells in yourself, and it is good for your pride to humiliate itself to such an extent that you can accept what you receive. ~Carl Jung, Letters Vol. 1, Page 458-459.
You yourself are a conflict that rages in itself and against itself, in order to melt its incompatible substances, the male and the female, in the fire of suffering, and thus create that fixed and unalterable form which is the goal of life. ~Carl Jung, Letters Vol. 1, Page 375.
You must go in quest of yourself, and you will find yourself again only in the simple and forgotten things. Why not go into the forest for a time, literally? Sometimes a tree tells you more than can be read in books… ~Carl Jung, Letters Vol. 1, Page 479.
There is no point in delivering yourself over to the last drop. . . . In my view it is absolutely essential always to have our consciousness well enough in hand to pay sufficient attention to our reality, to the Here and Now. ~Carl Jung, Letters Vol. 1, Page 239.
The experience of wholeness is, quite to the contrary, an extremely simple matter of feeling yourself in harmony with the world within and without. ~Carl Jung, Letters Vol. II, Page 456.
It is legitimate to ask yourself what it is that carries the qualities of the archetypal and synchronistic, and to pose the question, for instance, of the intrinsic nature of the psyche or of matter. ~Carl Jung, Letters Vol. II, Page 445-449
If you fulfil the pattern that is peculiar to yourself, you have loved yourself, you have accumulated and have abundance; you bestow virtue then because you have luster. ~Carl Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Page 502
But if you hate and despise yourself—if you have not accepted your pattern— then there are hungry animals (prowling cats and other beasts and vermin) in your constitution which get at your neighbours like flies in order to satisfy the appetites which you have failed to satisfy. ~Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Page 502
Don’t run away and make yourself unconscious of bodily facts, for they keep you in real life and help you not to lose your real way in the world of mere possibilities where you are simply blindfolded. ~Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, P. 66
The great lure of the archetypal situation is that you yourself suddenly cease to be. You cease to think and are acted upon as though carried by a great river with no end. You are suddenly eternal. ~Carl Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Page 240.
You can only know yourself if you get into yourself, and you can only do that when you accept the lead of the animal. ~Carl Jung, Visions Seminar, Page 458.
By removing yourself from the dogma you get into the world which is increasingly chaotic and primitive, in which you must find
or create a new orientation. ~Carl Jung, Visions Seminar, Page 905
You see, the shoot must come out of the ground, and if the personal spark has never gotten into the ground, nothing will come out of it; no linga [creative core] or Kundalini will be there, because you are still staying in the infinity that was before. ~Carl Jung, Kundalini Seminar, Page 29
You must believe in this world, make roots, do the best you can, even if you have to believe in the most absurd things—to believe, for instance, that this world is very definite, that it matters absolutely whether such-and-such a treaty is made or not. ~Carl Jung, Kundalini Seminar, Page 29
YOUR TREE IS YOUR SANCTUARY
Tree of Spirits, Initiation, & Fate
For the archetype is nothing human; no archetype is properly human.
~Carl Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Page 1343.
The World Tree is the great archetype. The World Tree is a common image in shamanic experiences from both traditional societies and in modern shamanic groups. In this tree spirits pass from one world to another. It is the holy center. http://www.shamaniccircles.org/2002oraclefolder/worldtree.html
The World Tree is the center of the world, but in shamanic paradox, the center of the world is also everywhere. In shamanic ritual or performance, the shaman operates in an altered state of consciousness with one foot in both realities. In this state, the the shaman 'becomes' the World Tree, and the place of that ritual becomes the center of the world.
The World Tree forms an integral part of the shamanic cosmos, linking the world of humanity with the world of the spirits. It is depicted in numerous tales of shamanic ritual and in power objects.
Genealogy is an ancient shamanic tool, like journeying and dialoguing. Working with the energies of dreams, death, and initiation helps us change our story and reveal our true nature which we can celebrate in ritual, including ancestral work. Our oldest ancestors can still be found at the edge of oblivion -- each generation another wave upon waves of possibility.
“Do you think that somewhere we are not Nature, that we are different from Nature? No, we are in Nature and think exactly like Nature.”
- C.G. Jung The Earth Has a Soul.
Climbing trees is part of the natural growth process which helps us become more fully human. You may remember when you were a child, climbing up into a tree in your yard, or that of your grandparents -- a place to hide and lick your childhood wounds and let the imagination soar, or maybe watch an approaching storm. That tree was your first archaic temple.
From that lofty perch you felt the wind in your hair, experienced the dappled sunlight, and gained a new perspective, from which you could observe a bigger picture of the landscape and the unfolding story of your life. You may also have been aware of the elegance and beauty of the tree itself as your sanctuary and haven.
You might even have had a treehouse, a sanctuary in the green leaves and a lively space far above ordinary life where your 'observer self' and imagination could roam or 'fly', and you felt you could see forever. Then, perhaps you climbed even higher. Did you keep your power objects there? As an adult, you may have created a treehouse for your own children.
Traditionally, such a treehouse reminds us that climbing up and down trees was the work of ancient shaman, who entered that sacred space to speak with the ancestors, find healing, enter altered states, and commune with the cosmos.
Your family treehouse of the imagination is the House of your family surname -- your dynastic inheritance and legacy. It is the repository of your family history, including all the maternal lines of the realm of the mothers. Such a treehouse is where we can go for family reunions, relational intimacy, and to commune with ourselves.
That tree embodies our family. "We suffer very much from the fact that we consist of mind and have lost the body." (Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Page 251.) The self is a fact of nature and always appears as such in immediate experiences, in dreams and visions, and so on; it is the spirit in the stone, the great secret which has to be worked out, to be extracted from nature, because it is buried in nature herself. ~Carl Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Page 977.
The unconscious on one side is nothing but nature, and on the other hand it is the overcoming of nature; it is yea and nay in itself, two things in one.
So we shall never understand what the unconscious is, as we shall never understand what the world is,because it is and it is not.
~Carl Jung, Visions Seminar, Page 89.
Your family tree is a synthesis of the ascent to higher consciousness and descent into more soulful living. All your beloved relatives still have a place there, or in your collateral lines -- a place where we can visit and honor them, or even work toward healing. It helps us live a sacred life of wisdom, heart and service, honoring all the parts of our being and all the dimensions of our life.
This work is at the heart of an embodied and inspiring expression of higher consciousness in day-to-day life, in which we come to honor our unique quirks, challenges and personality traits, as well as our depths, and the lives and legacies of our ancestors. You are a specific configuration of traits and opinions.
"The unconscious can make a fool of you in no time."
(Jung, Visions Seminar, Page 747).
"No matter what your conscious attitude may be, the unconscious has an absolutely free hand and can do what it pleases." (Jung, Visions Seminar, P. 27)
"But your attitude to it [death] matters, how you will take it, whether you believe in immortality or not, how you react to such and such an event, that matters to the unconscious." (Jung, Visions Seminar, Page 903.)
We learn to perceive the blessing in our wounds, and the liberation that beckons to us from our shadows. Buddhists suggest that the initial consciousness emerges as a vision of the clear light manifesting as a sight for the eye of wisdom. We simultaneously open to the vastness of Spirit and the beauty and depth of soul.
Worldviews Collide
It is a great privilege to live in a culture where we can recognize our birthright as free spiritual beings to a greater or lesser extent. But that may not have been so for our 2 parents, 4 grandparents, our 8 great grandparents, or our 16 great-great grandparents, much less our medieval and ancient ancestral lines. Many were born into systems their lives depended upon, whether or not they truly believed.
Where there is great passion, there is also great resentment. Heresy was punishable by death. Puritan, Quaker, Anglican, Johannite, or other religious ancestors, from the Gnostics, to the Inquisition, sought their version of spiritual freedom, at whatever cost to themselves or those who they fought or to lands they appropriated from it.
Spiritual Identity
Protestants persecuted Puritans who persecuted Quakers, like Roman Catholics persecuted Jews, Moors, and Cathars. Protestant vs. Catholic, Crusaders vs. Muslims, Christians vs. Pagans, etc. they all wished to 'purify' their ideas of religion. Certainly, there are many sides to the slings and arrows of holy wars, migration and beliefs when cultures clash. Each ethnicity has its traumas and issues and transitions. Often we have ancestors on both sides of conflicts, even in the same family.
Even if we look back only a generation or two we encounter ancestors whose spiritual self-identity and worldview we would now consider blindingly ignorant -- spiritual bondage rather than spiritual liberation. Yet the depth of commitment to the spiritual impulse remains the same. They searched within and this is what makes us interested in people who lived hundreds or thousands or years ago, to reconnect with the earth and be part of it as a culture, even if we are not sure how to do it.
RITUAL
"In the realm of sacred space, its most striking manifestation is religious man's will to take his stand at the very heart of the real, at the center of the World, that is, exactly where the cosmos came into existence and began to spread out toward the four horizons, and where, there is possibility of communication with the gods, where he is closest to the gods. Every religious man places himself at the Center of the World and by the same token at the very source of absolute reality, as close as possible to the opening that ensures him communication with the gods."
--Mircea Eliade/The Sacred and the Profane"
Magical practices are the projections of psychic events which, in cases like these, exert a counter influence on the soul and act like a kind of enchantment of one's own personality. That is to say, by means of these concrete performances the attention, or better said, the interest, is brought back to an inner sacred domain which is the source and goal of the soul. This inner domain contains the unity of life and consciousness which, though once possessed, has been lost and must now be found again." --C.G. Jung/Secret of the Golden Flower
The main value of ritual is for the soul. Ritual can be defined as an imitation of a Numinous Element (or godform) in the life of the aspirant. Ritual can be seen as the outward or visible form of contact, or an epiphany with, an inward or spiritual grace. It is essentially a metaphorical expression of creative imagination.
"The distinction between concrete and literal, so important to alchemy, is the essential distinction in ritual. The ritual of theater, of religion, of loving, and of play require concrete actions which are never what they literally seem to be. Ritual offers a primary mode of pathologizing, of deliteralizing events and seeing them as we "perform" them. As we go into a ritual, the soul of our actions "comes out"; or to ritualize a literal action, we "put soul into it."...Ritual brings together action idea into an enactment." --James Hillman/Re-Visioning Psychology.
http://zero-point.tripod.com/holistic/sphere10.html
Jung expands on the concept that ritual acts stand in direct contrast to technical acts. The former are purely symbolic, while the later are purposeful. This means that when one is doing something specific, one is purposeful in the action.
A ceremony is magical so long as it does not result in effective work but preserves the state of expectancy. In that case the energy is canalized into a new object and produces a new dynamism, which in turn remains magical only so long as it does not create effective work. --C.G. Jung/"On the Nature of the Psyche"
Ceremonies and rituals are the means for periodically drawing up the sums of energy, or libido, attached to symbols. Only periodic or regular repetition provokes expectation. Therefore, since archetypal processes are recurrent or chronic, regular repetition of rituals builds expectations.
Symbols are the abstract forms of religious ideas. They are expressed as rites or ceremonies in the form of action. Only through a symbol, can a portion of energy which customarily goes toward sustaining the regular course of life be transformed and channeled into another form. This produces cultural, rather than instinctive, activity. Its by-product is the creation of surplus energy, which is then at the free disposal of the ego which can use this energy for further transformation. When one makes ritual use of symbols, they are prevented from falling back into a purely subconscious form of manifestation, (for instance disease, or neurosis).
According to Robert Grinnell, in Alchemy in a Modern Woman, women bear a particular relationship to the unconscious and ritual; this bears on her deepest significance.
This distinction between feminine and masculine ways of experiencing the unconscious can best be seen in the different ways prima materia is represented. Whereas in a man's psychology the unconscious as prima materia is experienced as chaos, as violent and irrational processes of generation and destruction, in a woman it appears as a fascinating psychic background for sacred images and rituals expressive of her fundamental feminine conscience.
Later, he goes on expanding on this feminine experience.
Here we have both the problem and the deeper meaning of the "modern woman." For just as she produces an intensified polarity which seems very "modern" and raises to consciousness factors which seem "masculine" and which are left out of the dominant masculine view, so too she activates the unconscious rites linked to forgotten customs belonging to the primitive state of man whose aim was precisely to reconcile conflicting opposites. These rites are performed by men and women, but their content emanates from the divine sphere which is past, present, and future. These rites unite the instinctual pattern or pole of the constellated archetype to its divine, spiritual pole: the animal shadow of the archetype and its superhuman, divine aspect are linked together. A "reversal" occurs, in which the shadow of a latent consciousness at a psychoid level is extracted and "sublimated."
“The real miracle of individuation and reclamation of the Wild Woman is that we all begin the process before we are ready, before we are strong enough, before we know enough; we begin a dialogue with thoughts and feelings that both tickle and thunder within us. We respond before we know how to speak the language, before we know all the answers, and before we know exactly to whom we are speaking.” --Clarissa Pinkola Estés
The archetype in its archaic aspect is raised to a contemporary level.
Only if you first return to the body, to your earth, can individuation take place, only then does the thing become true. --Jung, Visions Seminar, P. 1314
GROUP RITUAL
[Carl Jung on Secret Societies and the member who fails to differentiate themselves.]
The secret society is an intermediary stage on the way to individuation. The individual is still relying on a collective organization to effect his differentiation for him; that is, he has not yet recognized that it is really the individual's task to differentiate himself from all the others and stand on his own feet.
All collective identities, such as membership in organizations, support of "isms," and so on, interfere with the fulfillment of this task.
Such collective identities are crutches for the lame, shields for the timid, beds for the lazy, nurseries for the irresponsible; but they are equally shelters for the poor and weak, a home port for the shipwrecked, the bosom of a family for orphans, a land of promise for disillusioned vagrants and weary pilgrims, a herd and a safe fold for lost sheep, and a mother providing nourishment and growth.
It would therefore be wrong to regard this intermediary stage as a trap; on the contrary, for a long time to come it will represent the only possible form of existence for the individual, who nowadays seems more than ever threatened by anonymity.
Collective organization is still so essential today that many consider it, with some justification, to be the final goal; whereas to call for further steps along the road to autonomy appears like arrogance or hubris, fantasticality, or simply folly. ~Carl Jung; Memories Dreams and Reflections; Page 342.
If one never gains "a separate independent self", the quest for union cannot begin: one has never left the fold:
“It seems ironic that later in life, if we pursue a spiritual path, we struggle with the ego, to still the stream of incessant chatter that began at our birth, and to realize our own nothingness, in order to make room in ourselves for something greater than the ego. But it takes a strong ego with a critical mind to distinguish what is genuinely greater from what is ersatz, and to surrender voluntarily to ... what one has been looking for all one’s life. If we had not been called out of nonbeing by our mother and father, or those who undertook to fill their places, there would be no pilgrim to set out on the search.” (Martha Heyneman, “The Mother Tongue.” *Parabola* 7(3), Aug/92. 4-12.)
https://books.google.com/books?id=XLqEWwa7fT8C&printsec=frontcover#v=onepage&q&f=false
Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists who Came to America Before 1700
...By Frederick Lewis Weis
Tree of Spirits, Initiation, & Fate
For the archetype is nothing human; no archetype is properly human.
~Carl Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Page 1343.
The World Tree is the great archetype. The World Tree is a common image in shamanic experiences from both traditional societies and in modern shamanic groups. In this tree spirits pass from one world to another. It is the holy center. http://www.shamaniccircles.org/2002oraclefolder/worldtree.html
The World Tree is the center of the world, but in shamanic paradox, the center of the world is also everywhere. In shamanic ritual or performance, the shaman operates in an altered state of consciousness with one foot in both realities. In this state, the the shaman 'becomes' the World Tree, and the place of that ritual becomes the center of the world.
The World Tree forms an integral part of the shamanic cosmos, linking the world of humanity with the world of the spirits. It is depicted in numerous tales of shamanic ritual and in power objects.
Genealogy is an ancient shamanic tool, like journeying and dialoguing. Working with the energies of dreams, death, and initiation helps us change our story and reveal our true nature which we can celebrate in ritual, including ancestral work. Our oldest ancestors can still be found at the edge of oblivion -- each generation another wave upon waves of possibility.
“Do you think that somewhere we are not Nature, that we are different from Nature? No, we are in Nature and think exactly like Nature.”
- C.G. Jung The Earth Has a Soul.
Climbing trees is part of the natural growth process which helps us become more fully human. You may remember when you were a child, climbing up into a tree in your yard, or that of your grandparents -- a place to hide and lick your childhood wounds and let the imagination soar, or maybe watch an approaching storm. That tree was your first archaic temple.
From that lofty perch you felt the wind in your hair, experienced the dappled sunlight, and gained a new perspective, from which you could observe a bigger picture of the landscape and the unfolding story of your life. You may also have been aware of the elegance and beauty of the tree itself as your sanctuary and haven.
You might even have had a treehouse, a sanctuary in the green leaves and a lively space far above ordinary life where your 'observer self' and imagination could roam or 'fly', and you felt you could see forever. Then, perhaps you climbed even higher. Did you keep your power objects there? As an adult, you may have created a treehouse for your own children.
Traditionally, such a treehouse reminds us that climbing up and down trees was the work of ancient shaman, who entered that sacred space to speak with the ancestors, find healing, enter altered states, and commune with the cosmos.
Your family treehouse of the imagination is the House of your family surname -- your dynastic inheritance and legacy. It is the repository of your family history, including all the maternal lines of the realm of the mothers. Such a treehouse is where we can go for family reunions, relational intimacy, and to commune with ourselves.
That tree embodies our family. "We suffer very much from the fact that we consist of mind and have lost the body." (Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Page 251.) The self is a fact of nature and always appears as such in immediate experiences, in dreams and visions, and so on; it is the spirit in the stone, the great secret which has to be worked out, to be extracted from nature, because it is buried in nature herself. ~Carl Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Page 977.
The unconscious on one side is nothing but nature, and on the other hand it is the overcoming of nature; it is yea and nay in itself, two things in one.
So we shall never understand what the unconscious is, as we shall never understand what the world is,because it is and it is not.
~Carl Jung, Visions Seminar, Page 89.
Your family tree is a synthesis of the ascent to higher consciousness and descent into more soulful living. All your beloved relatives still have a place there, or in your collateral lines -- a place where we can visit and honor them, or even work toward healing. It helps us live a sacred life of wisdom, heart and service, honoring all the parts of our being and all the dimensions of our life.
This work is at the heart of an embodied and inspiring expression of higher consciousness in day-to-day life, in which we come to honor our unique quirks, challenges and personality traits, as well as our depths, and the lives and legacies of our ancestors. You are a specific configuration of traits and opinions.
"The unconscious can make a fool of you in no time."
(Jung, Visions Seminar, Page 747).
"No matter what your conscious attitude may be, the unconscious has an absolutely free hand and can do what it pleases." (Jung, Visions Seminar, P. 27)
"But your attitude to it [death] matters, how you will take it, whether you believe in immortality or not, how you react to such and such an event, that matters to the unconscious." (Jung, Visions Seminar, Page 903.)
We learn to perceive the blessing in our wounds, and the liberation that beckons to us from our shadows. Buddhists suggest that the initial consciousness emerges as a vision of the clear light manifesting as a sight for the eye of wisdom. We simultaneously open to the vastness of Spirit and the beauty and depth of soul.
Worldviews Collide
It is a great privilege to live in a culture where we can recognize our birthright as free spiritual beings to a greater or lesser extent. But that may not have been so for our 2 parents, 4 grandparents, our 8 great grandparents, or our 16 great-great grandparents, much less our medieval and ancient ancestral lines. Many were born into systems their lives depended upon, whether or not they truly believed.
Where there is great passion, there is also great resentment. Heresy was punishable by death. Puritan, Quaker, Anglican, Johannite, or other religious ancestors, from the Gnostics, to the Inquisition, sought their version of spiritual freedom, at whatever cost to themselves or those who they fought or to lands they appropriated from it.
Spiritual Identity
Protestants persecuted Puritans who persecuted Quakers, like Roman Catholics persecuted Jews, Moors, and Cathars. Protestant vs. Catholic, Crusaders vs. Muslims, Christians vs. Pagans, etc. they all wished to 'purify' their ideas of religion. Certainly, there are many sides to the slings and arrows of holy wars, migration and beliefs when cultures clash. Each ethnicity has its traumas and issues and transitions. Often we have ancestors on both sides of conflicts, even in the same family.
Even if we look back only a generation or two we encounter ancestors whose spiritual self-identity and worldview we would now consider blindingly ignorant -- spiritual bondage rather than spiritual liberation. Yet the depth of commitment to the spiritual impulse remains the same. They searched within and this is what makes us interested in people who lived hundreds or thousands or years ago, to reconnect with the earth and be part of it as a culture, even if we are not sure how to do it.
RITUAL
"In the realm of sacred space, its most striking manifestation is religious man's will to take his stand at the very heart of the real, at the center of the World, that is, exactly where the cosmos came into existence and began to spread out toward the four horizons, and where, there is possibility of communication with the gods, where he is closest to the gods. Every religious man places himself at the Center of the World and by the same token at the very source of absolute reality, as close as possible to the opening that ensures him communication with the gods."
--Mircea Eliade/The Sacred and the Profane"
Magical practices are the projections of psychic events which, in cases like these, exert a counter influence on the soul and act like a kind of enchantment of one's own personality. That is to say, by means of these concrete performances the attention, or better said, the interest, is brought back to an inner sacred domain which is the source and goal of the soul. This inner domain contains the unity of life and consciousness which, though once possessed, has been lost and must now be found again." --C.G. Jung/Secret of the Golden Flower
The main value of ritual is for the soul. Ritual can be defined as an imitation of a Numinous Element (or godform) in the life of the aspirant. Ritual can be seen as the outward or visible form of contact, or an epiphany with, an inward or spiritual grace. It is essentially a metaphorical expression of creative imagination.
"The distinction between concrete and literal, so important to alchemy, is the essential distinction in ritual. The ritual of theater, of religion, of loving, and of play require concrete actions which are never what they literally seem to be. Ritual offers a primary mode of pathologizing, of deliteralizing events and seeing them as we "perform" them. As we go into a ritual, the soul of our actions "comes out"; or to ritualize a literal action, we "put soul into it."...Ritual brings together action idea into an enactment." --James Hillman/Re-Visioning Psychology.
http://zero-point.tripod.com/holistic/sphere10.html
Jung expands on the concept that ritual acts stand in direct contrast to technical acts. The former are purely symbolic, while the later are purposeful. This means that when one is doing something specific, one is purposeful in the action.
A ceremony is magical so long as it does not result in effective work but preserves the state of expectancy. In that case the energy is canalized into a new object and produces a new dynamism, which in turn remains magical only so long as it does not create effective work. --C.G. Jung/"On the Nature of the Psyche"
Ceremonies and rituals are the means for periodically drawing up the sums of energy, or libido, attached to symbols. Only periodic or regular repetition provokes expectation. Therefore, since archetypal processes are recurrent or chronic, regular repetition of rituals builds expectations.
Symbols are the abstract forms of religious ideas. They are expressed as rites or ceremonies in the form of action. Only through a symbol, can a portion of energy which customarily goes toward sustaining the regular course of life be transformed and channeled into another form. This produces cultural, rather than instinctive, activity. Its by-product is the creation of surplus energy, which is then at the free disposal of the ego which can use this energy for further transformation. When one makes ritual use of symbols, they are prevented from falling back into a purely subconscious form of manifestation, (for instance disease, or neurosis).
According to Robert Grinnell, in Alchemy in a Modern Woman, women bear a particular relationship to the unconscious and ritual; this bears on her deepest significance.
This distinction between feminine and masculine ways of experiencing the unconscious can best be seen in the different ways prima materia is represented. Whereas in a man's psychology the unconscious as prima materia is experienced as chaos, as violent and irrational processes of generation and destruction, in a woman it appears as a fascinating psychic background for sacred images and rituals expressive of her fundamental feminine conscience.
Later, he goes on expanding on this feminine experience.
Here we have both the problem and the deeper meaning of the "modern woman." For just as she produces an intensified polarity which seems very "modern" and raises to consciousness factors which seem "masculine" and which are left out of the dominant masculine view, so too she activates the unconscious rites linked to forgotten customs belonging to the primitive state of man whose aim was precisely to reconcile conflicting opposites. These rites are performed by men and women, but their content emanates from the divine sphere which is past, present, and future. These rites unite the instinctual pattern or pole of the constellated archetype to its divine, spiritual pole: the animal shadow of the archetype and its superhuman, divine aspect are linked together. A "reversal" occurs, in which the shadow of a latent consciousness at a psychoid level is extracted and "sublimated."
“The real miracle of individuation and reclamation of the Wild Woman is that we all begin the process before we are ready, before we are strong enough, before we know enough; we begin a dialogue with thoughts and feelings that both tickle and thunder within us. We respond before we know how to speak the language, before we know all the answers, and before we know exactly to whom we are speaking.” --Clarissa Pinkola Estés
The archetype in its archaic aspect is raised to a contemporary level.
Only if you first return to the body, to your earth, can individuation take place, only then does the thing become true. --Jung, Visions Seminar, P. 1314
GROUP RITUAL
[Carl Jung on Secret Societies and the member who fails to differentiate themselves.]
The secret society is an intermediary stage on the way to individuation. The individual is still relying on a collective organization to effect his differentiation for him; that is, he has not yet recognized that it is really the individual's task to differentiate himself from all the others and stand on his own feet.
All collective identities, such as membership in organizations, support of "isms," and so on, interfere with the fulfillment of this task.
Such collective identities are crutches for the lame, shields for the timid, beds for the lazy, nurseries for the irresponsible; but they are equally shelters for the poor and weak, a home port for the shipwrecked, the bosom of a family for orphans, a land of promise for disillusioned vagrants and weary pilgrims, a herd and a safe fold for lost sheep, and a mother providing nourishment and growth.
It would therefore be wrong to regard this intermediary stage as a trap; on the contrary, for a long time to come it will represent the only possible form of existence for the individual, who nowadays seems more than ever threatened by anonymity.
Collective organization is still so essential today that many consider it, with some justification, to be the final goal; whereas to call for further steps along the road to autonomy appears like arrogance or hubris, fantasticality, or simply folly. ~Carl Jung; Memories Dreams and Reflections; Page 342.
If one never gains "a separate independent self", the quest for union cannot begin: one has never left the fold:
“It seems ironic that later in life, if we pursue a spiritual path, we struggle with the ego, to still the stream of incessant chatter that began at our birth, and to realize our own nothingness, in order to make room in ourselves for something greater than the ego. But it takes a strong ego with a critical mind to distinguish what is genuinely greater from what is ersatz, and to surrender voluntarily to ... what one has been looking for all one’s life. If we had not been called out of nonbeing by our mother and father, or those who undertook to fill their places, there would be no pilgrim to set out on the search.” (Martha Heyneman, “The Mother Tongue.” *Parabola* 7(3), Aug/92. 4-12.)
https://books.google.com/books?id=XLqEWwa7fT8C&printsec=frontcover#v=onepage&q&f=false
Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists who Came to America Before 1700
...By Frederick Lewis Weis
WOMB AT THE TOP:
THE SACRED FEMININE
THE SACRED FEMININE
CIRCUMAMBULATION
Each branch of our family tree ofers the opportunity for circumambulation throughout its extent and a fuller return to yourself.
The Circumambulation, says Eliade: "The road is arduous, fraught with perils, because it is, in fact, a rite of passage from the profane to the sacred, from the ephemeral and illusory to reality and to eternity, from death to life, and from man to God. Access to the 'Centre' is equivalent to a consecration, an initiation; the existence of yesterday, profane and illusory, it happens a new life, real, lasting and effective."
Jung adds: "the circumambulation is not a simple circular motion, but it means on the one hand the delimitation of the sacred enclosure [temenos], And on the other hand, the determination and concentration. [...] This movement would be in a spin in a circle around themselves ', So as to involve all the sides of his personality. The Circular motion has therefore also the moral significance of animation of all the forces that are clear and dark of human nature, and as a result of all opposites psychological, of any nature can be."
Remember ღ Once upon a Time?
“A story is alive, as you and I are.
It is rounded by muscle and sinew.
Rushed with blood.
Layered with skin, both rough and smooth.
At its core lies soft marrow of hard, white bone.
A story beats with the heart of every person
who has ever strained ears to listen.
On the breath of the storyteller, it soars.
Until its images and deeds become so real
you can see them in the air, shimmering
like oases on the horizon line.
A story can fly like a bee, so straight and swift
you catch only the hum of its passing.
Or move so slowly it seems motionless,
curled in upon itself like a snake in the sun.
It can vanish like smoke before the wind.
Linger like perfume in the nose.
Change with every telling, yet always
remain the same.”
--Cameron Dokey
Each branch of our family tree ofers the opportunity for circumambulation throughout its extent and a fuller return to yourself.
The Circumambulation, says Eliade: "The road is arduous, fraught with perils, because it is, in fact, a rite of passage from the profane to the sacred, from the ephemeral and illusory to reality and to eternity, from death to life, and from man to God. Access to the 'Centre' is equivalent to a consecration, an initiation; the existence of yesterday, profane and illusory, it happens a new life, real, lasting and effective."
Jung adds: "the circumambulation is not a simple circular motion, but it means on the one hand the delimitation of the sacred enclosure [temenos], And on the other hand, the determination and concentration. [...] This movement would be in a spin in a circle around themselves ', So as to involve all the sides of his personality. The Circular motion has therefore also the moral significance of animation of all the forces that are clear and dark of human nature, and as a result of all opposites psychological, of any nature can be."
Remember ღ Once upon a Time?
“A story is alive, as you and I are.
It is rounded by muscle and sinew.
Rushed with blood.
Layered with skin, both rough and smooth.
At its core lies soft marrow of hard, white bone.
A story beats with the heart of every person
who has ever strained ears to listen.
On the breath of the storyteller, it soars.
Until its images and deeds become so real
you can see them in the air, shimmering
like oases on the horizon line.
A story can fly like a bee, so straight and swift
you catch only the hum of its passing.
Or move so slowly it seems motionless,
curled in upon itself like a snake in the sun.
It can vanish like smoke before the wind.
Linger like perfume in the nose.
Change with every telling, yet always
remain the same.”
--Cameron Dokey
Flickering Awareness
Consciousness arises only in time intervals of up to 400 milliseconds, with gaps of unconsciousness in between, according to a scientific research team at the Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne. According to their findings, consciousness forms as a series of short bursts of up to 400 milliseconds, with gaps of background, unconscious information processing in between -- where the innermost essence of mankind is born.
We can imagine each nanosecond we check out as checking in to the utterly non-conscious, primordial awareness we share directly with our progenitors. This flicker is like the screen refresh rate, reducing all we experience to a series of frames second. Michael Herzog at EPFL and Frank Scharnowski at the University of Zurich now put forward a new model of how the brain processes unconscious information, suggesting that consciousness arises only in intervals up to 400 milliseconds, with no consciousness in between.
In 1917 Jung wrote of 'dominants of the collective unconscious' which he characterized as 'nodal points' of psychic energy. Jung compared psyche's luminous experiences with the light impressions described by the alchemists.
Considering the primordial nature of the psyche, he reflected on the 'seeds of light broadcast in the chaos' (Khunrath) , of the 'scintillae' (Dorn), of fish-eyes at the bottom of the sea, or images of luminous serpent eyes. He spoke of the virtual light of such luminous nodal points emerging from the abyssal depths of psyche, eventually including dynamical processes and all types of universally recurring patterns of behavior in the psyche.
Diamond Sea of Scintillae
Jung sourced alchemical ideas to fund his psychological theory. The most prominent alchemical symbol is the scintillae, or germinal divine sparks of the spirit. He thought what the alchemists saw in matter was a projection, but it may be direct insight, perception of metaphysical reality. These seeds of light broadcast in the chaos are not illusory. Paracelsus, Khunrath and Dorn related them to the lumen naturae which illuminates consciousness like a diamond-strewn night sky.
They are more than symbolic. Jung linked them to the Sun, luminosity and numinosity. We labor in the dark of the unconscious until we see these glittering "fishes eyes" that herald the solar light. These multiple eyes reflect our many facets back to ourselves. Comparable with archetypes, these multiple intensities herald psyche's reunification with the unconscious, sparkling in the margins of astral vision. The union of the scintillae forms gold. Sparks shining in the dark solution are the first glimmers of immortality.
In essence, consciousness is located everywhere in the universe at the center of origin of every radiant energy field and fundamental particle. The universe and every field and form in it originates from and rests on its infinite zero-points of timeless and dimensionless (thus "empty" and "eternal") absolute or "ground space." Each zero-point (acting contiguously with all other zero points, as one thing, like a BEC) contains the total potential mass energy of the entire cosmos. All the energy and structural information of the entire cosmos is contained in every zero point and every standing wave particle center field.
"Your being has two sides...one visible, the other invisible. With open eyes you behold objective creation, and yourself in it. With closed eyes you see nothing, a dark void; yet your consciousness, even when dissociated from form, is still keenly aware and operative. If in deep meditation you penetrate the darkness behind closed eyes, you behold the Light from which all creation emerges. By deeper samadhi, your experience transcends even the manifested Light and enters the All-Blissful Consciousness -- beyond all form, yet infinitely more real, tangible and joyous than any sensory or supersensory perception." --Yogananda
Consciousness arises only in time intervals of up to 400 milliseconds, with gaps of unconsciousness in between, according to a scientific research team at the Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne. According to their findings, consciousness forms as a series of short bursts of up to 400 milliseconds, with gaps of background, unconscious information processing in between -- where the innermost essence of mankind is born.
We can imagine each nanosecond we check out as checking in to the utterly non-conscious, primordial awareness we share directly with our progenitors. This flicker is like the screen refresh rate, reducing all we experience to a series of frames second. Michael Herzog at EPFL and Frank Scharnowski at the University of Zurich now put forward a new model of how the brain processes unconscious information, suggesting that consciousness arises only in intervals up to 400 milliseconds, with no consciousness in between.
In 1917 Jung wrote of 'dominants of the collective unconscious' which he characterized as 'nodal points' of psychic energy. Jung compared psyche's luminous experiences with the light impressions described by the alchemists.
Considering the primordial nature of the psyche, he reflected on the 'seeds of light broadcast in the chaos' (Khunrath) , of the 'scintillae' (Dorn), of fish-eyes at the bottom of the sea, or images of luminous serpent eyes. He spoke of the virtual light of such luminous nodal points emerging from the abyssal depths of psyche, eventually including dynamical processes and all types of universally recurring patterns of behavior in the psyche.
Diamond Sea of Scintillae
Jung sourced alchemical ideas to fund his psychological theory. The most prominent alchemical symbol is the scintillae, or germinal divine sparks of the spirit. He thought what the alchemists saw in matter was a projection, but it may be direct insight, perception of metaphysical reality. These seeds of light broadcast in the chaos are not illusory. Paracelsus, Khunrath and Dorn related them to the lumen naturae which illuminates consciousness like a diamond-strewn night sky.
They are more than symbolic. Jung linked them to the Sun, luminosity and numinosity. We labor in the dark of the unconscious until we see these glittering "fishes eyes" that herald the solar light. These multiple eyes reflect our many facets back to ourselves. Comparable with archetypes, these multiple intensities herald psyche's reunification with the unconscious, sparkling in the margins of astral vision. The union of the scintillae forms gold. Sparks shining in the dark solution are the first glimmers of immortality.
In essence, consciousness is located everywhere in the universe at the center of origin of every radiant energy field and fundamental particle. The universe and every field and form in it originates from and rests on its infinite zero-points of timeless and dimensionless (thus "empty" and "eternal") absolute or "ground space." Each zero-point (acting contiguously with all other zero points, as one thing, like a BEC) contains the total potential mass energy of the entire cosmos. All the energy and structural information of the entire cosmos is contained in every zero point and every standing wave particle center field.
"Your being has two sides...one visible, the other invisible. With open eyes you behold objective creation, and yourself in it. With closed eyes you see nothing, a dark void; yet your consciousness, even when dissociated from form, is still keenly aware and operative. If in deep meditation you penetrate the darkness behind closed eyes, you behold the Light from which all creation emerges. By deeper samadhi, your experience transcends even the manifested Light and enters the All-Blissful Consciousness -- beyond all form, yet infinitely more real, tangible and joyous than any sensory or supersensory perception." --Yogananda
THE UNKNOWN SELF
Dreamers, Seekers, & the One Who Realizes the Dream
Dreamers, Seekers, & the One Who Realizes the Dream
Daimon, Serpent & Bird
The daimon of sexuality approaches our soul as a serpent. She is half human soul and is called thought-desire. The daimon of spirituality descends into our soul as the white bird. He is half human soul and is called desire-thought.
~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 354.
If I am not conjoined through the uniting of the Below and the Above, I break down into three parts: the serpent, and in that or some other animal form I roam, living nature daimonically, arousing fear and longing. The human soul, living forever within you. The celestial soul, as such dwelling with the Gods, far from you and unknown to you, appearing in the form of a bird. ~Carl Jung’s Soul to him, Black Books, Appendix C., Page 370.
But if the depths have conceived, then the symbol grows out of itself and is born from the mind, as befits a God. ~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 311.
" accustomed to fear our instincts and our emotions, we have confined the symbol of the snake in the spheres of deep negativity, forgetting that among the many qualities that it represents many could be valuable to revive and renew our daily life and make it more in touch with our visceral part. The serpent as a symbol of transformation and renewal is an archetype of all cultures." --C.G.Jung
The image of the serpent has been corrupted by the will of man, yet beyond the scope of his vision, it readies itself at his root, preparing to return him to the Godhead upon his death. --C.G. Jung
For it ascends from earth to Heaven, and descends again new born to earth, having acquired the powers of the Above and the Below. . .The power of the Telesma* is not complete if it is not converted into earth. --Emerald Tablet
Animals generally signify the instinctive forces of the unconscious, which are brought into unity within the mandala. This integration of the instincts is a prerequisite for individuation. ~Carl Jung, CW 9ii, Para 660.
Serpents symbolized the underworld, water, regeneration, fertility, awe, and fear to the Celts. The Uroboros snake eating its own tail is a perfect illustration of how chthonic can represent both the creative and destructive aspects of nature.
The snake is a powerful cross-cultural, archetypal, and mythic symbol -- one of the most enduring. It is associated with life, death, rebirth, renewal, and healing. Jung suggests if we can stay in the middle, know we are human, relate to both the god, and the animal of the god, then we are all right. But we must remember, "over the animal is the god; with the god, is the god's animal."
‘The idea of transformation and renewal by means of the serpent is a well-substantiated archetype. It is [a] healing [symbol]’. --Jung 7, par. 184.
The serpent represents magical power, which also appears where
animal drives are aroused imperceptibly in us. ~Jung, Liber Novus, Page 366.
The Uroboros is the unity of life and death in which all things that arise into existence must descend back into the void. In that silence we find our alert Presence, self-arising primordial awareness -- the unconscious ground that dissolves thousands of years of human conditioning and root of the Tree of Life...unborn awareness that is awareness itself.
In Jung's view, "the snake, as a chthonic and at the same time spiritual being, symbolizes the unconscious." (17) In particular, it seems to refer to "the latter's sudden and unexpected manifestations, its painful and dangerous intervention in our affairs, and its frightening effects." The Gnostic serpent of Paradise is wise, holy, and well-intentioned -- a manifestation of mother Sophia.
The snake corresponds to what is totally unconscious and incapable of becoming conscious, but which, as the collective unconscious. As instinct, seems to possess a peculiar wisdom of its own and a knowledge that is often felt to be supernatural. This is the treasure which the snake (or dragon) guards, and also the reason why the snake signifies evil and darkness on the one hand and wisdom on the other.
Birds have an ambiguous symbolic significance across cultures throughout human history, universally relating to both life and death. Birds portend impending calamity and death. They bear or steal spirits of the dead, sometimes even embodying those very spirits themselves, and are also commonly associated with life, fertility, and longevity. They symbolize our deep-seated ambivalence to mortality -- the denial of death as finality through a desire for renewal, transformation, and rebirth.
The daimon is a personification of the ancestors, intimately related, yet separate and remote, like the dead. A daimon is our divine element, an intercessor between gods and mankind -- a 'serpentine' companion spirit, the impersonal collective power of the gods to dispense destiny and the numinous as individual events and experience. The daimon conducts our "life review," and may show us past lives.
A destiny spirit or guardian angel, it also personifies conscience, the voice of our unconscious, or higher self -- a doppelganger through who's eyes we can catch of glimpse of our far-flung future, the life we will live in reverse. It is our destiny and protector, but it only protects the part of us that serves its plan for your self, because it springs from the impersonal Ground of being.
"In some way or other we are part of a single, all-embracing psyche, a single 'greatest man. . . .'" ("The Spiritual Problem of Modern Man", CW 10: § 175)
Every man carries within him the eternal image of woman, not the image of this or that particular woman, but a definite feminine image. This image is fundamentally unconscious; a hereditary factor of primordial origin engraved in the living organic system of the man, an imprint or "archetype" of all the ancestral experiences of the female, a deposit, as it were, of all the impressions ever made by woman-in short, an inherited system of psychic adaptation. Even if no women existed, it would still be possible, at any given time, to deduce from this unconscious image exactly how a woman would have to be constituted psychically. The same is true of the woman: she too has her inborn image of man. (Jung, "Marriage as a Psychological Relationship" (1925), CW 17: The Development of the Personality. P. 338)
"In the unconscious it is not so terribly important whether a man is alive or dead, that seems to make very little impression upon the unconscious. But your attitude to it matters, how you will take it, whether you believe in immortality or not, how you react to such and such an event, that matters to the unconscious."
~Carl Jung, Visions Seminar, Page 903.
“Just as the father represents collective consciousness, the traditional spirit, so the mother stands for the collective unconscious, the source of the water of life. (Cf. the maternal significance of the fons signatus, as an attribute of the Virgin Mary, etc.)” --Jung, Psychology & Alchemy
The daimon of sexuality approaches our soul as a serpent. She is half human soul and is called thought-desire. The daimon of spirituality descends into our soul as the white bird. He is half human soul and is called desire-thought.
~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 354.
If I am not conjoined through the uniting of the Below and the Above, I break down into three parts: the serpent, and in that or some other animal form I roam, living nature daimonically, arousing fear and longing. The human soul, living forever within you. The celestial soul, as such dwelling with the Gods, far from you and unknown to you, appearing in the form of a bird. ~Carl Jung’s Soul to him, Black Books, Appendix C., Page 370.
But if the depths have conceived, then the symbol grows out of itself and is born from the mind, as befits a God. ~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 311.
" accustomed to fear our instincts and our emotions, we have confined the symbol of the snake in the spheres of deep negativity, forgetting that among the many qualities that it represents many could be valuable to revive and renew our daily life and make it more in touch with our visceral part. The serpent as a symbol of transformation and renewal is an archetype of all cultures." --C.G.Jung
The image of the serpent has been corrupted by the will of man, yet beyond the scope of his vision, it readies itself at his root, preparing to return him to the Godhead upon his death. --C.G. Jung
For it ascends from earth to Heaven, and descends again new born to earth, having acquired the powers of the Above and the Below. . .The power of the Telesma* is not complete if it is not converted into earth. --Emerald Tablet
Animals generally signify the instinctive forces of the unconscious, which are brought into unity within the mandala. This integration of the instincts is a prerequisite for individuation. ~Carl Jung, CW 9ii, Para 660.
Serpents symbolized the underworld, water, regeneration, fertility, awe, and fear to the Celts. The Uroboros snake eating its own tail is a perfect illustration of how chthonic can represent both the creative and destructive aspects of nature.
The snake is a powerful cross-cultural, archetypal, and mythic symbol -- one of the most enduring. It is associated with life, death, rebirth, renewal, and healing. Jung suggests if we can stay in the middle, know we are human, relate to both the god, and the animal of the god, then we are all right. But we must remember, "over the animal is the god; with the god, is the god's animal."
‘The idea of transformation and renewal by means of the serpent is a well-substantiated archetype. It is [a] healing [symbol]’. --Jung 7, par. 184.
The serpent represents magical power, which also appears where
animal drives are aroused imperceptibly in us. ~Jung, Liber Novus, Page 366.
The Uroboros is the unity of life and death in which all things that arise into existence must descend back into the void. In that silence we find our alert Presence, self-arising primordial awareness -- the unconscious ground that dissolves thousands of years of human conditioning and root of the Tree of Life...unborn awareness that is awareness itself.
In Jung's view, "the snake, as a chthonic and at the same time spiritual being, symbolizes the unconscious." (17) In particular, it seems to refer to "the latter's sudden and unexpected manifestations, its painful and dangerous intervention in our affairs, and its frightening effects." The Gnostic serpent of Paradise is wise, holy, and well-intentioned -- a manifestation of mother Sophia.
The snake corresponds to what is totally unconscious and incapable of becoming conscious, but which, as the collective unconscious. As instinct, seems to possess a peculiar wisdom of its own and a knowledge that is often felt to be supernatural. This is the treasure which the snake (or dragon) guards, and also the reason why the snake signifies evil and darkness on the one hand and wisdom on the other.
Birds have an ambiguous symbolic significance across cultures throughout human history, universally relating to both life and death. Birds portend impending calamity and death. They bear or steal spirits of the dead, sometimes even embodying those very spirits themselves, and are also commonly associated with life, fertility, and longevity. They symbolize our deep-seated ambivalence to mortality -- the denial of death as finality through a desire for renewal, transformation, and rebirth.
The daimon is a personification of the ancestors, intimately related, yet separate and remote, like the dead. A daimon is our divine element, an intercessor between gods and mankind -- a 'serpentine' companion spirit, the impersonal collective power of the gods to dispense destiny and the numinous as individual events and experience. The daimon conducts our "life review," and may show us past lives.
A destiny spirit or guardian angel, it also personifies conscience, the voice of our unconscious, or higher self -- a doppelganger through who's eyes we can catch of glimpse of our far-flung future, the life we will live in reverse. It is our destiny and protector, but it only protects the part of us that serves its plan for your self, because it springs from the impersonal Ground of being.
"In some way or other we are part of a single, all-embracing psyche, a single 'greatest man. . . .'" ("The Spiritual Problem of Modern Man", CW 10: § 175)
Every man carries within him the eternal image of woman, not the image of this or that particular woman, but a definite feminine image. This image is fundamentally unconscious; a hereditary factor of primordial origin engraved in the living organic system of the man, an imprint or "archetype" of all the ancestral experiences of the female, a deposit, as it were, of all the impressions ever made by woman-in short, an inherited system of psychic adaptation. Even if no women existed, it would still be possible, at any given time, to deduce from this unconscious image exactly how a woman would have to be constituted psychically. The same is true of the woman: she too has her inborn image of man. (Jung, "Marriage as a Psychological Relationship" (1925), CW 17: The Development of the Personality. P. 338)
"In the unconscious it is not so terribly important whether a man is alive or dead, that seems to make very little impression upon the unconscious. But your attitude to it matters, how you will take it, whether you believe in immortality or not, how you react to such and such an event, that matters to the unconscious."
~Carl Jung, Visions Seminar, Page 903.
“Just as the father represents collective consciousness, the traditional spirit, so the mother stands for the collective unconscious, the source of the water of life. (Cf. the maternal significance of the fons signatus, as an attribute of the Virgin Mary, etc.)” --Jung, Psychology & Alchemy
The Four - Animus for Women:
1. “Any Man”. generative power to have a child. 2. “He who paid for the cow”, the Utilitarian husband. 3. The Dark Lover from across the Sea. 4. The Wise Old Man ~Carl Jung, Visions Seminar |
The Four - Anima for Man:
1. “The Furrow,” receptive generative power. 2. Helen of Troy, sensual femininity 3. Mary, the mother of the divine child. 4. Sophia, the Goddess of wisdom ~Carl Jung, Visions Seminar, Page792 |
The splitting of the Original Man into husband and wife expresses an act of nascent consciousness; it gives birth to the pair of opposites, thereby making consciousness possible. ~Carl Jung, Aion, Para 320
The power of Magic is rooted in Eros. When the connection between the erotic and the occult is unconscious, repressed or hidden, the mystery of uniting the esoteric and the erotic becomes the ultimate arcane secret that penetrates into the depths where all life is one, all boundaries broken down, body and mind fused in one. A deep and abiding awareness of the intimate interrelationship unites the opposites through the realization of imaginal workings.
As in Tantra, occult ritual involves the transgression of social mores, locating and enacting cultural taboos in order to transcend the boundaries which are traditionally constrictive. The erotic and the sexual then become a tool to experience the breaking of mundane bonds and something 'other.'
“The alchemists, who in their own way knew more about the nature of the individuation process than we moderns do, expressed this paradox through the symbol of the Ouroboros, the snake that eats its own tail. The Ouroboros has been said to have a meaning of infinity or wholeness. In the age-old image of the Ouroboros lies the thought of devouring oneself and turning oneself into a circulatory process, for it was clear to the more astute alchemists that the prima materia of the art was man himself. The Ouroboros is a dramatic symbol for the integration and assimilation of the opposite, i.e. of the shadow. This ‘feed-back’ process is at the same time a symbol of immortality, since it is said of the Ouroboros that he slays himself and brings himself to life, fertilizes himself and gives birth to himself. He symbolizes the One, who proceeds from the clash of opposites, and he therefore constitutes the secret of the prima materia which […] unquestionably stems from man’s unconscious.” ~ Carl G. Jung
The power of Magic is rooted in Eros. When the connection between the erotic and the occult is unconscious, repressed or hidden, the mystery of uniting the esoteric and the erotic becomes the ultimate arcane secret that penetrates into the depths where all life is one, all boundaries broken down, body and mind fused in one. A deep and abiding awareness of the intimate interrelationship unites the opposites through the realization of imaginal workings.
As in Tantra, occult ritual involves the transgression of social mores, locating and enacting cultural taboos in order to transcend the boundaries which are traditionally constrictive. The erotic and the sexual then become a tool to experience the breaking of mundane bonds and something 'other.'
“The alchemists, who in their own way knew more about the nature of the individuation process than we moderns do, expressed this paradox through the symbol of the Ouroboros, the snake that eats its own tail. The Ouroboros has been said to have a meaning of infinity or wholeness. In the age-old image of the Ouroboros lies the thought of devouring oneself and turning oneself into a circulatory process, for it was clear to the more astute alchemists that the prima materia of the art was man himself. The Ouroboros is a dramatic symbol for the integration and assimilation of the opposite, i.e. of the shadow. This ‘feed-back’ process is at the same time a symbol of immortality, since it is said of the Ouroboros that he slays himself and brings himself to life, fertilizes himself and gives birth to himself. He symbolizes the One, who proceeds from the clash of opposites, and he therefore constitutes the secret of the prima materia which […] unquestionably stems from man’s unconscious.” ~ Carl G. Jung
Sexuality dished out as sexuality is brutish;
but sexuality as an expression of love is hallowed.
~Carl Jung, CW 10, Para 234
"The principal pair of opposites is the conscious world and
the unconscious world, and when the two come together, it is as if man
and woman were coming together, the union of the male and the female,
of the light and the darkness. Then a birth will take place."
~Carl Jung, Visions Seminar, Page 574
You see, inasmuch as the living body contains the secret of life, it is an intelligence. It is also a plurality which is gathered up in one mind, for the body is extended in space, and the here and the there are two things; what is in your toes is not in your fingers, and what is in your fingers is not in your ears or your stomach or your knees or anywhere else in your body.
Each part is always something in itself. The different forms and localizations are all represented in your mind as more or less different facts, so there is a plurality.
What you think with your head doesn’t necessarily coincide with what you feel in your heart, and what your belly thinks is not what your mind thinks.
The extension in space, therefore, creates a pluralistic quality in the mind.
That is probably the reason why consciousness is possible. Different things are represented, and these are always supposed to be in a field of consciousness, in a sort of extension, that is. Yet you feel that the whole, that plurality, is drawn together and referred to something you call "I"; it is referred to a center which you cannot say has extension, as little as you can say of a thought that it has extension.
Thought is a disembodied something because it has no spatial qualities. So "I" is as if it were something abstract, yet in a vague way it coincides with your body; when you say "I" you beat your chest for instance, to emphasize the "I."
--Carl Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Page 360.
"I could say just as well that you could never attain the self without isolation; it is both being alone and in relationship." ~Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Page 797.
"...consciousness is always behind the facts; it never keeps up with the flux of life.
Life is in a way too rich, too quick, to be realized fully, and ...one only lives completely when one’s mind really accompanies one’s life, when one lives no more than one can reflect upon with one’s thought, and when one thinks no further than one is able to live. If one could say that of oneself, it would be a guarantee that one really was living. --Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Pages 1425-1426
"The opus consists of three parts: insight, endurance, and action. Psychology is needed only in the first part, but in the second and third parts moral strength plays the predominant role." ~Carl Jung, Letters Vol. 1, Page 375.
The natural mind is not a function of man; it is a part of nature, the mind of trees or rocks or water or the clouds or the winds, so absolutely beyond man that it hardly takes him into account.
One always finds that the utterances of the natural mind have this quality of an almost animal ruthlessness, along with a strange kind of superiority which reaches far beyond man.
It contains a most fundamental truth which makes it superior, and because of that superiority it is also divine.
The natural mind is very apparent in prophetic women.
~Carl Jung, Visions Seminar, Page 525
The unconscious on one side is nothing but nature, and on the other hand it is the overcoming of nature; it is yea and nay in itself, two things in one.
So we shall never understand what the unconscious is, as we shall never understand what the world is, because it is and it is not.
~Carl Jung, Visions Seminar, Page 89.
We can avoid the penalty of hubris by making a sacrifice .
Each of us must find in what area his sacrifice must be made.
If we can think of the worst possible sacrifice for us we are close to knowing which we must make.
A sacrifice is doing what we would force others to do.
If we hold back through fear of hubris then we fail in our task...
The acceptance of the shadow is a sacrifice...
The image of the Divine Child characterizes our relation with the Self...
But the Divine Child is the incarnation of an idea; it permits us personal access to an idea which we could not easily realize without it.
~Carl Jung, Ostroski-Sachs, Pages 38-43.
but sexuality as an expression of love is hallowed.
~Carl Jung, CW 10, Para 234
"The principal pair of opposites is the conscious world and
the unconscious world, and when the two come together, it is as if man
and woman were coming together, the union of the male and the female,
of the light and the darkness. Then a birth will take place."
~Carl Jung, Visions Seminar, Page 574
You see, inasmuch as the living body contains the secret of life, it is an intelligence. It is also a plurality which is gathered up in one mind, for the body is extended in space, and the here and the there are two things; what is in your toes is not in your fingers, and what is in your fingers is not in your ears or your stomach or your knees or anywhere else in your body.
Each part is always something in itself. The different forms and localizations are all represented in your mind as more or less different facts, so there is a plurality.
What you think with your head doesn’t necessarily coincide with what you feel in your heart, and what your belly thinks is not what your mind thinks.
The extension in space, therefore, creates a pluralistic quality in the mind.
That is probably the reason why consciousness is possible. Different things are represented, and these are always supposed to be in a field of consciousness, in a sort of extension, that is. Yet you feel that the whole, that plurality, is drawn together and referred to something you call "I"; it is referred to a center which you cannot say has extension, as little as you can say of a thought that it has extension.
Thought is a disembodied something because it has no spatial qualities. So "I" is as if it were something abstract, yet in a vague way it coincides with your body; when you say "I" you beat your chest for instance, to emphasize the "I."
--Carl Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Page 360.
"I could say just as well that you could never attain the self without isolation; it is both being alone and in relationship." ~Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Page 797.
"...consciousness is always behind the facts; it never keeps up with the flux of life.
Life is in a way too rich, too quick, to be realized fully, and ...one only lives completely when one’s mind really accompanies one’s life, when one lives no more than one can reflect upon with one’s thought, and when one thinks no further than one is able to live. If one could say that of oneself, it would be a guarantee that one really was living. --Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Pages 1425-1426
"The opus consists of three parts: insight, endurance, and action. Psychology is needed only in the first part, but in the second and third parts moral strength plays the predominant role." ~Carl Jung, Letters Vol. 1, Page 375.
The natural mind is not a function of man; it is a part of nature, the mind of trees or rocks or water or the clouds or the winds, so absolutely beyond man that it hardly takes him into account.
One always finds that the utterances of the natural mind have this quality of an almost animal ruthlessness, along with a strange kind of superiority which reaches far beyond man.
It contains a most fundamental truth which makes it superior, and because of that superiority it is also divine.
The natural mind is very apparent in prophetic women.
~Carl Jung, Visions Seminar, Page 525
The unconscious on one side is nothing but nature, and on the other hand it is the overcoming of nature; it is yea and nay in itself, two things in one.
So we shall never understand what the unconscious is, as we shall never understand what the world is, because it is and it is not.
~Carl Jung, Visions Seminar, Page 89.
We can avoid the penalty of hubris by making a sacrifice .
Each of us must find in what area his sacrifice must be made.
If we can think of the worst possible sacrifice for us we are close to knowing which we must make.
A sacrifice is doing what we would force others to do.
If we hold back through fear of hubris then we fail in our task...
The acceptance of the shadow is a sacrifice...
The image of the Divine Child characterizes our relation with the Self...
But the Divine Child is the incarnation of an idea; it permits us personal access to an idea which we could not easily realize without it.
~Carl Jung, Ostroski-Sachs, Pages 38-43.
"Acorn", Io Miller, 2016
James Hillman's 'acorn theory' of soul says we already hold the potential for unique possibilities inside ourselves, much as an acorn holds the pattern for an oak tree. It shows in our calling and life's work when fully actualized.
TAKING IT TO THE GRAVE
DREAM GENEALOGY
Inner Ways of Knowing
"All the works of man have their origin in creative fantasy. What right have we then to depreciate imagination? In the ordinary course of things, fantasy does not go astray; it is too deep for that, and too closely bound up with the tap-root of human and animal instinct. . . . The creative activity of the imagination frees man from his bondage to the 'nothing but' and liberates him in the spirit of play. As Schiller says, man is completely human only when he is playing."
--C.G. Jung, CW 16, §98
Young children have a consciousness which is remarkable.
I find the psychology of little children exceedingly difficult; their dreams, for instance, are amazingly difficult. One would assume that they would be quite simple but they are far from that.
Of course some are obvious, but they have an unusual number of great dreams, and great visions too, and to deal with them requires an hypothesis which makes one quite dizzy.
One has to assume that they have a consciousness of the collective unconscious, an amazing thing. It makes little children seem quite old, like people who have lived a full life and who have a very profound idea of what consciousness really is. Hence the saying: fools and children speak the truth. It is because they know it.
Children have the vision still hanging over them of things which they have never seen, and could not possibly have seen, and which are in accordance with the theory of reincarnation. It is just as if reminiscences of a former life were carried over into this life, or from the ancestral life perhaps, we don’t know.
I could tell you children’s dreams which are simply uncanny, and if you want to interpret them at all, you have to use uncanny means.
They cannot be explained even by the psychology of the parents.
They must come from the psychology of the collective unconscious; one could say they were remnants of things they had seen before they
were born, and that is really vision.
I know a case where a vision affected a whole life. Individuals can be stunted all through their lives by a vision in childhood. Such children are not quite born—their birth takes place much later, when they can detach.
But many people are never quite born; they live in the flesh but a part of them is still in what Lamaistic philosophy would call the Bardo, in the life between death and birth, and that prenatal state is filled with extraordinary visions.
~Carl Jung, Visions Seminar, Page 424.
Psychic and Personal Rootedness
"We are entangled in the roots, and we ourselves are the roots.
We make roots, we cause roots to be, we are rooted in the soil, and there is no getting away for us, because we must be there as long as we live.
That idea, that we can sublimate ourselves and become entirely spiritual and no hair left, is an inflation. I am sorry, that is impossible; it makes no sense."
~Carl Jung, Kundalini Seminar, Page 29
It may seem strange at first to think that collective dreams could have any relevance to ourselves. We have cut ourselves off from the past to such an extent that it is difficult to realize that the experiences of remote people can still have meaning for us. Yet it is so.
Unconsciously we still think like our distant ancestors, and to understand this is to deepen our experience, and open up new possibilities. We remain connected through the language of dreams and imagination. To visit “the imaginal realm,” suspended between the empirical world and the totally visionary, is not a supernatural power of some, but a phenomenon recognized from the dawn of mankind. Turning the inside out, we bring it through the senses.
While some dreams may be compensatory (balancing our conscious viewpoint), ancestral dream content often appears as not substantially different from conscious functioning. There is no need for defense or surrender to the dream material. We might dream of cemeteries, family records, ancestors themselves, or any other variety that informs our genealogical quest.
As Jung suggests, "There is no linear evolution; there is only a circumambulation of the self." (MDR, Pgs. 196-197)
When the Spirits Came Back
Even more than blood, we are bonded by respect and joy in each other's lives as true family. We may wonder about our ancestors who lived closely attuned to the land, and what were their lives like Who were the indigenous Celts and Anglo Saxons, or our other more archaic progenitors?
Although we may never truly know our indigenous ancestors’ ceremonies and rituals, we may be able to remember aspects of them and their world through dreaming. Even dreams about genealogy sometimes lead to real discoveries. Recurring dreams are even more compelling. Significant, impactful or highly-memorable dreams can be bizarre or beautiful. Some dreams have a life-long effect on us.
Integral Dreaming
Dreaming with the ancestors is perhaps more accurate than dreaming about them. 'Dreaming with' we may explore the power of dreams to recover deep ancestral, cultural, planetary, and cosmic memory. Hillman argued dreams tell us where are are not what to do. The dream is a descent into the underworld. Dreams saturate our consciousness with the mysterious customs of the dark and impenetrable underworld.
Somewhere within the total personality, there appears to be a continuing integrative force, a homeostasis or self-regulating function. Even when we feel overwhelmed by experience, some part of our mind still seems to observe, evaluate, comment, and even attempt to integrate this otherwise hidden material with the knowledge of conscious life.
This may disappear for brief periods, but most of the time it is clearly at work. No one knows what type of ‘thinking’ this is. It appears different both from ‘reality thinking’ and ‘autistic thinking,’ from the patterns of conscious thought and the imagery of fantasy a kind of bridge between two types of mental process. It can appear symbolically as distinctly 'Other.'
Jung's concept of wholeness, linked with the Self. Such compensatory dreams connect with is best seen in the collected dreams by an individual undertaking their own personal journey to self acceptance and integration. Through an overview of dreams gained in this way, the two aspects of compensation become much more clearly drawn.
The dream work, aimed at meeting the neglected or hurt parts of oneself, opens the way to more pronounced compensation -- the gaps in our experience. Following our dreams means following our uncertainty. Root metaphor dreams may arise in times of crisis and help us adapt and help one another.
Dreams teach by revelation, but there is no reason to objectify that. There is no work to it, no interpretation, no theorizing. We are each simply unrepeatable and utterly inexhaustible entities, whose mystery cannot be objectified or reduced to any single interpretation.
The process of compensation also links with patterns of love and strength actually lived by others. They are then patterns remaining in the collective experience of humanity that can be accessed. When we touch these powerful racial memories we may clothe them in the image of our cultural hero or savior. The power we find is a release of our own potential emerging from our core self, our own innate potential. This emerges from our unconscious clothed in whatever imagery or ideas we can accept or allow, as do dreams.
Dreams are the underworld. Imagination and the psyche are two key components of the underworld, a dreamland of souls where the human mind retreats and interacts with other psyches present.
In the Hero's Journey, Campbell notes, "Mythologies are in fact the public dreams that move and shape societies, and conversely one's own dreams are the little myths of the private gods, antigods, and guardian powers that are moving and shaping oneself: revelations of the actual fears, desires, aims, and values by which one's life is subliminally ordered."
The 'nekyia' is a night sea journey, a descent into the underworld or into the belly of a sea monster, and a meeting with the dead. It is a myth which occurs in many cultures in different forms and symbolizes the struggle towards spiritual or psychological revelation and transformation.
In a Fortune article, Lawrence Lessing describes recent sleep research: ‘...recent evidence shows that there may well be a second, lower level of dreaming extending down even into deep sleep, consisting largely of abstract thoughts or isolated symbols, much harder to recall than the generally vivid, active imagery of rapid-eye-movement dreaming.’
“But why on earth,” you may ask, “should it be necessary for man to achieve, by hook or by crook, a higher level of consciousness? This is truly the crucial question, and I do not find the answer easy. Instead… I can only make a confession of faith: I believe that, after thousands and millions of years, someone had to realize that this wonderful world of mountains and oceans, suns and moons, galaxies and nebulae, plants and animals, exists. From a low hill in the Athi plains of East Africa I once watched the vast herds of wild animals grazing in soundless stillness, as they had done from time immemorial, touched only by the breath of the primeval world. I felt then as if I were the first man, the first creature, to know that all this is. The entire world round me was still in its primeval state; it did not know that it was. And then, in that one moment in which I came to know, the world sprang into being; without that moment it would never have been. All Nature seeks this goal and finds it fulfilled in man, but only in the most highly developed and most fully conscious man." (CW 9i, §177)
James Hillman's 'acorn theory' of soul says we already hold the potential for unique possibilities inside ourselves, much as an acorn holds the pattern for an oak tree. It shows in our calling and life's work when fully actualized.
TAKING IT TO THE GRAVE
DREAM GENEALOGY
Inner Ways of Knowing
"All the works of man have their origin in creative fantasy. What right have we then to depreciate imagination? In the ordinary course of things, fantasy does not go astray; it is too deep for that, and too closely bound up with the tap-root of human and animal instinct. . . . The creative activity of the imagination frees man from his bondage to the 'nothing but' and liberates him in the spirit of play. As Schiller says, man is completely human only when he is playing."
--C.G. Jung, CW 16, §98
Young children have a consciousness which is remarkable.
I find the psychology of little children exceedingly difficult; their dreams, for instance, are amazingly difficult. One would assume that they would be quite simple but they are far from that.
Of course some are obvious, but they have an unusual number of great dreams, and great visions too, and to deal with them requires an hypothesis which makes one quite dizzy.
One has to assume that they have a consciousness of the collective unconscious, an amazing thing. It makes little children seem quite old, like people who have lived a full life and who have a very profound idea of what consciousness really is. Hence the saying: fools and children speak the truth. It is because they know it.
Children have the vision still hanging over them of things which they have never seen, and could not possibly have seen, and which are in accordance with the theory of reincarnation. It is just as if reminiscences of a former life were carried over into this life, or from the ancestral life perhaps, we don’t know.
I could tell you children’s dreams which are simply uncanny, and if you want to interpret them at all, you have to use uncanny means.
They cannot be explained even by the psychology of the parents.
They must come from the psychology of the collective unconscious; one could say they were remnants of things they had seen before they
were born, and that is really vision.
I know a case where a vision affected a whole life. Individuals can be stunted all through their lives by a vision in childhood. Such children are not quite born—their birth takes place much later, when they can detach.
But many people are never quite born; they live in the flesh but a part of them is still in what Lamaistic philosophy would call the Bardo, in the life between death and birth, and that prenatal state is filled with extraordinary visions.
~Carl Jung, Visions Seminar, Page 424.
Psychic and Personal Rootedness
"We are entangled in the roots, and we ourselves are the roots.
We make roots, we cause roots to be, we are rooted in the soil, and there is no getting away for us, because we must be there as long as we live.
That idea, that we can sublimate ourselves and become entirely spiritual and no hair left, is an inflation. I am sorry, that is impossible; it makes no sense."
~Carl Jung, Kundalini Seminar, Page 29
It may seem strange at first to think that collective dreams could have any relevance to ourselves. We have cut ourselves off from the past to such an extent that it is difficult to realize that the experiences of remote people can still have meaning for us. Yet it is so.
Unconsciously we still think like our distant ancestors, and to understand this is to deepen our experience, and open up new possibilities. We remain connected through the language of dreams and imagination. To visit “the imaginal realm,” suspended between the empirical world and the totally visionary, is not a supernatural power of some, but a phenomenon recognized from the dawn of mankind. Turning the inside out, we bring it through the senses.
While some dreams may be compensatory (balancing our conscious viewpoint), ancestral dream content often appears as not substantially different from conscious functioning. There is no need for defense or surrender to the dream material. We might dream of cemeteries, family records, ancestors themselves, or any other variety that informs our genealogical quest.
As Jung suggests, "There is no linear evolution; there is only a circumambulation of the self." (MDR, Pgs. 196-197)
When the Spirits Came Back
Even more than blood, we are bonded by respect and joy in each other's lives as true family. We may wonder about our ancestors who lived closely attuned to the land, and what were their lives like Who were the indigenous Celts and Anglo Saxons, or our other more archaic progenitors?
Although we may never truly know our indigenous ancestors’ ceremonies and rituals, we may be able to remember aspects of them and their world through dreaming. Even dreams about genealogy sometimes lead to real discoveries. Recurring dreams are even more compelling. Significant, impactful or highly-memorable dreams can be bizarre or beautiful. Some dreams have a life-long effect on us.
Integral Dreaming
Dreaming with the ancestors is perhaps more accurate than dreaming about them. 'Dreaming with' we may explore the power of dreams to recover deep ancestral, cultural, planetary, and cosmic memory. Hillman argued dreams tell us where are are not what to do. The dream is a descent into the underworld. Dreams saturate our consciousness with the mysterious customs of the dark and impenetrable underworld.
Somewhere within the total personality, there appears to be a continuing integrative force, a homeostasis or self-regulating function. Even when we feel overwhelmed by experience, some part of our mind still seems to observe, evaluate, comment, and even attempt to integrate this otherwise hidden material with the knowledge of conscious life.
This may disappear for brief periods, but most of the time it is clearly at work. No one knows what type of ‘thinking’ this is. It appears different both from ‘reality thinking’ and ‘autistic thinking,’ from the patterns of conscious thought and the imagery of fantasy a kind of bridge between two types of mental process. It can appear symbolically as distinctly 'Other.'
Jung's concept of wholeness, linked with the Self. Such compensatory dreams connect with is best seen in the collected dreams by an individual undertaking their own personal journey to self acceptance and integration. Through an overview of dreams gained in this way, the two aspects of compensation become much more clearly drawn.
The dream work, aimed at meeting the neglected or hurt parts of oneself, opens the way to more pronounced compensation -- the gaps in our experience. Following our dreams means following our uncertainty. Root metaphor dreams may arise in times of crisis and help us adapt and help one another.
Dreams teach by revelation, but there is no reason to objectify that. There is no work to it, no interpretation, no theorizing. We are each simply unrepeatable and utterly inexhaustible entities, whose mystery cannot be objectified or reduced to any single interpretation.
The process of compensation also links with patterns of love and strength actually lived by others. They are then patterns remaining in the collective experience of humanity that can be accessed. When we touch these powerful racial memories we may clothe them in the image of our cultural hero or savior. The power we find is a release of our own potential emerging from our core self, our own innate potential. This emerges from our unconscious clothed in whatever imagery or ideas we can accept or allow, as do dreams.
Dreams are the underworld. Imagination and the psyche are two key components of the underworld, a dreamland of souls where the human mind retreats and interacts with other psyches present.
In the Hero's Journey, Campbell notes, "Mythologies are in fact the public dreams that move and shape societies, and conversely one's own dreams are the little myths of the private gods, antigods, and guardian powers that are moving and shaping oneself: revelations of the actual fears, desires, aims, and values by which one's life is subliminally ordered."
The 'nekyia' is a night sea journey, a descent into the underworld or into the belly of a sea monster, and a meeting with the dead. It is a myth which occurs in many cultures in different forms and symbolizes the struggle towards spiritual or psychological revelation and transformation.
In a Fortune article, Lawrence Lessing describes recent sleep research: ‘...recent evidence shows that there may well be a second, lower level of dreaming extending down even into deep sleep, consisting largely of abstract thoughts or isolated symbols, much harder to recall than the generally vivid, active imagery of rapid-eye-movement dreaming.’
“But why on earth,” you may ask, “should it be necessary for man to achieve, by hook or by crook, a higher level of consciousness? This is truly the crucial question, and I do not find the answer easy. Instead… I can only make a confession of faith: I believe that, after thousands and millions of years, someone had to realize that this wonderful world of mountains and oceans, suns and moons, galaxies and nebulae, plants and animals, exists. From a low hill in the Athi plains of East Africa I once watched the vast herds of wild animals grazing in soundless stillness, as they had done from time immemorial, touched only by the breath of the primeval world. I felt then as if I were the first man, the first creature, to know that all this is. The entire world round me was still in its primeval state; it did not know that it was. And then, in that one moment in which I came to know, the world sprang into being; without that moment it would never have been. All Nature seeks this goal and finds it fulfilled in man, but only in the most highly developed and most fully conscious man." (CW 9i, §177)
PSYCHOPOMP
Decision Tree
The spirit consists of possibilities -- one could say the world of possibilities was the world of the spirit. The spirit can be anything, but the earth can only be something definite. So remaining true to the earth would mean maintaining your conscious relationship to the body. Don't run away and make yourself unconscious of bodily facts, for they keep you in real life and help you not to lose your way in the world of mere possibilities where you are simply blindfolded. ~Carl Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Pages 66-67
For Jung, the psychopomp -- a guide of souls -- is a mediator between the realms of consciousness and unconsciousness, a guide from the world of the living to the world of the dead. Soul guides are the midwives of death.
"The animus when on his way, on his quest, is really a psychopompos, leading the soul back to the stars whence it came. On the way back out of the existence in the flesh, the psychopompos develops such a cosmic aspect, he wanders among the constellations, he leads the soul over the rainbow bridge into the blossoming fields of the stars." ~Carl Jung, Visions Seminar, Page 1229
This is an apt description for the wisdom figures, shaman, Knights Errant, and spirits of our family tree who we meet as we travel through the disembodied states of another reality. They lead us beyond themselves to even deeper ground. When you become the guardian of your dead, you become a psychopomp of your own soul.
Cristine Downing speaks of, “the seemingly alien but unconscious longed-for pattern of energy that most often pulls me down into the underworld.” To the psyche death is always the fearful opposite to life, so the initial forays may be the most daunting. The value of a guide in the descent is to learn the lessons which a knowledge of death bring to the living of life.
Like many trees, our family tree can be dormant, and some branches can go extinct. A genealogy tree is the most common form of visually documenting family ancestry. Most family trees include a box for each individual and each box is connected to the others to indicate relationships. In addition to an individual's name, each box may include dates, birthplace, marriages, and other information.
It is no accident that a Family Tree resembles modern decision trees. Genealogy is a flowchart from parental nodes, a biological decision tree, integrating gene expression and demographics. It is a top-down predictive model displaying consequences, including chance event outcomes, and algorithms. These are the decisions of families, fate, and destiny as worked out through nature.
A schematic tree-shaped diagram is used to determine a course of action or show a statistical probability. Each branch of the decision tree represents a possible decision or occurrence. The tree structure shows how one choice leads to the next, and the use of branches indicates that each option is mutually exclusive.
The structure allows us to see multiple relations and display them in a simple, easy-to-understand format that shows the relationship between different events or decisions [cascading marriages and offspring].
Everyone has two family trees. The first is a Genealogical Tree, which is every ancestor in history that had a child who had a child who had a child that ultimately led to you. Every decision made by every person in that tree contributed to who and what you are today.
However, not every person in that tree contributed a segment of your DNA sequence (because of random inheritance, as discussed above). As a result, we have a second family tree – a Genetic Tree – which is a tree that contains only those ancestors who contributed to our DNA.
Decision Tree
The spirit consists of possibilities -- one could say the world of possibilities was the world of the spirit. The spirit can be anything, but the earth can only be something definite. So remaining true to the earth would mean maintaining your conscious relationship to the body. Don't run away and make yourself unconscious of bodily facts, for they keep you in real life and help you not to lose your way in the world of mere possibilities where you are simply blindfolded. ~Carl Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Pages 66-67
For Jung, the psychopomp -- a guide of souls -- is a mediator between the realms of consciousness and unconsciousness, a guide from the world of the living to the world of the dead. Soul guides are the midwives of death.
"The animus when on his way, on his quest, is really a psychopompos, leading the soul back to the stars whence it came. On the way back out of the existence in the flesh, the psychopompos develops such a cosmic aspect, he wanders among the constellations, he leads the soul over the rainbow bridge into the blossoming fields of the stars." ~Carl Jung, Visions Seminar, Page 1229
This is an apt description for the wisdom figures, shaman, Knights Errant, and spirits of our family tree who we meet as we travel through the disembodied states of another reality. They lead us beyond themselves to even deeper ground. When you become the guardian of your dead, you become a psychopomp of your own soul.
Cristine Downing speaks of, “the seemingly alien but unconscious longed-for pattern of energy that most often pulls me down into the underworld.” To the psyche death is always the fearful opposite to life, so the initial forays may be the most daunting. The value of a guide in the descent is to learn the lessons which a knowledge of death bring to the living of life.
Like many trees, our family tree can be dormant, and some branches can go extinct. A genealogy tree is the most common form of visually documenting family ancestry. Most family trees include a box for each individual and each box is connected to the others to indicate relationships. In addition to an individual's name, each box may include dates, birthplace, marriages, and other information.
It is no accident that a Family Tree resembles modern decision trees. Genealogy is a flowchart from parental nodes, a biological decision tree, integrating gene expression and demographics. It is a top-down predictive model displaying consequences, including chance event outcomes, and algorithms. These are the decisions of families, fate, and destiny as worked out through nature.
A schematic tree-shaped diagram is used to determine a course of action or show a statistical probability. Each branch of the decision tree represents a possible decision or occurrence. The tree structure shows how one choice leads to the next, and the use of branches indicates that each option is mutually exclusive.
The structure allows us to see multiple relations and display them in a simple, easy-to-understand format that shows the relationship between different events or decisions [cascading marriages and offspring].
Everyone has two family trees. The first is a Genealogical Tree, which is every ancestor in history that had a child who had a child who had a child that ultimately led to you. Every decision made by every person in that tree contributed to who and what you are today.
However, not every person in that tree contributed a segment of your DNA sequence (because of random inheritance, as discussed above). As a result, we have a second family tree – a Genetic Tree – which is a tree that contains only those ancestors who contributed to our DNA.
Note that the Genetic Family Tree illustrates a concept rather than an exact representation of someone’s actual genetic family tree. The Genealogical Family Tree contains ALL of your biological ancestors: The Genetic Family Tree contains a small subset of your biological ancestors: Due to the nature of the Genealogical versus the Genetic Family Tree, entire populations, ancestors, and ethnicities are regularly lost entirely from your DNA! For example, in the following example of a Genetic Family Tree, the ethnicity in blue below is NOT part of the tree, and therefore would not be detected by a DNA test.
The two most common tests examine the paternally inherited Y chromosome (Y-DNA), which is passed down from father to son, and the maternally inherited mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA), which is passed down from mother to child, both male and female. A third type of test (autosomal DNA) examines DNA inherited from both parents.
“With many of these tests, you’re only tracking one small part of your family tree,” Bolnick says. “For example, a mtDNA test can tell you about only one of your 16 great-great-grandparents. That leaves a huge number of unknowns.”
Genetic ancestry tests examine the sequence of molecules, called nucleotides, in a person’s DNA. They focus on what scientists consider “junk” DNA—portions of the human genome for which no biological function has been identified. An individual’s DNA sequence is compared to a database of samples to identify others with similar DNA sequences. The testing company then suggests that the ancestors lived in the geographic region and belonged to the ethnic group in which the customer’s DNA sequence is most common.
Many DNA sequences are found in many different human populations. For example, certain DNA sequences may be most common in Native Americans, but they also are found in Asians. So, some tests may incorrectly inform someone they have Native American ancestry when their ancestors actually lived in Asia.Many companies try to link your DNA to racial and ethnic categories in ways that are problematic. “These categories are socially constructed, and they’re mostly based on cultural heritage and shared experiences. There’s no clear-cut connection between racial identity and your genetic makeup. Unfortunately, these tests incorrectly imply that there is, so they may encourage a return to old ways of thinking about race as purely biological, which it’s not.”
DNA Colonization
The anount of DNA we share with blood relatives varies. For example, your first cousin has 12.5% of the genes you do (implying, inversely, that 87.5% of their genes are different). Your third cousin twice removed, on the other hand, would have only 0.195% of the same genes, meaning 99.805% of their genes would be different. This assumes, of course, that you have no double relations in your family tree (e.g., sharing a great-great grandmother from two sides of your family tree).
Rare double cousins arise when two siblings of one family reproduce with two siblings of another family. This results in the children being related to each other through both parents, and sharing the same grandparents. As a result, double cousins are genetically equal to half-siblings, sharing double the genetic material normally seen in first cousins.
Sure, your blood, skin, brain and lungs are made up of your own cells, but not entirely. Most of us are walking, talking patchworks of cells, with emissaries from our mother, children or even our siblings infiltrating every part of our bodies. Welcome to the bizarre world of microchimerism.
Nature is crafty. The cells of our ancestors, children or siblings, even lovers, infiltrate every part of our bodies. The cells of others can colonize our bodies, eggs, and mind, permanently injecting us with the genetic material of both random and relationally intimate partners.
Babies of current partners have been found with the germ plasm of former partners. A father can even unknowingly perpetuate the DNA of his twin re-absorbed in the womb. Male children ‘colonize’ our minds with their DNA during gestation and never ‘move out.’ That can be so even if the baby doesn’t come to term.
These random cells also provide some immunological benefit, much like an injection of embryonic stem cells. Cells also migrate to the mother’s muscle, thyroid, liver, heart, kidney and skin. Our DNA soup is therefore rather messy. So, no sex is really “casual.”
Mitochondrial DNA is the Mother Root
Mitochondrial DNA contains 37 genes, all of which are essential for normal mitochondrial function. Thirteen of these genes provide instructions for making enzymes involved in oxidative phosphorylation. The remaining genes provide instructions for making molecules called transfer RNAs (tRNAs) and ribosomal RNAs (rRNAs), which are chemical cousins of DNA. These types of RNA help assemble protein building blocks (amino acids) into functioning proteins.
“With many of these tests, you’re only tracking one small part of your family tree,” Bolnick says. “For example, a mtDNA test can tell you about only one of your 16 great-great-grandparents. That leaves a huge number of unknowns.”
Genetic ancestry tests examine the sequence of molecules, called nucleotides, in a person’s DNA. They focus on what scientists consider “junk” DNA—portions of the human genome for which no biological function has been identified. An individual’s DNA sequence is compared to a database of samples to identify others with similar DNA sequences. The testing company then suggests that the ancestors lived in the geographic region and belonged to the ethnic group in which the customer’s DNA sequence is most common.
Many DNA sequences are found in many different human populations. For example, certain DNA sequences may be most common in Native Americans, but they also are found in Asians. So, some tests may incorrectly inform someone they have Native American ancestry when their ancestors actually lived in Asia.Many companies try to link your DNA to racial and ethnic categories in ways that are problematic. “These categories are socially constructed, and they’re mostly based on cultural heritage and shared experiences. There’s no clear-cut connection between racial identity and your genetic makeup. Unfortunately, these tests incorrectly imply that there is, so they may encourage a return to old ways of thinking about race as purely biological, which it’s not.”
DNA Colonization
The anount of DNA we share with blood relatives varies. For example, your first cousin has 12.5% of the genes you do (implying, inversely, that 87.5% of their genes are different). Your third cousin twice removed, on the other hand, would have only 0.195% of the same genes, meaning 99.805% of their genes would be different. This assumes, of course, that you have no double relations in your family tree (e.g., sharing a great-great grandmother from two sides of your family tree).
Rare double cousins arise when two siblings of one family reproduce with two siblings of another family. This results in the children being related to each other through both parents, and sharing the same grandparents. As a result, double cousins are genetically equal to half-siblings, sharing double the genetic material normally seen in first cousins.
Sure, your blood, skin, brain and lungs are made up of your own cells, but not entirely. Most of us are walking, talking patchworks of cells, with emissaries from our mother, children or even our siblings infiltrating every part of our bodies. Welcome to the bizarre world of microchimerism.
Nature is crafty. The cells of our ancestors, children or siblings, even lovers, infiltrate every part of our bodies. The cells of others can colonize our bodies, eggs, and mind, permanently injecting us with the genetic material of both random and relationally intimate partners.
Babies of current partners have been found with the germ plasm of former partners. A father can even unknowingly perpetuate the DNA of his twin re-absorbed in the womb. Male children ‘colonize’ our minds with their DNA during gestation and never ‘move out.’ That can be so even if the baby doesn’t come to term.
These random cells also provide some immunological benefit, much like an injection of embryonic stem cells. Cells also migrate to the mother’s muscle, thyroid, liver, heart, kidney and skin. Our DNA soup is therefore rather messy. So, no sex is really “casual.”
Mitochondrial DNA is the Mother Root
Mitochondrial DNA contains 37 genes, all of which are essential for normal mitochondrial function. Thirteen of these genes provide instructions for making enzymes involved in oxidative phosphorylation. The remaining genes provide instructions for making molecules called transfer RNAs (tRNAs) and ribosomal RNAs (rRNAs), which are chemical cousins of DNA. These types of RNA help assemble protein building blocks (amino acids) into functioning proteins.
ANCESTORS & ARCHETYPES
Last Rites: Embodying Ancestor Wisdom
By Iona Miller, (c) 2016
"I am fully committed to the idea that human existence should be
rooted in the earth."
~Carl Jung, C.G. Jung Speaking, Page 204
"There is an alchemical saying: Man is the heaven of woman and woman
is the earth of man. The woman’s task is to bring things down to earth."
--Marie Louise von Franz, Psychological Perspectives by E. Rossi
"You see that quite clearly in the moment when you check the creative impulse; nothing is more poisonous to the nervous system than a disregarded or checked creative impulse. It even destroys people’s organic health."
--Carl Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Page 654.
Solidly Grounded
"The spirit can easily be anything, but the earth can only be something definite.
So remaining true to the earth would mean maintaining your conscious relationship to the body." --Carl Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Page 66
Arguably, the best way to hone our theory is to refine our arguments against vigorous counterarguments. We don't have to go as far as 'magical thinking' to have a bit of magic in our lives, nor do we have to remain content with wishful thinking, idiosyncratic views, or 'spiritual' fantasies about our healing potential. If we use our genealogy in a compensatory fashion, it functions somewhat like dreams, and can be approached with the same conditions.
There is an enormous amount of variation in metaphysical and moral views, often characterized by an unusual degree of intractability. Without any rational basis, people believe all sorts of things because they "feel right," as if that were some touchstone, when it is the basis of pseudo-science, false suppositions, or erroneous conclusions and lack of critical thinking.
Jung said, "All people who claim to be spiritual try to get away from the fact of the body; they want to destroy it in order to be something imaginary, but they never will be that, because the body denies them; the body says otherwise." (Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Page 64.)
We don't need to make exaggerated claims for CAM healing or "secrets," based on spurious theories or misapplied science and buzzword branding. Sometimes it works temporarily, but not for the reasons or in the way it purports. Much of it mobilizes the placebo effect, which is fine, but perhaps not the best approach. Our own hidden family secrets contain the key to our well-being, but we don't need to turn our genealogy work into a rootless transcendental escape.
We don't need to approach our ancestors with far-fetched superstitious ideas or wildly irrational models to consciously develop a living relationship with them. There are four inheritance systems that play a role in evolution: genetic, epigenetic (or non-DNA cellular transmission of traits), behavioral, and symbolic (transmission through language and other forms of symbolic communication).
Everything begins with a foundation. It is said there are things hidden since the Foundation of the World. Archaic genealogy is one of them. Rituals revolve around whether imitation is forbidden or mandatory. Imperative rituals are religious or spiritual; forbidden rites are transgressive.
Genealogy is desirable. Descent is the first and primordial fact about the body-mind -- its origin and source of 'in-form-ation.' We don't need special gifts to track their weird properties. In genealogy, meaning and purpose meet a genuine emotional connection. Genealogy is the skeleton upon which we can flesh out our family history into a sacred living lineage. It is not a way of burying ourselves in the past to avoid the present, but to be more fully Present.
Our attitude is one of openness and inclusiveness, which is essential for working with dying, death, grieving, and caring. We desire to experience everything without withdrawing from the intensity and vividness of any experience. Our guide is the continuum of spontaneity, a realm of not-knowing -- undefended and transparent to the full embrace of life.
The past is fully present in our psychophysical being. Presence is that state where the past doesn’t exist, and the future hasn’t been written. It is what is in the now. It is clarity. Like heals like.
"Don’t run away and make yourself unconscious of bodily facts, for they keep you in real life and help you not to lose your real way in the world of mere possibilities where you are simply blindfolded." (Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, P.66)
"...when people approach their inferior function; they have attacks of vertigo or nausea for instance, because the unconscious brings a peculiar sort of motion, as if the earth were moving under their feet, or as if they were on the deck of a ship rolling in a heavy swell. They get a kind of seasickness; they develop such symptoms actually.
It simply means that their former basis, or their imagined basis, has gone certain values which they thought to be basic are no longer there-so they become doubtful and suspended in a sort of indefinite atmosphere with no ground under their feet, always afraid of falling down.
And of course the thing that is waiting for them underneath is the jaws of hell, or the depth of the water, or a profound darkness, or a monster-or they may call it madness. And mind you, it is madness to fall out of one's conscious world into an unconscious condition.
Insanity means just that, being overcome by an invasion of the unconscious.
It is madness to fall out of one’s conscious world into an unconscious condition.
Insanity means just that, being overcome by an invasion of the unconscious.
Consciousness is swept over by unconscious contents in which all orientation is lost.
The ego then becomes a sort of fish swimming in a sea among other fishes, and of course fishes don’t know who they are, don’t even know the name of their own species. (Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Pages 1088-1089)
Divinatory Traditions
Besides dreams, divination is one of the major ways ancestors communicate. Shaman 'throw the bones' acknowledging that they have the capacity for revelations. Divination with natural objects uses organic living tools of divination. In bone divination, bones of various sorts are ritually tossed onto a mat, an animal hide, or into a circle drawn in the dirt, and the resulting patterns interpreted.
Throwing the bones is an ancient practice traditional to many regions of the world, including Africa, Asia, and North America. The number and type of bones used, as well as the inclusion of other small objects, such as pebbles, shells, and hard nuts, varies from culture to culture.
Marked bones are often used in groups of two or four to obtain yes or no answers, as well as more detailed information. Gaming dice, often called "the bones," may have their origin in marked bone divination. There are still forms of divination using patterns of spots and dots on dice or dominoes. Marking or painting the bones makes their identification quick and certain. Runes were often inscribed on bones.
Before throwing the bones, the healer invokes the ancestors by giving snuff, kneeling and clapping, and rattling or chanting a song. A general reading is given and then specific questions are asked and answered. Each question is answered by a separate throw of all the bones. It is the ancestor, and not the healer or messenger, who provides the information.
Old style Conjure, Mama Starr says, "I was taught that we are able to read the bones through our ancestors and the spirits that walk with us. You have to have a strong connection with your ancestors in order to receive the information through the bones. Your bones are very personal, and they should be taken care of after all this is a link between you and your ancestors. ... I was taught my bones are protected by my ancestors and if someone stole them they would have to deal with my ancestors..."
Others say, "In both my bone sets I have a piece that represents an ancient ancestor. It is an ancestor so far back that we can no longer know if it was male or female, or whether it is a relative from the mother’s side, or the father’s side. The only thing we know about it is that it is ancient and powerful."
"When it is near a person I look to see if there is a message. But even if there is no message, the presence of this piece nearby tells me that the client has an ancestor like this nearby watching over them. To me this is a special blessing."
"At the point this ancestor appears in your family tree they may have hundreds, if not thousands of blood descendants. That they are taking a particular interest in you out of all those others implies a gift. It could be that you share a similar gift or calling in life. I generally think of these gifts as gifts of the spirit – healing, or divination, or a creative talent. I think it has to be something that is universal throughout time. Every generation in every culture had healers, diviners, and artisans."
"The ancestors that are far back in our bloodlines appear the weakest to our intellect, but they have the most powerful energy. With little to go on, ancestors like this are hard to imagine or get a mental image of. But they themselves have the wisdom of ages. If in your self readings this ancestor keeps making its presence known you might want to consider deeper connection with just this ancestor."
Scottish speal bones are a divination used in Scotland, called Sleina-nachd, or reading the Speal Bone, or the Blade Bone ...A speal bone or blade bone of a shoulder of mutton was used, but complete details of the divinatory practice is unknown.
Cooked bones (most often the shoulder blade or scapular of a large animal) may be scraped clean of flesh and the marks upon it interpreted. In other cultures, certain specially selected bones, sometimes called oracle bones (usually scapulars or turtle bones) may be burned in a fire or heated until they crack and the resulting chars and cracks examined for specific answers to questions.
Firm Foundation
A firm foundation in our close family is a good anchor for more distance ancestors. The depth of your foundation determines how high you can fly, or in this case, trace your far-flung family tree -- an exceptional foundation as only royal, legendary, and mythical lineages pre-date the Middle Ages.
The durability of any structure is predetermined by the strength of its foundation. Impactful destinies have sure foundations. The stories we tell about the deceased depend largely on the foundation that person laid down in their life.
You must invest in your foundation. Your root should be enduring, deep, and strong. A deep foundation holds up the edifice of your destiny, eternally. The strength of your foundation supports your unique development or individuation.
When the ancestors call and you answer, you are infused with their organic wisdom. Outstanding dedication shines. Your worldview widens to encompass deep time. Life is about the bonds of family, the essence of what it is to be human. We become oblivious to the names and experiences of even our recent ancestors; we get ancestral amnesia. We forget their burdens and their blessings.
But we can raise them into the light of consciousness with a bit of joyful effort. Then we are rewarded with new meaning and self-knowledge. Like all initiatory journeys, it is about engaging with the ancestors, the death of the old self, and rebirth of the new, within generations of generativity.
This is family you can keep with you for the rest of your life. Groundwork takes some digging. With research and reading, combined with some information gathering to lay the groundwork, you can begin to construct your family tree and fill in the blanks that may have eluded you on your first rough sketches. You may think you are looking for 'who' and 'when', but you also need to think about 'where,' as in the precise location of your ancestors who may share a common surname with many families.
Genealogy looks at several generations of a family while kinship maps merge several family histories or genealogies to understand, not just descent, but extended family relationships. All meaningful communication is a form of storytelling or giving a report of events (narrative). In bonding, we realize that the ancestors mirror us and we reflect them.
Narrative Coherence
Because of this, human beings experience and comprehend life as a series of ongoing narratives, each with its own conflicts, characters, beginning, middle, and end -- best viewed as stories shaped by history, culture, and character. Narrative is the basis of communication, how we explain and/or justify their behavior, whether past or future.
The world is a set of stories from among which we must choose in order to live in a process of continual re-creation. We choose the ones that match our values and beliefs. Beliefs are how we make sense of life and death. The test of narrative rationality is based on the probability, coherence, and fidelity of the stories that underpin each story.
Narration is cross-cultural and is one of the first language skills all children develop. Is the story consistent, with sufficient detail, reliable characters, and free of any major surprises? Do the characters to act in a reliable manner. Otherwise, we become suspicious when characters behave uncharacteristically.
Narrative fidelity states that if a story matches our own beliefs and experiences, it will be accepted. Fidelity determines how the story fits into the background of the world as we have known it. Fisher also believes that a story has fidelity when it can be seen as a guide for our own actions, ultimately influence our beliefs and values.
It is more than a metaphor that nature is alive and speaks to us in millions of fragments of light -- the final form of life. "If you will bring to light what is inside of you, what you will bring to light will save you." (Gnostic Gospel of Thomas, 30) “In order for the light to shine so brightly, the darkness must be present.” (Sir Francis Bacon)
"Natural life is the nourishing soil of the soul." (Jung, CW 8, Para 800).
Jung called dreams "pure nature."..."they show us the unvarnished, natural truth, and are therefore fitted, as nothing else is, to give us back an attitude that accords with our basic human nature when our consciousness has strayed too far from its foundations and run into an impasse.” (CW 10 317)
Shake Hands With Your Family Tree
“Trees depict the living structure of our inner self. Its roots show our connection with our physical body and the earth; its trunk the way we would direct the energies of our being–varied and yet all connected in the common life process of our being. The tree can also symbolize new growth, stages of life and death, with its springs leaves and blossoms, then the falling leaves. The top of the tree, by the end of the branches, are our aspirations, the growing bendable tip of our personal growth and spiritual realization. The leaves may represent our personal life which may fall off the tree of life (die) but what gave it life continues to exist. The tree is our whole life, the evolutionary urge which pushes us into being. Its growth depicts the forces or processes behind all other life forms, expressing interpersonal existence.”
“I am an orphan, alone: nevertheless I am found everywhere. I am one, but opposed to myself. I am youth and old man at one and the same time. I have known neither father nor mother, because I have had to be fetched out of the deep like a fish, or fell like a white stone from heaven. In woods and mountains I roam, but I am hidden in the innermost soul of man. I am mortal for everyone, yet I am not touched by the cycle of aeons.” (Jung, Memories, Dreams, Reflections, P. 227)
Last Rites: Embodying Ancestor Wisdom
By Iona Miller, (c) 2016
"I am fully committed to the idea that human existence should be
rooted in the earth."
~Carl Jung, C.G. Jung Speaking, Page 204
"There is an alchemical saying: Man is the heaven of woman and woman
is the earth of man. The woman’s task is to bring things down to earth."
--Marie Louise von Franz, Psychological Perspectives by E. Rossi
"You see that quite clearly in the moment when you check the creative impulse; nothing is more poisonous to the nervous system than a disregarded or checked creative impulse. It even destroys people’s organic health."
--Carl Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Page 654.
Solidly Grounded
"The spirit can easily be anything, but the earth can only be something definite.
So remaining true to the earth would mean maintaining your conscious relationship to the body." --Carl Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Page 66
Arguably, the best way to hone our theory is to refine our arguments against vigorous counterarguments. We don't have to go as far as 'magical thinking' to have a bit of magic in our lives, nor do we have to remain content with wishful thinking, idiosyncratic views, or 'spiritual' fantasies about our healing potential. If we use our genealogy in a compensatory fashion, it functions somewhat like dreams, and can be approached with the same conditions.
There is an enormous amount of variation in metaphysical and moral views, often characterized by an unusual degree of intractability. Without any rational basis, people believe all sorts of things because they "feel right," as if that were some touchstone, when it is the basis of pseudo-science, false suppositions, or erroneous conclusions and lack of critical thinking.
Jung said, "All people who claim to be spiritual try to get away from the fact of the body; they want to destroy it in order to be something imaginary, but they never will be that, because the body denies them; the body says otherwise." (Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Page 64.)
We don't need to make exaggerated claims for CAM healing or "secrets," based on spurious theories or misapplied science and buzzword branding. Sometimes it works temporarily, but not for the reasons or in the way it purports. Much of it mobilizes the placebo effect, which is fine, but perhaps not the best approach. Our own hidden family secrets contain the key to our well-being, but we don't need to turn our genealogy work into a rootless transcendental escape.
We don't need to approach our ancestors with far-fetched superstitious ideas or wildly irrational models to consciously develop a living relationship with them. There are four inheritance systems that play a role in evolution: genetic, epigenetic (or non-DNA cellular transmission of traits), behavioral, and symbolic (transmission through language and other forms of symbolic communication).
Everything begins with a foundation. It is said there are things hidden since the Foundation of the World. Archaic genealogy is one of them. Rituals revolve around whether imitation is forbidden or mandatory. Imperative rituals are religious or spiritual; forbidden rites are transgressive.
Genealogy is desirable. Descent is the first and primordial fact about the body-mind -- its origin and source of 'in-form-ation.' We don't need special gifts to track their weird properties. In genealogy, meaning and purpose meet a genuine emotional connection. Genealogy is the skeleton upon which we can flesh out our family history into a sacred living lineage. It is not a way of burying ourselves in the past to avoid the present, but to be more fully Present.
Our attitude is one of openness and inclusiveness, which is essential for working with dying, death, grieving, and caring. We desire to experience everything without withdrawing from the intensity and vividness of any experience. Our guide is the continuum of spontaneity, a realm of not-knowing -- undefended and transparent to the full embrace of life.
The past is fully present in our psychophysical being. Presence is that state where the past doesn’t exist, and the future hasn’t been written. It is what is in the now. It is clarity. Like heals like.
"Don’t run away and make yourself unconscious of bodily facts, for they keep you in real life and help you not to lose your real way in the world of mere possibilities where you are simply blindfolded." (Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, P.66)
"...when people approach their inferior function; they have attacks of vertigo or nausea for instance, because the unconscious brings a peculiar sort of motion, as if the earth were moving under their feet, or as if they were on the deck of a ship rolling in a heavy swell. They get a kind of seasickness; they develop such symptoms actually.
It simply means that their former basis, or their imagined basis, has gone certain values which they thought to be basic are no longer there-so they become doubtful and suspended in a sort of indefinite atmosphere with no ground under their feet, always afraid of falling down.
And of course the thing that is waiting for them underneath is the jaws of hell, or the depth of the water, or a profound darkness, or a monster-or they may call it madness. And mind you, it is madness to fall out of one's conscious world into an unconscious condition.
Insanity means just that, being overcome by an invasion of the unconscious.
It is madness to fall out of one’s conscious world into an unconscious condition.
Insanity means just that, being overcome by an invasion of the unconscious.
Consciousness is swept over by unconscious contents in which all orientation is lost.
The ego then becomes a sort of fish swimming in a sea among other fishes, and of course fishes don’t know who they are, don’t even know the name of their own species. (Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Pages 1088-1089)
Divinatory Traditions
Besides dreams, divination is one of the major ways ancestors communicate. Shaman 'throw the bones' acknowledging that they have the capacity for revelations. Divination with natural objects uses organic living tools of divination. In bone divination, bones of various sorts are ritually tossed onto a mat, an animal hide, or into a circle drawn in the dirt, and the resulting patterns interpreted.
Throwing the bones is an ancient practice traditional to many regions of the world, including Africa, Asia, and North America. The number and type of bones used, as well as the inclusion of other small objects, such as pebbles, shells, and hard nuts, varies from culture to culture.
Marked bones are often used in groups of two or four to obtain yes or no answers, as well as more detailed information. Gaming dice, often called "the bones," may have their origin in marked bone divination. There are still forms of divination using patterns of spots and dots on dice or dominoes. Marking or painting the bones makes their identification quick and certain. Runes were often inscribed on bones.
Before throwing the bones, the healer invokes the ancestors by giving snuff, kneeling and clapping, and rattling or chanting a song. A general reading is given and then specific questions are asked and answered. Each question is answered by a separate throw of all the bones. It is the ancestor, and not the healer or messenger, who provides the information.
Old style Conjure, Mama Starr says, "I was taught that we are able to read the bones through our ancestors and the spirits that walk with us. You have to have a strong connection with your ancestors in order to receive the information through the bones. Your bones are very personal, and they should be taken care of after all this is a link between you and your ancestors. ... I was taught my bones are protected by my ancestors and if someone stole them they would have to deal with my ancestors..."
Others say, "In both my bone sets I have a piece that represents an ancient ancestor. It is an ancestor so far back that we can no longer know if it was male or female, or whether it is a relative from the mother’s side, or the father’s side. The only thing we know about it is that it is ancient and powerful."
"When it is near a person I look to see if there is a message. But even if there is no message, the presence of this piece nearby tells me that the client has an ancestor like this nearby watching over them. To me this is a special blessing."
"At the point this ancestor appears in your family tree they may have hundreds, if not thousands of blood descendants. That they are taking a particular interest in you out of all those others implies a gift. It could be that you share a similar gift or calling in life. I generally think of these gifts as gifts of the spirit – healing, or divination, or a creative talent. I think it has to be something that is universal throughout time. Every generation in every culture had healers, diviners, and artisans."
"The ancestors that are far back in our bloodlines appear the weakest to our intellect, but they have the most powerful energy. With little to go on, ancestors like this are hard to imagine or get a mental image of. But they themselves have the wisdom of ages. If in your self readings this ancestor keeps making its presence known you might want to consider deeper connection with just this ancestor."
Scottish speal bones are a divination used in Scotland, called Sleina-nachd, or reading the Speal Bone, or the Blade Bone ...A speal bone or blade bone of a shoulder of mutton was used, but complete details of the divinatory practice is unknown.
Cooked bones (most often the shoulder blade or scapular of a large animal) may be scraped clean of flesh and the marks upon it interpreted. In other cultures, certain specially selected bones, sometimes called oracle bones (usually scapulars or turtle bones) may be burned in a fire or heated until they crack and the resulting chars and cracks examined for specific answers to questions.
Firm Foundation
A firm foundation in our close family is a good anchor for more distance ancestors. The depth of your foundation determines how high you can fly, or in this case, trace your far-flung family tree -- an exceptional foundation as only royal, legendary, and mythical lineages pre-date the Middle Ages.
The durability of any structure is predetermined by the strength of its foundation. Impactful destinies have sure foundations. The stories we tell about the deceased depend largely on the foundation that person laid down in their life.
You must invest in your foundation. Your root should be enduring, deep, and strong. A deep foundation holds up the edifice of your destiny, eternally. The strength of your foundation supports your unique development or individuation.
When the ancestors call and you answer, you are infused with their organic wisdom. Outstanding dedication shines. Your worldview widens to encompass deep time. Life is about the bonds of family, the essence of what it is to be human. We become oblivious to the names and experiences of even our recent ancestors; we get ancestral amnesia. We forget their burdens and their blessings.
But we can raise them into the light of consciousness with a bit of joyful effort. Then we are rewarded with new meaning and self-knowledge. Like all initiatory journeys, it is about engaging with the ancestors, the death of the old self, and rebirth of the new, within generations of generativity.
This is family you can keep with you for the rest of your life. Groundwork takes some digging. With research and reading, combined with some information gathering to lay the groundwork, you can begin to construct your family tree and fill in the blanks that may have eluded you on your first rough sketches. You may think you are looking for 'who' and 'when', but you also need to think about 'where,' as in the precise location of your ancestors who may share a common surname with many families.
Genealogy looks at several generations of a family while kinship maps merge several family histories or genealogies to understand, not just descent, but extended family relationships. All meaningful communication is a form of storytelling or giving a report of events (narrative). In bonding, we realize that the ancestors mirror us and we reflect them.
Narrative Coherence
Because of this, human beings experience and comprehend life as a series of ongoing narratives, each with its own conflicts, characters, beginning, middle, and end -- best viewed as stories shaped by history, culture, and character. Narrative is the basis of communication, how we explain and/or justify their behavior, whether past or future.
The world is a set of stories from among which we must choose in order to live in a process of continual re-creation. We choose the ones that match our values and beliefs. Beliefs are how we make sense of life and death. The test of narrative rationality is based on the probability, coherence, and fidelity of the stories that underpin each story.
Narration is cross-cultural and is one of the first language skills all children develop. Is the story consistent, with sufficient detail, reliable characters, and free of any major surprises? Do the characters to act in a reliable manner. Otherwise, we become suspicious when characters behave uncharacteristically.
Narrative fidelity states that if a story matches our own beliefs and experiences, it will be accepted. Fidelity determines how the story fits into the background of the world as we have known it. Fisher also believes that a story has fidelity when it can be seen as a guide for our own actions, ultimately influence our beliefs and values.
It is more than a metaphor that nature is alive and speaks to us in millions of fragments of light -- the final form of life. "If you will bring to light what is inside of you, what you will bring to light will save you." (Gnostic Gospel of Thomas, 30) “In order for the light to shine so brightly, the darkness must be present.” (Sir Francis Bacon)
"Natural life is the nourishing soil of the soul." (Jung, CW 8, Para 800).
Jung called dreams "pure nature."..."they show us the unvarnished, natural truth, and are therefore fitted, as nothing else is, to give us back an attitude that accords with our basic human nature when our consciousness has strayed too far from its foundations and run into an impasse.” (CW 10 317)
Shake Hands With Your Family Tree
“Trees depict the living structure of our inner self. Its roots show our connection with our physical body and the earth; its trunk the way we would direct the energies of our being–varied and yet all connected in the common life process of our being. The tree can also symbolize new growth, stages of life and death, with its springs leaves and blossoms, then the falling leaves. The top of the tree, by the end of the branches, are our aspirations, the growing bendable tip of our personal growth and spiritual realization. The leaves may represent our personal life which may fall off the tree of life (die) but what gave it life continues to exist. The tree is our whole life, the evolutionary urge which pushes us into being. Its growth depicts the forces or processes behind all other life forms, expressing interpersonal existence.”
“I am an orphan, alone: nevertheless I am found everywhere. I am one, but opposed to myself. I am youth and old man at one and the same time. I have known neither father nor mother, because I have had to be fetched out of the deep like a fish, or fell like a white stone from heaven. In woods and mountains I roam, but I am hidden in the innermost soul of man. I am mortal for everyone, yet I am not touched by the cycle of aeons.” (Jung, Memories, Dreams, Reflections, P. 227)
DEPTH GENEALOGY
GROUNDWORK: AN ECOLOGY OF SOULS
Collaborating with the Dead
"I am fully committed to the idea that human existence should be rooted in the earth." ~Carl Jung, C.G. Jung Speaking, Page 204
"Do you think that somewhere we are not in nature, that we are different from nature? No, we are in nature and we think exactly like nature."
~Carl Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Page 1277
Jung contended we can make no progress with ourselves until we become "very much more acquainted" with nature and our own nature. Genealogy is one opportunity to do so.
Depth Genealogy is an approach to genealogy with its own roots in Jungian and archetypal psychology, Transgenerational Integration, phenomenology, genetic genealogy, the arts, and other relevant areas. It is a soulful approach, attuned to the Earth and Feminine with an eye for the imaginal, the ecological, the embodied, and mythological. We cannot describe symptoms without acknowledging the human origins of the ecological crisis. Our way of understanding human life and activity has gone awry, to the serious detriment of the world around us.
Philosopher Martin Heidegger emphasized phenomenology—the phenomena of being aware of one’s own consciousness of the moment. Heidegger wrote about Dasein, or “being there” in the moment with oneself and with how one perceives the world.
Beliefs organize our experience and condition our experience and interpretation of sensed presence. You can't unperceive a perception once perceived, but you can erroneously project, interpret. or concretize it. However we attribute 'sensed presence' or 'liminal entities' we know that they are evoked potentials, rather than literal beings, but they exhibit phenomenological qualities that carry meaning.
Similar exotic experiences can be induced in the laboratory with electromagnetic fields on the temporal lobes, as reported by Persinger and Murphy (2016). The amygdala also plays a role in such manifestations, which appear 'good' or 'evil', depending on which side of the amygdala is dominant during the 'visitor experience,' which includes the 'ancestors'.
"On one extreme, there is the 'demonic' or evil visitor, and on the other extreme, there are more angelic visitors. It depends on which emotional center (amygdala), left or right, is more active. If the negative one (meaning the one that supports fear) is more active, the visitor experience will become a visitation by a demon, Satan, or a terrifying ghost. On the other extreme, it could be an angel, a spirit protector, or even God." (Todd Murphy)
In private mail Murphy hypothesized about the benign nature of 'ancestors'. We can conjecture that the rule of thumb of 10% experiencing negative effects may hold.
"Hypothesis: in a sharp crisis, that bears in some way on species survival [or elicitation of an altered state], an individual may spontaneously sense the presence of non-physical beings becoming, for a time, a divided entity, with a portion of their consciousness more able to access non-verbal (intuitive, psychic, empathetic) information via the right temporal lobes and limbic region."
Enhancements in intuitive skills increase the chances for surviving the sharp crisis. The person's own non-linear cognitive skills are attributed to the 'spirit' being, who will seem to have guided them in a moment of crisis. In fact, the being was a projection of their own right-hemispheric self, the insight was from their own experiences, and the being enabled to whole process - whether it was 'real' (in the mechanistic sense) or not."
"The profound experiences attributed to the “sensed presence” and their cultural anthropomorphisms such as deities and gods are persistent reports in human populations that are frequently associated with permanent changes in behavior, reduced depression and alleviation of pain. The majority of traditional clinical observations and modern imaging techniques have emphasized the central role of right temporal lobe structures and their directly related networks. The experimental simulation of sensed presences ... can result in attributions to spiritual, deity-based or mystical sources within the clinical laboratory by the application of physiologically -patterned magnetic fields across the temporal lobes." (Persinger, Murphy,)
http://www.nrgarchive.gdk.mx/2016-reply-to-neuroscience-for-the-soul.pdf
In the genealogical journey our lineage descent becomes an initiatory experience of the depths of the human psyche and collective unconscious. In-depth research, therapy, and self-help for exploring of your Family Tree. Genealogy is a firm foundation for self-knowledge and any spiritual practice. Our ancestors become living presences informing our lives and being -- our relationship with the past, present, and future and the great cycle of life -- birth, death, and rebirth.
GROUNDWORK: AN ECOLOGY OF SOULS
Collaborating with the Dead
"I am fully committed to the idea that human existence should be rooted in the earth." ~Carl Jung, C.G. Jung Speaking, Page 204
"Do you think that somewhere we are not in nature, that we are different from nature? No, we are in nature and we think exactly like nature."
~Carl Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Page 1277
Jung contended we can make no progress with ourselves until we become "very much more acquainted" with nature and our own nature. Genealogy is one opportunity to do so.
Depth Genealogy is an approach to genealogy with its own roots in Jungian and archetypal psychology, Transgenerational Integration, phenomenology, genetic genealogy, the arts, and other relevant areas. It is a soulful approach, attuned to the Earth and Feminine with an eye for the imaginal, the ecological, the embodied, and mythological. We cannot describe symptoms without acknowledging the human origins of the ecological crisis. Our way of understanding human life and activity has gone awry, to the serious detriment of the world around us.
Philosopher Martin Heidegger emphasized phenomenology—the phenomena of being aware of one’s own consciousness of the moment. Heidegger wrote about Dasein, or “being there” in the moment with oneself and with how one perceives the world.
Beliefs organize our experience and condition our experience and interpretation of sensed presence. You can't unperceive a perception once perceived, but you can erroneously project, interpret. or concretize it. However we attribute 'sensed presence' or 'liminal entities' we know that they are evoked potentials, rather than literal beings, but they exhibit phenomenological qualities that carry meaning.
Similar exotic experiences can be induced in the laboratory with electromagnetic fields on the temporal lobes, as reported by Persinger and Murphy (2016). The amygdala also plays a role in such manifestations, which appear 'good' or 'evil', depending on which side of the amygdala is dominant during the 'visitor experience,' which includes the 'ancestors'.
"On one extreme, there is the 'demonic' or evil visitor, and on the other extreme, there are more angelic visitors. It depends on which emotional center (amygdala), left or right, is more active. If the negative one (meaning the one that supports fear) is more active, the visitor experience will become a visitation by a demon, Satan, or a terrifying ghost. On the other extreme, it could be an angel, a spirit protector, or even God." (Todd Murphy)
In private mail Murphy hypothesized about the benign nature of 'ancestors'. We can conjecture that the rule of thumb of 10% experiencing negative effects may hold.
"Hypothesis: in a sharp crisis, that bears in some way on species survival [or elicitation of an altered state], an individual may spontaneously sense the presence of non-physical beings becoming, for a time, a divided entity, with a portion of their consciousness more able to access non-verbal (intuitive, psychic, empathetic) information via the right temporal lobes and limbic region."
Enhancements in intuitive skills increase the chances for surviving the sharp crisis. The person's own non-linear cognitive skills are attributed to the 'spirit' being, who will seem to have guided them in a moment of crisis. In fact, the being was a projection of their own right-hemispheric self, the insight was from their own experiences, and the being enabled to whole process - whether it was 'real' (in the mechanistic sense) or not."
"The profound experiences attributed to the “sensed presence” and their cultural anthropomorphisms such as deities and gods are persistent reports in human populations that are frequently associated with permanent changes in behavior, reduced depression and alleviation of pain. The majority of traditional clinical observations and modern imaging techniques have emphasized the central role of right temporal lobe structures and their directly related networks. The experimental simulation of sensed presences ... can result in attributions to spiritual, deity-based or mystical sources within the clinical laboratory by the application of physiologically -patterned magnetic fields across the temporal lobes." (Persinger, Murphy,)
http://www.nrgarchive.gdk.mx/2016-reply-to-neuroscience-for-the-soul.pdf
In the genealogical journey our lineage descent becomes an initiatory experience of the depths of the human psyche and collective unconscious. In-depth research, therapy, and self-help for exploring of your Family Tree. Genealogy is a firm foundation for self-knowledge and any spiritual practice. Our ancestors become living presences informing our lives and being -- our relationship with the past, present, and future and the great cycle of life -- birth, death, and rebirth.
FAMILY TREE HUGGERS
Greening the Family Tree
Greening the Family Tree
YOU ARE A BRIDGE BETWEEN TWO WORLDS
Depth Genealogy: Retrieving Your Ancestors
"To give birth to the ancient in a new time is creation."
~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 311
For a woman, the typical danger emanating from the unconscious comes from above, from the “spiritual” sphere personified by the animus, whereas for a man it comes from the chthonic realm of the “world and woman,” i.e., the anima projected on to the world. ~Carl Jung, CW 9i, Para 559
One of the essential features of the child motif is its futurity.
The child is potential future.
Hence the occurrence of the child motif in the psychology of the individual signifies as a rule an anticipation of future developments, even though at first sight it may seem like a retrospective configuration.
Life is a flux, a flowing into the future, and not a stoppage or a backwash.
It is therefore not surprising that so many of the mythological saviours are child gods.
This agrees exactly with our experience of the psychology of the individual, which shows that the “child” paves the way for a future change of personality.
“Child” means something evolving towards independence.
This it cannot do without detaching itself from its origins: abandonment is therefore a necessary condition, not just a concomitant symptom.
~Carl Jung, CW 9i, Para 287
If we go further and consider the fact that man is also what neither he himself nor other people know of him—an unknown something which can yet be proved to exist —the problem of identity becomes more difficult still.
Indeed, it is quite impossible to define the extent and the ultimate character of psychic existence.
When we now speak of man we mean the indefinable whole of him, an ineffable totality, which can only be formulated symbolically.
I have chosen the term “self” to designate the totality of man, the sum total of his conscious and unconscious contents.
I have chosen this term in accordance with Eastern philosophy, which for centuries has occupied itself with the problems that arise when even the gods cease to incarnate. ~Carl Jung, CW 11, Para 140
Retrieval does *not* mean "going back in time" but, rather,
remembering what we've forgotten. Yes, that is a re-naissance.
In the archetypal realm, the beginning and end of days is always with us in each and every moment as the mythic dimension. Myth describes breakthroughs of the sacred into the profane or historical time.
As humans, we still live in a Tree -- the ancient World Tree of our ancestors. We can use archeomythology to retrieve the ancestors, our lost soul, and the Feminine. Deeply buried in the layers of our cellular memory are the myths and stories of the Great Goddess; therein lies a connection to the very source of healing that we so desperately seek to reground ourselves in the present.
If we are lucky, and not too dissociated, we can feel our pain. Pain becomes a portal into deep awakening, and when we are truly blessed we can hear the faint and distant echo of the voice of the Mother calling to us through our pain, as she calls to us now. Her blessing of love fills our hearts and souls with the moisture of life, as we soak it up like parched drought land, welcoming a long awaited rain.
Mystical Marriage & Groundwork
The Mystical Marriage, the union of self and the divine, soul and spirit, is a process of being reborn on multiple levels of Ascent and Descent. Genealogy is the raw material of the symbolic life. Genealogy is the groundwork of our reclamation project, which leads downward toward the dark center of our individual selves and into the fruitful mysteries of the-more-than-human world of nature and ancestral lines already etched somewhere within us.
When we encounter the soul we are more likely to say we has uncovered our unique gifts, destiny, life purpose, or personal meaning. Through soul encounter, we learns why spirit and nature gave birth to our exceptional individuality and particular way of belonging to the world. Jung said, "But your darkness should grasp the light." (Jung, Liber Novus, Page 270)
The soul path is often associated with the setting sun (and thus the direction of west), the descent to our earthy roots, into the wildness of the soil and the soul, a journey into the underworld, a voyage into darkness or shadow. We may have been taught that the downward direction is a turn away from the sacred, toward evil and wickedness, toward “hell.” Then, entering the underworld is sinful, suicidal, or a one-way trip reserved for those who have been particularly bad.
Likewise, nature has been rendered as evil. Pan, the Greek’s horned god of the forest, was transformed into the devil of Christian mythology. Most Western cultures have feared wild nature and have thought of it as unruly, a realm whose laws clash with society’s. We have, in short, been led to believe that nature and soul are not merely wild but inherently dangerous, forbidden, tainted, or evil.
We 'descendants' are the embodiment of descent itself. The initial goal of the descent is to cultivate the ego/soul relationship, which is underworld business, that might, at first, make our surface lives more difficult or lonely, or less comfortable, secure, or happy. Soul practices prepare the old self-ego to abandon its social stability and psychological composure and to be reassigned through initiation as an active, adult agent for soul, as opposed to its former role as an adolescent agent for itself.
This journey of descent prepares us to live in the world with its harsh need to change us, and shows us where and how to make our stand on solid groundwork, firmly and uniquely. On this half of the spiritual journey, we do not rise toward heaven but fall toward the center of our longing. Although equally sacred and perhaps even more ancient than the journey of ascent, this second spiritual realm may be unfamiliar.
The concept of soul embraces the essence of our particular individuality while spirit is universal. Spirit and soul are both sacred; they imbue life with meaning, beauty, and mystery. Spirit and soul are both spiritual or transpersonal—they exist beyond the personal, beyond the conventional mind or personality. They might each be referred to as the “sacred Other.”
Thomas Moore, in Care of the Soul says whereas in spirit, "we reach for consciousness, awareness, and the highest values," soul "has to do with depth, value, relatedness, heart and personal substance."
Spirit wants to go toward beyond every unseen horizon; soul wants to remain in the world and its complexity, to stay within. Spirit wants transcendence; soul wants immanence. Spirit would leave all worldliness behind to escape to heaven, while soul wants to find heaven on earth and in all the earth's messiness.
The inseparable roots systems of the genealogical discipline are mystical practices and healing traditions, providing direct experience of present centered awareness, the numinous, heartful healing, and an embodied awakening, summoning the soul toward a return, a reunion with the origin and the eternal.
The descent into our genealogical roots in the 'land of the dead' has its own rewards both independent of the ascent and in conjunction with it. As Rilke wrote:
"If we surrendered to earth’s intelligence we could rise up rooted, like trees."
The rooting (of trees, of our selves) is as important and as necessary as the rising. We have the opportunity to sink roots into soul and rise up with branches in heaven.
"If we surrendered to earth’s intelligence we could root down ascendant, like trees." Our spiritual growth is meant to go toward the fertile darkness and the glorious light, each of us having the opportunity to bridge earth and heaven—the underworld and the upper world—through the trunks of our middle world lives.
Rilke saw the intrinsic value of darkness: "You darkness from which I come, I love you more than all the fires that fence out the world, for the fire makes a circle for everyone so that no one sees you anymore."
Hierosgamos
Heirosgamos is a mystic marriage or union. Symbolized in alchemy by the coniunctio, it stands for conjunction of conscious and unconscious. Mysterium Coniunctionis ("mysterious conjunction") is the final alchemical synthesis (for Jung, of ego and unconscious, matter and spirit, male and female) that brings forth the Philosopher's Stone (the Self). Its highest aspect, as for alchemist Gerard Dorn, was the unus mundus, a unification of the Stone with body, soul, and spirit.
Moore says neither spirit nor soul can work without the other.
In fact, they need to be married to each other:
"Spirit tends to shoot off on its own in ambition, fanaticism, fundamentalism, and perfectionism. Soul gets stuck in its soupy moods, impossible relationships, and obsessive preoccupations. For the marriage to take place, each has to learn to appreciate the other and to be affected by the other--spirit's loftiness tempered by the soul's lowly limitations, soul's unconsciousness stirred by ideas and imagination."
Transcendence must remember its immanent context, and immanence must remember its transcendent implications. However, this marriage isn't just a metaphor. According to Jungian psychology, spirit and soul have definite masculine and feminine correspondences, respectively. The archetype of spirit is what Jungians call the animus, defined as the archetype of masculine being, whereas soul corresponds to the anima as the archetype of primordial femininity. This association deeper than any superficial definition of gender.
In his book Anima: An Anatomy of a Personified Notion, James Hillman talks about the way the animus or spirit always appears alongside the anima or soul, and vice versa, whether we like it or not:
"At the very moment of a new psychological move, we hear animus voices, driving us from it by spiritualizing the experience into abstractions, extracting its meaning, carrying it into actions, dogmatizing it into general principles, or using it to prove something. Where anima is vivid, animus enters. Similarly, when at work intellectually, or in spiritual meditation, or where courage is screwed to the sticking place, then anima invades with images and fears, with distractions of attachments and connections, telephoning, natural urges, suicidal despairs, or disturbing with ever deeper questions and puzzling unknowns. Moved by a new idea or spiritual impetus, anima is right there, wanting to make it personal, asking 'How does it relate?' and 'What about me?'
The anima--as soul, relatedness, immanence, the "thick of things"--always appears together with the transcendent animus. You can't separate them even if you tried.
We all share the same connection, as is revealed by the presence of our umbilicus. We cannot split from this source and expect to maintain a quality of life and love in the world. The Sacred Feminine has many names: Kali, Tara, Isis, Asherah, Yemaya, Guanyin, Coatlique, White Buffalo Woman, Hecate, Demeter, Persephone, and countless more. She inspired the names of lands, such as Asia, Africa, Europe and Russia, and is calling to us to re-member Her and to re-member ourselves, and re-member our Family Tree.
The thresholds of creativity we behold when we retrieve the Sacred Feminine for ourselves exist in the internal landscapes of our deep inner being. There we uncover the sacred well of the Goddess, where we can drink freely of Her nurturing waters and feel cleansed of our suffering, shedding like the snake, the ancient symbol of the Goddess, our outworn skins of despair. She is the elixir of life, the fountain of youth. Her youth lies not in an eternally youthful appearance, but in Her powers of regeneration, well-known by our ancestors.
In soul retrieval power is restored to the individual who has experienced soul loss. Soul loss is a shamanic term used to describe the loss of vital life force experienced in trauma, often linked to family of origin trauma. Lack of conscious connection to this source cuts us off from that which births and sustains us. We become detached and dissociated, losing our soul connection to the Sacred Feminine.
We must do the re-membering in order for the ancestors to inform our lives and to drink from the deep well within. Our approach includes many disciplines: archaeology, anthropology, linguistics, genetics, history, mythology,
comparative religions, psychology, poetry, and the visual arts.
Ancestor retrieval is information retrieval. Like alchemists of old, we become miners of data, trying to turn raw information and literature narratives into meaningful 'gold'. Extraction of characteristics from text is one of the main tasks in text mining. Family relationships help link people across different genealogical documents and sources.
Depth Genealogy: Retrieving Your Ancestors
"To give birth to the ancient in a new time is creation."
~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 311
For a woman, the typical danger emanating from the unconscious comes from above, from the “spiritual” sphere personified by the animus, whereas for a man it comes from the chthonic realm of the “world and woman,” i.e., the anima projected on to the world. ~Carl Jung, CW 9i, Para 559
One of the essential features of the child motif is its futurity.
The child is potential future.
Hence the occurrence of the child motif in the psychology of the individual signifies as a rule an anticipation of future developments, even though at first sight it may seem like a retrospective configuration.
Life is a flux, a flowing into the future, and not a stoppage or a backwash.
It is therefore not surprising that so many of the mythological saviours are child gods.
This agrees exactly with our experience of the psychology of the individual, which shows that the “child” paves the way for a future change of personality.
“Child” means something evolving towards independence.
This it cannot do without detaching itself from its origins: abandonment is therefore a necessary condition, not just a concomitant symptom.
~Carl Jung, CW 9i, Para 287
If we go further and consider the fact that man is also what neither he himself nor other people know of him—an unknown something which can yet be proved to exist —the problem of identity becomes more difficult still.
Indeed, it is quite impossible to define the extent and the ultimate character of psychic existence.
When we now speak of man we mean the indefinable whole of him, an ineffable totality, which can only be formulated symbolically.
I have chosen the term “self” to designate the totality of man, the sum total of his conscious and unconscious contents.
I have chosen this term in accordance with Eastern philosophy, which for centuries has occupied itself with the problems that arise when even the gods cease to incarnate. ~Carl Jung, CW 11, Para 140
Retrieval does *not* mean "going back in time" but, rather,
remembering what we've forgotten. Yes, that is a re-naissance.
In the archetypal realm, the beginning and end of days is always with us in each and every moment as the mythic dimension. Myth describes breakthroughs of the sacred into the profane or historical time.
As humans, we still live in a Tree -- the ancient World Tree of our ancestors. We can use archeomythology to retrieve the ancestors, our lost soul, and the Feminine. Deeply buried in the layers of our cellular memory are the myths and stories of the Great Goddess; therein lies a connection to the very source of healing that we so desperately seek to reground ourselves in the present.
If we are lucky, and not too dissociated, we can feel our pain. Pain becomes a portal into deep awakening, and when we are truly blessed we can hear the faint and distant echo of the voice of the Mother calling to us through our pain, as she calls to us now. Her blessing of love fills our hearts and souls with the moisture of life, as we soak it up like parched drought land, welcoming a long awaited rain.
Mystical Marriage & Groundwork
The Mystical Marriage, the union of self and the divine, soul and spirit, is a process of being reborn on multiple levels of Ascent and Descent. Genealogy is the raw material of the symbolic life. Genealogy is the groundwork of our reclamation project, which leads downward toward the dark center of our individual selves and into the fruitful mysteries of the-more-than-human world of nature and ancestral lines already etched somewhere within us.
When we encounter the soul we are more likely to say we has uncovered our unique gifts, destiny, life purpose, or personal meaning. Through soul encounter, we learns why spirit and nature gave birth to our exceptional individuality and particular way of belonging to the world. Jung said, "But your darkness should grasp the light." (Jung, Liber Novus, Page 270)
The soul path is often associated with the setting sun (and thus the direction of west), the descent to our earthy roots, into the wildness of the soil and the soul, a journey into the underworld, a voyage into darkness or shadow. We may have been taught that the downward direction is a turn away from the sacred, toward evil and wickedness, toward “hell.” Then, entering the underworld is sinful, suicidal, or a one-way trip reserved for those who have been particularly bad.
Likewise, nature has been rendered as evil. Pan, the Greek’s horned god of the forest, was transformed into the devil of Christian mythology. Most Western cultures have feared wild nature and have thought of it as unruly, a realm whose laws clash with society’s. We have, in short, been led to believe that nature and soul are not merely wild but inherently dangerous, forbidden, tainted, or evil.
We 'descendants' are the embodiment of descent itself. The initial goal of the descent is to cultivate the ego/soul relationship, which is underworld business, that might, at first, make our surface lives more difficult or lonely, or less comfortable, secure, or happy. Soul practices prepare the old self-ego to abandon its social stability and psychological composure and to be reassigned through initiation as an active, adult agent for soul, as opposed to its former role as an adolescent agent for itself.
This journey of descent prepares us to live in the world with its harsh need to change us, and shows us where and how to make our stand on solid groundwork, firmly and uniquely. On this half of the spiritual journey, we do not rise toward heaven but fall toward the center of our longing. Although equally sacred and perhaps even more ancient than the journey of ascent, this second spiritual realm may be unfamiliar.
The concept of soul embraces the essence of our particular individuality while spirit is universal. Spirit and soul are both sacred; they imbue life with meaning, beauty, and mystery. Spirit and soul are both spiritual or transpersonal—they exist beyond the personal, beyond the conventional mind or personality. They might each be referred to as the “sacred Other.”
Thomas Moore, in Care of the Soul says whereas in spirit, "we reach for consciousness, awareness, and the highest values," soul "has to do with depth, value, relatedness, heart and personal substance."
Spirit wants to go toward beyond every unseen horizon; soul wants to remain in the world and its complexity, to stay within. Spirit wants transcendence; soul wants immanence. Spirit would leave all worldliness behind to escape to heaven, while soul wants to find heaven on earth and in all the earth's messiness.
The inseparable roots systems of the genealogical discipline are mystical practices and healing traditions, providing direct experience of present centered awareness, the numinous, heartful healing, and an embodied awakening, summoning the soul toward a return, a reunion with the origin and the eternal.
The descent into our genealogical roots in the 'land of the dead' has its own rewards both independent of the ascent and in conjunction with it. As Rilke wrote:
"If we surrendered to earth’s intelligence we could rise up rooted, like trees."
The rooting (of trees, of our selves) is as important and as necessary as the rising. We have the opportunity to sink roots into soul and rise up with branches in heaven.
"If we surrendered to earth’s intelligence we could root down ascendant, like trees." Our spiritual growth is meant to go toward the fertile darkness and the glorious light, each of us having the opportunity to bridge earth and heaven—the underworld and the upper world—through the trunks of our middle world lives.
Rilke saw the intrinsic value of darkness: "You darkness from which I come, I love you more than all the fires that fence out the world, for the fire makes a circle for everyone so that no one sees you anymore."
Hierosgamos
Heirosgamos is a mystic marriage or union. Symbolized in alchemy by the coniunctio, it stands for conjunction of conscious and unconscious. Mysterium Coniunctionis ("mysterious conjunction") is the final alchemical synthesis (for Jung, of ego and unconscious, matter and spirit, male and female) that brings forth the Philosopher's Stone (the Self). Its highest aspect, as for alchemist Gerard Dorn, was the unus mundus, a unification of the Stone with body, soul, and spirit.
Moore says neither spirit nor soul can work without the other.
In fact, they need to be married to each other:
"Spirit tends to shoot off on its own in ambition, fanaticism, fundamentalism, and perfectionism. Soul gets stuck in its soupy moods, impossible relationships, and obsessive preoccupations. For the marriage to take place, each has to learn to appreciate the other and to be affected by the other--spirit's loftiness tempered by the soul's lowly limitations, soul's unconsciousness stirred by ideas and imagination."
Transcendence must remember its immanent context, and immanence must remember its transcendent implications. However, this marriage isn't just a metaphor. According to Jungian psychology, spirit and soul have definite masculine and feminine correspondences, respectively. The archetype of spirit is what Jungians call the animus, defined as the archetype of masculine being, whereas soul corresponds to the anima as the archetype of primordial femininity. This association deeper than any superficial definition of gender.
In his book Anima: An Anatomy of a Personified Notion, James Hillman talks about the way the animus or spirit always appears alongside the anima or soul, and vice versa, whether we like it or not:
"At the very moment of a new psychological move, we hear animus voices, driving us from it by spiritualizing the experience into abstractions, extracting its meaning, carrying it into actions, dogmatizing it into general principles, or using it to prove something. Where anima is vivid, animus enters. Similarly, when at work intellectually, or in spiritual meditation, or where courage is screwed to the sticking place, then anima invades with images and fears, with distractions of attachments and connections, telephoning, natural urges, suicidal despairs, or disturbing with ever deeper questions and puzzling unknowns. Moved by a new idea or spiritual impetus, anima is right there, wanting to make it personal, asking 'How does it relate?' and 'What about me?'
The anima--as soul, relatedness, immanence, the "thick of things"--always appears together with the transcendent animus. You can't separate them even if you tried.
We all share the same connection, as is revealed by the presence of our umbilicus. We cannot split from this source and expect to maintain a quality of life and love in the world. The Sacred Feminine has many names: Kali, Tara, Isis, Asherah, Yemaya, Guanyin, Coatlique, White Buffalo Woman, Hecate, Demeter, Persephone, and countless more. She inspired the names of lands, such as Asia, Africa, Europe and Russia, and is calling to us to re-member Her and to re-member ourselves, and re-member our Family Tree.
The thresholds of creativity we behold when we retrieve the Sacred Feminine for ourselves exist in the internal landscapes of our deep inner being. There we uncover the sacred well of the Goddess, where we can drink freely of Her nurturing waters and feel cleansed of our suffering, shedding like the snake, the ancient symbol of the Goddess, our outworn skins of despair. She is the elixir of life, the fountain of youth. Her youth lies not in an eternally youthful appearance, but in Her powers of regeneration, well-known by our ancestors.
In soul retrieval power is restored to the individual who has experienced soul loss. Soul loss is a shamanic term used to describe the loss of vital life force experienced in trauma, often linked to family of origin trauma. Lack of conscious connection to this source cuts us off from that which births and sustains us. We become detached and dissociated, losing our soul connection to the Sacred Feminine.
We must do the re-membering in order for the ancestors to inform our lives and to drink from the deep well within. Our approach includes many disciplines: archaeology, anthropology, linguistics, genetics, history, mythology,
comparative religions, psychology, poetry, and the visual arts.
Ancestor retrieval is information retrieval. Like alchemists of old, we become miners of data, trying to turn raw information and literature narratives into meaningful 'gold'. Extraction of characteristics from text is one of the main tasks in text mining. Family relationships help link people across different genealogical documents and sources.
Grof's Perinatal Matrices
Basic Perinatal Matrix I,
Basic Perinatal Matrix II,
Basic Perinatal Matrix III,
Basic Perinatal Matrix IV.
These matrices correspond roughly to the different stages of the child’s development in the uterus, and its birth through the birth canal. The first Basic Perinatal Matrix corresponds from the time of conception up until the first intrauterine contraction. The second Basic Perinatal Matrix lasts during the time of intrauterine contractions to the entering into the birth canal. The third Basic Perinatal Matrix is completed at the time of passage of the fetus through the birth canal. Finally, the forth Basic Perinatal Matrix is represented from the beginning of birth as an independent body.
Grof's Basic Perinatal Matrices, summarized in his own words
BPM I:
The biological basis of this matrix is the experience of the original symbiotic unity of the fetus with the [mother].... Archetypal images from the collective unconscious that can be selectively reached in this state involve the heavens or paradises of different cultures of the world. The experience of the first matrix also involves elements of cosmic unity or mystical union.
BPM II:
This experiential pattern is related to the very onset of biological delivery....the original equilibrium of the intrauterine existence is disturbed....Very characteristic for this stage is the experience of a three-dimensional spiral, funnel, or whirlpool, sucking the subject relentlessly towards its center....The corresponding mythological theme seems to be the beginning of the hero's journey....Agonizing feelings of metaphysical loneliness, helplessness, inferiority, existential despair, and guilt are standard constituents of this matrix.
BPM III:
Many important aspects of this complex experiential matrix can be understood from its association with the second clinical stage of biological delivery....This involves an enormous struggle for survival, crushing mechanical pressure, and often a high degree of anoxia and suffocation....[Themes of BPM III include the] titanic fight, sadomasochistic experiences, intense sexual arousal, demonic episodes, scatalogical involvement, and encounter with fire. All these occur in the context of a determined death-rebirth struggle....Related archetypal themes are images of the Last Judgement, the extraordinary feats of superheroes, and mythological battles of cosmic proportions involving demons and angels or gods and Titans....[BPM III experiences] combine sex with death, danger, biological material, aggression, self-destructive impulses, physical pain, and spirituality.
BPM IV:
This perinatal matrix is meaningfully related to the third clinical stage of delivery, the actual birth of the child. In this final stage, the agonizing process of the birth struggle comes to an end....The symbolic counterpart of this final stage of delivery is the death-rebirth experience....The transition from BPM III to BPM IV involves a sense of annihilation on all imaginable levels--physical destruction, emotional debacle, intellectual defeat, ultimate moral failure, and absolute damnation of transcendental proportions.This experience of "ego death" seems to entail an instant merciless destruction all previous reference points in the life of the individual....[after which]The subject experiences a deep sense of spiritual liberation, redemption, and salvation.
More:
http://ancestorsandarchetypes.weebly.com/grof-perinatal-matrices.html
Basic Perinatal Matrix I,
Basic Perinatal Matrix II,
Basic Perinatal Matrix III,
Basic Perinatal Matrix IV.
These matrices correspond roughly to the different stages of the child’s development in the uterus, and its birth through the birth canal. The first Basic Perinatal Matrix corresponds from the time of conception up until the first intrauterine contraction. The second Basic Perinatal Matrix lasts during the time of intrauterine contractions to the entering into the birth canal. The third Basic Perinatal Matrix is completed at the time of passage of the fetus through the birth canal. Finally, the forth Basic Perinatal Matrix is represented from the beginning of birth as an independent body.
Grof's Basic Perinatal Matrices, summarized in his own words
BPM I:
The biological basis of this matrix is the experience of the original symbiotic unity of the fetus with the [mother].... Archetypal images from the collective unconscious that can be selectively reached in this state involve the heavens or paradises of different cultures of the world. The experience of the first matrix also involves elements of cosmic unity or mystical union.
BPM II:
This experiential pattern is related to the very onset of biological delivery....the original equilibrium of the intrauterine existence is disturbed....Very characteristic for this stage is the experience of a three-dimensional spiral, funnel, or whirlpool, sucking the subject relentlessly towards its center....The corresponding mythological theme seems to be the beginning of the hero's journey....Agonizing feelings of metaphysical loneliness, helplessness, inferiority, existential despair, and guilt are standard constituents of this matrix.
BPM III:
Many important aspects of this complex experiential matrix can be understood from its association with the second clinical stage of biological delivery....This involves an enormous struggle for survival, crushing mechanical pressure, and often a high degree of anoxia and suffocation....[Themes of BPM III include the] titanic fight, sadomasochistic experiences, intense sexual arousal, demonic episodes, scatalogical involvement, and encounter with fire. All these occur in the context of a determined death-rebirth struggle....Related archetypal themes are images of the Last Judgement, the extraordinary feats of superheroes, and mythological battles of cosmic proportions involving demons and angels or gods and Titans....[BPM III experiences] combine sex with death, danger, biological material, aggression, self-destructive impulses, physical pain, and spirituality.
BPM IV:
This perinatal matrix is meaningfully related to the third clinical stage of delivery, the actual birth of the child. In this final stage, the agonizing process of the birth struggle comes to an end....The symbolic counterpart of this final stage of delivery is the death-rebirth experience....The transition from BPM III to BPM IV involves a sense of annihilation on all imaginable levels--physical destruction, emotional debacle, intellectual defeat, ultimate moral failure, and absolute damnation of transcendental proportions.This experience of "ego death" seems to entail an instant merciless destruction all previous reference points in the life of the individual....[after which]The subject experiences a deep sense of spiritual liberation, redemption, and salvation.
More:
http://ancestorsandarchetypes.weebly.com/grof-perinatal-matrices.html
Reubens
FORBIDDEN FRUIT
Healing Across Life Lines
"I myself was, so it seemed, in the Pardes Rimmonim, the garden of pomegranates, and the wedding of Tifereth with Malchuth was taking place. Or else I was Rabbi Simon ben Jochai, whose wedding in the afterlife was being celebrated. It was the mystic marriage as it appears in the Cabbalistic tradition. I cannot tell you how wonderful it was. I could only think continually, “Now this is the garden of pomegranates! Now this is the marriage of Malchuth with Tifereth!” I do not know exactly what part I played in it. At bottom it was I myself: I was the marriage. And my beatitude was that of a blissful wedding."
(C. G. Jung, Memories, dreams, reflections" (A. Jaffe, Ed.). New York: Random House, 1961, p. 293)
Apart from Elijah and Salome I found the serpent as a third principle. It is a stranger to both principles although it is associated with both. The serpent taught me the unconditional difference in essence between the two principles in me. ~Carl Jung and Elijah, Liber Novus, Page 247.
Healing Across Life Lines
"I myself was, so it seemed, in the Pardes Rimmonim, the garden of pomegranates, and the wedding of Tifereth with Malchuth was taking place. Or else I was Rabbi Simon ben Jochai, whose wedding in the afterlife was being celebrated. It was the mystic marriage as it appears in the Cabbalistic tradition. I cannot tell you how wonderful it was. I could only think continually, “Now this is the garden of pomegranates! Now this is the marriage of Malchuth with Tifereth!” I do not know exactly what part I played in it. At bottom it was I myself: I was the marriage. And my beatitude was that of a blissful wedding."
(C. G. Jung, Memories, dreams, reflections" (A. Jaffe, Ed.). New York: Random House, 1961, p. 293)
Apart from Elijah and Salome I found the serpent as a third principle. It is a stranger to both principles although it is associated with both. The serpent taught me the unconditional difference in essence between the two principles in me. ~Carl Jung and Elijah, Liber Novus, Page 247.
She:
Oh why do the leaves Of the Mulberry tree Whisper differently now And why is the nightingale singing At noon on the Mulberry bow For some most mysterious reason This isn't the garden I know No it's paradise now That was only a garden A moment ago |
He:
Take my hand I'm a stranger in paradise All lost in a wonderland A stranger in paradise If I stand starry-eyed That's a danger in paradise For mortals who stand beside An angel like you --Stranger in Paradise, Kismet |
Where are apples mentioned in scripture? No, not the Garden of Eden. The fruit of the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil was never named. Apples and apple trees in particular, are mentioned in the Song of Solomon, God's love song to His people. The verse describes the meeting of the young woman and her sweetheart:
"Who is this coming up from the wilderness, leaning upon her beloved? I awakened you under the apple tree. ... Place me like a seal over your heart...." - Song of Solomon 8:5
So if the Song of Solomon is an allegory of God's relationship with us, then the apple tree represents the place where God and I meet, where we connect, and our relationship is forged.
*
Pomegranate seeds sprout readily in the right environment. They became a symbol for fertility. Some believe the pomegranate was the forbidden fruit, not the apple, but its Latin name literally means "apple with many seeds."
In kabbalah the Spheres of the Tree of Life are likened to pomegranates. Gods and angels attend to the Tree of Life. A garden is the fantastic place in which to contemplate beauty and the mysteries of nature. A magic place, a safe haven, where man by tending flowers, plants and trees, nurtures the most intimate and delicate part of his being: a garden is a place of the soul. So is our genealogy where we cultivate the fruitful rows of our lineage.
The Spheres relate to major metaphysical concepts, as levels within the Divinity. The Tree of Life in the Kabbalah is the plan used for the creation of the worlds, and the descending path along which souls and creatures have attained their current forms.
In the gematria, the doctrine which attributes a numerical value to every letter, the value of "Pomegranate Garden" is 700 which is equivalent to "the one Lord God".
The Pomegranate Garden is thus equivalent to an affirmation of faith.
Symbolism is a primary and unavoidable for mysticism, that intuitively penetrates the veil of the deepest mystery. It is a means of communication which allows for the message to be adapted to the level of knowledge of the recipient. The special nature of symbolic communication is that it is open to differing levels of interpretation, depending on the level of the reader himself... For those who know and who possess the right key for interpretation and the right sensitivity one single symbolic cue - even in pictorial form - can open wide a world of analogies and implications.
Such is the nature of the pomegranate with its scarlet blossoms, as symbol. In all the cultures of the Near East, the pomegranate has always been seen as a symbol of fertility, fecundity and thus prosperity. This is because of the spherical structure of its fruit, its ruby red color and the countless seeds it contains. In antiquity it was associated with the cult of the Mother Goddess.
For example, in the motif of the tree of life, the multiplication of the subject, prior to having a decorative function, represents the expansion of an important idea, which conceals itself as it reveals itself. The symbolic function is potentially to link people around the same meaning, an experience which can be shared even by people of different generations, so as to create a bridge, a commonality of feeling and a spiritual affinity.
Commonly taken as fertility symbols, in Iraq pinecones and pomegranates are traditionally symbols of unity. In Christian symbolism, the pomegranate represents "multiplicity in unity as the Church, with the seeds as its many members" and, secondarily, "regeneration and resurrection," self-renewal, and victory over death immortality, longevity, victory over death. Ancestral knowledge of forever time.
A carpet is the reflection of this ideal place. The carpet-garden allows us to satisfy our aesthetic and his spiritual sensibility, by setting aside a place for meditation and prayer. A carpet is a space in which the stories of the world can be read, for those multi-colored outlines are traces of myths and legends, principles and life forces, being and becoming and the cosmic cycle. The carpet, a small bounded and decorated space just like a garden, is thus itself a garden of the soul.
The fleshy fruits with numerous blood-red seeds are a good symbol for multiple descendants. From earliest times, the pomegranate has been the fruit of fertility, of death and rebirth, of hope -- and guardian against the evil eye. The folktale goes, "Three pomegranates fell down from heaven: One for the story teller, one for the listener, and one for the whole world."
The "fruit of the gods," or "fruit of heaven," pomegranate is s Semitic symbol of life, abundance and wealth. In the Babylonian empire the fruit was served at weddings and represented the symbol of love and fertility. The pomegranate symbolized the soul’s immortality -- eternal life -- and the perfection of nature for Zoroastrians.
But, maybe it was also a "forbidden fruit." Pomegranate seeds were used by women of antiquity as a hormonal contraceptive. Taken regularly, it prohibited pregnancy during treatment. So, the forbidden fruit is about the knowledge of good and evil, sex, and reproductive power -- to have fertility or knowingly thwart it with reduced fertility rates.
A paradoxical union of opposites it symbolizes both fertility and contraceptive. Modern testing has shown that pomegranate does have contraceptive effects. The uterine contracting property of these fruits may cause serious hazard like abortion, when consumed in early trimesters of pregnancy. Contraction-stimulating compounds increase the chances of miscarriage. In ancient times pomegranate seeds were used as abortifacient.
Hippocrates and others prescribed the seeds and rind of the pomegranate to prevent conception. Oestrone, a compound that is identical to estrogen, is found in high levels in pomegranate seeds. The seeds have tested as the highest concentration of oestrone among all plants.
Soranus writes about six contraceptive and abortive recipes for vaginal suppositories, five of which use the rind or peel of a pomegranate, in addition to recommendations for pomegranate as an oral contraceptive. There are other well known religious traditions involving the testimony of pomegranate as an oral contraceptive.
Pomegranate and its distinctive ruby-red jewel-like seeds have been used for medicinal purposes for thousands of years. Ayurveda uses pomegranate as a contraceptive and abortifacient. Consuming the seeds, pulp, or rind is supplemented by using the rind as a vaginal suppository. This practice is recorded in ancient Indian literature, in medieval sources, and in modern folk medicine.
In ancient Greek mythology this fruit was the symbol of life, marriage and rebirth in the abduction story of Persephone by Hades, the god of the underworld, who abducted her to the land of the dead. Pomegranates, as a symbol of fertility, were used in the worship of Demeter during her ancient festival. The third and final day, the Calligenera, was devoted to the fertility of women where eating of pomegranate seeds was an important part of the rituals.
In Asia the pomegranate played a part in the wedding ceremony. The guests were provided with pomegranates and were told to throw them sharply upon the floor of the newlywed’s honeymoon room, scattering the seeds. This ritual was intended to encourage a fruitful union and many children. Jewish tradition teaches that the pomegranate is a symbol for righteousness and fruitfulness.
Likewise, the pomegranate is the Armenian symbol of fertility, abundance and marriage. A bride was given a pomegranate fruit, which she threw against a wall, breaking it into pieces. Scattered pomegranate seeds ensured the bride future children. In medieval legend the pomegranate tree is a symbol of abundance and fertility and an important feature in the hunt for the magical unicorn. Once Adam sprouts his own 'tree' in the garden, human descent begins.
Symbolically, "forbidden fruit" with its unconscious meanings can be relational difficulties, incest, or illegitimate descent -- the fruit of unwed or unwanted unions, or mythically-rooted cross cousin marriage. Just one adoption or family secret can lead to long lost family lines, only retrievable through genetic genealogy.
Yet, unknown family patterns and traits have a way of being passed along. Cross-cousin marriage, designed to keep power and assets in the family, is based on the archetype of the quaternio.
Because we do not tend to live out such archaic patterns in modern life, the dynamic is pushed down into the unconscious. But we can see it in our genealogy, especially when it is practiced through generations; it is called pedigree collapse. Reproduction between two individuals who share an ancestor causes the number of distinct ancestors in the family tree of their offspring to be smaller than it could otherwise be.
A single individual alive today would, over 30 generations going back to the High Middle Ages, have roughly a billion ancestors -- more than the total world population at the time. This apparent paradox is explained by shared ancestors, referred to as pedigree collapse. Instead of consisting of all unique individuals, a tree may have multiple places occupied by a single individual. This typically happens when the parents of an ancestor are related to each other (sometimes unknown to themselves).
When cousins marry, you get inbreeding, ancestor paradox, pedigree collapse or the 'family braid'. Instead of having all different ancestors, the same couple appears more than once in your pedigree. First cousins share a pair of grandparents, for example, so any children they have will show one pair of great-grand-parents ‘repeated’ in their pedigree.
Pedigree collapse is caused by inbreeding; both recent close breeding and more distant founder effects. When a breeder inbreeds they are cutting the pedigree pyramid of their stock down dramatically. When two cousins mate, they have actually permanently cut out 25% of the possible ancestors for their offspring.
Within the same general population, the chances are almost 100% that your spouse is a distant cousin, and you share a common ancestor from 20 generations ago. Once you go back 20 generations (a million distinct ancestors), you are almost guaranteed to see a common ancestor, and all ancestors of the common ancestor reduce the overall number of unique ancestors.
This early form of mating that ensured that endogenous (kinship) libido -- incest -- held the family together but didn't overpower exogamous libido. The endogamous side wants a sister, the exogamous urge desires a stranger, so marrying a cousin balances the two. Marriage of a man's sister to his wife's brother is a relic of the "sister-exchange marriage" of many primitive tribes and the basis of alliance theory.
Native Americans could not marry cousins from the father's line, but they could marry cousins from their mother's line. This was called cross-cousin marriage.
Preferential cross-cousin marriage exists in Tibet, Nepal, Pakistan, Africa, and elsewhere.
Levi-Strauss also discovered that a wide range of historically unrelated cultures had the rule that individuals should marry their cross-cousin, meaning children of siblings of the opposite sex - from a male perspective that is either the FZD (father's sister's daughter in kinship abbreviation) or the MBD (mother's brother's daughter in kinship abbreviation). Accordingly, he grouped all possible kinship systems into a scheme containing three basic kinship structures, constructed out of two types of exchange. He called the three kinship structures elementary, semi-complex and complex.
Common reasons behind cousin marriages are:
a) Better to marry in a family we know so that the bride/groom can adjust to their new life easily.
b) Better marry within the family so that our `wealth' does not go out.
c) Better marry within the family because we are better/superior than others.
d) Better marry within the family so disputes can be settled easily, reducing the likelihood of divorce.
e)Agreements are made by parents who are usually related.
Such marriage between 'the respective descendants of a brother and a sister', 'despite the very close degree of consanguinity between the spouses, is regarded as an ideal'. Bilateral cross-cousin marriage is often prescribed.
Diamond Pedigree Collapse -- How the shape of your genealogy expands & contracts with increasing occurrence of cousin marriages the further back you go.
https://www.pinterest.com/pin/369435975654167827/
If we consider as a function of time t the number of a given individual's ancestors who were alive at time t, it is likely that for most individuals this function has a maximum at around 1200 AD. Some geneticists believe that everyone on Earth is at most 50th cousin to everyone else. We are born, we fruit, and die.
BEST ROYAL DESCENT
A royal descent is a lineal descent from a past or present monarch. Royal descent is sometimes claimed as a mark of distinction and is seen as a desirable goal of genealogy. Pretenders, impostors and those hoping to improve their social status have often claimed royal descent and some have fabricated lineages.
There were at least 650 colonists with traceable royal ancestry, and 387 left descendants in America (almost always numbering many thousands, and some as many as one million). Due to primogeniture, many colonists of high social status were younger children of English aristocratic families who came to America looking for land because, given their birth order, they could not inherit. Many of these immigrants initially enjoyed high standing where they settled. They could often claim royal descent through a female line or illegitimate descent.
The idea is that the "best" Royal descent is the descent from the most recent Monarch. In other words, a descent from a youngest son of Edward III of England (d. 1377) is considered "better" than descent from a daughter of Edward I of England (d. 1307).
One wrinkle in the idea of "best" is when the person is descended from
Monarchs of two different countries. In the past, several researchers would hold that a descent from any English king (such as Edward I, d. 1307) was "better" than a descent from any Scottish king (such as Robert III, d. 1406), but all of the major genealogy researchers have switched over to the strictly chronological definition.
A descent from, say, Henry VII, is "better" than a descent from Edward III ---- because it means that one is descended from some of those monarchs in between [Henry IV, Henry V, Henry VI, Edward IV] ---- giving a greater overall count of Total Overall Royal Descents [TORD].
By the same token, a descent from Queen Victoria would be far better, but not if your main interest is archaic royal lines prior to the Donation of Constantine, which allowed the church to choose merchant kings, rather than ancient lineage heirs.
"Genealogy is an infinite progressive and regressive binary series, propagated by means of a terminal, sexually transmitted disease, producing a 100% death rate -- which we call Life." [DSH] -- 4 June 1997
"Who is this coming up from the wilderness, leaning upon her beloved? I awakened you under the apple tree. ... Place me like a seal over your heart...." - Song of Solomon 8:5
So if the Song of Solomon is an allegory of God's relationship with us, then the apple tree represents the place where God and I meet, where we connect, and our relationship is forged.
*
Pomegranate seeds sprout readily in the right environment. They became a symbol for fertility. Some believe the pomegranate was the forbidden fruit, not the apple, but its Latin name literally means "apple with many seeds."
In kabbalah the Spheres of the Tree of Life are likened to pomegranates. Gods and angels attend to the Tree of Life. A garden is the fantastic place in which to contemplate beauty and the mysteries of nature. A magic place, a safe haven, where man by tending flowers, plants and trees, nurtures the most intimate and delicate part of his being: a garden is a place of the soul. So is our genealogy where we cultivate the fruitful rows of our lineage.
The Spheres relate to major metaphysical concepts, as levels within the Divinity. The Tree of Life in the Kabbalah is the plan used for the creation of the worlds, and the descending path along which souls and creatures have attained their current forms.
In the gematria, the doctrine which attributes a numerical value to every letter, the value of "Pomegranate Garden" is 700 which is equivalent to "the one Lord God".
The Pomegranate Garden is thus equivalent to an affirmation of faith.
Symbolism is a primary and unavoidable for mysticism, that intuitively penetrates the veil of the deepest mystery. It is a means of communication which allows for the message to be adapted to the level of knowledge of the recipient. The special nature of symbolic communication is that it is open to differing levels of interpretation, depending on the level of the reader himself... For those who know and who possess the right key for interpretation and the right sensitivity one single symbolic cue - even in pictorial form - can open wide a world of analogies and implications.
Such is the nature of the pomegranate with its scarlet blossoms, as symbol. In all the cultures of the Near East, the pomegranate has always been seen as a symbol of fertility, fecundity and thus prosperity. This is because of the spherical structure of its fruit, its ruby red color and the countless seeds it contains. In antiquity it was associated with the cult of the Mother Goddess.
For example, in the motif of the tree of life, the multiplication of the subject, prior to having a decorative function, represents the expansion of an important idea, which conceals itself as it reveals itself. The symbolic function is potentially to link people around the same meaning, an experience which can be shared even by people of different generations, so as to create a bridge, a commonality of feeling and a spiritual affinity.
Commonly taken as fertility symbols, in Iraq pinecones and pomegranates are traditionally symbols of unity. In Christian symbolism, the pomegranate represents "multiplicity in unity as the Church, with the seeds as its many members" and, secondarily, "regeneration and resurrection," self-renewal, and victory over death immortality, longevity, victory over death. Ancestral knowledge of forever time.
A carpet is the reflection of this ideal place. The carpet-garden allows us to satisfy our aesthetic and his spiritual sensibility, by setting aside a place for meditation and prayer. A carpet is a space in which the stories of the world can be read, for those multi-colored outlines are traces of myths and legends, principles and life forces, being and becoming and the cosmic cycle. The carpet, a small bounded and decorated space just like a garden, is thus itself a garden of the soul.
The fleshy fruits with numerous blood-red seeds are a good symbol for multiple descendants. From earliest times, the pomegranate has been the fruit of fertility, of death and rebirth, of hope -- and guardian against the evil eye. The folktale goes, "Three pomegranates fell down from heaven: One for the story teller, one for the listener, and one for the whole world."
The "fruit of the gods," or "fruit of heaven," pomegranate is s Semitic symbol of life, abundance and wealth. In the Babylonian empire the fruit was served at weddings and represented the symbol of love and fertility. The pomegranate symbolized the soul’s immortality -- eternal life -- and the perfection of nature for Zoroastrians.
But, maybe it was also a "forbidden fruit." Pomegranate seeds were used by women of antiquity as a hormonal contraceptive. Taken regularly, it prohibited pregnancy during treatment. So, the forbidden fruit is about the knowledge of good and evil, sex, and reproductive power -- to have fertility or knowingly thwart it with reduced fertility rates.
A paradoxical union of opposites it symbolizes both fertility and contraceptive. Modern testing has shown that pomegranate does have contraceptive effects. The uterine contracting property of these fruits may cause serious hazard like abortion, when consumed in early trimesters of pregnancy. Contraction-stimulating compounds increase the chances of miscarriage. In ancient times pomegranate seeds were used as abortifacient.
Hippocrates and others prescribed the seeds and rind of the pomegranate to prevent conception. Oestrone, a compound that is identical to estrogen, is found in high levels in pomegranate seeds. The seeds have tested as the highest concentration of oestrone among all plants.
Soranus writes about six contraceptive and abortive recipes for vaginal suppositories, five of which use the rind or peel of a pomegranate, in addition to recommendations for pomegranate as an oral contraceptive. There are other well known religious traditions involving the testimony of pomegranate as an oral contraceptive.
Pomegranate and its distinctive ruby-red jewel-like seeds have been used for medicinal purposes for thousands of years. Ayurveda uses pomegranate as a contraceptive and abortifacient. Consuming the seeds, pulp, or rind is supplemented by using the rind as a vaginal suppository. This practice is recorded in ancient Indian literature, in medieval sources, and in modern folk medicine.
In ancient Greek mythology this fruit was the symbol of life, marriage and rebirth in the abduction story of Persephone by Hades, the god of the underworld, who abducted her to the land of the dead. Pomegranates, as a symbol of fertility, were used in the worship of Demeter during her ancient festival. The third and final day, the Calligenera, was devoted to the fertility of women where eating of pomegranate seeds was an important part of the rituals.
In Asia the pomegranate played a part in the wedding ceremony. The guests were provided with pomegranates and were told to throw them sharply upon the floor of the newlywed’s honeymoon room, scattering the seeds. This ritual was intended to encourage a fruitful union and many children. Jewish tradition teaches that the pomegranate is a symbol for righteousness and fruitfulness.
Likewise, the pomegranate is the Armenian symbol of fertility, abundance and marriage. A bride was given a pomegranate fruit, which she threw against a wall, breaking it into pieces. Scattered pomegranate seeds ensured the bride future children. In medieval legend the pomegranate tree is a symbol of abundance and fertility and an important feature in the hunt for the magical unicorn. Once Adam sprouts his own 'tree' in the garden, human descent begins.
Symbolically, "forbidden fruit" with its unconscious meanings can be relational difficulties, incest, or illegitimate descent -- the fruit of unwed or unwanted unions, or mythically-rooted cross cousin marriage. Just one adoption or family secret can lead to long lost family lines, only retrievable through genetic genealogy.
Yet, unknown family patterns and traits have a way of being passed along. Cross-cousin marriage, designed to keep power and assets in the family, is based on the archetype of the quaternio.
Because we do not tend to live out such archaic patterns in modern life, the dynamic is pushed down into the unconscious. But we can see it in our genealogy, especially when it is practiced through generations; it is called pedigree collapse. Reproduction between two individuals who share an ancestor causes the number of distinct ancestors in the family tree of their offspring to be smaller than it could otherwise be.
A single individual alive today would, over 30 generations going back to the High Middle Ages, have roughly a billion ancestors -- more than the total world population at the time. This apparent paradox is explained by shared ancestors, referred to as pedigree collapse. Instead of consisting of all unique individuals, a tree may have multiple places occupied by a single individual. This typically happens when the parents of an ancestor are related to each other (sometimes unknown to themselves).
When cousins marry, you get inbreeding, ancestor paradox, pedigree collapse or the 'family braid'. Instead of having all different ancestors, the same couple appears more than once in your pedigree. First cousins share a pair of grandparents, for example, so any children they have will show one pair of great-grand-parents ‘repeated’ in their pedigree.
Pedigree collapse is caused by inbreeding; both recent close breeding and more distant founder effects. When a breeder inbreeds they are cutting the pedigree pyramid of their stock down dramatically. When two cousins mate, they have actually permanently cut out 25% of the possible ancestors for their offspring.
Within the same general population, the chances are almost 100% that your spouse is a distant cousin, and you share a common ancestor from 20 generations ago. Once you go back 20 generations (a million distinct ancestors), you are almost guaranteed to see a common ancestor, and all ancestors of the common ancestor reduce the overall number of unique ancestors.
This early form of mating that ensured that endogenous (kinship) libido -- incest -- held the family together but didn't overpower exogamous libido. The endogamous side wants a sister, the exogamous urge desires a stranger, so marrying a cousin balances the two. Marriage of a man's sister to his wife's brother is a relic of the "sister-exchange marriage" of many primitive tribes and the basis of alliance theory.
Native Americans could not marry cousins from the father's line, but they could marry cousins from their mother's line. This was called cross-cousin marriage.
Preferential cross-cousin marriage exists in Tibet, Nepal, Pakistan, Africa, and elsewhere.
Levi-Strauss also discovered that a wide range of historically unrelated cultures had the rule that individuals should marry their cross-cousin, meaning children of siblings of the opposite sex - from a male perspective that is either the FZD (father's sister's daughter in kinship abbreviation) or the MBD (mother's brother's daughter in kinship abbreviation). Accordingly, he grouped all possible kinship systems into a scheme containing three basic kinship structures, constructed out of two types of exchange. He called the three kinship structures elementary, semi-complex and complex.
Common reasons behind cousin marriages are:
a) Better to marry in a family we know so that the bride/groom can adjust to their new life easily.
b) Better marry within the family so that our `wealth' does not go out.
c) Better marry within the family because we are better/superior than others.
d) Better marry within the family so disputes can be settled easily, reducing the likelihood of divorce.
e)Agreements are made by parents who are usually related.
Such marriage between 'the respective descendants of a brother and a sister', 'despite the very close degree of consanguinity between the spouses, is regarded as an ideal'. Bilateral cross-cousin marriage is often prescribed.
Diamond Pedigree Collapse -- How the shape of your genealogy expands & contracts with increasing occurrence of cousin marriages the further back you go.
https://www.pinterest.com/pin/369435975654167827/
If we consider as a function of time t the number of a given individual's ancestors who were alive at time t, it is likely that for most individuals this function has a maximum at around 1200 AD. Some geneticists believe that everyone on Earth is at most 50th cousin to everyone else. We are born, we fruit, and die.
BEST ROYAL DESCENT
A royal descent is a lineal descent from a past or present monarch. Royal descent is sometimes claimed as a mark of distinction and is seen as a desirable goal of genealogy. Pretenders, impostors and those hoping to improve their social status have often claimed royal descent and some have fabricated lineages.
There were at least 650 colonists with traceable royal ancestry, and 387 left descendants in America (almost always numbering many thousands, and some as many as one million). Due to primogeniture, many colonists of high social status were younger children of English aristocratic families who came to America looking for land because, given their birth order, they could not inherit. Many of these immigrants initially enjoyed high standing where they settled. They could often claim royal descent through a female line or illegitimate descent.
The idea is that the "best" Royal descent is the descent from the most recent Monarch. In other words, a descent from a youngest son of Edward III of England (d. 1377) is considered "better" than descent from a daughter of Edward I of England (d. 1307).
One wrinkle in the idea of "best" is when the person is descended from
Monarchs of two different countries. In the past, several researchers would hold that a descent from any English king (such as Edward I, d. 1307) was "better" than a descent from any Scottish king (such as Robert III, d. 1406), but all of the major genealogy researchers have switched over to the strictly chronological definition.
A descent from, say, Henry VII, is "better" than a descent from Edward III ---- because it means that one is descended from some of those monarchs in between [Henry IV, Henry V, Henry VI, Edward IV] ---- giving a greater overall count of Total Overall Royal Descents [TORD].
By the same token, a descent from Queen Victoria would be far better, but not if your main interest is archaic royal lines prior to the Donation of Constantine, which allowed the church to choose merchant kings, rather than ancient lineage heirs.
"Genealogy is an infinite progressive and regressive binary series, propagated by means of a terminal, sexually transmitted disease, producing a 100% death rate -- which we call Life." [DSH] -- 4 June 1997
THE HIDDEN LIFE OF FAMILY TREES
Sap is a Living Symbol of the Tree
Sap is a Living Symbol of the Tree
Connecting with the vitality of our lineage -- the living sap of the Tree -- elevates the mind and sublimes the thought. It is less about a "me generation" story than a grand "story of us" that ranges beyond illusions of time, space, and ego. We can cultivate the Elysian Fields of our ancestors to good effect. Thus, genealogy can be a transformative art. The Grail is a Mystery and the search for it is a Quest for self-actualization, a way of initiation.
Genealogy contains a spiritual healing potential, the living sap of the Tree, a manifestation of the sacred. It is a Grail banquet of cultures, customs and symbolism. The spirit, by death or enlightenment, will produce the pure, perfected, incorruptible spirit. In alchemical terms, the incorruptible body is the potential of the philosopher's stone.
The circulation of blood in the arteries mirrors the circulation of sap in the tree, and the circularity of cosmological or metaphysical thought — analogical thinking that links the macrocosm and microcosm, above and below. The ancestral field has an immediate effect, both healing and challenging, on our whole lives.
Our genealogical Quest is an introspective as well as investigative journey. We may think that the lines of evidence of our family tree are very neat and orderly, but when it comes to human beings, dead or alive, there is a certain inherent messiness that comes from the sap of living, from the juicy stuff of life that won't ever fit on the page -- the life experiences and felt-sense of Being. Uncanny patterns and systems of occurrences befall families from generation to generation.
Much of the action goes on in the invisible realm, in the roots far below the branches where everything mingles and becomes entangled and from which the nutritious sap flows. Hidden links below the surface inform and affect us at the unconscious level and biogenealogy. Our ancestors, and their original ancestral traumas, even those who died before we were born, do affect us. They are part of the natural environment from which we are formed.
Family patterns persist over generations. It is the hidden hand of the grip the family retains on our lives and being. Transgenerational therapy says the ancestors can be the root of repetition compulsions, couple behavior, unresolved feelings, and a variety of other psychophysical phenomena -- a trans-subjective reality.
Methodical tracing of our family trees uncovers how important events have been interred in our genetic structures, only to pop up generations later. Family conflicts can pass on to future generations, even "the secret that is never told." When we have to live with the circumstances, knowledge is power.
The anniversary date of or a certain tragedy in the past can be stored in unconscious memory and acted out by following generations. Anniversary reactions appear not only as dramatic coincidences in dates or behaviors, but also in health problems, family secrets and accidents which seem to repeat generation after generation without any plausible explanation.
The research of Ernest Rossi, MD and others opens a new model of the relationships between the most interesting and motivating experiences of consciousness and the molecular dynamics of memory and learning that are described as the “novelty-numinosum-neurogenesis effect” (Rossi, 2002).
Gene-expression is the mechanism by which new patterns are called into being (Rossi, 2000). There is also a strong correlation between modulation of the brain’s EM field and consciousness (Persinger, 1987; McFadden, 2002). Creative, novel and enriching psychotherapeutic experiences can lead to neurogenesis, gene expression, and healing which facilitate mindbody communication and can have a long-term transformative effect on the whole person (Rossi, 2002).
Activated ancestors, like activated archetypes in complexes, can become like strange attractors, around whom we orbit in weird yet meaningful patterns. The attractor once again exhibits its self-iterating capacity by demonstrating its attractive or seductive power as a phenomenon, idea, or theory. Chaotic systems display certain characteristics including complex feedback loops, self organization, holistic behavior, inherent unpredictability.
It isn't what is expected and easily predictable in human affairs that is motivating, but the exact reverse. That which is surprising, unknown, and unpredicted garners our attention most. We set forth on the human quests for creative problem solving and creative adventure. We can explore the novelty-numinosum-neurogenesis dynamics of mind-body communication and healing in the new discipline of psychosocial genomics with our genealogy.
But what we really want from the generations past are not just the facts or the DNA. We want the stories. Love, passion, success, disappointment, humanity. There may be no way to know — really know — their interior life.
Genealogy contains a spiritual healing potential, the living sap of the Tree, a manifestation of the sacred. It is a Grail banquet of cultures, customs and symbolism. The spirit, by death or enlightenment, will produce the pure, perfected, incorruptible spirit. In alchemical terms, the incorruptible body is the potential of the philosopher's stone.
The circulation of blood in the arteries mirrors the circulation of sap in the tree, and the circularity of cosmological or metaphysical thought — analogical thinking that links the macrocosm and microcosm, above and below. The ancestral field has an immediate effect, both healing and challenging, on our whole lives.
Our genealogical Quest is an introspective as well as investigative journey. We may think that the lines of evidence of our family tree are very neat and orderly, but when it comes to human beings, dead or alive, there is a certain inherent messiness that comes from the sap of living, from the juicy stuff of life that won't ever fit on the page -- the life experiences and felt-sense of Being. Uncanny patterns and systems of occurrences befall families from generation to generation.
Much of the action goes on in the invisible realm, in the roots far below the branches where everything mingles and becomes entangled and from which the nutritious sap flows. Hidden links below the surface inform and affect us at the unconscious level and biogenealogy. Our ancestors, and their original ancestral traumas, even those who died before we were born, do affect us. They are part of the natural environment from which we are formed.
Family patterns persist over generations. It is the hidden hand of the grip the family retains on our lives and being. Transgenerational therapy says the ancestors can be the root of repetition compulsions, couple behavior, unresolved feelings, and a variety of other psychophysical phenomena -- a trans-subjective reality.
Methodical tracing of our family trees uncovers how important events have been interred in our genetic structures, only to pop up generations later. Family conflicts can pass on to future generations, even "the secret that is never told." When we have to live with the circumstances, knowledge is power.
The anniversary date of or a certain tragedy in the past can be stored in unconscious memory and acted out by following generations. Anniversary reactions appear not only as dramatic coincidences in dates or behaviors, but also in health problems, family secrets and accidents which seem to repeat generation after generation without any plausible explanation.
The research of Ernest Rossi, MD and others opens a new model of the relationships between the most interesting and motivating experiences of consciousness and the molecular dynamics of memory and learning that are described as the “novelty-numinosum-neurogenesis effect” (Rossi, 2002).
Gene-expression is the mechanism by which new patterns are called into being (Rossi, 2000). There is also a strong correlation between modulation of the brain’s EM field and consciousness (Persinger, 1987; McFadden, 2002). Creative, novel and enriching psychotherapeutic experiences can lead to neurogenesis, gene expression, and healing which facilitate mindbody communication and can have a long-term transformative effect on the whole person (Rossi, 2002).
Activated ancestors, like activated archetypes in complexes, can become like strange attractors, around whom we orbit in weird yet meaningful patterns. The attractor once again exhibits its self-iterating capacity by demonstrating its attractive or seductive power as a phenomenon, idea, or theory. Chaotic systems display certain characteristics including complex feedback loops, self organization, holistic behavior, inherent unpredictability.
It isn't what is expected and easily predictable in human affairs that is motivating, but the exact reverse. That which is surprising, unknown, and unpredicted garners our attention most. We set forth on the human quests for creative problem solving and creative adventure. We can explore the novelty-numinosum-neurogenesis dynamics of mind-body communication and healing in the new discipline of psychosocial genomics with our genealogy.
But what we really want from the generations past are not just the facts or the DNA. We want the stories. Love, passion, success, disappointment, humanity. There may be no way to know — really know — their interior life.
Genetic Healing
Genomics has psycho-social dimensions. Ernest Rossi, M.D. reveals his Jungian approach, stating, “Nothing, it seems turns on gene expression and brain plasticity as much as the presence of others of the same species!”
Jung suggested that "Individual consciousness is only the flower and the fruit of a season, sprung from the perennial rhizome beneath the earth; and it would find
itself in better accord with the truth if it took the existence of the rhizome into its calculations. For the root matter is the mother of all things."
Ernest Rossi (1999; 2002) has developed a pertinent creativity hypothesis: “Enriching life experiences that evoke psychobiological arousal with positive fascination and focused attention during creative moments of art, music, dance, drama, humor, spirituality, numinosity, awe, joy, expectation, and social rituals can evoke immediate early gene protein cascades to optimize brain growth, mindbody communication, and healing.”
“[The] psychotherapeutic approach can contribute to psychobiological arousal, enrichment and relaxation; it may be possible to help people find optimal levels of mental stimulation to facilitate actual growth in the hippocampus of their brain to encode new memory, learning and behavior...optimizing psychobiological growth and healing.”
Rossi (1999) describes a mind/body communication channel that is pertinent in that it may describe another way neural plasticity and healing manifests from REM. He describes how immediate-early genes (also called “Primary Response Genes” or third messengers) play a central role in the dynamics of waking, sleeping, dreaming, and mind-body healing at the cellular level.
There is evidence that immediate-early genes (IEGs) function as mediators of information transduction between psychological experience, behavioral states, and gene expression. A wide range of behavioral state-related gene expression (from relaxation, hypnosis and sleep to high arousal, performance, stress and trauma) culminate in the production of new proteins or homeostasis, physical and psychosocial adaptation.”
Behavioral states modulate certain patterns of gene expression. Interaction between the genetic and behavioral levels is a two way street. Genes and behavior are related in cybernetic loops of mind-body communication. How does this relate, for example, to our genealogical work and its psychobiological effects?
Genomics has psycho-social dimensions. Ernest Rossi, M.D. reveals his Jungian approach, stating, “Nothing, it seems turns on gene expression and brain plasticity as much as the presence of others of the same species!”
Jung suggested that "Individual consciousness is only the flower and the fruit of a season, sprung from the perennial rhizome beneath the earth; and it would find
itself in better accord with the truth if it took the existence of the rhizome into its calculations. For the root matter is the mother of all things."
Ernest Rossi (1999; 2002) has developed a pertinent creativity hypothesis: “Enriching life experiences that evoke psychobiological arousal with positive fascination and focused attention during creative moments of art, music, dance, drama, humor, spirituality, numinosity, awe, joy, expectation, and social rituals can evoke immediate early gene protein cascades to optimize brain growth, mindbody communication, and healing.”
“[The] psychotherapeutic approach can contribute to psychobiological arousal, enrichment and relaxation; it may be possible to help people find optimal levels of mental stimulation to facilitate actual growth in the hippocampus of their brain to encode new memory, learning and behavior...optimizing psychobiological growth and healing.”
Rossi (1999) describes a mind/body communication channel that is pertinent in that it may describe another way neural plasticity and healing manifests from REM. He describes how immediate-early genes (also called “Primary Response Genes” or third messengers) play a central role in the dynamics of waking, sleeping, dreaming, and mind-body healing at the cellular level.
There is evidence that immediate-early genes (IEGs) function as mediators of information transduction between psychological experience, behavioral states, and gene expression. A wide range of behavioral state-related gene expression (from relaxation, hypnosis and sleep to high arousal, performance, stress and trauma) culminate in the production of new proteins or homeostasis, physical and psychosocial adaptation.”
Behavioral states modulate certain patterns of gene expression. Interaction between the genetic and behavioral levels is a two way street. Genes and behavior are related in cybernetic loops of mind-body communication. How does this relate, for example, to our genealogical work and its psychobiological effects?
AN ECOLOGY OF SOULS
Family Tree Huggers
The Aesthetic Paradigm in Genealogy
“...it is only as an aesthetic phenomenon that existence and the world
are eternally justified...” --F. Nietzsche, 1872
"I am convinced that there is only one basic Order - which appears as logical or mathematical to our cognitive intuition, aesthetic to our emotional intuition, and moral to the volitional or conative. And it is essentially numinous."
--Sir Cyril Burt
"The canvas, which is to say the unconscious, considers the painter’s first stroke, and then tells the painter’s hand how to respond to it with a shape of a certain color and texture. And then, if all is well, the canvas the ponders this addition and comes up with further recommendations." --Kurt Vonnegut
"The Spirit speaks in a poetic way, but the man understands it literally. ...The richest understanding of the sacred becomes available when the metaphorical and the literal are brought together without denying either kind of truth..."
--Gregory Bateson
"The impact of an archetype, whether it takes the form of immediate experience or is expressed through the spoken word, stirs us because it summons up a voice that is stronger than our own. Whoever speaks in primordial images speaks with a thousand voices; he enthralls and overpowers, while at the same time he lifts the idea he is seeking to express out of the occasional and the transitory into the realm of the ever-enduring. He transmutes our personal destiny into the destiny of mankind, and evokes in us all those beneficent forces that ever and anon have enabled humanity to find a refuge from every peril and to outlive the longest night. That is the secret of great art, and its effect upon us."
(C. G. Jung, On the Relation of Analytical Psychology to Poetry; CW, Vol. 15)
Family Tree Huggers
The Aesthetic Paradigm in Genealogy
“...it is only as an aesthetic phenomenon that existence and the world
are eternally justified...” --F. Nietzsche, 1872
"I am convinced that there is only one basic Order - which appears as logical or mathematical to our cognitive intuition, aesthetic to our emotional intuition, and moral to the volitional or conative. And it is essentially numinous."
--Sir Cyril Burt
"The canvas, which is to say the unconscious, considers the painter’s first stroke, and then tells the painter’s hand how to respond to it with a shape of a certain color and texture. And then, if all is well, the canvas the ponders this addition and comes up with further recommendations." --Kurt Vonnegut
"The Spirit speaks in a poetic way, but the man understands it literally. ...The richest understanding of the sacred becomes available when the metaphorical and the literal are brought together without denying either kind of truth..."
--Gregory Bateson
"The impact of an archetype, whether it takes the form of immediate experience or is expressed through the spoken word, stirs us because it summons up a voice that is stronger than our own. Whoever speaks in primordial images speaks with a thousand voices; he enthralls and overpowers, while at the same time he lifts the idea he is seeking to express out of the occasional and the transitory into the realm of the ever-enduring. He transmutes our personal destiny into the destiny of mankind, and evokes in us all those beneficent forces that ever and anon have enabled humanity to find a refuge from every peril and to outlive the longest night. That is the secret of great art, and its effect upon us."
(C. G. Jung, On the Relation of Analytical Psychology to Poetry; CW, Vol. 15)
The Norse gods formed the first man and woman, Ask and Embla, from two tree trunks, and built a fence around their dwelling-place, Midgard, to protect them from the giants. Creation is ongoing and participatory.
Ask and Embla are the first humans of the world. Ask is the first male and Embla the first female. Oden together with Vile and Ve created them out of two trees they found on a beach, an ash-tree that would become Ask and an elm-tree that would become Embla. Oden gave them life, Vile gave them common sense and mobility, Ve gave them emotions and senses.
Ask and Embla are the first humans of the world. Ask is the first male and Embla the first female. Oden together with Vile and Ve created them out of two trees they found on a beach, an ash-tree that would become Ask and an elm-tree that would become Embla. Oden gave them life, Vile gave them common sense and mobility, Ve gave them emotions and senses.
ANCESTRAL ALCHEMY
Marriage of the Sun & the Moon: Primordial Parents
"When you make the two into one, and when you make the inner like the outer and the outer like the inner, and the upper like the lower, and when you make male and female into a single one, so that the male will not be male nor the female be female, when you make eyes in place of an eye, a hand in place of a hand, a foot in place of a foot, an image in place of an image, then you will enter the Kingdom." (Gospel of Thomas, 22)
A perennial theme of humankind, transformation as a basic change in character, cognition, and direction has been explored in religion, psychology and art. Rites of passage, as a summons to wisdom, can include a psychological and sacred dimension. Rites of initiation provide a symbolic death and rebirth experience. It addresses the question of how a person finds a personal path worthy of the soul.
Ritual Consummation
The hieros gamos, divine marriage, is usually found at the top of an ancient genealogical line. The genealogical myth begins when younger gods are born. The hieros gamos myth is a genealogical myth connected to the ruling family and fertility from ancient times. Nothing is more sacred than this union, the very fount of life itself.
Cosmic Disaster
The divine marriage is modeled on the union of sun and moon, either in eclipse or at solstice. A sliver of sunlight still enters the earth passage tomb at New Grange on the darkest day of the year fructifying mother earth, and entreating the ancestors to bless their fertility, through meaningful alignment of sun, earth, and moon. By coming together they 'force' or generate the re-creation of the universe. The royal couple mimics cosmological events -- "As above; so below."
The first known megalithic building begun at Gobekli Tepe (navel-like hill) has been linked to the cataclysmic massive Laurentian comet (10,900 BC Younger Dryas impact event) around 12,000 years ago. Many of the circular temples (womb chambers) repeat a 12 around 2 pattern, that is thought to represent primordial parents (Sun/Moon) as humanoid statues and the circle of the zodiac. In womb-like chambers, the souls of shaman and the spirits of the dead, could quite literally journey to the source of creation. The area was rich in essential obsidian for blades and trade.
"The elite of the Halaf and Ubaid were probably the forerunners of the god-kings who ruled the first city-states down on the Mesopotamian plain, which eventually became the civilizations of Sumer, Akkad, Assyria and Babylon. Their scribes preserved in cuneiform writing the ruling dynasties' mythical history, in which the founders of the Neolithic revolution are known as the Anunnaki, the gods of heaven and earth. Their birthplace was said to have been the Duku, a primeval mound located on the summit of a world mountain called Kharsag, or Hursag, and now identified with both Göbekli Tepe and Bingöl Mountain. Here the Anunnaki are said to have given humankind the first sheep and grain, a memory almost certainly of the introduction of animal husbandry and agriculture at the time of the Neolithic revolution, which occurred in the same region as Göbekli Tepe around 9000-8000 BC. The Anunnaki are occasionally likened to serpents, reflecting the snake-like appearance of Göbekli Tepe's ruling elite, as well as those of the later Halaf and Ubaid cultures." (Collins)
http://www.andrewcollins.com/page/articles/Go_Tep_launch.htm
In the third millennium earth passed through massive debris (The Taurids) from the breakup of comet Encke, and the fall of massive fireballs changed many Neolithics from earth to sky/fire religion. 'Dragons' fought massive battles in the sky, or so the ancestors imagined. Comets are also implicated in Bronze Age collapse.
As we approach the end of the Second Millennium, the AD 837 apparition of Halley's Comet appeared as bright as Venus and would have moved through 60 degrees of sky in one day as it passed just 0.03 AU from Earth. The beginning of the Dark Ages came from a comet fall near the equator that virtually blotted out the sun and led to famine and plague.
Crown of Creation
In ancient cities, the priest/king and his temple consort reenacted the rite, the sacred mating of Heaven and Earth. The royal union is called the Marriage of the Sun and Moon in alchemy. The Marriage of Inner & Outer Worlds unites internal/external and macrocosm/microcosm, the sacred and profane. Later clear parallels to the ancient rites turn up in the Grail cycle.
The central theme of alchemy, this marriage is represented by the two snakes of the caduceus, the opposing forces of our nature, joined together at the head, which correspond to the Moon and the Sun. The entwined serpents are an ancient glyph for the DNA double-helix, and might describe how two serpents twine up the trunk of our family tree.
When we each get “infused” with the sacred essence of the divine male and female, we can dissolve in the unity of cosmic consciousness. The celestial pair are reunited. "Heaven on earth” describes divine union on earth, dissolving into time, mirroring the notion of "As above, so below." The ascent or descent is a function or goal of the hieros gamos itself. The union with the Goddess implied the meeting of human and divine.
The genealogical relationship to the soul has to do with its mystical-genealogical origin. Genealogy has its virtually infinite series of primal couples -- the grandfathers and grandmothers who give birth in a cascading union of opposites.
Life feeds on opposites and contradictions will always appear in life. They engender the souls of the newborn -- the seed of a fate-laden new creation. So, if we are whole we are full of contradictions -- ambiguous and paradoxical. The unconscious holds the whole creation in potential.
Alchemical symbolism calls this a marriage of the Sun (spirit) and the Moon (soul), solar and lunar ways of knowing. We live, life moves, at the confluence of these polarities of spirit and matter, body and soul have the capacity to hold contradiction and paradox so we can become whole. Such is the Chemical Marriage, Courtly Love and tantric secrets that might conceive a magical child.
Sacred kingship is the basic myth of genealogy, destiny, and eros. Jung tells us that the queen symbolizes the body, the king stands for the spirit, and the soul unites the two in the royal marriage. Therefore, our psyche is a half bodily and half spiritual substance.
The hieros gamos myth is multifunctional, combining enthronement, genealogical myth, cosmology, and legitimization of rule. When king and queen (animus/anima) unite, they form a magical hermaphroditic being which is a union of opposite energies. Symbolically, their sacred marriage results in the manifestation of all things.
In alchemical manuscripts, coniunctio, mystical marriage, is depicted as the union or coitus of King and Queen, the red man and white woman, or just by man and wife. The mother is the unconscious, the son is the conscious. It is a ‘regressus ad uterum’ or the return to the uterus of the mother.
Penetration of the female is the same as the penetration of the water or the unconscious. Thus we see that the coniunctio is depicted as the coitus of man and wife, king and queen, but also by the king taking a bath, or drinking water. Sometimes consummation between man and woman happens in water, in a bath or in a fountain.
In the sacred marriage, such acts refer to the union of our divine spirit with the soul, and finally with the body. As a grand union of opposites, mystic marriage symbolizes the unification of king and queen, man and wife, conscious and unconscious, personality and society, etc.
Ordinarily, spirit, soul and body are separated from each other, even while in dynamic interaction. But when the Great Work is complete, the divine spirit is brought ‘down’ to shine through the soul and body. It unifies itself with them, so they all form one and the same ‘body’.
Jung used the poetic term syzygy for the union of opposites, wholeness and completion and the divine couple. The pattern repeats endlessly. Pulsating life is the substrate of our existence. The perfect partnership includes physical and psychic compatibility of anima and animus, which fire the quest for love and myths of the soulmate.
Just as a man brings forth his work as a complete creation out of his inner feminine nature, so the inner masculine side of a woman brings forth creative seeds which have the power to fertilize the feminine side of the man. ~Carl Jung, CW 7, Para 336.
The parental pair has many symbols from the medieval West and sacred duos of the East, including yin/yang. The Divine inner marriage—or the syzygy—of the masculine/dynamic and feminine/magnetic yokes the anima, the feminine aspect of the male psyche, and the animus, the male aspect of the female psyche.
The experience of spiritual rebirth via the union of opposites, or the sacred marriage is characterized as the union of the Sun (+) and Moon (-), positive-negative; male-female; god-devil; spirit-matter; father-mother; etc.
The sacred marriage, or coniunctio, creates a bond by which opposites are united in an image which transcends both original potentials. The whole art of alchemy is contained within the image of a magical or divine child. This process creates a cellular, alchemical, energetic rebirth into a higher order of being, symbolically called a spiritual androgyne.
The syzygy has three components: a man's femininity and woman's masculinity; the experience man has of woman and vice versa; and the masculine and feminine archetypal image. Archetypal symbolic pairings are 'yoked together' by this term.
Contrasexual (male-female) pairings occur in dream symbolism. They refer to internal communication between the unconscious and conscious minds of any individual.
“It is a psychological fact that as soon as we touch on these identifications we enter the realm of the syzygies, the paired opposites, where the One is never separated from the Other, its antithesis. It is a field of personal experience which leads directly to the experience of individuation, the attainment of the self. ...In this still very obscure field of psychological experience, where we are in direct contact, so to speak, with the archetype, its psychic power is felt in full force. This realm is so entirely one of immediate experience that it cannot be captured by any formula, but can only be hinted at to one who already knows.” (Carl Jung, CW 9i, para. 194)
Female archetypes of earth and sky symbolize the Great Mother, who is both conscious protector, spiritual guide, and nurturer, while at the same time the unconscious forces of birth and death, life and destruction. The anima lurks in the unconscious, wielding her supernatural power to drive our lives either towards mystical knowledge, consciousness and individuation, or towards oblivion in sensual urges.
The sky mothers and animas can transcend the body and ego, but in so many myths, they crave balance through the experience of the underworld, the unconscious drives of the instincts and the non-rational, and through this unity, express a balanced whole.
The union of seemingly separate elements give birth to and reveal a higher form. This is often referred to as the royal marriage. This marriage is of fundamental concern to alchemists because it is a key to transformation. Using an alchemical metaphor, Jung often referred to marriage as the crucible of consciousness.
In Sacred Marriage relationship is Immortality. All our cultural experience and individual conscious existence depends on the fabric of life, the germ line, from the mutual sexual relationship of genders. The female is the sole bearer of cytoplasmic inheritance and the principal investor in time and resources. The male contributes half of the genetic material. Immortality is thus not the domain of one gender but of the relationship between woman and man.
The Philosopher's Stone is equated with the Body of Light, the Resurrection Body, or the Immortal Body. Alchemy strives for spiritual rebirth through the union of opposites, or the sacred marriage. The Philosopher's Stone (lapis) is also a symbol of the embryonic Self. The transcendent function is the product of the sacred marriage, which has been characterized in alchemy as the royal union of the Sun and Moon.
Polarized positions may be symbolized variously as positive-negative, male-female, god-devil, spirit-matter, father-mother, etc. This marriage creates a bond by which opposites are united in an image which transcends both original potentials. The whole art of alchemy is contained within the image of a magical, numinous, or divine child.
Progeny of the divine couple have various alchemical names: the philosopher’s gold, the filius Philosophorum, the infans solaris (sun child), the red tincture, the sun/moon child, etc. Making the Philosopher's Stone is a repetition of the creation myth via imagery. The Stone is made in Nature, and with and by “Nature” in the visible and invisible worlds -- within the material, spiritual,and psychological worlds. Light unveiled begets light.
The transformative imperative is a a mystic marriage or union, symbolized in alchemy by the coniunctio -- conjunction of conscious and unconscious. Individuation is the integration of unconscious contents into consciousness. Potential is embodied as a psychologically whole self-realized or self-actualizing person. The "royal wedding" is the final alchemical synthesis of ego and unconscious, matter and spirit, male and female, that brings forth the Philosopher's Stone (the Self).
Alchemist Gerard Dorn called the unus mundus a unification of the Stone with body, soul, and spirit -- a perfect synthesis of conscious and unconscious. This "one world" is the physical-psychological, transcendental, "third thing" continuum underlying all existence -- the metaphysical equivalent of the collective unconscious. Mercurius or the Dragon's "treasure hard to attain" are images for the archetype of unity -- the self.
We need to be related to another individual, according to Jung, to experience the full depth of our own psyche. From an internal perspective, spiritual marriage is an inner experience which is not projected onto another living individual. In the royal marriage of the soul with the Self, the projections of anima and animus have been returned to their proper level in the personal unconscious.
Our partner no longer carries an essentially religious function for us. The King and Queen are united, or conjoined, synthesizing the opposites. When the opposites to be united are the masculine consciousness (of our day world) and the feminine unconscious (the night world), this royal marriage is a transcendent symbol of the Self, and embodies the psychic totality of personal wholeness.
Clarity is artistic discovery of the universal. There is enchantment in the quality of wholeness. There is beauty in the rhythms of nature and our nature. Aesthetic response is an essential emotional aspect of alchemy that lends flow and harmony to the process of balance, rhythm and synthesis of immediate perception.
This flow is lyrical, epic and dramatic. Aesthetic signification is one thing, but the deep emotional impact of aesthetic arrest -- being suspended for a thrilling radiant moment in the eternal -- stops us in our tracks in a moment of realization.
Marriage of the Sun & the Moon: Primordial Parents
"When you make the two into one, and when you make the inner like the outer and the outer like the inner, and the upper like the lower, and when you make male and female into a single one, so that the male will not be male nor the female be female, when you make eyes in place of an eye, a hand in place of a hand, a foot in place of a foot, an image in place of an image, then you will enter the Kingdom." (Gospel of Thomas, 22)
A perennial theme of humankind, transformation as a basic change in character, cognition, and direction has been explored in religion, psychology and art. Rites of passage, as a summons to wisdom, can include a psychological and sacred dimension. Rites of initiation provide a symbolic death and rebirth experience. It addresses the question of how a person finds a personal path worthy of the soul.
Ritual Consummation
The hieros gamos, divine marriage, is usually found at the top of an ancient genealogical line. The genealogical myth begins when younger gods are born. The hieros gamos myth is a genealogical myth connected to the ruling family and fertility from ancient times. Nothing is more sacred than this union, the very fount of life itself.
Cosmic Disaster
The divine marriage is modeled on the union of sun and moon, either in eclipse or at solstice. A sliver of sunlight still enters the earth passage tomb at New Grange on the darkest day of the year fructifying mother earth, and entreating the ancestors to bless their fertility, through meaningful alignment of sun, earth, and moon. By coming together they 'force' or generate the re-creation of the universe. The royal couple mimics cosmological events -- "As above; so below."
The first known megalithic building begun at Gobekli Tepe (navel-like hill) has been linked to the cataclysmic massive Laurentian comet (10,900 BC Younger Dryas impact event) around 12,000 years ago. Many of the circular temples (womb chambers) repeat a 12 around 2 pattern, that is thought to represent primordial parents (Sun/Moon) as humanoid statues and the circle of the zodiac. In womb-like chambers, the souls of shaman and the spirits of the dead, could quite literally journey to the source of creation. The area was rich in essential obsidian for blades and trade.
"The elite of the Halaf and Ubaid were probably the forerunners of the god-kings who ruled the first city-states down on the Mesopotamian plain, which eventually became the civilizations of Sumer, Akkad, Assyria and Babylon. Their scribes preserved in cuneiform writing the ruling dynasties' mythical history, in which the founders of the Neolithic revolution are known as the Anunnaki, the gods of heaven and earth. Their birthplace was said to have been the Duku, a primeval mound located on the summit of a world mountain called Kharsag, or Hursag, and now identified with both Göbekli Tepe and Bingöl Mountain. Here the Anunnaki are said to have given humankind the first sheep and grain, a memory almost certainly of the introduction of animal husbandry and agriculture at the time of the Neolithic revolution, which occurred in the same region as Göbekli Tepe around 9000-8000 BC. The Anunnaki are occasionally likened to serpents, reflecting the snake-like appearance of Göbekli Tepe's ruling elite, as well as those of the later Halaf and Ubaid cultures." (Collins)
http://www.andrewcollins.com/page/articles/Go_Tep_launch.htm
In the third millennium earth passed through massive debris (The Taurids) from the breakup of comet Encke, and the fall of massive fireballs changed many Neolithics from earth to sky/fire religion. 'Dragons' fought massive battles in the sky, or so the ancestors imagined. Comets are also implicated in Bronze Age collapse.
As we approach the end of the Second Millennium, the AD 837 apparition of Halley's Comet appeared as bright as Venus and would have moved through 60 degrees of sky in one day as it passed just 0.03 AU from Earth. The beginning of the Dark Ages came from a comet fall near the equator that virtually blotted out the sun and led to famine and plague.
Crown of Creation
In ancient cities, the priest/king and his temple consort reenacted the rite, the sacred mating of Heaven and Earth. The royal union is called the Marriage of the Sun and Moon in alchemy. The Marriage of Inner & Outer Worlds unites internal/external and macrocosm/microcosm, the sacred and profane. Later clear parallels to the ancient rites turn up in the Grail cycle.
The central theme of alchemy, this marriage is represented by the two snakes of the caduceus, the opposing forces of our nature, joined together at the head, which correspond to the Moon and the Sun. The entwined serpents are an ancient glyph for the DNA double-helix, and might describe how two serpents twine up the trunk of our family tree.
When we each get “infused” with the sacred essence of the divine male and female, we can dissolve in the unity of cosmic consciousness. The celestial pair are reunited. "Heaven on earth” describes divine union on earth, dissolving into time, mirroring the notion of "As above, so below." The ascent or descent is a function or goal of the hieros gamos itself. The union with the Goddess implied the meeting of human and divine.
The genealogical relationship to the soul has to do with its mystical-genealogical origin. Genealogy has its virtually infinite series of primal couples -- the grandfathers and grandmothers who give birth in a cascading union of opposites.
Life feeds on opposites and contradictions will always appear in life. They engender the souls of the newborn -- the seed of a fate-laden new creation. So, if we are whole we are full of contradictions -- ambiguous and paradoxical. The unconscious holds the whole creation in potential.
Alchemical symbolism calls this a marriage of the Sun (spirit) and the Moon (soul), solar and lunar ways of knowing. We live, life moves, at the confluence of these polarities of spirit and matter, body and soul have the capacity to hold contradiction and paradox so we can become whole. Such is the Chemical Marriage, Courtly Love and tantric secrets that might conceive a magical child.
Sacred kingship is the basic myth of genealogy, destiny, and eros. Jung tells us that the queen symbolizes the body, the king stands for the spirit, and the soul unites the two in the royal marriage. Therefore, our psyche is a half bodily and half spiritual substance.
The hieros gamos myth is multifunctional, combining enthronement, genealogical myth, cosmology, and legitimization of rule. When king and queen (animus/anima) unite, they form a magical hermaphroditic being which is a union of opposite energies. Symbolically, their sacred marriage results in the manifestation of all things.
In alchemical manuscripts, coniunctio, mystical marriage, is depicted as the union or coitus of King and Queen, the red man and white woman, or just by man and wife. The mother is the unconscious, the son is the conscious. It is a ‘regressus ad uterum’ or the return to the uterus of the mother.
Penetration of the female is the same as the penetration of the water or the unconscious. Thus we see that the coniunctio is depicted as the coitus of man and wife, king and queen, but also by the king taking a bath, or drinking water. Sometimes consummation between man and woman happens in water, in a bath or in a fountain.
In the sacred marriage, such acts refer to the union of our divine spirit with the soul, and finally with the body. As a grand union of opposites, mystic marriage symbolizes the unification of king and queen, man and wife, conscious and unconscious, personality and society, etc.
Ordinarily, spirit, soul and body are separated from each other, even while in dynamic interaction. But when the Great Work is complete, the divine spirit is brought ‘down’ to shine through the soul and body. It unifies itself with them, so they all form one and the same ‘body’.
Jung used the poetic term syzygy for the union of opposites, wholeness and completion and the divine couple. The pattern repeats endlessly. Pulsating life is the substrate of our existence. The perfect partnership includes physical and psychic compatibility of anima and animus, which fire the quest for love and myths of the soulmate.
Just as a man brings forth his work as a complete creation out of his inner feminine nature, so the inner masculine side of a woman brings forth creative seeds which have the power to fertilize the feminine side of the man. ~Carl Jung, CW 7, Para 336.
The parental pair has many symbols from the medieval West and sacred duos of the East, including yin/yang. The Divine inner marriage—or the syzygy—of the masculine/dynamic and feminine/magnetic yokes the anima, the feminine aspect of the male psyche, and the animus, the male aspect of the female psyche.
The experience of spiritual rebirth via the union of opposites, or the sacred marriage is characterized as the union of the Sun (+) and Moon (-), positive-negative; male-female; god-devil; spirit-matter; father-mother; etc.
The sacred marriage, or coniunctio, creates a bond by which opposites are united in an image which transcends both original potentials. The whole art of alchemy is contained within the image of a magical or divine child. This process creates a cellular, alchemical, energetic rebirth into a higher order of being, symbolically called a spiritual androgyne.
The syzygy has three components: a man's femininity and woman's masculinity; the experience man has of woman and vice versa; and the masculine and feminine archetypal image. Archetypal symbolic pairings are 'yoked together' by this term.
Contrasexual (male-female) pairings occur in dream symbolism. They refer to internal communication between the unconscious and conscious minds of any individual.
“It is a psychological fact that as soon as we touch on these identifications we enter the realm of the syzygies, the paired opposites, where the One is never separated from the Other, its antithesis. It is a field of personal experience which leads directly to the experience of individuation, the attainment of the self. ...In this still very obscure field of psychological experience, where we are in direct contact, so to speak, with the archetype, its psychic power is felt in full force. This realm is so entirely one of immediate experience that it cannot be captured by any formula, but can only be hinted at to one who already knows.” (Carl Jung, CW 9i, para. 194)
Female archetypes of earth and sky symbolize the Great Mother, who is both conscious protector, spiritual guide, and nurturer, while at the same time the unconscious forces of birth and death, life and destruction. The anima lurks in the unconscious, wielding her supernatural power to drive our lives either towards mystical knowledge, consciousness and individuation, or towards oblivion in sensual urges.
The sky mothers and animas can transcend the body and ego, but in so many myths, they crave balance through the experience of the underworld, the unconscious drives of the instincts and the non-rational, and through this unity, express a balanced whole.
The union of seemingly separate elements give birth to and reveal a higher form. This is often referred to as the royal marriage. This marriage is of fundamental concern to alchemists because it is a key to transformation. Using an alchemical metaphor, Jung often referred to marriage as the crucible of consciousness.
In Sacred Marriage relationship is Immortality. All our cultural experience and individual conscious existence depends on the fabric of life, the germ line, from the mutual sexual relationship of genders. The female is the sole bearer of cytoplasmic inheritance and the principal investor in time and resources. The male contributes half of the genetic material. Immortality is thus not the domain of one gender but of the relationship between woman and man.
The Philosopher's Stone is equated with the Body of Light, the Resurrection Body, or the Immortal Body. Alchemy strives for spiritual rebirth through the union of opposites, or the sacred marriage. The Philosopher's Stone (lapis) is also a symbol of the embryonic Self. The transcendent function is the product of the sacred marriage, which has been characterized in alchemy as the royal union of the Sun and Moon.
Polarized positions may be symbolized variously as positive-negative, male-female, god-devil, spirit-matter, father-mother, etc. This marriage creates a bond by which opposites are united in an image which transcends both original potentials. The whole art of alchemy is contained within the image of a magical, numinous, or divine child.
Progeny of the divine couple have various alchemical names: the philosopher’s gold, the filius Philosophorum, the infans solaris (sun child), the red tincture, the sun/moon child, etc. Making the Philosopher's Stone is a repetition of the creation myth via imagery. The Stone is made in Nature, and with and by “Nature” in the visible and invisible worlds -- within the material, spiritual,and psychological worlds. Light unveiled begets light.
The transformative imperative is a a mystic marriage or union, symbolized in alchemy by the coniunctio -- conjunction of conscious and unconscious. Individuation is the integration of unconscious contents into consciousness. Potential is embodied as a psychologically whole self-realized or self-actualizing person. The "royal wedding" is the final alchemical synthesis of ego and unconscious, matter and spirit, male and female, that brings forth the Philosopher's Stone (the Self).
Alchemist Gerard Dorn called the unus mundus a unification of the Stone with body, soul, and spirit -- a perfect synthesis of conscious and unconscious. This "one world" is the physical-psychological, transcendental, "third thing" continuum underlying all existence -- the metaphysical equivalent of the collective unconscious. Mercurius or the Dragon's "treasure hard to attain" are images for the archetype of unity -- the self.
We need to be related to another individual, according to Jung, to experience the full depth of our own psyche. From an internal perspective, spiritual marriage is an inner experience which is not projected onto another living individual. In the royal marriage of the soul with the Self, the projections of anima and animus have been returned to their proper level in the personal unconscious.
Our partner no longer carries an essentially religious function for us. The King and Queen are united, or conjoined, synthesizing the opposites. When the opposites to be united are the masculine consciousness (of our day world) and the feminine unconscious (the night world), this royal marriage is a transcendent symbol of the Self, and embodies the psychic totality of personal wholeness.
Clarity is artistic discovery of the universal. There is enchantment in the quality of wholeness. There is beauty in the rhythms of nature and our nature. Aesthetic response is an essential emotional aspect of alchemy that lends flow and harmony to the process of balance, rhythm and synthesis of immediate perception.
This flow is lyrical, epic and dramatic. Aesthetic signification is one thing, but the deep emotional impact of aesthetic arrest -- being suspended for a thrilling radiant moment in the eternal -- stops us in our tracks in a moment of realization.
The state of imperfect transformation, merely hoped for and waited for, does not seem to be one of torment only, but of positive, if hidden, happiness.
It is the state of someone who, in his wanderings among the mazes of his psychic transformation, comes upon a secret happiness which reconciles him to his apparent loneliness.
In communing with himself he finds not deadly boredom and melancholy but an inner partner; more than that, a relationship that seems like the happiness of a secret love, or like a hidden springtime, when the green seed sprouts from the barren earth, holding out the promise of future harvests.
~Carl Jung, Mysterium Coniunctionis, Para 623.
Hieros Gamos
Deciphering its inherent meaning is a Quest for the Grail and the journey of psychological transformation. The hierosgamos is the holy grail of sexual rites, a psychobiological and symbolic act. Alchemy refers to the reconciliation of Sol and Luna as The Chymical Wedding. The coniunctio was allegorized as the hieros gamos, the ritual cohabitation of Sol et Luna.
Jung's theory of the psychic conjunction of polarities was inspired by this teaching. Over centuries, the alchemists generated a wide range of symbolic images as homologues for the anatomy of the unconscious, relating form and dynamic function.
In biology, two things are homologous if they bear the same relationship to one another. Homology is a relationship between structures or DNA derived from a common ancestor. Homologous traits of organisms are therefore explained by descent from a common ancestor. Homology can also be described at the level of the gene. In genetics homology can refer to both the gene (DNA) and the corresponding protein product.
What we seek is spiritual union, sacred marriage of the gods -- found by joining the male and female within, returning Eros to our process. They guide us into a new holistic era. We now turn to the Feminine, which gives birth to new forms, including the non-physical field of epigenetic and wave-genetic inheritance patterns. Epigenetics is an active, tuneable inheritance mechanism that can be turned ‘on’ or ‘off.
The balance of opposites is called the ‘alchemical wedding’ or mysterium coniunctionis. It was celebrated in Morganatic marriages between human representatives of the God and Goddess. It has less to do with inheritance and succession than with renewal of community.
Art that contains the archetype, including the genealogical art, is the art that best serves the global community. Like the Caduceus, the two intertwined snakes, it serves as a symbol for perpetually incarnating life, healing and wholeness.
The unification of archetypes embodies the Self. Jung said, “The symbols of the self arise in the depths of the body and they express its materiality every bit as much as the structure of the perceiving consciousness. The symbol is thus a living body, corpus et anima.” (Cw 9i) Any distinction between mind and body is an artificial dichotomy.
The Great Rite, also called the Hieros Gamos, dates to Inanna of ancient Sumeria, around 2600 BCE, if not before. Gods and goddesses, kings of the land and queens of sovereignty incarnate on the earth. The Great Rite is one of the earliest recorded public ceremonies in written history, deemed essential for the fertility of the land.
Symbols arising from the changeable coniunctio reflect the natural process of life/death/rebirth arising from the fixed constellations.of the patriarchal archetypes. The feminine gives birth to the Self before she can birth the new man. Hierosgamos is the symbol of the absolute that reigns over the ego.
The myth of the Holy Grail had to do with the Fisher King whose impotence reflected the drought, the wasteland. Sexual union is a microcosm of the god and goddess, the two fundamental aspects of the cosmos whose union completes the whole. Mystically, the sexual union of male and female is the source of both immortality and personal individuation and redemption.
No one who sets forth on the grail quest remains unchanged. The incarnatio is a spontaneous act of creation in the matter of the universe as the result of the today constellated act of the coniunctio. Synchronicity is the conjunction of individual and cosmos in a way that accelerates and deepens life in an unforeseen way that celebrates Life. The only place of power and change is the Present.
It is the state of someone who, in his wanderings among the mazes of his psychic transformation, comes upon a secret happiness which reconciles him to his apparent loneliness.
In communing with himself he finds not deadly boredom and melancholy but an inner partner; more than that, a relationship that seems like the happiness of a secret love, or like a hidden springtime, when the green seed sprouts from the barren earth, holding out the promise of future harvests.
~Carl Jung, Mysterium Coniunctionis, Para 623.
Hieros Gamos
Deciphering its inherent meaning is a Quest for the Grail and the journey of psychological transformation. The hierosgamos is the holy grail of sexual rites, a psychobiological and symbolic act. Alchemy refers to the reconciliation of Sol and Luna as The Chymical Wedding. The coniunctio was allegorized as the hieros gamos, the ritual cohabitation of Sol et Luna.
Jung's theory of the psychic conjunction of polarities was inspired by this teaching. Over centuries, the alchemists generated a wide range of symbolic images as homologues for the anatomy of the unconscious, relating form and dynamic function.
In biology, two things are homologous if they bear the same relationship to one another. Homology is a relationship between structures or DNA derived from a common ancestor. Homologous traits of organisms are therefore explained by descent from a common ancestor. Homology can also be described at the level of the gene. In genetics homology can refer to both the gene (DNA) and the corresponding protein product.
What we seek is spiritual union, sacred marriage of the gods -- found by joining the male and female within, returning Eros to our process. They guide us into a new holistic era. We now turn to the Feminine, which gives birth to new forms, including the non-physical field of epigenetic and wave-genetic inheritance patterns. Epigenetics is an active, tuneable inheritance mechanism that can be turned ‘on’ or ‘off.
The balance of opposites is called the ‘alchemical wedding’ or mysterium coniunctionis. It was celebrated in Morganatic marriages between human representatives of the God and Goddess. It has less to do with inheritance and succession than with renewal of community.
Art that contains the archetype, including the genealogical art, is the art that best serves the global community. Like the Caduceus, the two intertwined snakes, it serves as a symbol for perpetually incarnating life, healing and wholeness.
The unification of archetypes embodies the Self. Jung said, “The symbols of the self arise in the depths of the body and they express its materiality every bit as much as the structure of the perceiving consciousness. The symbol is thus a living body, corpus et anima.” (Cw 9i) Any distinction between mind and body is an artificial dichotomy.
The Great Rite, also called the Hieros Gamos, dates to Inanna of ancient Sumeria, around 2600 BCE, if not before. Gods and goddesses, kings of the land and queens of sovereignty incarnate on the earth. The Great Rite is one of the earliest recorded public ceremonies in written history, deemed essential for the fertility of the land.
Symbols arising from the changeable coniunctio reflect the natural process of life/death/rebirth arising from the fixed constellations.of the patriarchal archetypes. The feminine gives birth to the Self before she can birth the new man. Hierosgamos is the symbol of the absolute that reigns over the ego.
The myth of the Holy Grail had to do with the Fisher King whose impotence reflected the drought, the wasteland. Sexual union is a microcosm of the god and goddess, the two fundamental aspects of the cosmos whose union completes the whole. Mystically, the sexual union of male and female is the source of both immortality and personal individuation and redemption.
No one who sets forth on the grail quest remains unchanged. The incarnatio is a spontaneous act of creation in the matter of the universe as the result of the today constellated act of the coniunctio. Synchronicity is the conjunction of individual and cosmos in a way that accelerates and deepens life in an unforeseen way that celebrates Life. The only place of power and change is the Present.
TRUEBORN
LINES OF EVIDENCE
Archetypal Aesthetics in Genealogy
"I am. Lo, I am alive"
Symbols are the currency of consciousness.
Henry Stapp calls consciousness "the felt quality of the manipulating actions of these symbols upon one another." Symbols refer to reality, and the anthropomorphizing, personification and projection of aspects of ourselves onto reality. Misunderstood, symbols are abstract ideas that enslave our minds.
Symbolism comes from trying to relate ourselves to reality, self-knowledge, and nature to understand ourselves and reality. First is reality. Second is knowledge from perception. Third are symbols of that knowledge from reality.
General human symbols:
Father, mother, grandfather, grandmother, son, daughter, sister, brother, child, wise old man, magician, king, queen, prince, princess, knight, teacher; the human heart, the human hand, the eye, the egg. Birth, growth, marriage, death and rebirth, rejuvenation, or resurrection. The real purpose of religious ceremonial is to revivify.
"You may have, say, a religious attitude, which means an attitude of great totality, so that you receive the next leaf that falls from the tree as a message from God, and it works." (Carl Jung, Visions Seminar, Page 919.)
"Good and bad must always be united first if the symbol is to be created.
The symbol can neither be thought up nor found; it becomes.
Its becoming is like the becoming of human life in the womb.
Pregnancy comes about through voluntary copulation.
It goes on through willing attention.
But if the depths have conceived, then the symbol grows out of itself
and is born from the mind, as befits a God."
~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 311.
LINES OF EVIDENCE
Archetypal Aesthetics in Genealogy
"I am. Lo, I am alive"
Symbols are the currency of consciousness.
Henry Stapp calls consciousness "the felt quality of the manipulating actions of these symbols upon one another." Symbols refer to reality, and the anthropomorphizing, personification and projection of aspects of ourselves onto reality. Misunderstood, symbols are abstract ideas that enslave our minds.
Symbolism comes from trying to relate ourselves to reality, self-knowledge, and nature to understand ourselves and reality. First is reality. Second is knowledge from perception. Third are symbols of that knowledge from reality.
General human symbols:
Father, mother, grandfather, grandmother, son, daughter, sister, brother, child, wise old man, magician, king, queen, prince, princess, knight, teacher; the human heart, the human hand, the eye, the egg. Birth, growth, marriage, death and rebirth, rejuvenation, or resurrection. The real purpose of religious ceremonial is to revivify.
"You may have, say, a religious attitude, which means an attitude of great totality, so that you receive the next leaf that falls from the tree as a message from God, and it works." (Carl Jung, Visions Seminar, Page 919.)
"Good and bad must always be united first if the symbol is to be created.
The symbol can neither be thought up nor found; it becomes.
Its becoming is like the becoming of human life in the womb.
Pregnancy comes about through voluntary copulation.
It goes on through willing attention.
But if the depths have conceived, then the symbol grows out of itself
and is born from the mind, as befits a God."
~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 311.
DEPTH GENEALOGY
"From a barren list of names we learn who were the fathers or mothers, or more distant progenitors, of the select few, who are able to trace what is called their descent from antiquity." (Smollett, Tobias (1798).)
"Hypothesis: in a sharp crisis, that bears in some way on species survival,
an individual may spontaneously merge with his ancestors AND descendants
and become, for a time, a single amplified entity." --Ken Thomas
"Go to bed. Think of your problem. See what you dream.
Perhaps the Great Man, the 2,000,000-year-old man, will speak...
If you are not interested in your own fate, the unconscious is.
There is a mountain of symbolism. ...
The Great Man is something that reacts.
Analysis is a long discussion with the Great Man--
an unintelligent attempt to understand him.
It, the Great Man, can at one stroke put an entirely different face
on the thing — or anything can happen.
In that way you learn about the peculiar intelligence of the background;
you learn the nature of the Great Man.
You learn about yourself against the Great Man—against his postulates.
This is the way through things, things that look desperate and unanswerable.
The unconscious gives you that peculiar twist that makes the way possible.
The way is ineffable.
One needs faith, courage, and no end of honesty and patience.
You have added things you didn't dream of--
a new aspect of yourself and of the world.
If you are dishonest, you are nothing for your unconscious.
This you cannot regulate, or it would be misused.
It is not a conviction, not an assumption.
It is a Presence. It is a fact. It is there. ...
You have got to accept what the unconscious produces,
and you have to understand its language.
It is Nature, and it has to be translated into human forms."
(Jung, C.G. Jung Speaking: Interviews and Encounters, Pages 359-364)
"From a barren list of names we learn who were the fathers or mothers, or more distant progenitors, of the select few, who are able to trace what is called their descent from antiquity." (Smollett, Tobias (1798).)
"Hypothesis: in a sharp crisis, that bears in some way on species survival,
an individual may spontaneously merge with his ancestors AND descendants
and become, for a time, a single amplified entity." --Ken Thomas
"Go to bed. Think of your problem. See what you dream.
Perhaps the Great Man, the 2,000,000-year-old man, will speak...
If you are not interested in your own fate, the unconscious is.
There is a mountain of symbolism. ...
The Great Man is something that reacts.
Analysis is a long discussion with the Great Man--
an unintelligent attempt to understand him.
It, the Great Man, can at one stroke put an entirely different face
on the thing — or anything can happen.
In that way you learn about the peculiar intelligence of the background;
you learn the nature of the Great Man.
You learn about yourself against the Great Man—against his postulates.
This is the way through things, things that look desperate and unanswerable.
The unconscious gives you that peculiar twist that makes the way possible.
The way is ineffable.
One needs faith, courage, and no end of honesty and patience.
You have added things you didn't dream of--
a new aspect of yourself and of the world.
If you are dishonest, you are nothing for your unconscious.
This you cannot regulate, or it would be misused.
It is not a conviction, not an assumption.
It is a Presence. It is a fact. It is there. ...
You have got to accept what the unconscious produces,
and you have to understand its language.
It is Nature, and it has to be translated into human forms."
(Jung, C.G. Jung Speaking: Interviews and Encounters, Pages 359-364)
A VOICE FOR THE VOICELESS
Depth Perception
Today's world is complex. We may be disheartened by the current state of the world, including nasty politics, signs of eco-collapse, and relentless culture wars. Genealogy can be part of the re-enchantment of our world, an oasis or refuge honoring the heart and soul of our family's living emotional memory.
Genealogy is a natural and cultural artifact. A genealogy is a record of the descent of a person or group from an ancestor. Death fascinates us, and probably always has. It is a sniper that can strike anywhere, anytime and constantly informs us of our mortality. The oldest extant epic, Gilgamesh, directly addresses the question of why death exists and the yearning for immortality.
In our family tree our 'depth perception' refers to how many generations are known to us, and how keenly we perceive the essence of each of their lives (face recognition) in our family history. The self emerges from seed fulfilling character and calling in our identity -- the innate genius of creativity and sublimity.
Living in touch with what our ancestors symbolize in the emotional language of the unconscious roots us in a far greater whole. The ancestors are an untapped potential to illuminate the perceptual/cognitive processes that underlie archetypal aesthetic experiences and complexity.
In genealogy we engage the unconscious and tend the living image. Our hunger is for connection, not more food, money, or status. When we know our ancestors we live in unbroken continuity with the past. This is grounding down to the molecular level.
Ideally, depth connections throughout deep time might help us to overcome stumbling blocks, move through loss, find deeper meaning and interpersonal connection, and function at our optimal potential. We break through ancient walls, listening to the archaic hum of the ancestors, what their souls are saying, that reminds us of the collective buzzing of bees.
Joseph Cambray, Provost of Pacifica, said, “So much of human suffering is very intimately tied up with non-conscious levels that it’s hard to imagine we could ameliorate symptoms without a depth perspective.”
Jung's "Great Man" can also appear as the Great woman -- Anima Mundi, the ancient worldview. It is the hermaphroditic fusion of all our ancestry into an omnipotent archetypal figure of soul and spirit.
Throughout much of human history, ancestors were revered and frequently visited in caves and barrows. People sat in these natural resonant echo chambers, chanting and drumming hypnotically and opening their altered psyches to the possibility of communication with the Beyond – voices of eternity.
People died so young, this youthful population needed shamanic guidance, needed primal wisdom. We are learning to understand that our immature culture can benefit by rooting ourselves in deep time and the wisdom of eternity. We still dream at night of connecting somehow with our departed loved ones. We are unconsciously entangled with our ancestral soul, but psychically dissociated.
Chopping Wood & Carrying Cosmic Water
Water is the great symbol of the primordial unconscious. And we are its water-bearers. We carry the ancestral psyche much like the bloodline. The dragon or serpent is another symbol of the universal unconscious, the psychic field, and renewal. It impregnates itself by biting its own tail. The depths conceive.
A feminine symbol, water also signifies emotions or psychic energy, fertility, growth, creative potential, new life, or healing. An integrative approach includes memory reconsolidation to maintain, strengthen, modify and stabilize memories of the unconscious and long-term memory. Our ancestors remain amnesiac agents as long as we are unconscious of them as a kinship system.
Psychologically, water means spirit that has become unconscious. The way of the soul leads to the water, to the dark mirror, the world of invisible perception, that reposes at its bottom. This water is no figure of speech, but a living symbol of the dark psyche. We descend into our depths, into that well of souls and perhaps return with a bit of its healing bounty.
The Tree, watered by the unconscious roots, is the great symbol of humanity. In the tree metaphor, these root systems that lie far beneath the surface of the Earth, which are just as extensive as the trunks and branches we have growing in plain view. We don't just look at the tree superficially, but examine its entire structure — perhaps, a metaphorical "chopping wood" -- including belief systems and subconscious patterns of thinking formed from birth.
We all "carry water" for the divine in our manifest embodiment -- not only in the fluids of our bodies, but the fluidity of the psyche and our epigenetic memories. But how many of us incorporate the numinous realms of the psyche—meaning the unconscious, spiritual beliefs, dream life, the imagination, our connection to mystery, myth, archetype and the natural world?
How do we function in society, what bonds us to one another, what causes our psychoses and neuroses, and what helps us to individuate and become the people we were meant to be? The Depth Approach includes Dual Process Theory and The Frame Problem, and some consequences for our research.
Dual Process Theory recognizes that the human mind has two disparate modes of thinking - Subconscious Intuitive Understanding on one hand and Conscious Logical Reasoning on the other. The depth perspective "frame" in this case is provided by genealogy. There is an aesthetic harmony to the layout of our genealogical displays, or grids, which comes in a variety of forms.
Combined Perspectives
Psychological life is aesthetic life and just as meaningful as understanding. Aesthetics is an artistic philosophy. It makes us permeable to the image, mobilizes us internally and enables imaginative activity through a form of observance.
Imagery evokes a perceptual response -- an aesthetic response, a participatory way of knowing, re-membering, and reconnecting with soul and identity. In the phenomenological aesthetic paradigm, Hillman asserts that images derive autonomy and operate according to their own will, similar to gods.
The nature of Beauty is an immediate revelation of things as they are: unity, line, rhythm, tension, elegance -- communion of the soul with the mysteries of inner and outer world -- the naked awareness of divine self-revelation in a community of living presence. Traces of ancient art and adornment show aesthetics -- the felt-sense of form and beauty -- is inherent in the primal mind.
For example, we can be so caught up by beauty that everything stops in aesthetic arrest -- a seizure by the tremendum. We reflexively gasp for air in awe and wonder that precedes any thoughts or cognitive framing. "I breath, therefore I perceive." Aesthetics is a method of externalizing something of the inner quality of life, fusing the transcendent with the immanent, the personal with the impersonal, the inner with the outer.
Genealogy is an aesthetic discipline. Our ancestral practice has an inherently aesthetic base; we perceive them through our aesthetic sensibilities. We instinctually long for beauty; it affects the soul and can heal or restore our psychological senses. Aesthetics reveals spiritual and psychological significance. The depths of something helps us feel and make sense of our experiences.
Deep Primal Engagement
Ancestors appear as self-presenting, expressive forms that speak to us. We imbibe and re-dignify the soul and spirit of our early ancestors across time and place. Their communion with us asserts the fundamental continuity of our primal consciousness, imbued with the natural force of the mythic by our faithful attention.
The image remains as the face of things as they are when all else perishes -- a psychological aesthetic with patterns of meaning. This isn't formal aesthetics but an opportunity to "see through" to greater significance, to distinguish something from the shifting quality of the vortex of morphing imagery.
James Hillman said, “Aesthetics in this primordial sense involves sensing the things of the world in their particularity and being affected by the many ways things present themselves.” Bioevolutionary aesthetics includes the cognitive spectrum of sensation, perception, conceptualization, and thought as well as the basic emotions, pain, and sexuality.
Aesthetic space makes way for the beauty that presents itself to us. We pause, take a moment to notice and appreciate the particulars of some thing, and enter aesthetic space, increasing our awareness of larger patterns of purpose. Our aesthetic response may express as transformation.
Conversely, aesthetic frustration or oppression affects our bodily feeling, our emotional well-being, and we must ward ourselves from their influence--the despair they produce, and the exhaustion, outrage, repulsion, insult, if not assault, and a heightened irritability.
We deny our aesthetic responses by closing down our senses, our perceptions; we anesthetize ourselves -- we just go numb as in anesthesia. But ugliness, pain, or disgust can also jar us awake with a conscious shock, calling our attention to soul.
"If the aesthetic is seen in contrast to the anaesthetic - or numbness, it can be understood more correctly as ‘enlivened being'. Reclaiming the aesthetic in this way enables us to understand the link between the aesthetic and responsibility: response-ability not as a moral imperative, but as the ability to respond." (Shelley Sacks, UN Summit on Culture and Development, Stockholm 1998)
We can cultivate a capacity to open ourselves to 'the other' in all its forms. We bring our own sense of deep aesthetics to ancestral relationships, knowing that each of our living cells carries the experience of billions of years of experimentation by its ancestors. We can have an aesthetic appreciation of each life.
About 1/3 - 1/2 of each of the psychological types seem to enjoy genealogy. The 'analysts' (Intuitive and Thinking) enjoy a rigorous, fact-based treasure hunt through their ancestry. The visionary 'diplomats' (intuitive and feeling) are curious, imaginative, on the lookout for secrets, hidden meanings and new possibilities.
Conservative 'sentinels' (observant and judging) like to preserve order and security, are often focus on the bonds of family and the importance of history. Goal-oriented 'explorers' (observing and prospecting) tend to stick to the facts and have practical applications in the future - the past and the present are prologue.
Genealogical Heritage
An ancestor or forebear is a parent or (recursively) the parent of an ancestor (i.e., a grandparent, great-grandparent, great-great-grandparent, and so forth). Ancestor is "any person from whom one is descended. In law the person from whom an estate has been inherited."
Direct-line research refers to genealogy research focused on one's direct-line ancestors. We follow both surnames at each generation (i.e. paternal and maternal lines), back as far as records allow. Family history, rather than just genealogy, includes extended families (biological marital, sociological) that often interact significantly with our own lines.
When our genealogy expresses more than one line of descent from a given ancestor, then it exhibits segmentation or branching. This is a "segmented genealogy." A segmented genealogy starts with a single parent and shows the relationship of children to each other. This kind of genealogy will have both a horizontal and vertical element to it.
If we go back 300 years, we have roughly 3,000 ancestors. Going back a thousand years results theoretically in billions of ancestors, more people than ever lived on the face of the earth! In reality, the same ancestors will show up in multiple places in your family tree as you have multiple lines of descent from many of these people.
"Linear genealogy" expresses only one line of descent, linking the genealogy to an older ancestor or group. Both segmented and linear genealogies exhibit depth (number of generations) and a sort of "cartography" of the unconscious. That map may lead us toward our greatest possible treasure–our inner gold -- the knowledge in our bones.
Maybe we also find a bit of fool's gold along the way. Family stories provide wonderful insights into the lives of our ancestors. However, not all family stories are true. Many such stories are fictional. Yet, even the stories that are either entirely or part fiction may contain clues to facts. Good genealogical practice requires that we admit the fiction to mine for its nuggets of truth.
In the domestic sphere, linear genealogy relates individuals to other individuals and kinship groups. They also function in the political and legal sphere to legitimate rulers, express progress, and support claims to recognition, status or power.
Some lines pass through or end (or begin) in legends or mythic figures. Already in the fifth century, the Macedonian kings claimed descent from Perdiccas, who descended from Temenos, a king of Argos; and he was great-grandchild of Hyllus, the son of Heracles.
Woden is consistently placed at nine removes from the founder of a dynasty. But is that the god, or Odin the man? In the 13th century, the Icelandic historian Snorri Sturluson wrote that Odin came to worshiped as a god, but he was originally a famous warrior who led his people out of Troy and into Scandinavia. Or was he?
In the 13th century, the Danish historian Saxo Grammaticus wrote that Odin was a sorcerer from Byzantium. The other gods there stripped Odin of his rank and power, then banished him. He fooled the people of Scandinavia into worshiping him as a god. The old kings of Wessex and Mercia claimed him as ancestor.
Paul Henri Mallet (1730-1807) might have been the first to formulate explicitly the idea that the historical Odin was a man named Sigge Fridulfsson. He says, "His true name was Sigge, son of Fridulph; but he assumed that of Odin, who was the Supreme God among the Scythians." Mallet's version claims, Sigge (also known as Odin) was an ally of Mithradates, a Persian king defeated by the Romans. (Mallet, Northern Antiquities, 1770, 1809).
On the other hand, as many as 3 million men worldwide may be descendants of the Irish warlord, Niall of the Nine Hostages, who was who was the Irish “High King” at Tara, the ancient center of Ireland from A.D. 379 to A.D. 405. A 2003 study found that 8 percent of all Mongolian males are the descendants of Genghis Khan, sharing his Y chromosome. The Khan family may have as many as 16 million descendants in Asia today.
Even metaphorically, the most prestigious of all possible ancestry is descent from divinity itself. Descent from antiquity (DFA) is the project of establishing a well-researched, generation-by-generation descent of living persons from people living in antiquity. It is an ultimate challenge in genealogy. No prospective DFA is accepted at this time.
Irish legends and subsequently Scottish lines, claim royal descent from Milesius, King of Spain, husband of Scota, Princess of Egypt. The Welsh also have legends, which claim descent from Noah, while Charlemagne, the father of all European nobility, claims descent from Adam. Sometimes totems represent descent from Dragons, Lions, Eagles, or Serpents.
Hellenistic dynasties, such as the Ptolemies, claimed descent from gods and legendary heroes. In the Middle Ages, major royal dynasties of Europe sponsored compilations claiming their descent from Julius Caesar, Alexander the Great, in particular the rulers of Troy. As propaganda, these claims glorified a royal patron by trumpeting the antiquity and nobility of his ancestry.
These descent lines included both mythical figures and outright fiction, much of which is still widely perpetuated today. The odds of royal ancestry are overwhelming. Virtually all people with European ancestry are descended from the usual royal suspects of 1000+ years ago.
Seeing ourselves in our archetypal nature helps us recognize our timeless parts and own our gifts. Having a mythic sensibility about ourselves offers a clue to how we might be unconsciously acting out archetypal patterns.
Apparently conflicting genealogies with different functions (and often without kinship terms) emerge from the religious or cultic sphere. That is, genealogies become fluid in accuracy according to their function. No generalizations are possible for a historiographic value of such genealogies with fragmentations and gaps.
For example, Sumerian and Akkadian elements were fused into Hellenistic and biblical narrative with questionable linkages, significant differences, and background stories. Of the nine descendants of Adam, only Enoch is described with particulars from traditions now lost to us (Genesis Apocryphon) though we know they are related to Mesopotamian "fish-shaped sages" and kings lists.
The exact form of such ancient determinative lines in royal or religious genealogies is not known, but historically conflated, confabulated, and altered by compilers at various times for various reasons. Jung suggested we "think diligently" about the images the ancients have left us, as they also intimate what is to come.
Depth is the most important feature of linear genealogy. That depth expresses the memories of the people who preserve it in practice, relating us to deep time, distance, and transcendence.
But, true nobility springs from the soul and spirit, rather than any genetic trail.
Depth Perception
Today's world is complex. We may be disheartened by the current state of the world, including nasty politics, signs of eco-collapse, and relentless culture wars. Genealogy can be part of the re-enchantment of our world, an oasis or refuge honoring the heart and soul of our family's living emotional memory.
Genealogy is a natural and cultural artifact. A genealogy is a record of the descent of a person or group from an ancestor. Death fascinates us, and probably always has. It is a sniper that can strike anywhere, anytime and constantly informs us of our mortality. The oldest extant epic, Gilgamesh, directly addresses the question of why death exists and the yearning for immortality.
In our family tree our 'depth perception' refers to how many generations are known to us, and how keenly we perceive the essence of each of their lives (face recognition) in our family history. The self emerges from seed fulfilling character and calling in our identity -- the innate genius of creativity and sublimity.
Living in touch with what our ancestors symbolize in the emotional language of the unconscious roots us in a far greater whole. The ancestors are an untapped potential to illuminate the perceptual/cognitive processes that underlie archetypal aesthetic experiences and complexity.
In genealogy we engage the unconscious and tend the living image. Our hunger is for connection, not more food, money, or status. When we know our ancestors we live in unbroken continuity with the past. This is grounding down to the molecular level.
Ideally, depth connections throughout deep time might help us to overcome stumbling blocks, move through loss, find deeper meaning and interpersonal connection, and function at our optimal potential. We break through ancient walls, listening to the archaic hum of the ancestors, what their souls are saying, that reminds us of the collective buzzing of bees.
Joseph Cambray, Provost of Pacifica, said, “So much of human suffering is very intimately tied up with non-conscious levels that it’s hard to imagine we could ameliorate symptoms without a depth perspective.”
Jung's "Great Man" can also appear as the Great woman -- Anima Mundi, the ancient worldview. It is the hermaphroditic fusion of all our ancestry into an omnipotent archetypal figure of soul and spirit.
Throughout much of human history, ancestors were revered and frequently visited in caves and barrows. People sat in these natural resonant echo chambers, chanting and drumming hypnotically and opening their altered psyches to the possibility of communication with the Beyond – voices of eternity.
People died so young, this youthful population needed shamanic guidance, needed primal wisdom. We are learning to understand that our immature culture can benefit by rooting ourselves in deep time and the wisdom of eternity. We still dream at night of connecting somehow with our departed loved ones. We are unconsciously entangled with our ancestral soul, but psychically dissociated.
Chopping Wood & Carrying Cosmic Water
Water is the great symbol of the primordial unconscious. And we are its water-bearers. We carry the ancestral psyche much like the bloodline. The dragon or serpent is another symbol of the universal unconscious, the psychic field, and renewal. It impregnates itself by biting its own tail. The depths conceive.
A feminine symbol, water also signifies emotions or psychic energy, fertility, growth, creative potential, new life, or healing. An integrative approach includes memory reconsolidation to maintain, strengthen, modify and stabilize memories of the unconscious and long-term memory. Our ancestors remain amnesiac agents as long as we are unconscious of them as a kinship system.
Psychologically, water means spirit that has become unconscious. The way of the soul leads to the water, to the dark mirror, the world of invisible perception, that reposes at its bottom. This water is no figure of speech, but a living symbol of the dark psyche. We descend into our depths, into that well of souls and perhaps return with a bit of its healing bounty.
The Tree, watered by the unconscious roots, is the great symbol of humanity. In the tree metaphor, these root systems that lie far beneath the surface of the Earth, which are just as extensive as the trunks and branches we have growing in plain view. We don't just look at the tree superficially, but examine its entire structure — perhaps, a metaphorical "chopping wood" -- including belief systems and subconscious patterns of thinking formed from birth.
We all "carry water" for the divine in our manifest embodiment -- not only in the fluids of our bodies, but the fluidity of the psyche and our epigenetic memories. But how many of us incorporate the numinous realms of the psyche—meaning the unconscious, spiritual beliefs, dream life, the imagination, our connection to mystery, myth, archetype and the natural world?
How do we function in society, what bonds us to one another, what causes our psychoses and neuroses, and what helps us to individuate and become the people we were meant to be? The Depth Approach includes Dual Process Theory and The Frame Problem, and some consequences for our research.
Dual Process Theory recognizes that the human mind has two disparate modes of thinking - Subconscious Intuitive Understanding on one hand and Conscious Logical Reasoning on the other. The depth perspective "frame" in this case is provided by genealogy. There is an aesthetic harmony to the layout of our genealogical displays, or grids, which comes in a variety of forms.
Combined Perspectives
Psychological life is aesthetic life and just as meaningful as understanding. Aesthetics is an artistic philosophy. It makes us permeable to the image, mobilizes us internally and enables imaginative activity through a form of observance.
Imagery evokes a perceptual response -- an aesthetic response, a participatory way of knowing, re-membering, and reconnecting with soul and identity. In the phenomenological aesthetic paradigm, Hillman asserts that images derive autonomy and operate according to their own will, similar to gods.
The nature of Beauty is an immediate revelation of things as they are: unity, line, rhythm, tension, elegance -- communion of the soul with the mysteries of inner and outer world -- the naked awareness of divine self-revelation in a community of living presence. Traces of ancient art and adornment show aesthetics -- the felt-sense of form and beauty -- is inherent in the primal mind.
For example, we can be so caught up by beauty that everything stops in aesthetic arrest -- a seizure by the tremendum. We reflexively gasp for air in awe and wonder that precedes any thoughts or cognitive framing. "I breath, therefore I perceive." Aesthetics is a method of externalizing something of the inner quality of life, fusing the transcendent with the immanent, the personal with the impersonal, the inner with the outer.
Genealogy is an aesthetic discipline. Our ancestral practice has an inherently aesthetic base; we perceive them through our aesthetic sensibilities. We instinctually long for beauty; it affects the soul and can heal or restore our psychological senses. Aesthetics reveals spiritual and psychological significance. The depths of something helps us feel and make sense of our experiences.
Deep Primal Engagement
Ancestors appear as self-presenting, expressive forms that speak to us. We imbibe and re-dignify the soul and spirit of our early ancestors across time and place. Their communion with us asserts the fundamental continuity of our primal consciousness, imbued with the natural force of the mythic by our faithful attention.
The image remains as the face of things as they are when all else perishes -- a psychological aesthetic with patterns of meaning. This isn't formal aesthetics but an opportunity to "see through" to greater significance, to distinguish something from the shifting quality of the vortex of morphing imagery.
James Hillman said, “Aesthetics in this primordial sense involves sensing the things of the world in their particularity and being affected by the many ways things present themselves.” Bioevolutionary aesthetics includes the cognitive spectrum of sensation, perception, conceptualization, and thought as well as the basic emotions, pain, and sexuality.
Aesthetic space makes way for the beauty that presents itself to us. We pause, take a moment to notice and appreciate the particulars of some thing, and enter aesthetic space, increasing our awareness of larger patterns of purpose. Our aesthetic response may express as transformation.
Conversely, aesthetic frustration or oppression affects our bodily feeling, our emotional well-being, and we must ward ourselves from their influence--the despair they produce, and the exhaustion, outrage, repulsion, insult, if not assault, and a heightened irritability.
We deny our aesthetic responses by closing down our senses, our perceptions; we anesthetize ourselves -- we just go numb as in anesthesia. But ugliness, pain, or disgust can also jar us awake with a conscious shock, calling our attention to soul.
"If the aesthetic is seen in contrast to the anaesthetic - or numbness, it can be understood more correctly as ‘enlivened being'. Reclaiming the aesthetic in this way enables us to understand the link between the aesthetic and responsibility: response-ability not as a moral imperative, but as the ability to respond." (Shelley Sacks, UN Summit on Culture and Development, Stockholm 1998)
We can cultivate a capacity to open ourselves to 'the other' in all its forms. We bring our own sense of deep aesthetics to ancestral relationships, knowing that each of our living cells carries the experience of billions of years of experimentation by its ancestors. We can have an aesthetic appreciation of each life.
About 1/3 - 1/2 of each of the psychological types seem to enjoy genealogy. The 'analysts' (Intuitive and Thinking) enjoy a rigorous, fact-based treasure hunt through their ancestry. The visionary 'diplomats' (intuitive and feeling) are curious, imaginative, on the lookout for secrets, hidden meanings and new possibilities.
Conservative 'sentinels' (observant and judging) like to preserve order and security, are often focus on the bonds of family and the importance of history. Goal-oriented 'explorers' (observing and prospecting) tend to stick to the facts and have practical applications in the future - the past and the present are prologue.
Genealogical Heritage
An ancestor or forebear is a parent or (recursively) the parent of an ancestor (i.e., a grandparent, great-grandparent, great-great-grandparent, and so forth). Ancestor is "any person from whom one is descended. In law the person from whom an estate has been inherited."
Direct-line research refers to genealogy research focused on one's direct-line ancestors. We follow both surnames at each generation (i.e. paternal and maternal lines), back as far as records allow. Family history, rather than just genealogy, includes extended families (biological marital, sociological) that often interact significantly with our own lines.
When our genealogy expresses more than one line of descent from a given ancestor, then it exhibits segmentation or branching. This is a "segmented genealogy." A segmented genealogy starts with a single parent and shows the relationship of children to each other. This kind of genealogy will have both a horizontal and vertical element to it.
If we go back 300 years, we have roughly 3,000 ancestors. Going back a thousand years results theoretically in billions of ancestors, more people than ever lived on the face of the earth! In reality, the same ancestors will show up in multiple places in your family tree as you have multiple lines of descent from many of these people.
"Linear genealogy" expresses only one line of descent, linking the genealogy to an older ancestor or group. Both segmented and linear genealogies exhibit depth (number of generations) and a sort of "cartography" of the unconscious. That map may lead us toward our greatest possible treasure–our inner gold -- the knowledge in our bones.
Maybe we also find a bit of fool's gold along the way. Family stories provide wonderful insights into the lives of our ancestors. However, not all family stories are true. Many such stories are fictional. Yet, even the stories that are either entirely or part fiction may contain clues to facts. Good genealogical practice requires that we admit the fiction to mine for its nuggets of truth.
In the domestic sphere, linear genealogy relates individuals to other individuals and kinship groups. They also function in the political and legal sphere to legitimate rulers, express progress, and support claims to recognition, status or power.
Some lines pass through or end (or begin) in legends or mythic figures. Already in the fifth century, the Macedonian kings claimed descent from Perdiccas, who descended from Temenos, a king of Argos; and he was great-grandchild of Hyllus, the son of Heracles.
Woden is consistently placed at nine removes from the founder of a dynasty. But is that the god, or Odin the man? In the 13th century, the Icelandic historian Snorri Sturluson wrote that Odin came to worshiped as a god, but he was originally a famous warrior who led his people out of Troy and into Scandinavia. Or was he?
In the 13th century, the Danish historian Saxo Grammaticus wrote that Odin was a sorcerer from Byzantium. The other gods there stripped Odin of his rank and power, then banished him. He fooled the people of Scandinavia into worshiping him as a god. The old kings of Wessex and Mercia claimed him as ancestor.
Paul Henri Mallet (1730-1807) might have been the first to formulate explicitly the idea that the historical Odin was a man named Sigge Fridulfsson. He says, "His true name was Sigge, son of Fridulph; but he assumed that of Odin, who was the Supreme God among the Scythians." Mallet's version claims, Sigge (also known as Odin) was an ally of Mithradates, a Persian king defeated by the Romans. (Mallet, Northern Antiquities, 1770, 1809).
On the other hand, as many as 3 million men worldwide may be descendants of the Irish warlord, Niall of the Nine Hostages, who was who was the Irish “High King” at Tara, the ancient center of Ireland from A.D. 379 to A.D. 405. A 2003 study found that 8 percent of all Mongolian males are the descendants of Genghis Khan, sharing his Y chromosome. The Khan family may have as many as 16 million descendants in Asia today.
Even metaphorically, the most prestigious of all possible ancestry is descent from divinity itself. Descent from antiquity (DFA) is the project of establishing a well-researched, generation-by-generation descent of living persons from people living in antiquity. It is an ultimate challenge in genealogy. No prospective DFA is accepted at this time.
Irish legends and subsequently Scottish lines, claim royal descent from Milesius, King of Spain, husband of Scota, Princess of Egypt. The Welsh also have legends, which claim descent from Noah, while Charlemagne, the father of all European nobility, claims descent from Adam. Sometimes totems represent descent from Dragons, Lions, Eagles, or Serpents.
Hellenistic dynasties, such as the Ptolemies, claimed descent from gods and legendary heroes. In the Middle Ages, major royal dynasties of Europe sponsored compilations claiming their descent from Julius Caesar, Alexander the Great, in particular the rulers of Troy. As propaganda, these claims glorified a royal patron by trumpeting the antiquity and nobility of his ancestry.
These descent lines included both mythical figures and outright fiction, much of which is still widely perpetuated today. The odds of royal ancestry are overwhelming. Virtually all people with European ancestry are descended from the usual royal suspects of 1000+ years ago.
Seeing ourselves in our archetypal nature helps us recognize our timeless parts and own our gifts. Having a mythic sensibility about ourselves offers a clue to how we might be unconsciously acting out archetypal patterns.
Apparently conflicting genealogies with different functions (and often without kinship terms) emerge from the religious or cultic sphere. That is, genealogies become fluid in accuracy according to their function. No generalizations are possible for a historiographic value of such genealogies with fragmentations and gaps.
For example, Sumerian and Akkadian elements were fused into Hellenistic and biblical narrative with questionable linkages, significant differences, and background stories. Of the nine descendants of Adam, only Enoch is described with particulars from traditions now lost to us (Genesis Apocryphon) though we know they are related to Mesopotamian "fish-shaped sages" and kings lists.
The exact form of such ancient determinative lines in royal or religious genealogies is not known, but historically conflated, confabulated, and altered by compilers at various times for various reasons. Jung suggested we "think diligently" about the images the ancients have left us, as they also intimate what is to come.
Depth is the most important feature of linear genealogy. That depth expresses the memories of the people who preserve it in practice, relating us to deep time, distance, and transcendence.
But, true nobility springs from the soul and spirit, rather than any genetic trail.
WE LIVE NOW
Breath & Blood
Genealogy is a recorded history of a person or family’s descent from an ancestor or ancestors. Soul is spiritual or emotional warmth, force or evidence. These combine so that knowing your roots and connecting with family are good for the soul. Our ancestors are also symbols.
Jung noted, "If one accepts the symbol, it is as if a door opens leading into a new room whose existence one previously did not know."(Liber Novus, Page 311)
"I Am. Lo, I Am Alive"
Genealogy is a written testament to the endurance of the archaic -- a historical epic of the flesh made word. Healing of the mind and body was practiced in prehistoric times and a vital part of it involved maintaining a living connection with the ancestors.
“Psyche” is Greek for soul, life, and breath; so psyche is Nature itself. Jung reminds us “nature is not matter only, she is also spirit,” -- the Great Mother. If we repress nature, animals, creative fantasy, and the “inferior” or primitive side of humans, we depreciate the earth and lose our connection with nature and divinity.
Jung told Ira Progoff that, “individuation is the natural process by which a tree becomes a tree and a human a human." He said that consciousness can just as well interfere with the natural growth process as aid it. We do not have a sense of living history.
Incorporating wisdom from the depths of the psyche, spans the archaic, natural, primordial, or original. Dissociation from our ancestors is unconscious dissociation from nature, our nature and the world soul. Rituals, such as genealogy, can help us reconnect, to awaken both spirit and nature to a new life -- spanning modern and archaic.
This quest for self is the yearning for soul and the healing power of nature. Jung believed when we touch nature we get clean, that natural life is the “nourishing soil of the soul." When we search for our ancestors we search for soul. The collective unconscious is the well of souls.
When our soul is touched, we know what we are here for. Our whole purpose and destiny is just to be. We do not need to lose the mystery by pretending to a knowledge that we do not have. If we just stay with the process, living the soul, our genealogy unfolds with our life's journey and meaning. The streaming continuity of life becomes clear in our lineage. Our ancestral legacy is the ancestral continuum or ancestral field.
We can listen to the voices, feelings, sights and experiences of our ancestors. The land of the dead is the country of our ancestors. The images who walk in on us are our ancestors, ordinary and extraordinary. Genealogy is a tangible path to the soul and the sacred. In genealogy we have to go through the personal to get to the transcendent. Genealogy is a living mythology organically relevant to living the organic form and participating in myth.
Return of the Feminine
Unlike paternal line genealogy of inheritance, social norms and the Father Archetype, contemporary genealogy fully embraces the feminine, and the infusion of maternal lines and qualities into the family tree that speak on behalf of life.
The life value of the facts are related both to everyday and eternal images. The return to the Feminine is not focused on transcendence, but on the embodiment of the sacred, in life and in relationships. The grandmothers of our family tree embody the Mother Archetype.
The unification of the body, sexuality and emotions with the spirit heralds a return from striving to being. Myth is the transcendent in living relationship with the present -- the life wisdom that lives within us and is bound in our body. Myth points the way beyond the phenomenal field, and this role is demonstrated in the roots of our genealogical lines, where we find families of gods and goddesses.
Joseph Campbell explored three major themes of the sacred Feminine:
1) Initiation into the cosmos and nature; immanence and eternity, and thus existing outside the bounds of ordinary, lived experience.
2) Transformation; guiding the life cycle from birth to death.
3) Inspiration; the deep, felt sense of the aliveness and energy of all life.
”On the simplest level, the Goddess is the Earth. On the next, archaic level, She is the surrounding sky. On the philosophic level, She is Maya, the forms of sensibility, the limitations of the senses that enclose us so that all of our thinking takes place within her bounds—She is IT. The Goddess is the ultimate boundary of consciousness in the world of time and space.”
(Joseph Campbell, Goddesses: Mysteries of the Feminine Divine)
The Incredible Lightness of Breathing
Breath is life -- the life-giving presence. In Latin, Hebrew and Greek, 'breath' means 'soul.' When we breath we derive sustenance from the world around us. The breath of life is the symbol and medium of vital force which animates the body and shows itself in breathing and inspiration. On a cosmic level, breath symbolizes the spirit and the vital breath of the universe. In this way, to breathe is to assimilate spiritual power.
Breath is a symbol of freedom, quest, direction, and delivery. Inhalation and exhalation symbolize the alternating rhythm of life and death, of manifestation and reabsorption into the universe. In L'Air et les Songes, Bachelard notes that breathing is connected with circulation of the blood and with the important symbolic paths of involution and evolution.
There Will Be Blood
Blood and bloodline is of central significance in genealogy. Where Breath is flight, Blood is the ties that bind -- relativity, heredity, bloodlines, and self-realization -- life, sex, and death. Blood is the fiery 'water' of our body's rivers, always in motion, ceaseless in its circulation.
When we feel most alive, when we experience passion, jealousy, or other overpowering emotions, blood rushes through our veins, we breathe faster, our cheeks redden. Blood impresses the imagination, stimulating all sorts of beliefs beyond the rational -- for example, drinking blood for regeneration. Globally it represents not only heritage, but life force itself, as the element of divine life that functions within the human body.
Blood has carried extraordinary symbolic power since Neolithic times with the cyclic mysteries of the goddess and menstrual taboos, reflecting the magical meaning of women as sources of life, symbols of Eros and fertility, and the magical meaning of blood as vital fluid.. The "knot of Isis" funerary amulet placed at the neck of the deceased symbolized "the blood of Isis."
In ancient Greek medicine, each of the four humors became associated with an element. Blood was the humor identified with air, since both were hot and wet. And blood means kin from common ancestry. Eliphas Levi called blood "the great arcanum of life" and, "the first incarnation of the universal fluid; it is the materialized vital light. Its birth is the most marvelous of all nature’s marvels; it lives only by perpetually transforming itself, for it is the universal Proteus."
Archetypal beliefs, fantasies and notions concerning the significance of blood are among the oldest surviving concepts from the earliest days of human existence. Symbolically, blood is bonds, promises, responsibility, sacrifice, collective will and has many religious connotations. Childbirth and death often involve blood. Wars have been fought in the name of bloodlines. Blood rituals symbolize death and rebirth. Body piercing is also a blood ritual.
The notion that "life is in the blood" gave rise to its presumed divine nature, a gift of the gods. Dream meanings of blood include life, fluidity, passion and that which sustains us, but also emotional pain and hurtful things. Blood is said to have magic powers and it is also associated with a variety of irrational notions, including blood brotherhood, "royal blood," blood vengeance, "pure blood," blood baptism, "bad blood," bloodshed, and blood guilt.
Depth Approach
Jung thought his psychology contributed to a depth aesthetic that rests on the manifestation of the archetypal in all forms of creativity. As such, it is closely related to the spiritual and religious.
A Jungian approach to genealogy is not a requirement for practice, but it is a valid approach with its own coherence. Archetypal psychology is a legitimate 'ground' for an aesthetic, phenomenological approach to genealogy.
Depth Psychology can help us explore the hidden parts of human experience with a deeper rather than reductive view. Looking beyond the surface level we find currents that run throughout our lives and those of our ancestors, connecting us and communicating greater meaning through imagery, dreams, and archetypal patterns.
The depth orientation brings a new lens to our transgenerational issues we may have overlooked. The ancestral field connects us with something larger that our everyday selves, raising what was unconscious into conscious awareness. Symbolism is the practice of representing peoples, places, objects, and ideas by means of symbols or of attributing symbolic meanings or significance to objects, events, or relationships.
A psychological approach is a trustworthy framework for understanding a more holistic genealogical process, with a clear sense of humanness or personhood, and irreal and quasi-real experience -- intangibles produced by psyche itself.
Intangibles
Our genealogical lines are ours alone, although we share some of them with others. When we begin our genealogical adventure, we enter our own exclusive path. As Jung suggests, "You can enter only into your own mysteries." How do we explore the depths of our reality and experience, seeing underneath that which appears on the surface?
Campbell noted, "Whenever a knight of the Grail tried to follow a path made by someone else, he went altogether astray. Where there is a way or path, it is someone else's footsteps. Each of us has to find his own way, and this is what gives our Occidental world its initiative and creative quality. Nobody can give you a mythology. The images that mean something to you, you'll find in your dreams, in your visions, in your actions — and you'll find out what they are after you've passed them." (Joseph Campbell, interview by Joan Marler, Yoga Journal, Joseph Campbell Foundation)
Our ancestors are like intangible assets that lack physical substance and usually are very hard to evaluate. They are not constituted or represented by a physical object and their value is not measurable. But we can feel and even assess it despite lack of physical presence.
Modes of Apprehension
A depth approach addresses the feelings, significant dreams, and imagery that are naturally aroused in the self-discovery process, and describes the nature of synchronous events. Grounded theory has a particular conceptual and methodological foundation that doesn't reduce what it means to be human, embodied or incorporeal.
We need to separate our constructions from a delusory interpretation of the facts of reality, as available to experience. How can we integrate different theories relating to the basis of reality? No shortage of comparisons and correlations between spiritual notions,metaphysical ideas, and scientific theories has been made.
The normally unconscious functional layer of perceptional and emotional variants are only psychologically transcendent but by no means "transcendental," i.e., metaphysical. Perfectly normal people can have visions in certain moments. The heart of the labyrinth is the heart of all life; it is the womb of creation, rebirth, regeneration and metamorphosis. A labyrinth is a scrambled mandala.
In an idealist worldview, we act on the world through consciousness and, therefore, actively know and shape our world. In contrast, in a realist view, the world acts us and we react. Both perspectives tend to assume a dualist subject/object separation and directional relationship between person and world that does not exist in the world of actual lived experience.
We can describe at least three functional aspects of consciousness and focus of attention that relate to personal and collective conscious-unconscious phenomenology and models of reality — the way we perceive it, the way we imagine or interpret it, and the unified ground underlying existence.
1) Personal self-awareness fused with direct sensory experience and emotion (awake and aware of surroundings).
2) a fusion of imaginal memories, myths, dreams and conceptual interpretations of experience.
3) Non-dual unity and totality; the universal, suprapersonal or global aspect of dimensionless abstraction, we call “Consciousness,” or God in potentia.
A descriptive phenomenological method helps us grasp previously unrecognized assumptions regarding meaning -- the means to understand subjective matters. The psychological approach is neither idealist nor realist, but intimate. Like ourselves, most of our ancestors had a lifeworld, place and home that hold people and world together.
Place is a ontological structure of being-in-the world because of our existence as embodied beings. We are "bound by body to be in place." And the same holds true in the inner life. As with lifeworld and place, home as experience presupposes and sustains a taken-for-granted involvement between person and world. This bond is largely unself-conscious, and the phenomenological aim it to make that tacitness explicit and thereby understand it.
There many challenges in life, from catastrophes (war, famine, plague, disasters), to loss of autonomy, major illness and disabilities, to involuntary displacement‑-the families' experience of forced relocation and resettlement, metaphorically a forced journey and starting over or rebuilding. Our ancestors faced them all, mostly without modern conveniences.
The grand plan on which the unconscious life of the psyche is constructed is so inaccessible to our understanding that we can never know what evil may not be necessary in order to produce good by enantiodromia, and what good may very possibly lead to evil. ~Carl Jung, CW 9i, Para 397.
The lifeworld includes both the routine and the unusual, the mundane and the surprising. Whether an experience is ordinary or extraordinary, however, the lifeworld in which the experience happens is normally out of sight. Each of our ancestors had their space in their landscape and in our genealogical descent. That place serves as the condition of all existing things --"To be is to be in place."
Typically, we do not make our experiences in the lifeworld an object of conscious awareness. Rather, these experiences just happen, and we do not consider how they happen in context. The natural attitude is to take the everyday world unquestioningly for granted. Inner and outer dimensions normally unfold automatically.
Phenomenology is an enquiry based sub-discipline of philosophy that aims to understand the subjective experiences of consciousness. A phenomenon is a fact or situation that is observed to exist or happen and whose cause or explanation can be questioned.
No one can know what the ultimate things are.
We must therefore take them as we experience them.
And if such experience helps to make life healthier, more beautiful, more complete and more satisfactory to yourself and to those you love, you may safely say: “This was the grace of God.” ~Carl Jung, CW 11, Para 167.
Phenomenology is the interpretive study of human experience. The aim is to examine and clarify spontaneous human situations, events, meanings, and experiences, including personal impact, urgency, and ambiguity. We bring our own style to the process. It is an innovative way for looking at the person-environment relationship and for identifying and understanding its complex, multi-dimensional structure.
Consciousness was not separate from the world and human existence. A primarily aesthetic, poetic enterprise need not attempt to achieve a degree of rigor and epistemological clarity like natural scientists. We have no need to "objectify" the human being, but to adopt a qualitative, interpretive approach and to explore environmental and inherited issues. Phenomenology is one style of qualitative inquiry that involves symbolic interaction as its conceptual and methodological foundation.
As in conventional genealogy, we should apply trustworthy and reliable protocols to our practice. Humanity and the environment are an indivisible whole we can describe phenomenologically. Three phenomenological methods include: (1) first-person phenomenological research; (2) existential-phenomenological research; and (3) hermeneutical-phenomenological research.
Once we ourselves are rooted in this fertile earth of the deep unconscious, we can plant our contemporary and traditional Family Tree with its potentially vital forms and structures and listen to souls being born in the future. The Tree grounds us in imaginal space. We learn to "stand our ground" in the deep interiority of the psychological field with new vigor.
Dreaming the Earth, and Earthing the Dream
We can activate the deep knowing of the psyche as it is nourished and animated by intimacy with the natural world. Research suggests that interconnectivity manifests in our deep psychic bond with the earth, its creatures and plants, and the cosmos as a whole. Evidence of this interrelationship arises in our personal lives in dream images and synchronicities, and in the powerful and visceral sense of engagement we feel with the natural world.
In the beginning, the 'earth' was void and without form: "You have got to accept what the unconscious produces, and you have to understand its language. It is Nature, and it has to be translated into human forms." (Jung, C.G. Jung Speaking: Interviews and Encounters, Pages 359-364)
Joseph Campbell described four functions of myth:
(1) to help us through life passages, with ritual (baptism, marriage, initiation, job entry, funerals);
(2) to make connections with mysteries of the universe (spirituality, religion, arts);
(3) to explain the workings of nature (lightning, seasons, floods, birth, death); and
(4) to provide a way we find a place in the social community (family, clan, caste, ethnicity, social class, subculture).
Breath & Blood
Genealogy is a recorded history of a person or family’s descent from an ancestor or ancestors. Soul is spiritual or emotional warmth, force or evidence. These combine so that knowing your roots and connecting with family are good for the soul. Our ancestors are also symbols.
Jung noted, "If one accepts the symbol, it is as if a door opens leading into a new room whose existence one previously did not know."(Liber Novus, Page 311)
"I Am. Lo, I Am Alive"
Genealogy is a written testament to the endurance of the archaic -- a historical epic of the flesh made word. Healing of the mind and body was practiced in prehistoric times and a vital part of it involved maintaining a living connection with the ancestors.
“Psyche” is Greek for soul, life, and breath; so psyche is Nature itself. Jung reminds us “nature is not matter only, she is also spirit,” -- the Great Mother. If we repress nature, animals, creative fantasy, and the “inferior” or primitive side of humans, we depreciate the earth and lose our connection with nature and divinity.
Jung told Ira Progoff that, “individuation is the natural process by which a tree becomes a tree and a human a human." He said that consciousness can just as well interfere with the natural growth process as aid it. We do not have a sense of living history.
Incorporating wisdom from the depths of the psyche, spans the archaic, natural, primordial, or original. Dissociation from our ancestors is unconscious dissociation from nature, our nature and the world soul. Rituals, such as genealogy, can help us reconnect, to awaken both spirit and nature to a new life -- spanning modern and archaic.
This quest for self is the yearning for soul and the healing power of nature. Jung believed when we touch nature we get clean, that natural life is the “nourishing soil of the soul." When we search for our ancestors we search for soul. The collective unconscious is the well of souls.
When our soul is touched, we know what we are here for. Our whole purpose and destiny is just to be. We do not need to lose the mystery by pretending to a knowledge that we do not have. If we just stay with the process, living the soul, our genealogy unfolds with our life's journey and meaning. The streaming continuity of life becomes clear in our lineage. Our ancestral legacy is the ancestral continuum or ancestral field.
We can listen to the voices, feelings, sights and experiences of our ancestors. The land of the dead is the country of our ancestors. The images who walk in on us are our ancestors, ordinary and extraordinary. Genealogy is a tangible path to the soul and the sacred. In genealogy we have to go through the personal to get to the transcendent. Genealogy is a living mythology organically relevant to living the organic form and participating in myth.
Return of the Feminine
Unlike paternal line genealogy of inheritance, social norms and the Father Archetype, contemporary genealogy fully embraces the feminine, and the infusion of maternal lines and qualities into the family tree that speak on behalf of life.
The life value of the facts are related both to everyday and eternal images. The return to the Feminine is not focused on transcendence, but on the embodiment of the sacred, in life and in relationships. The grandmothers of our family tree embody the Mother Archetype.
The unification of the body, sexuality and emotions with the spirit heralds a return from striving to being. Myth is the transcendent in living relationship with the present -- the life wisdom that lives within us and is bound in our body. Myth points the way beyond the phenomenal field, and this role is demonstrated in the roots of our genealogical lines, where we find families of gods and goddesses.
Joseph Campbell explored three major themes of the sacred Feminine:
1) Initiation into the cosmos and nature; immanence and eternity, and thus existing outside the bounds of ordinary, lived experience.
2) Transformation; guiding the life cycle from birth to death.
3) Inspiration; the deep, felt sense of the aliveness and energy of all life.
”On the simplest level, the Goddess is the Earth. On the next, archaic level, She is the surrounding sky. On the philosophic level, She is Maya, the forms of sensibility, the limitations of the senses that enclose us so that all of our thinking takes place within her bounds—She is IT. The Goddess is the ultimate boundary of consciousness in the world of time and space.”
(Joseph Campbell, Goddesses: Mysteries of the Feminine Divine)
The Incredible Lightness of Breathing
Breath is life -- the life-giving presence. In Latin, Hebrew and Greek, 'breath' means 'soul.' When we breath we derive sustenance from the world around us. The breath of life is the symbol and medium of vital force which animates the body and shows itself in breathing and inspiration. On a cosmic level, breath symbolizes the spirit and the vital breath of the universe. In this way, to breathe is to assimilate spiritual power.
Breath is a symbol of freedom, quest, direction, and delivery. Inhalation and exhalation symbolize the alternating rhythm of life and death, of manifestation and reabsorption into the universe. In L'Air et les Songes, Bachelard notes that breathing is connected with circulation of the blood and with the important symbolic paths of involution and evolution.
There Will Be Blood
Blood and bloodline is of central significance in genealogy. Where Breath is flight, Blood is the ties that bind -- relativity, heredity, bloodlines, and self-realization -- life, sex, and death. Blood is the fiery 'water' of our body's rivers, always in motion, ceaseless in its circulation.
When we feel most alive, when we experience passion, jealousy, or other overpowering emotions, blood rushes through our veins, we breathe faster, our cheeks redden. Blood impresses the imagination, stimulating all sorts of beliefs beyond the rational -- for example, drinking blood for regeneration. Globally it represents not only heritage, but life force itself, as the element of divine life that functions within the human body.
Blood has carried extraordinary symbolic power since Neolithic times with the cyclic mysteries of the goddess and menstrual taboos, reflecting the magical meaning of women as sources of life, symbols of Eros and fertility, and the magical meaning of blood as vital fluid.. The "knot of Isis" funerary amulet placed at the neck of the deceased symbolized "the blood of Isis."
In ancient Greek medicine, each of the four humors became associated with an element. Blood was the humor identified with air, since both were hot and wet. And blood means kin from common ancestry. Eliphas Levi called blood "the great arcanum of life" and, "the first incarnation of the universal fluid; it is the materialized vital light. Its birth is the most marvelous of all nature’s marvels; it lives only by perpetually transforming itself, for it is the universal Proteus."
Archetypal beliefs, fantasies and notions concerning the significance of blood are among the oldest surviving concepts from the earliest days of human existence. Symbolically, blood is bonds, promises, responsibility, sacrifice, collective will and has many religious connotations. Childbirth and death often involve blood. Wars have been fought in the name of bloodlines. Blood rituals symbolize death and rebirth. Body piercing is also a blood ritual.
The notion that "life is in the blood" gave rise to its presumed divine nature, a gift of the gods. Dream meanings of blood include life, fluidity, passion and that which sustains us, but also emotional pain and hurtful things. Blood is said to have magic powers and it is also associated with a variety of irrational notions, including blood brotherhood, "royal blood," blood vengeance, "pure blood," blood baptism, "bad blood," bloodshed, and blood guilt.
Depth Approach
Jung thought his psychology contributed to a depth aesthetic that rests on the manifestation of the archetypal in all forms of creativity. As such, it is closely related to the spiritual and religious.
A Jungian approach to genealogy is not a requirement for practice, but it is a valid approach with its own coherence. Archetypal psychology is a legitimate 'ground' for an aesthetic, phenomenological approach to genealogy.
Depth Psychology can help us explore the hidden parts of human experience with a deeper rather than reductive view. Looking beyond the surface level we find currents that run throughout our lives and those of our ancestors, connecting us and communicating greater meaning through imagery, dreams, and archetypal patterns.
The depth orientation brings a new lens to our transgenerational issues we may have overlooked. The ancestral field connects us with something larger that our everyday selves, raising what was unconscious into conscious awareness. Symbolism is the practice of representing peoples, places, objects, and ideas by means of symbols or of attributing symbolic meanings or significance to objects, events, or relationships.
A psychological approach is a trustworthy framework for understanding a more holistic genealogical process, with a clear sense of humanness or personhood, and irreal and quasi-real experience -- intangibles produced by psyche itself.
Intangibles
Our genealogical lines are ours alone, although we share some of them with others. When we begin our genealogical adventure, we enter our own exclusive path. As Jung suggests, "You can enter only into your own mysteries." How do we explore the depths of our reality and experience, seeing underneath that which appears on the surface?
Campbell noted, "Whenever a knight of the Grail tried to follow a path made by someone else, he went altogether astray. Where there is a way or path, it is someone else's footsteps. Each of us has to find his own way, and this is what gives our Occidental world its initiative and creative quality. Nobody can give you a mythology. The images that mean something to you, you'll find in your dreams, in your visions, in your actions — and you'll find out what they are after you've passed them." (Joseph Campbell, interview by Joan Marler, Yoga Journal, Joseph Campbell Foundation)
Our ancestors are like intangible assets that lack physical substance and usually are very hard to evaluate. They are not constituted or represented by a physical object and their value is not measurable. But we can feel and even assess it despite lack of physical presence.
Modes of Apprehension
A depth approach addresses the feelings, significant dreams, and imagery that are naturally aroused in the self-discovery process, and describes the nature of synchronous events. Grounded theory has a particular conceptual and methodological foundation that doesn't reduce what it means to be human, embodied or incorporeal.
We need to separate our constructions from a delusory interpretation of the facts of reality, as available to experience. How can we integrate different theories relating to the basis of reality? No shortage of comparisons and correlations between spiritual notions,metaphysical ideas, and scientific theories has been made.
The normally unconscious functional layer of perceptional and emotional variants are only psychologically transcendent but by no means "transcendental," i.e., metaphysical. Perfectly normal people can have visions in certain moments. The heart of the labyrinth is the heart of all life; it is the womb of creation, rebirth, regeneration and metamorphosis. A labyrinth is a scrambled mandala.
In an idealist worldview, we act on the world through consciousness and, therefore, actively know and shape our world. In contrast, in a realist view, the world acts us and we react. Both perspectives tend to assume a dualist subject/object separation and directional relationship between person and world that does not exist in the world of actual lived experience.
We can describe at least three functional aspects of consciousness and focus of attention that relate to personal and collective conscious-unconscious phenomenology and models of reality — the way we perceive it, the way we imagine or interpret it, and the unified ground underlying existence.
1) Personal self-awareness fused with direct sensory experience and emotion (awake and aware of surroundings).
2) a fusion of imaginal memories, myths, dreams and conceptual interpretations of experience.
3) Non-dual unity and totality; the universal, suprapersonal or global aspect of dimensionless abstraction, we call “Consciousness,” or God in potentia.
A descriptive phenomenological method helps us grasp previously unrecognized assumptions regarding meaning -- the means to understand subjective matters. The psychological approach is neither idealist nor realist, but intimate. Like ourselves, most of our ancestors had a lifeworld, place and home that hold people and world together.
Place is a ontological structure of being-in-the world because of our existence as embodied beings. We are "bound by body to be in place." And the same holds true in the inner life. As with lifeworld and place, home as experience presupposes and sustains a taken-for-granted involvement between person and world. This bond is largely unself-conscious, and the phenomenological aim it to make that tacitness explicit and thereby understand it.
There many challenges in life, from catastrophes (war, famine, plague, disasters), to loss of autonomy, major illness and disabilities, to involuntary displacement‑-the families' experience of forced relocation and resettlement, metaphorically a forced journey and starting over or rebuilding. Our ancestors faced them all, mostly without modern conveniences.
The grand plan on which the unconscious life of the psyche is constructed is so inaccessible to our understanding that we can never know what evil may not be necessary in order to produce good by enantiodromia, and what good may very possibly lead to evil. ~Carl Jung, CW 9i, Para 397.
The lifeworld includes both the routine and the unusual, the mundane and the surprising. Whether an experience is ordinary or extraordinary, however, the lifeworld in which the experience happens is normally out of sight. Each of our ancestors had their space in their landscape and in our genealogical descent. That place serves as the condition of all existing things --"To be is to be in place."
Typically, we do not make our experiences in the lifeworld an object of conscious awareness. Rather, these experiences just happen, and we do not consider how they happen in context. The natural attitude is to take the everyday world unquestioningly for granted. Inner and outer dimensions normally unfold automatically.
Phenomenology is an enquiry based sub-discipline of philosophy that aims to understand the subjective experiences of consciousness. A phenomenon is a fact or situation that is observed to exist or happen and whose cause or explanation can be questioned.
No one can know what the ultimate things are.
We must therefore take them as we experience them.
And if such experience helps to make life healthier, more beautiful, more complete and more satisfactory to yourself and to those you love, you may safely say: “This was the grace of God.” ~Carl Jung, CW 11, Para 167.
Phenomenology is the interpretive study of human experience. The aim is to examine and clarify spontaneous human situations, events, meanings, and experiences, including personal impact, urgency, and ambiguity. We bring our own style to the process. It is an innovative way for looking at the person-environment relationship and for identifying and understanding its complex, multi-dimensional structure.
Consciousness was not separate from the world and human existence. A primarily aesthetic, poetic enterprise need not attempt to achieve a degree of rigor and epistemological clarity like natural scientists. We have no need to "objectify" the human being, but to adopt a qualitative, interpretive approach and to explore environmental and inherited issues. Phenomenology is one style of qualitative inquiry that involves symbolic interaction as its conceptual and methodological foundation.
As in conventional genealogy, we should apply trustworthy and reliable protocols to our practice. Humanity and the environment are an indivisible whole we can describe phenomenologically. Three phenomenological methods include: (1) first-person phenomenological research; (2) existential-phenomenological research; and (3) hermeneutical-phenomenological research.
Once we ourselves are rooted in this fertile earth of the deep unconscious, we can plant our contemporary and traditional Family Tree with its potentially vital forms and structures and listen to souls being born in the future. The Tree grounds us in imaginal space. We learn to "stand our ground" in the deep interiority of the psychological field with new vigor.
Dreaming the Earth, and Earthing the Dream
We can activate the deep knowing of the psyche as it is nourished and animated by intimacy with the natural world. Research suggests that interconnectivity manifests in our deep psychic bond with the earth, its creatures and plants, and the cosmos as a whole. Evidence of this interrelationship arises in our personal lives in dream images and synchronicities, and in the powerful and visceral sense of engagement we feel with the natural world.
In the beginning, the 'earth' was void and without form: "You have got to accept what the unconscious produces, and you have to understand its language. It is Nature, and it has to be translated into human forms." (Jung, C.G. Jung Speaking: Interviews and Encounters, Pages 359-364)
Joseph Campbell described four functions of myth:
(1) to help us through life passages, with ritual (baptism, marriage, initiation, job entry, funerals);
(2) to make connections with mysteries of the universe (spirituality, religion, arts);
(3) to explain the workings of nature (lightning, seasons, floods, birth, death); and
(4) to provide a way we find a place in the social community (family, clan, caste, ethnicity, social class, subculture).
Ovum Mundi
The longing for our origins is a metaphorical longing for paradise.
The primary myth, the seminal idea, is of our origins The egg is the universal symbol of the archetypal phenomenology of the child’s birth. This embryo of the universe has been called the world egg, formed by light itself, The Primordial Being is hatched from the serpent-entwined Cosmic Egg. This proverbial ‘Orphic Egg’ was the source of the generative power of the entire universe.
Palaeolithic, Neolithic and later Bronze-Age associated serpent veneration with rain and fertility religious invocations in India. In the South Pacific, in Australia and in Central and South America, serpents were regarded as chthonian spirits of earth who possessed life-giving powers. Chaldean and Arabic words for "serpent" and "life" have a synergy. In Classical Greece, the Agathos Daimon was literally the "noble spirit", a personal companion spirit ensuing health and good fortune. The Agathos Daimon was the numinous element portrayed in iconography as a serpent, The serpentine staff of Asklepios, the Drakon god of healing, is forerunner of the caduceus symbol of medicine.
In mythology, eggs stand for the earth, the life, or the seat of the soul. They indicate the presence of the Goddess, “whose World Egg contains the universe in embryo.” In India, Egypt, Greece and Phoenicia the creator and mankind emerge from the Cosmic Egg. The egg is commonly considered as a symbol of fertility, the rebirth of nature and wholeness. In Sufism the central goal is the rediscovery of the root of one’s being through reintegration with the entirety.
Eliade insists that the egg never loses its primary meaning, but "ensures the repetition of the act of creation which gave birth in illo tempore to living forms. ...the egg guarantees the possibility of repeating the primeval act, the act of creation...In as much as it is linked with the scenarios for the New Year or the return of spring, the egg represents a manifestation of creation." This golden egg is the most Divine being on the whole earth and from this primeval Immortal golden embryo springs the fountain of Immortality.
The world egg or golden embryo born of cosmic being or the cosmic womb is a global theme. Egyptian language implies "egg" is naturally related to "goddess." The words "userit," "netrit," "hen-t,' and "shepsit," all mean "goddess" and use the egg hieroglyph as a determinative.
The cosmic egg of the Egyptians was also identified as Osiris, symbolizing life, death, renewal, rejuvenation, rebirth, or immortality. As unconscious, Osiris is the paradoxical life/death ground where integrative impulses arise. His epic ordeals mirror our own.
We cannot speak of Osiris (Wasir) apart from the rejuvenating processes of Isis (Aset), who complements and completes him. He was called "the Great Egg" -- "the only egg" -- and was lauded as "thou egg who becometh as one renewed."
From the viewpoint of the ground we are refreshed each and every nanosecond of our existence. Human beings weave imaginal tales about the nature of nature, their experience and dreams. We still stave off our fears of death with hopes of eternal life when the existential fact remains that it is impossible for us to leave the sacred source field that undergirds both our corporeal existence and our potential immortalization in the virtual field, the groundstate of continuous creation.
The sarcophagus of Seti I depicts Osiris as "bent round in a circle with his toes touching his head..." Phoenician cosmogenesis says, "From the union of [Desire and Darkness] were born Aer (air) and Aura (breath)...This couple then produced the cosmic Egg, in conformity with the intelligible spirit."
Life comes from life. The egg, the universal germ of creation, with all its potency for transformation and its circular containment, is a mandala, a magic circle, a microverse.
Greek philosopher Epicurus described the cosmic egg as a circular band. "The All," he stated, "was from the beginning like an egg," and the pneuma as serpent winds around the egg in a tight band as a wreath or belt around the universe. This circle without beginning or end is a symbol of the parents of the world, portrayed in their equal stature as the original unity.
This ancient symbol of the Orphic Mysteries --the serpent-entwined egg -- signified Cosmos encircled by the fiery Creative Spirit. The egg also represents the soul of the philosopher; the serpent, the Mysteries. At the time of initiation the shell is broken and one emerges from the embryonic state of physical existence which is the fetal period of philosophic regeneration.
This germinal point is something great. Before our body is born of our parents, at the time of conception, this seed is first created where human nature and life dwell. The two intermingle forming a unity. Myth suggests: "In the state before the appearance there is an inexhaustible breath." Before the parents beget the child, the breath of life is complete and the embryo perfect.
Jung's incantation cries, "Oh light of the middle way, enclosed in the egg, embryonic, full of ardor, oppressed. Fully expectant, dreamlike, awaiting lost memories. As heavy as stone, hardened. Molten, transparent. Streaming bright, coiled on itself." (The Red Book; 53).
Alchemy describes the “Philosophers’ Child,” “Child of Wisdom,” “ Child of the Egg” or homunculus, born symbolically in a retort which represents the human Heart. Chinese Taoist alchemy calls it the “immortal foetus,” “embryo of the Tao,” “seed pearl” or “starseed embryo.”
In The Book of the Dead, Wallis Budge describes the primitive credo concerning the cosmic egg of the ancient Egyptians in these words:
"[In the beginning] nothing existed except a boundless primeval mass of water which was shrouded in darkness and which contained within itself the germs or beginnings, male and female, of everything which was to be in the future world. The divine primeval spirit which formed an essential part of the primeval matter felt within itself the desire to begin the work of creation, and its word woke to life the world, the form and shape of which it had already depicted to itself. The first act of creation began with the formation of an egg out of the primeval water..."
Paradise Myth
The search for our origins expressing a "longing for paradise."
The spirit of God moves upon the Face of the waters -- the embryo. Jung noted that Simon Magus considered the Garden of Eden a symbol or metaphor for corporeal uterine life. The fetus is surrounded by waters.
If paradise is the womb, then Eden is the placenta and the river branching into four is the umbilical with two arteries of breath and two veins of blood. Magus claims Moses allegorically referred to the cave/womb as The Garden from which in time we are expelled, as the Fruit of the Tree of Life.
"[P]aradise is the uterus, and the Garden of Eden the navel. Four flows emanate from the navel, two air- and two blood-vessels, so to speak, through which the growing child receives its food, the blood, and the pneuma.” (Children’s Dreams Seminar, Pages 365-367.)
The world navel is a symbol for Paradise, as Eliade (1991) tells us. "Paradise, where Adam was created from clay, is, of course, situated at the center of the cosmos. Paradise was the navel of the earth and according to a Syrian tradition, was established on a mountain higher than all other" (p. 16).
In biological terms, this mountain is the pregnant body of the mother and her navel as the center of the world, the connection between Heaven and Earth. The umbilical cord is the container for the river (water of life) that flows into Paradise or the womb, thereby nourishing it. Biologically, we can also compare the act of physical love and female orgasm (water of life) to the river flowing out of Paradise, leaving behind the egg that generates new life at conception.
The serpent in our archetypal tree is the unconscious with its painful, dangerous interventions and frightening effects. Though totally unconscious, it has a wisdom of its own that is foundational to our origins. But the path of knowledge is painful and bitter. The unconscious is not a separate sphere, but found in all things at all times. The soul has its own internal sources of knowledge.
Elemental Earth
The physical and chemical constituents of our bodies are the elemental earth in us. Here our acorn can grow into the oak it was meant to be. The future is affected by what we imagine. The challenge today is to sustain the vivacity of our culture and carry it into the future, maintaining a reciprocal relationship with nature, and connection to the ancestral past.
Consciously practiced, genealogy is a way to get in touch with the ground of being. It forms a great feedback loop between our present and our origins from the middle ground of imagery states that is our birthright. Interacting with one's genealogy becomes a rite of passage with three phases: severance (deciding to participate), threshold (entering uncharted territory), and incorporation, (literally, “to take on the body,” having gained new insights).
Our search is for our origins. Our lines take serpentine twists and turns mirroring the genetics of our DNA. Genealogy dignifies our existence as numinous, not merely derivative or reactive, nor is it prescriptive in any one-approach-fits-all manner.
"When the unconscious intrudes into spaces of consciousness, it is automatically split into its pairs of opposites." (Jung, Children’s Dreams Seminar, Page 408.) Symbols mirror the nuclear family union of gender opposites and reconciliation in new birth. Images, like the union of opposites, cannot be willed.
"What takes place between light and darkness, what unites the opposites, always has a share in both sides and can be judged just as well from the left as from the right… the only thing that helps us here is the symbol….with its paradoxical nature it represents the ‘third thing.” (Jung, CW 13, pp. 134)
"The Kingdom of Heaven is within ourselves. It is our innermost nature and something between ourselves. The Kingdom of Heaven is between people like cement." (Jung, Visions Seminar, Page 444.)
Recognition of soul images and incorporation into awareness is an ongoing process. In The Red Book, Jung notes, "Because I sink into my symbol to such an extent, the symbol changes me from my one into my other ...I have interpreted these images, as best I can, with poor words." (Pg. 250.)
Jung cautions, "The dead who besiege us are souls who have not fulfilled the principium individuationis, or else they would have become distant stars. Insofar as we do not fulfill it, the dead have a claim on us and besiege us and we cannot escape them." (The Red Book; Appendix C; Page 370)
Jung advised the incorporation of death into one's lived experience. In The Red Book, he says, “The knowledge of death came to me that night, from the dying that engulfs the world. I saw how we live towards death, how the swaying golden wheat sinks together under the scythe of the reaper like a smooth wave on a sea beach.”
Our ancestors are permanent living residents in our own psychological life that continue to enrich, animate, and inspire us in their enduring significance and embodied meaning. Bringing them back through remembrance is also a recollection -- a re-collection and differentiation. Tacitly welcoming us across the years, they have aesthetic and psychological qualities -- subtle bodies clothed with the presence of our deep memories.
Our thought is constrained and impaired if we think in terms of partial derivatives (time- and space-bound effects) instead of full function. The capacity for objective inner experience remains latent. We gradually develop "an eye to see and an ear to hear." We dialogue with figures of the soul. Their radical otherness, activities, and words affect us as they move with their own intentions.
Aesthetic Genealogy
Genealogy reconnects us with nature and our own nature. It is an aesthetic interaction in which both the Greek chorus of ancestors and ourselves are the medium that makes art of life's remnants. It is a tool we can use to change ourselves by turning into more of ourselves.
The evolutionary function of the aesthetic sense drew us toward conditions that made for survival and reproductive success and repelled us from conditions that impacted longevity and fertility negatively. Existence and the world are eternally joined as an aesthetic phenomena.
What we think and feel and the intensity of aesthetic engagement, is proportional to the depth of its unconscious content. Its imaginative texture cannot be fixed in meaning. Yet it is capable of moving us psychologically away from the temporal (human) present and towards the universal (divine) or archetypal constant. So, aesthetics is a form of transformation.
Genealogy forms both the aesthetic space or context as well as the figurative content in an authentic expression of the human condition through the ages. Genealogy is the basis for a configuration, re-configuration, and aesthetic appreciation of our life story. Genealogy is a 'mirror' of aesthetic engagement in the materially based image.
Addressing the needs of unconscious life is fundamental to aesthetic
appreciation. Implied inner needs drive the initial intention to physically create our genealogical image and to act this out imaginatively. We raise the ancestors who carry meaning and value to consciousness from the labyrinth of unconscious form production and creative instinct.
The aesthetic paradigm is admittedly not the only approach, and it may be philosophically romantic, but it embodies a certain eros -- felt-experience or love toward the family -- known, unknown, and unknowable. Eros connects body and soul with vitality and passion born in the blood. Vivid libidinal participation connects our heart to the heart of the universe. It binds the ordinary and nonordinary worlds together by creating symbols of transcendence.
Genealogy becomes a homage to the power of love in our very creation. We heed the ancestors when we receive, listen, and contain. In that sense, genealogy becomes a temenos, or sacred space, the sanctuary of our holy grove -- the magic circle of extended family. The self-realizing motion performs the transformation. Our ancestors are a revelation. We need to reveal, not just know ourselves. Self-realization is self-revelation.
We have to accept that our genealogical 'dead ends' will remain unknown, will remain the 'road not taken.' We can relate to the blunt facts of our genesis and stop there as the genealogical 'realists' do, cutting off the fictional, legendary and mythic elements, but we may do so at our own psychological peril. A myth is not a dream; its archaic images and memories constitute a world.
Aesthetic appeal is certainly a big part of the lure of genealogy that supersedes dry ancestral recording, analysis, and interpretation. The aesthetic approach does not rule out other perspectives on genealogy, which can be pursued as we are moved to do so.
But the archetypal approach probably makes the most 'sense' of the roots of our mythologically-based lines, and permits depth exploration without literalism, concretization, or symptomatic concretization. For example, when Native American cultures say they get their ancestral wisdom, ceremonies, guidance, and direction from the 'womb at the center of the universe,' they refer to the sacred Feminine.
Jung echoes such ancient sentiments: "For him who looks backwards the whole world, even the starry sky, becomes the mother who bends over him and enfolds him on all sides, and from the renunciation of this image, and of the longing for it arises the picture of the world as we know it today." ( The Sacrifice; CW 5; Par 643.)
The archetypes are an aesthetic stimulus with their own properties and appeal, among other things. So is our aesthetic response to their symbolism and experience. The mythic is an expression of the larger whole. We often fail to realize that other fascinating possibilities exist.
Heuristic Method
Creative outpouring is the entrance to self-actualization. It is heuristic, preparing us for deeper understanding. In psychology, heuristics are simple, efficient rules, learned or hard-coded by evolutionary processes. Like archetypes, they help us function without constantly stopping to think about the next course of action.
We find or discover things by experience and experiment. It stimulates interest in further investigation. As a problem-solving strategy, the heuristic method allows us to discover something for ourselves, to discover answers on our own and learn more about ourselves on our own.
A psychophysical approach is the secret behind the aesthetic experience. The ancestors feed the aesthetic formation of our living form. Aesthetic knowledge enables the psychological phenomena to link the body to the world.
Creativity points the way to the numinous, a high-voltage elemental force. Incubation brings new insights into ourselves and the ancestors. In our initial attempts to encounter the numinous with the emotions instead of with the body, we must expect indirect, rather than direct knowledge, and therefore be satisfied with intimations, allegory, implications, and transformations.
Psychic tensions accumulate and stimulate our imaginations to form images embodying their emotional essence. This process is the dynamic agency behind both individual fantasies and forms of cultural expression.
Aesthetic Intuition
Genealogy offers direct traditional testimony that archetypes as aesthetic universals lie at the roots of the collective unconscious which Jung insisted was not a mystical idea. Our invisible connections go down deep, and to go deep is to go backward.
Our aesthetic response, a psychic sensuality and sensitivity, to phenomena is the source of the immediate apprehension that Hillman describes as 'soul-making,' subjective interrelation. Reflection makes consciousness, but only love makes soul.
It means leaving our solid footing and carrying every question into deeper waters, rather than dragging 'the invisibles' out of the underworld and back into the daylight world. They may 'come up' spontaneously if we have no desire to control the outcome.
Poiesis, as creative act, is the death and re-birth of the soul. We constantly to re-form ourselves with 'soul-making.' Poiesis is integrative affirmation always emerging into form. The naturally therapeutic process evokes the emotions and experiences that give life a deeper meaning. It evokes the ancestors.
"Psychological faith begins in the love of images, and it flows mainly through the shapes of persons in reveries, fantasies, reflections, and imaginations. Their increasing vivification gives one an increasing conviction of having, and then of being, and interior reality of deep significance transcending one’s personal life." (Hillman, James, Re-Visioning Psychology, p. 50)
The symbol is a means of guiding thought out into the Unseen and Incomprehensible. Ancestral images remain largely ambiguous and are never precisely defined nor fully explained. They appear and are created in dreams, ritual, and art.
We know now there are neural correlates to aesthetic experience, including contemporary genealogical practice. Its effects include spontaneous appearance of intuitive forms and symbolic visualizations of what cannot be directly known. An aesthetic response to perception fosters notions of reverence, symbolism, and role relationships -- aspects of ancestor devotion.
We open to the aesthetic depths of the world, in addition to the physical, social, linguistic, and spiritual modes. Spiritual here is a concept with a voice independent of formal religious structures with essential mystery underscoring its meaning, It has a deep resonance with key elements of religious practice.
The image now exists as an external presence, outside the maker and, at the same time, is temporarily inhabited by a part of the maker. Images are actively imagined internal feeling states now embodied within this external image. The image is both a statement about and a depiction of what was formerly an invisible and largely unconscious inner state. It can be understood in several ways at many levels of meaning.
At root, traditional genealogy is an archetypal activity, recapitulating and extending humanity's oldest activities. The aesthetic response is an ethical response -- a response of the heart -- that values the ancestors and the genealogical history. Genealogy is thus an archetypal order, an aesthetic construction, and a virtual map of the personal and collective unconscious, reflecting a principle of totality and primordial origins.
A Forest of Family Trees
Cosmic process provides the potential for life. The life-world is always there as the background of all human experiences. All the living world is aesthetic. Deeply felt aesthetic experiences are very likely to also be numinous. The aesthetic is a way to receive, process, and deal with coherent information.
Pattern is the ultimate "stuff" of reality. Without intent to do so, the patterns of our genealogical structures endure and then disintegrate. This occurs at all levels of explanation. The key is the integrity of the pattern, not the "substrate."
Even largely unconscious flowing information elicits physical responses. The "pattern which connects" is beauty, and the beauty of our connectedness is revealed graphically in the full flowering of our genealogy with its incorporation of the eollective tree -- the archetypal World Tree. At its root is the archetypal drama of our origins, externally validated by sources of recognition and resonance.
Like the sea or the sky, the tree or forest is a kind of archetype of the foundations of the world. Because it reflects our inner and outer reality, genealogy becomes a means of access to insights about the deep nature of both personal and collective reality. The ancestors are transcendent in their value if not their appearance.
Our genealogical chart is a shorthand of minimal graphics -- we are born; we mate; we die. It is a vast treasure of subconscious symbolism, wisdom, collective and self-knowledge that is the enabling of life. We are products of the aesthetic process of evolution, embryology, and life experience. Our bodies exhibit aesthetic proportion and so does a balanced mind.
Our family tree focuses and expands the field of our attention. Genealogy is a metaphor of primary process with the full intensity of literal truth. We can be inspired by lived relations with those energies on an ongoing basis...not just as a paper trial. Where lines meet dead ends or brick walls, the charts also represent emptiness.
Presence of Absence
The figures of absence inform us with their paradoxical presence -- the dead or missing parent, the grandparent never met, the unborn and miscarried. Absence of something is the negation of a presence as ‘non-presence.’
Many figurative strategies confront the notion of absence, and address the aesthetics of absence. For example, a spectre, phantom or absent figure is an archetypal representation of the presence of an absence, distorted shape (anamorphosis, a form of perspective) as uncertain presence.
Our untraceable lines remain profoundly unconscious in the silent margins from which the last known member of a lost line speaks. Such lines of descent do not enclose us but disclose our essential nature. They reflect and map out our embedding in the natural world, intricate in its elegance -- our very aliveness. Seeing with the eye of the heart gives us a very personal sense of the vastness and beauty of nature, our inherent place in it, and how we are sustained by it.
Autopoiesis
The genealogical aesthetic emerges somewhere between imagination and rigor as an ecology of souls, a self-organizing biophenomenon, the dynamics and functionality of interrelationships. We can apply ecological hermeneutics to explore our interpretations of disclosure and concealment -- in an imaginal sort of ecological intercorporeality.
Genealogy arouses and enlivens real psychological phenomena, with attention to bodily responses and emotional awareness enhanced by imagination.
Archetypal symbolism is an aesthetic experience, as is symbolic interaction with our ancestors, the archetypal background, and primal states of consciousness of the life-world. We interact through the meaning of symbols, by interpreting and reacting. We each have symbolic meaning to be revealed. Symbols bridge the gap between perceptual reality and and what we understand.
James Hillman’s aesthetic approach to dream images translate directly to genealogical imagery as scene, as context, as mood. Certain ancestors spontaneously suggest a place that we dream into, we enter into and in turn are embraced by it. Hillman noted the image doesn’t lead somewhere else like a story.
We can find nowhere to go but more deeply into the image. The images do not become pinned down by any particular interpretation, are never literalized into any single fixed concept or "meaning. Instead we return, drawn again and again to an experiential "living in the image," with new meanings potentially emerging over time as we go "more deeply into the image." Hillman suggests that images acquire autonomy and operate according to their own will, similar to gods.
Hillman’s approach to image is deeply rooted in the work of the French phenomenologist Gaston Bachelard. The image is a free expression created not from pressure but from play, not from necessity but from inventiveness -- the way we engage and embrace the world. Imagination is more than the stuff-sack of trauma; it is the cradle of renewal, a genesis, rather than effect. Imagination mobilizes the potencies of transformation.
In his Poetics of Space, Bachelard says, "By the swiftness of its actions, the imagination separates us from the past as well as from reality; it faces the future. To the function of reality, wise in the experience of the past, should be added a function of irreality, which is equally positive. Any weakness in the function of irreality will hamper the productive psyche. If we cannot imagine, we cannot foresee."
Our self-reference rests on a perceptual dimension of presence-openness not ‘closed’ within any conceptual system. As long as the images are not trapped in a single meaning, they continue as an animating, enlivening presence. You will quickly discover the ancestors various aesthetic preferences. These are forms, styles and archetypes that are inherent in their makeup. Aesthetic satisfaction validates the process.
Joseph Campbell said, "The object becomes aesthetically significant when it becomes metaphysically significant." Clarity is the "aha" quality -- privileged 'moments of grace.' Transient moments of grace and transformation put meaning into aesthetic arrest and creativity that is an intuitive awareness of the required action. The innocent viewer is stopped dead in their tracks and has no choice but to stare in awe at their relationship with the living world.
Aesthetic engagement is active engagement with the (genealogical) process -- engagement with the element of beauty and systemic wisdom. Aesthetic arrangement and metaphorical thought squeeze out the real meaning and value of our experience and the comprehensive properties of our relationships through 'wise relating.'
Like art, genealogy is significant life activity and a way to access systemic wisdom and connectiveness. We cultivate inner beauty in the life-changing play of our own natural history. Information is the stuff of relationship and the living world of context, relevance and integration. The conjunction of the spiritual and aesthetic is a Royal Marriage -- a grand synthesis of wholeness, our frail and mortal selves, revealed in their beauty over the epic panoply of history and myth.
"If your life has not three dimensions, if you don't live in the body,
if you live on the two-dimensional plane in the paper world that is flat and printed, as if you were only living your biography, then you are nowhere."
~Carl Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Page 972.
The longing for our origins is a metaphorical longing for paradise.
The primary myth, the seminal idea, is of our origins The egg is the universal symbol of the archetypal phenomenology of the child’s birth. This embryo of the universe has been called the world egg, formed by light itself, The Primordial Being is hatched from the serpent-entwined Cosmic Egg. This proverbial ‘Orphic Egg’ was the source of the generative power of the entire universe.
Palaeolithic, Neolithic and later Bronze-Age associated serpent veneration with rain and fertility religious invocations in India. In the South Pacific, in Australia and in Central and South America, serpents were regarded as chthonian spirits of earth who possessed life-giving powers. Chaldean and Arabic words for "serpent" and "life" have a synergy. In Classical Greece, the Agathos Daimon was literally the "noble spirit", a personal companion spirit ensuing health and good fortune. The Agathos Daimon was the numinous element portrayed in iconography as a serpent, The serpentine staff of Asklepios, the Drakon god of healing, is forerunner of the caduceus symbol of medicine.
In mythology, eggs stand for the earth, the life, or the seat of the soul. They indicate the presence of the Goddess, “whose World Egg contains the universe in embryo.” In India, Egypt, Greece and Phoenicia the creator and mankind emerge from the Cosmic Egg. The egg is commonly considered as a symbol of fertility, the rebirth of nature and wholeness. In Sufism the central goal is the rediscovery of the root of one’s being through reintegration with the entirety.
Eliade insists that the egg never loses its primary meaning, but "ensures the repetition of the act of creation which gave birth in illo tempore to living forms. ...the egg guarantees the possibility of repeating the primeval act, the act of creation...In as much as it is linked with the scenarios for the New Year or the return of spring, the egg represents a manifestation of creation." This golden egg is the most Divine being on the whole earth and from this primeval Immortal golden embryo springs the fountain of Immortality.
The world egg or golden embryo born of cosmic being or the cosmic womb is a global theme. Egyptian language implies "egg" is naturally related to "goddess." The words "userit," "netrit," "hen-t,' and "shepsit," all mean "goddess" and use the egg hieroglyph as a determinative.
The cosmic egg of the Egyptians was also identified as Osiris, symbolizing life, death, renewal, rejuvenation, rebirth, or immortality. As unconscious, Osiris is the paradoxical life/death ground where integrative impulses arise. His epic ordeals mirror our own.
We cannot speak of Osiris (Wasir) apart from the rejuvenating processes of Isis (Aset), who complements and completes him. He was called "the Great Egg" -- "the only egg" -- and was lauded as "thou egg who becometh as one renewed."
From the viewpoint of the ground we are refreshed each and every nanosecond of our existence. Human beings weave imaginal tales about the nature of nature, their experience and dreams. We still stave off our fears of death with hopes of eternal life when the existential fact remains that it is impossible for us to leave the sacred source field that undergirds both our corporeal existence and our potential immortalization in the virtual field, the groundstate of continuous creation.
The sarcophagus of Seti I depicts Osiris as "bent round in a circle with his toes touching his head..." Phoenician cosmogenesis says, "From the union of [Desire and Darkness] were born Aer (air) and Aura (breath)...This couple then produced the cosmic Egg, in conformity with the intelligible spirit."
Life comes from life. The egg, the universal germ of creation, with all its potency for transformation and its circular containment, is a mandala, a magic circle, a microverse.
Greek philosopher Epicurus described the cosmic egg as a circular band. "The All," he stated, "was from the beginning like an egg," and the pneuma as serpent winds around the egg in a tight band as a wreath or belt around the universe. This circle without beginning or end is a symbol of the parents of the world, portrayed in their equal stature as the original unity.
This ancient symbol of the Orphic Mysteries --the serpent-entwined egg -- signified Cosmos encircled by the fiery Creative Spirit. The egg also represents the soul of the philosopher; the serpent, the Mysteries. At the time of initiation the shell is broken and one emerges from the embryonic state of physical existence which is the fetal period of philosophic regeneration.
This germinal point is something great. Before our body is born of our parents, at the time of conception, this seed is first created where human nature and life dwell. The two intermingle forming a unity. Myth suggests: "In the state before the appearance there is an inexhaustible breath." Before the parents beget the child, the breath of life is complete and the embryo perfect.
Jung's incantation cries, "Oh light of the middle way, enclosed in the egg, embryonic, full of ardor, oppressed. Fully expectant, dreamlike, awaiting lost memories. As heavy as stone, hardened. Molten, transparent. Streaming bright, coiled on itself." (The Red Book; 53).
Alchemy describes the “Philosophers’ Child,” “Child of Wisdom,” “ Child of the Egg” or homunculus, born symbolically in a retort which represents the human Heart. Chinese Taoist alchemy calls it the “immortal foetus,” “embryo of the Tao,” “seed pearl” or “starseed embryo.”
In The Book of the Dead, Wallis Budge describes the primitive credo concerning the cosmic egg of the ancient Egyptians in these words:
"[In the beginning] nothing existed except a boundless primeval mass of water which was shrouded in darkness and which contained within itself the germs or beginnings, male and female, of everything which was to be in the future world. The divine primeval spirit which formed an essential part of the primeval matter felt within itself the desire to begin the work of creation, and its word woke to life the world, the form and shape of which it had already depicted to itself. The first act of creation began with the formation of an egg out of the primeval water..."
Paradise Myth
The search for our origins expressing a "longing for paradise."
The spirit of God moves upon the Face of the waters -- the embryo. Jung noted that Simon Magus considered the Garden of Eden a symbol or metaphor for corporeal uterine life. The fetus is surrounded by waters.
If paradise is the womb, then Eden is the placenta and the river branching into four is the umbilical with two arteries of breath and two veins of blood. Magus claims Moses allegorically referred to the cave/womb as The Garden from which in time we are expelled, as the Fruit of the Tree of Life.
"[P]aradise is the uterus, and the Garden of Eden the navel. Four flows emanate from the navel, two air- and two blood-vessels, so to speak, through which the growing child receives its food, the blood, and the pneuma.” (Children’s Dreams Seminar, Pages 365-367.)
The world navel is a symbol for Paradise, as Eliade (1991) tells us. "Paradise, where Adam was created from clay, is, of course, situated at the center of the cosmos. Paradise was the navel of the earth and according to a Syrian tradition, was established on a mountain higher than all other" (p. 16).
In biological terms, this mountain is the pregnant body of the mother and her navel as the center of the world, the connection between Heaven and Earth. The umbilical cord is the container for the river (water of life) that flows into Paradise or the womb, thereby nourishing it. Biologically, we can also compare the act of physical love and female orgasm (water of life) to the river flowing out of Paradise, leaving behind the egg that generates new life at conception.
The serpent in our archetypal tree is the unconscious with its painful, dangerous interventions and frightening effects. Though totally unconscious, it has a wisdom of its own that is foundational to our origins. But the path of knowledge is painful and bitter. The unconscious is not a separate sphere, but found in all things at all times. The soul has its own internal sources of knowledge.
Elemental Earth
The physical and chemical constituents of our bodies are the elemental earth in us. Here our acorn can grow into the oak it was meant to be. The future is affected by what we imagine. The challenge today is to sustain the vivacity of our culture and carry it into the future, maintaining a reciprocal relationship with nature, and connection to the ancestral past.
Consciously practiced, genealogy is a way to get in touch with the ground of being. It forms a great feedback loop between our present and our origins from the middle ground of imagery states that is our birthright. Interacting with one's genealogy becomes a rite of passage with three phases: severance (deciding to participate), threshold (entering uncharted territory), and incorporation, (literally, “to take on the body,” having gained new insights).
Our search is for our origins. Our lines take serpentine twists and turns mirroring the genetics of our DNA. Genealogy dignifies our existence as numinous, not merely derivative or reactive, nor is it prescriptive in any one-approach-fits-all manner.
"When the unconscious intrudes into spaces of consciousness, it is automatically split into its pairs of opposites." (Jung, Children’s Dreams Seminar, Page 408.) Symbols mirror the nuclear family union of gender opposites and reconciliation in new birth. Images, like the union of opposites, cannot be willed.
"What takes place between light and darkness, what unites the opposites, always has a share in both sides and can be judged just as well from the left as from the right… the only thing that helps us here is the symbol….with its paradoxical nature it represents the ‘third thing.” (Jung, CW 13, pp. 134)
"The Kingdom of Heaven is within ourselves. It is our innermost nature and something between ourselves. The Kingdom of Heaven is between people like cement." (Jung, Visions Seminar, Page 444.)
Recognition of soul images and incorporation into awareness is an ongoing process. In The Red Book, Jung notes, "Because I sink into my symbol to such an extent, the symbol changes me from my one into my other ...I have interpreted these images, as best I can, with poor words." (Pg. 250.)
Jung cautions, "The dead who besiege us are souls who have not fulfilled the principium individuationis, or else they would have become distant stars. Insofar as we do not fulfill it, the dead have a claim on us and besiege us and we cannot escape them." (The Red Book; Appendix C; Page 370)
Jung advised the incorporation of death into one's lived experience. In The Red Book, he says, “The knowledge of death came to me that night, from the dying that engulfs the world. I saw how we live towards death, how the swaying golden wheat sinks together under the scythe of the reaper like a smooth wave on a sea beach.”
Our ancestors are permanent living residents in our own psychological life that continue to enrich, animate, and inspire us in their enduring significance and embodied meaning. Bringing them back through remembrance is also a recollection -- a re-collection and differentiation. Tacitly welcoming us across the years, they have aesthetic and psychological qualities -- subtle bodies clothed with the presence of our deep memories.
Our thought is constrained and impaired if we think in terms of partial derivatives (time- and space-bound effects) instead of full function. The capacity for objective inner experience remains latent. We gradually develop "an eye to see and an ear to hear." We dialogue with figures of the soul. Their radical otherness, activities, and words affect us as they move with their own intentions.
Aesthetic Genealogy
Genealogy reconnects us with nature and our own nature. It is an aesthetic interaction in which both the Greek chorus of ancestors and ourselves are the medium that makes art of life's remnants. It is a tool we can use to change ourselves by turning into more of ourselves.
The evolutionary function of the aesthetic sense drew us toward conditions that made for survival and reproductive success and repelled us from conditions that impacted longevity and fertility negatively. Existence and the world are eternally joined as an aesthetic phenomena.
What we think and feel and the intensity of aesthetic engagement, is proportional to the depth of its unconscious content. Its imaginative texture cannot be fixed in meaning. Yet it is capable of moving us psychologically away from the temporal (human) present and towards the universal (divine) or archetypal constant. So, aesthetics is a form of transformation.
Genealogy forms both the aesthetic space or context as well as the figurative content in an authentic expression of the human condition through the ages. Genealogy is the basis for a configuration, re-configuration, and aesthetic appreciation of our life story. Genealogy is a 'mirror' of aesthetic engagement in the materially based image.
Addressing the needs of unconscious life is fundamental to aesthetic
appreciation. Implied inner needs drive the initial intention to physically create our genealogical image and to act this out imaginatively. We raise the ancestors who carry meaning and value to consciousness from the labyrinth of unconscious form production and creative instinct.
The aesthetic paradigm is admittedly not the only approach, and it may be philosophically romantic, but it embodies a certain eros -- felt-experience or love toward the family -- known, unknown, and unknowable. Eros connects body and soul with vitality and passion born in the blood. Vivid libidinal participation connects our heart to the heart of the universe. It binds the ordinary and nonordinary worlds together by creating symbols of transcendence.
Genealogy becomes a homage to the power of love in our very creation. We heed the ancestors when we receive, listen, and contain. In that sense, genealogy becomes a temenos, or sacred space, the sanctuary of our holy grove -- the magic circle of extended family. The self-realizing motion performs the transformation. Our ancestors are a revelation. We need to reveal, not just know ourselves. Self-realization is self-revelation.
We have to accept that our genealogical 'dead ends' will remain unknown, will remain the 'road not taken.' We can relate to the blunt facts of our genesis and stop there as the genealogical 'realists' do, cutting off the fictional, legendary and mythic elements, but we may do so at our own psychological peril. A myth is not a dream; its archaic images and memories constitute a world.
Aesthetic appeal is certainly a big part of the lure of genealogy that supersedes dry ancestral recording, analysis, and interpretation. The aesthetic approach does not rule out other perspectives on genealogy, which can be pursued as we are moved to do so.
But the archetypal approach probably makes the most 'sense' of the roots of our mythologically-based lines, and permits depth exploration without literalism, concretization, or symptomatic concretization. For example, when Native American cultures say they get their ancestral wisdom, ceremonies, guidance, and direction from the 'womb at the center of the universe,' they refer to the sacred Feminine.
Jung echoes such ancient sentiments: "For him who looks backwards the whole world, even the starry sky, becomes the mother who bends over him and enfolds him on all sides, and from the renunciation of this image, and of the longing for it arises the picture of the world as we know it today." ( The Sacrifice; CW 5; Par 643.)
The archetypes are an aesthetic stimulus with their own properties and appeal, among other things. So is our aesthetic response to their symbolism and experience. The mythic is an expression of the larger whole. We often fail to realize that other fascinating possibilities exist.
Heuristic Method
Creative outpouring is the entrance to self-actualization. It is heuristic, preparing us for deeper understanding. In psychology, heuristics are simple, efficient rules, learned or hard-coded by evolutionary processes. Like archetypes, they help us function without constantly stopping to think about the next course of action.
We find or discover things by experience and experiment. It stimulates interest in further investigation. As a problem-solving strategy, the heuristic method allows us to discover something for ourselves, to discover answers on our own and learn more about ourselves on our own.
A psychophysical approach is the secret behind the aesthetic experience. The ancestors feed the aesthetic formation of our living form. Aesthetic knowledge enables the psychological phenomena to link the body to the world.
Creativity points the way to the numinous, a high-voltage elemental force. Incubation brings new insights into ourselves and the ancestors. In our initial attempts to encounter the numinous with the emotions instead of with the body, we must expect indirect, rather than direct knowledge, and therefore be satisfied with intimations, allegory, implications, and transformations.
Psychic tensions accumulate and stimulate our imaginations to form images embodying their emotional essence. This process is the dynamic agency behind both individual fantasies and forms of cultural expression.
Aesthetic Intuition
Genealogy offers direct traditional testimony that archetypes as aesthetic universals lie at the roots of the collective unconscious which Jung insisted was not a mystical idea. Our invisible connections go down deep, and to go deep is to go backward.
Our aesthetic response, a psychic sensuality and sensitivity, to phenomena is the source of the immediate apprehension that Hillman describes as 'soul-making,' subjective interrelation. Reflection makes consciousness, but only love makes soul.
It means leaving our solid footing and carrying every question into deeper waters, rather than dragging 'the invisibles' out of the underworld and back into the daylight world. They may 'come up' spontaneously if we have no desire to control the outcome.
Poiesis, as creative act, is the death and re-birth of the soul. We constantly to re-form ourselves with 'soul-making.' Poiesis is integrative affirmation always emerging into form. The naturally therapeutic process evokes the emotions and experiences that give life a deeper meaning. It evokes the ancestors.
"Psychological faith begins in the love of images, and it flows mainly through the shapes of persons in reveries, fantasies, reflections, and imaginations. Their increasing vivification gives one an increasing conviction of having, and then of being, and interior reality of deep significance transcending one’s personal life." (Hillman, James, Re-Visioning Psychology, p. 50)
The symbol is a means of guiding thought out into the Unseen and Incomprehensible. Ancestral images remain largely ambiguous and are never precisely defined nor fully explained. They appear and are created in dreams, ritual, and art.
We know now there are neural correlates to aesthetic experience, including contemporary genealogical practice. Its effects include spontaneous appearance of intuitive forms and symbolic visualizations of what cannot be directly known. An aesthetic response to perception fosters notions of reverence, symbolism, and role relationships -- aspects of ancestor devotion.
We open to the aesthetic depths of the world, in addition to the physical, social, linguistic, and spiritual modes. Spiritual here is a concept with a voice independent of formal religious structures with essential mystery underscoring its meaning, It has a deep resonance with key elements of religious practice.
The image now exists as an external presence, outside the maker and, at the same time, is temporarily inhabited by a part of the maker. Images are actively imagined internal feeling states now embodied within this external image. The image is both a statement about and a depiction of what was formerly an invisible and largely unconscious inner state. It can be understood in several ways at many levels of meaning.
At root, traditional genealogy is an archetypal activity, recapitulating and extending humanity's oldest activities. The aesthetic response is an ethical response -- a response of the heart -- that values the ancestors and the genealogical history. Genealogy is thus an archetypal order, an aesthetic construction, and a virtual map of the personal and collective unconscious, reflecting a principle of totality and primordial origins.
A Forest of Family Trees
Cosmic process provides the potential for life. The life-world is always there as the background of all human experiences. All the living world is aesthetic. Deeply felt aesthetic experiences are very likely to also be numinous. The aesthetic is a way to receive, process, and deal with coherent information.
Pattern is the ultimate "stuff" of reality. Without intent to do so, the patterns of our genealogical structures endure and then disintegrate. This occurs at all levels of explanation. The key is the integrity of the pattern, not the "substrate."
Even largely unconscious flowing information elicits physical responses. The "pattern which connects" is beauty, and the beauty of our connectedness is revealed graphically in the full flowering of our genealogy with its incorporation of the eollective tree -- the archetypal World Tree. At its root is the archetypal drama of our origins, externally validated by sources of recognition and resonance.
Like the sea or the sky, the tree or forest is a kind of archetype of the foundations of the world. Because it reflects our inner and outer reality, genealogy becomes a means of access to insights about the deep nature of both personal and collective reality. The ancestors are transcendent in their value if not their appearance.
Our genealogical chart is a shorthand of minimal graphics -- we are born; we mate; we die. It is a vast treasure of subconscious symbolism, wisdom, collective and self-knowledge that is the enabling of life. We are products of the aesthetic process of evolution, embryology, and life experience. Our bodies exhibit aesthetic proportion and so does a balanced mind.
Our family tree focuses and expands the field of our attention. Genealogy is a metaphor of primary process with the full intensity of literal truth. We can be inspired by lived relations with those energies on an ongoing basis...not just as a paper trial. Where lines meet dead ends or brick walls, the charts also represent emptiness.
Presence of Absence
The figures of absence inform us with their paradoxical presence -- the dead or missing parent, the grandparent never met, the unborn and miscarried. Absence of something is the negation of a presence as ‘non-presence.’
Many figurative strategies confront the notion of absence, and address the aesthetics of absence. For example, a spectre, phantom or absent figure is an archetypal representation of the presence of an absence, distorted shape (anamorphosis, a form of perspective) as uncertain presence.
Our untraceable lines remain profoundly unconscious in the silent margins from which the last known member of a lost line speaks. Such lines of descent do not enclose us but disclose our essential nature. They reflect and map out our embedding in the natural world, intricate in its elegance -- our very aliveness. Seeing with the eye of the heart gives us a very personal sense of the vastness and beauty of nature, our inherent place in it, and how we are sustained by it.
Autopoiesis
The genealogical aesthetic emerges somewhere between imagination and rigor as an ecology of souls, a self-organizing biophenomenon, the dynamics and functionality of interrelationships. We can apply ecological hermeneutics to explore our interpretations of disclosure and concealment -- in an imaginal sort of ecological intercorporeality.
Genealogy arouses and enlivens real psychological phenomena, with attention to bodily responses and emotional awareness enhanced by imagination.
Archetypal symbolism is an aesthetic experience, as is symbolic interaction with our ancestors, the archetypal background, and primal states of consciousness of the life-world. We interact through the meaning of symbols, by interpreting and reacting. We each have symbolic meaning to be revealed. Symbols bridge the gap between perceptual reality and and what we understand.
James Hillman’s aesthetic approach to dream images translate directly to genealogical imagery as scene, as context, as mood. Certain ancestors spontaneously suggest a place that we dream into, we enter into and in turn are embraced by it. Hillman noted the image doesn’t lead somewhere else like a story.
We can find nowhere to go but more deeply into the image. The images do not become pinned down by any particular interpretation, are never literalized into any single fixed concept or "meaning. Instead we return, drawn again and again to an experiential "living in the image," with new meanings potentially emerging over time as we go "more deeply into the image." Hillman suggests that images acquire autonomy and operate according to their own will, similar to gods.
Hillman’s approach to image is deeply rooted in the work of the French phenomenologist Gaston Bachelard. The image is a free expression created not from pressure but from play, not from necessity but from inventiveness -- the way we engage and embrace the world. Imagination is more than the stuff-sack of trauma; it is the cradle of renewal, a genesis, rather than effect. Imagination mobilizes the potencies of transformation.
In his Poetics of Space, Bachelard says, "By the swiftness of its actions, the imagination separates us from the past as well as from reality; it faces the future. To the function of reality, wise in the experience of the past, should be added a function of irreality, which is equally positive. Any weakness in the function of irreality will hamper the productive psyche. If we cannot imagine, we cannot foresee."
Our self-reference rests on a perceptual dimension of presence-openness not ‘closed’ within any conceptual system. As long as the images are not trapped in a single meaning, they continue as an animating, enlivening presence. You will quickly discover the ancestors various aesthetic preferences. These are forms, styles and archetypes that are inherent in their makeup. Aesthetic satisfaction validates the process.
Joseph Campbell said, "The object becomes aesthetically significant when it becomes metaphysically significant." Clarity is the "aha" quality -- privileged 'moments of grace.' Transient moments of grace and transformation put meaning into aesthetic arrest and creativity that is an intuitive awareness of the required action. The innocent viewer is stopped dead in their tracks and has no choice but to stare in awe at their relationship with the living world.
Aesthetic engagement is active engagement with the (genealogical) process -- engagement with the element of beauty and systemic wisdom. Aesthetic arrangement and metaphorical thought squeeze out the real meaning and value of our experience and the comprehensive properties of our relationships through 'wise relating.'
Like art, genealogy is significant life activity and a way to access systemic wisdom and connectiveness. We cultivate inner beauty in the life-changing play of our own natural history. Information is the stuff of relationship and the living world of context, relevance and integration. The conjunction of the spiritual and aesthetic is a Royal Marriage -- a grand synthesis of wholeness, our frail and mortal selves, revealed in their beauty over the epic panoply of history and myth.
"If your life has not three dimensions, if you don't live in the body,
if you live on the two-dimensional plane in the paper world that is flat and printed, as if you were only living your biography, then you are nowhere."
~Carl Jung, Zarathustra Seminar, Page 972.
"dziadzia" English translation
dziadzia {noun}
dziadzia {m} [child.l.] (also: dziadek, dziadzio, dziadunio, dziadziuś)
grandpa {noun} [child.l.]dziad {noun}
dziad {m} (also: starzec, stary, staruszek, starszy człowiek)old man {noun} dziad {m} (also: przodek, antenat)
ancestor {noun} dziad {m} [pej.] (also: żebrak)
beggar {noun} dziad {m} [arch.] (also: dziadek)
grandfather {noun}
Dziadzia is the Americanized Polish word for grandpa, which in Polish is dziadek or dziadziu.
dziadzia {noun}
dziadzia {m} [child.l.] (also: dziadek, dziadzio, dziadunio, dziadziuś)
grandpa {noun} [child.l.]dziad {noun}
dziad {m} (also: starzec, stary, staruszek, starszy człowiek)old man {noun} dziad {m} (also: przodek, antenat)
ancestor {noun} dziad {m} [pej.] (also: żebrak)
beggar {noun} dziad {m} [arch.] (also: dziadek)
grandfather {noun}
Dziadzia is the Americanized Polish word for grandpa, which in Polish is dziadek or dziadziu.
LIFEWAYS
Phenomenology indicates a way to research where we can be open to the phenomenon and to allow it to show itself in its fullness and complexity through our own direct involvement and understanding. Understanding arises directly from our personal sensibility and awareness. Direct contact creates an intimacy with the phenomenon through prolonged, firsthand exposure and immersion.
We meet the phenomenon in as free and as unprejudiced a way as possible so that it can present itself and be accurately described and understood. The hopeful result is moments of deeper clarity in which we see the phenomenon in a radically fresh and fuller way.
Phenomenological intuiting requires discipline, patience, effort and care. It requires utter concentration on the object intuited without being absorbed in it to the point of no longer looking critically or falling into blind spots.
Through intuiting, we hope to experience a moment of insight in which we sees the phenomenon in a clearer light. Phenomenological disclosure is "the aha! experience," "revelatory seeing," or "pristine encounter." Through phenomenological disclosure, we hope to see the thing in its own terms and to feel confident that this seeing is reasonably correct.
Consciousness, Behavior & Experience
Our personal efforts, experiences, and insights are the central means for examining the phenomenon and arriving at moments of disclosure so the phenomenon reveals something about itself in a new or fuller way.
Generally, phenomenological intuiting involves a series of smaller and larger disclosures that slowly coalesce into a fuller apprehension of the phenomenon.
In this sense, intuiting is rarely a single moment of revelation in which understanding comes in one full swoop. Instead, intuiting is gradual and unpredictable. Through our wish, effort, and practice, we see the phenomenon in smaller and larger ways. Patterns, relationships, and subtleties gradually arise that we never noticed before. Phenomenological intuiting is a flow and spiral, with unpredictability and serendipity.
We must begin somewhere and intends to end somewhere. Thus there is a movement, a progression, and eventually, an arrival. But, this movement isn’t a straight, sequential process. We see it more in terms of a flow, or of a cycling and spiraling motion. We can’t say where this flow begins. The first idea of trying to makes sense of something may evolve over the course of our genealogical research activity.
Uncharted Territory
The phenomenon is an uncharted territory that we attempt to explore, flexibly adapting to the nature and circumstances of the phenomenon. We must assume that we do not know the phenomenon but wish to, so we approach it as a beginner. We may know what we do not know, but need to consider that we may not know what we don’t know. We have no clear sense of what we will find or how discoveries will arise fluidly and unfold in a rich, unstructured, multidimensional way. A certain uncertainty and spontaneity must be accepted and creatively transformed into possibility and pattern.
We can use an existential and hermeneutic, as well as first-person approach, drawing on our realm of experience ‑- our own lived situation, setting aside preconceptions and biases. We examine specific characteristics and qualities and may become immersed in the process, its revelations and clarity. We become more perceptive, thus better able to articulate our experience. Emergent meaning arises from description and interpretation.
In genealogy the nature of ancestors is much more important for establishing the specific research procedure and descriptions, in a thoughtful, articulate way. Our specific methods and procedures fit the nature and needs of our own individual research style and the internal necessity that impels our impulses.
Our genealogy is a text imbued in some way with human meaning and therefore a subject for hermeneutic interpretation. We immerse ourselves in the process, get involved, and begin to discern configurations of meaning, of parts and wholes and their interrelationships.
We receive certain messages and glimpses of an unfolding development that beckons to be articulated and related to the total fabric of meaning. The hermeneutic allows the ancestors to be revealed to our eyes, ears, and intuition just by being what they are -- to speak their own story into our understanding in the universal language of imagery and symbolism. We are the lived fabric of inescapable fleshly connectedness. A whole lifetime is imprisoned in each ancestral image, a whole lifetime of fears, doubts, hopes, and joys.
Interpretive Relativity
The issue of trustworthiness raises the question, what criteria can be used to establish the reliability of phenomenological descriptions and interpretations? Reliability first of all involves interpretive appropriateness.
How is it that we can say what we experience and yet always live more than we can say, so that we could always say more than we in fact do? How can we evaluate the adequacy or inadequacy of our expression in terms of doing justice to the full lived quality of the experience described?
How are thought and life interrelated so that they can be characterized as interdependent, as in need of each other, as complementing and interpenetrating each other? Living informs expression (language and thinking) and, in turn, thinking-language-expression reciprocally informs and gives a recognizable shaped awareness to living.
Reliability can only be had through intersubjective corroboration. Do other interested parties find in their own life and experience, either directly or vicariously, what we find in our own work? In this sense, our interpretations are no more and no less than interpretive possibilities or potentials.
The aim is an openness and empathy whereby we begin to sense the other's situation and meaning. We can judge the trustworthiness of phenomenological interpretation from vividness, accuracy, richness, and elegance. Genealogical work is elegant because there is a clear interrelationship between real-world experiences and conceptual interpretation.
The Essence of Human Experience
In the end, this approach to genealogy is a highly personal, interpretive venture. In trying to see the phenomenon, it is very easy to see too much or too little. Looking and trying to see are very much an intuitive, spontaneous affair that involves feeling as much as thinking. In this sense, phenomenology might be described as a method to cultivate a mode of seeing with both intellectual and emotional sensibilities, for more whole and comprehensive understanding.
The genealogical work is born in a mysterious and secret way. It gains life and being. Its existence isn’t casual and inconsequential. It has a definite and purposeful strength, in its material and spiritual life. It exists and has power to create a spiritual atmosphere suitable for ancestral devotion. We adapt the form to its inner meaning. When it comes to the ancestors we can investigate general essences and watch modes of appearing.
http://www.arch.ksu.edu/seamon/seamon_revieweap.htm
When Lao-tzu says: "All are clear, I alone am clouded," he is expressing what I now feel in advanced old age.
Lao-tzu is the example of a man with superior insight who has seen and experienced worth and worthlessness, and who at the end of his life desires to return into his own being, into the eternal unknowable meaning.
The archetype of the old man who has seen enough is eternally true. At every level of intelligence this type appears, and its lineaments are always the same, whether it be an old peasant or a great philosopher like Lao-tzu.
This is old age, and a limitation. Yet there is so much that fills me: plants, animals, clouds, day and night, and the eternal in man.
The more uncertain I have felt about myself, the more there has grown up in me a feeling of kinship with all things.
In fact it seems to me as if that alienation which so long separated me from the world has become transferred into my own inner world, and has revealed to me an unexpected unfamiliarity with myself. ~Carl Jung;
Phenomenology indicates a way to research where we can be open to the phenomenon and to allow it to show itself in its fullness and complexity through our own direct involvement and understanding. Understanding arises directly from our personal sensibility and awareness. Direct contact creates an intimacy with the phenomenon through prolonged, firsthand exposure and immersion.
We meet the phenomenon in as free and as unprejudiced a way as possible so that it can present itself and be accurately described and understood. The hopeful result is moments of deeper clarity in which we see the phenomenon in a radically fresh and fuller way.
Phenomenological intuiting requires discipline, patience, effort and care. It requires utter concentration on the object intuited without being absorbed in it to the point of no longer looking critically or falling into blind spots.
Through intuiting, we hope to experience a moment of insight in which we sees the phenomenon in a clearer light. Phenomenological disclosure is "the aha! experience," "revelatory seeing," or "pristine encounter." Through phenomenological disclosure, we hope to see the thing in its own terms and to feel confident that this seeing is reasonably correct.
Consciousness, Behavior & Experience
Our personal efforts, experiences, and insights are the central means for examining the phenomenon and arriving at moments of disclosure so the phenomenon reveals something about itself in a new or fuller way.
Generally, phenomenological intuiting involves a series of smaller and larger disclosures that slowly coalesce into a fuller apprehension of the phenomenon.
In this sense, intuiting is rarely a single moment of revelation in which understanding comes in one full swoop. Instead, intuiting is gradual and unpredictable. Through our wish, effort, and practice, we see the phenomenon in smaller and larger ways. Patterns, relationships, and subtleties gradually arise that we never noticed before. Phenomenological intuiting is a flow and spiral, with unpredictability and serendipity.
We must begin somewhere and intends to end somewhere. Thus there is a movement, a progression, and eventually, an arrival. But, this movement isn’t a straight, sequential process. We see it more in terms of a flow, or of a cycling and spiraling motion. We can’t say where this flow begins. The first idea of trying to makes sense of something may evolve over the course of our genealogical research activity.
Uncharted Territory
The phenomenon is an uncharted territory that we attempt to explore, flexibly adapting to the nature and circumstances of the phenomenon. We must assume that we do not know the phenomenon but wish to, so we approach it as a beginner. We may know what we do not know, but need to consider that we may not know what we don’t know. We have no clear sense of what we will find or how discoveries will arise fluidly and unfold in a rich, unstructured, multidimensional way. A certain uncertainty and spontaneity must be accepted and creatively transformed into possibility and pattern.
We can use an existential and hermeneutic, as well as first-person approach, drawing on our realm of experience ‑- our own lived situation, setting aside preconceptions and biases. We examine specific characteristics and qualities and may become immersed in the process, its revelations and clarity. We become more perceptive, thus better able to articulate our experience. Emergent meaning arises from description and interpretation.
In genealogy the nature of ancestors is much more important for establishing the specific research procedure and descriptions, in a thoughtful, articulate way. Our specific methods and procedures fit the nature and needs of our own individual research style and the internal necessity that impels our impulses.
Our genealogy is a text imbued in some way with human meaning and therefore a subject for hermeneutic interpretation. We immerse ourselves in the process, get involved, and begin to discern configurations of meaning, of parts and wholes and their interrelationships.
We receive certain messages and glimpses of an unfolding development that beckons to be articulated and related to the total fabric of meaning. The hermeneutic allows the ancestors to be revealed to our eyes, ears, and intuition just by being what they are -- to speak their own story into our understanding in the universal language of imagery and symbolism. We are the lived fabric of inescapable fleshly connectedness. A whole lifetime is imprisoned in each ancestral image, a whole lifetime of fears, doubts, hopes, and joys.
Interpretive Relativity
The issue of trustworthiness raises the question, what criteria can be used to establish the reliability of phenomenological descriptions and interpretations? Reliability first of all involves interpretive appropriateness.
How is it that we can say what we experience and yet always live more than we can say, so that we could always say more than we in fact do? How can we evaluate the adequacy or inadequacy of our expression in terms of doing justice to the full lived quality of the experience described?
How are thought and life interrelated so that they can be characterized as interdependent, as in need of each other, as complementing and interpenetrating each other? Living informs expression (language and thinking) and, in turn, thinking-language-expression reciprocally informs and gives a recognizable shaped awareness to living.
Reliability can only be had through intersubjective corroboration. Do other interested parties find in their own life and experience, either directly or vicariously, what we find in our own work? In this sense, our interpretations are no more and no less than interpretive possibilities or potentials.
The aim is an openness and empathy whereby we begin to sense the other's situation and meaning. We can judge the trustworthiness of phenomenological interpretation from vividness, accuracy, richness, and elegance. Genealogical work is elegant because there is a clear interrelationship between real-world experiences and conceptual interpretation.
The Essence of Human Experience
In the end, this approach to genealogy is a highly personal, interpretive venture. In trying to see the phenomenon, it is very easy to see too much or too little. Looking and trying to see are very much an intuitive, spontaneous affair that involves feeling as much as thinking. In this sense, phenomenology might be described as a method to cultivate a mode of seeing with both intellectual and emotional sensibilities, for more whole and comprehensive understanding.
The genealogical work is born in a mysterious and secret way. It gains life and being. Its existence isn’t casual and inconsequential. It has a definite and purposeful strength, in its material and spiritual life. It exists and has power to create a spiritual atmosphere suitable for ancestral devotion. We adapt the form to its inner meaning. When it comes to the ancestors we can investigate general essences and watch modes of appearing.
http://www.arch.ksu.edu/seamon/seamon_revieweap.htm
When Lao-tzu says: "All are clear, I alone am clouded," he is expressing what I now feel in advanced old age.
Lao-tzu is the example of a man with superior insight who has seen and experienced worth and worthlessness, and who at the end of his life desires to return into his own being, into the eternal unknowable meaning.
The archetype of the old man who has seen enough is eternally true. At every level of intelligence this type appears, and its lineaments are always the same, whether it be an old peasant or a great philosopher like Lao-tzu.
This is old age, and a limitation. Yet there is so much that fills me: plants, animals, clouds, day and night, and the eternal in man.
The more uncertain I have felt about myself, the more there has grown up in me a feeling of kinship with all things.
In fact it seems to me as if that alienation which so long separated me from the world has become transferred into my own inner world, and has revealed to me an unexpected unfamiliarity with myself. ~Carl Jung;
ANCESTRAL DEVOTIONS
Dead Serious Genealogy
The Ancestors are Integral Parts of the Soul's Symbolism
and Calibrators of Time
Dead Serious Genealogy
The Ancestors are Integral Parts of the Soul's Symbolism
and Calibrators of Time
That higher and "complete" man is begotten by the "unknown" father and born from Wisdom... ~Carl Jung; Answer to Job, R. Hull, trans. (1984), pp. 157-158
If you are not interested in your own fate, the unconscious is. ~Carl Jung, C.G. Jung Speaking: Interviews and Encounters, Pages 359-364
As if we know nature! Or about the psyche! The 2,000,000-year-old man may know something. ~Carl Jung, C.G. Jung Speaking: Interviews and Encounters, Pages 359-364
"To live oneself means: to be one's own task. Never say that it is a pleasure to live oneself It will be no joy but a long suffering, since you must become your own creator. If you want to create yourself then you do not begin with the best and the highest, but with the worst and the deepest. Therefore say that you are reluctant to live yourself The flowing together of the stream of life is not joy but pain, since it is power against power, guilt, and shatters the sanctified."
~Carl Jung; Red Book.
If you are not interested in your own fate, the unconscious is. ~Carl Jung, C.G. Jung Speaking: Interviews and Encounters, Pages 359-364
As if we know nature! Or about the psyche! The 2,000,000-year-old man may know something. ~Carl Jung, C.G. Jung Speaking: Interviews and Encounters, Pages 359-364
"To live oneself means: to be one's own task. Never say that it is a pleasure to live oneself It will be no joy but a long suffering, since you must become your own creator. If you want to create yourself then you do not begin with the best and the highest, but with the worst and the deepest. Therefore say that you are reluctant to live yourself The flowing together of the stream of life is not joy but pain, since it is power against power, guilt, and shatters the sanctified."
~Carl Jung; Red Book.
The Great House:
Mankind, Migrations & Meaning
We're Born; We Mate; We Die
All life is bound to individual carriers who realize it, and it is simply inconceivable without them. But every carrier is charged with an individual destiny and destination, and the realization of these alone makes sense of life.
~Carl Jung, Psychology and Alchemy, Page 222.
Mankind, Migrations & Meaning
We're Born; We Mate; We Die
All life is bound to individual carriers who realize it, and it is simply inconceivable without them. But every carrier is charged with an individual destiny and destination, and the realization of these alone makes sense of life.
~Carl Jung, Psychology and Alchemy, Page 222.
THE HOUSE OF LIFE
When Air Becomes Breath
Breathing Life Into Your Ancestors
The ancient Egyptian mystery school, the Per Ankh is the inspiration for a hermeneutic and healing approach to genealogy. Every hermeneutical perspective constructs and reconstructs more or less coherent and meaningful pictures of the past, based on the particular spiritual needs and expectations of their real or imagined audiences. It is a soulful approach to psyche and our forebears and the mysteries of death, transformation, and spiritual rebirth, honoring soul and body.
The psychophysical approach is rooted in our being, land, water, and air, from our very first to our final breath -- the fire of the breath of life. Psyche is that divine spark. Along the way, we are learning to live and learning to die with wisdom and meaning. Wisdom is not as concerned with a particular kind of thought, as a wisdom about thinking, and an analysis of what it means to think, and an inquiry into the nature of the ultimate reference of thought.
Our family tree is rooted in narrative and history which traces back to ancient Egyptian, Mesopotamian, and Biblical traditions, and spans continents and conflicts. We study the psychological and metaphysical meanings of the mythologies that anchor our longest lines of lineage. It includes mental activities, spiritual dimensions, methods, attitudes, practices, or even behavioral and ritual patterns that give us image and form.
The Transgenerational Effect
Our psychological approach is Transgenerational Integration.
Trans- is a prefix meaning: across, beyond, through, on the other side of, to go beyond, while state is a condition or way of being that exists at a particular time. It functions as a feedback loop acting across multiple generations, including transgenerational conflict. Transgenerational trauma is transferred from the first generation of trauma survivors to the second and further generations of offspring.
Some transgenerational consequences are epigenetic, regulated by triggers and on/off switches. Feedback determines whether epigenetic memory will continue to the progeny or not, and how long each epigenetic response will last. Specific genes called “MOTEK” (Modified Transgenerational Epigenetic Kinetics), are involved in turning epigenetic transmissions of small RNAs on and off. Manipulating genes in this feedback pathway changes the duration of heritable silencing. Such active control of transgenerational effects could be adaptive, since ancestral responses would be detrimental if the environments of the progeny and the ancestors were different.
http://www.kurzweilai.net/onoff-button-for-passing-along-epigenetic-memories-to-our-children-discovered
The hallmark of the transgenerational models of family therapy is their emphasis on the powerful influences that past generations have on the present. Unresolved conflicts, beliefs, and roles in an individual impact an individual's relationships and interactions in his/her family of origin. They unconsciously continue to influence our current relationships and level of functioning. Healing across lifetimes is possible without any metaphysical model or belief in past lives or reincarnation, but within the genealogical model of direct descent and multigenerational influence.
So, the trans- state is, among other things, a coincidentia oppositorum. An alchemical wedding defines the fixed place, where boundaries are actively transgressed. In many ways, this very undertaking is where the role of the magician, mystic, artist, and healer collide. Down at the crossroads, where possibilities are collapsed into actualities, by the wondrous act of a conscious decision lies the place of suffering and surrender -- of realization and redemption.
We seek, not only ancestors, but signs, symbols, and symbolic meaning -- our origin in the foundation of being -- with an eye to restoring sacred harmony and transformative connection to Cosmos, an indissoluble unity of potentiality and act, darkness and light. Systems of archetypal symbolism come from the mysteries of death, transformation, and spiritual rebirth, and related cosmogonical theories.
Many of these ideas had their roots in Egyptian philosophy. Philosophy is a rite of rebirth, the very essence of which is participation in divine reality and, therefore, its activities are primarily those of inner vision rather than mere logic. The Tree of Life is a logically coherent meta-structure of metaphysical knowledge -- its own body of wisdom. And it lives within us.
Per Ankh
Ankh is the Egyptian term meaning “life.”The hieroglyph ankh, originally perhaps representing a knot or a bow, is a symbol for divine life, for the “breath of life,” provided by Shu and other gods, and for regenerating the power of water.
Ankh also designates a floral bouquet (offered to the gods) and a mirror, itself an important metaphysical symbol., also seen in the sistrum and later the crux ansata.
Per ankh means the House of Life -- a temple scriptorium and advanced school for esoteric training whose priests maintained an oral tradition of initiation and also produced writings in different branches of knowledge. This included theology, mathematics, ritual expertise, hieratic liturgy, hermeneutics, genealogy, astrology, sacred geography, mineralogy, medicine, mythography, architecture, the science of theurgic talismans and image-making.
The staff of every per ankh were lector-priests (heri heb) whose role was associated with sacred books and the heka-power, as well as with preservation of maat, the cosmic order, and maintaining the theurgic tradition of mystical ascent and assimilation to the gods.
Only through esoteric knowledge and initiation into the invisible realm, that is, through symbolic death and rebirth, accomplished in the House of Life, was one able to reveal one sakh-identity and be united with immortal divine principles. In the diagram of the per ankh (Pap. Salt 825) it is depicted as a symbolic mandala with Osiris at the center.
Isis and Nepthys occupy the corners at the side of his feet, Horus and Thoth are at the corners at the side of the head, Geb represents the ground, Nut–the sky. The priests of the House of Life follow “the secret way of Thoth.” One of the chief lector-priests (heri tep) said regarding the formula imbued with the heka-power: “Do not reveal it to the common man–it is a mystery of the House of Life.” (Pap. Leiden344r)
The House of Life was the center of cultural endeavor to preserve and ensure progress of cosmic, political, and social life. A holy place and scriptorium, The House of Life contained secret, magical writings the Egyptians believed had the power to renew and sustain life and further the rebirth of Osiris at his annual festival.
The significance of the House of Life and the rituals performed there was universal. Like the temples it stood for the whole creation, just as the reborn Osiris symbolized eternal life in general. According to tradition, time and again people went to the House of Life to consult ancient writings when they needed answers to problems of their day.
In ancient Egyptian writings and architecture, the House of Life was an institution aligned with kingship, preserving and creating knowledge in written and pictorial form. The overseer of the private rooms of the king, bore the title of 'overseer of writing in the House of Life, a man to whom all sacred matters are revealed', and 'keeper of secrets of the House of Life.'
The ancient Egyptian civilization was strongly connected with nature and the Universe that surrounded them. The school of Abydos House of Life, attracted many healers in the course of time and was an important base of knowledge about healing and medicines. They knew mind and body were strongly connected. Therefore they created various ways to maintain a sound physical body. They analyzed the plants in their neighborhood and built various schools.
The Per Ankh, House of Life, is a solar temple of sacred science (mystery school) and an institution of learning, healing and training. The House of Life, (Per Ankh), is an organization of Egyptian Magicians, founded by the God of Learning, Thoth.
The Per-Ankh texts were transcribed and kept by scribes, including the “books of the dead”. The House of Life was also a restricted access center of esoteric training where students may have undertaken a course of spiritual development, resulting in initiations into “various degrees of symbolic death and rebirth."
https://books.google.com/books?id=WRfHSnGlX7QC&pg=PA216&lpg=PA216&dq=per+ankh+house+of+life&source=bl&ots=kjNlwISk85&sig=frZYvP2n-r_h2Scl3GlywnqjXBc&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwiLr_Ch_KLLAhXH6CYKHWVKATg4FBDoAQgzMAU#v=onepage&q=per%20ankh%20house%20of%20life&f=false
I REVERENCE YOU
When Air Becomes Breath
Breathing Life Into Your Ancestors
The ancient Egyptian mystery school, the Per Ankh is the inspiration for a hermeneutic and healing approach to genealogy. Every hermeneutical perspective constructs and reconstructs more or less coherent and meaningful pictures of the past, based on the particular spiritual needs and expectations of their real or imagined audiences. It is a soulful approach to psyche and our forebears and the mysteries of death, transformation, and spiritual rebirth, honoring soul and body.
The psychophysical approach is rooted in our being, land, water, and air, from our very first to our final breath -- the fire of the breath of life. Psyche is that divine spark. Along the way, we are learning to live and learning to die with wisdom and meaning. Wisdom is not as concerned with a particular kind of thought, as a wisdom about thinking, and an analysis of what it means to think, and an inquiry into the nature of the ultimate reference of thought.
Our family tree is rooted in narrative and history which traces back to ancient Egyptian, Mesopotamian, and Biblical traditions, and spans continents and conflicts. We study the psychological and metaphysical meanings of the mythologies that anchor our longest lines of lineage. It includes mental activities, spiritual dimensions, methods, attitudes, practices, or even behavioral and ritual patterns that give us image and form.
The Transgenerational Effect
Our psychological approach is Transgenerational Integration.
Trans- is a prefix meaning: across, beyond, through, on the other side of, to go beyond, while state is a condition or way of being that exists at a particular time. It functions as a feedback loop acting across multiple generations, including transgenerational conflict. Transgenerational trauma is transferred from the first generation of trauma survivors to the second and further generations of offspring.
Some transgenerational consequences are epigenetic, regulated by triggers and on/off switches. Feedback determines whether epigenetic memory will continue to the progeny or not, and how long each epigenetic response will last. Specific genes called “MOTEK” (Modified Transgenerational Epigenetic Kinetics), are involved in turning epigenetic transmissions of small RNAs on and off. Manipulating genes in this feedback pathway changes the duration of heritable silencing. Such active control of transgenerational effects could be adaptive, since ancestral responses would be detrimental if the environments of the progeny and the ancestors were different.
http://www.kurzweilai.net/onoff-button-for-passing-along-epigenetic-memories-to-our-children-discovered
The hallmark of the transgenerational models of family therapy is their emphasis on the powerful influences that past generations have on the present. Unresolved conflicts, beliefs, and roles in an individual impact an individual's relationships and interactions in his/her family of origin. They unconsciously continue to influence our current relationships and level of functioning. Healing across lifetimes is possible without any metaphysical model or belief in past lives or reincarnation, but within the genealogical model of direct descent and multigenerational influence.
So, the trans- state is, among other things, a coincidentia oppositorum. An alchemical wedding defines the fixed place, where boundaries are actively transgressed. In many ways, this very undertaking is where the role of the magician, mystic, artist, and healer collide. Down at the crossroads, where possibilities are collapsed into actualities, by the wondrous act of a conscious decision lies the place of suffering and surrender -- of realization and redemption.
We seek, not only ancestors, but signs, symbols, and symbolic meaning -- our origin in the foundation of being -- with an eye to restoring sacred harmony and transformative connection to Cosmos, an indissoluble unity of potentiality and act, darkness and light. Systems of archetypal symbolism come from the mysteries of death, transformation, and spiritual rebirth, and related cosmogonical theories.
Many of these ideas had their roots in Egyptian philosophy. Philosophy is a rite of rebirth, the very essence of which is participation in divine reality and, therefore, its activities are primarily those of inner vision rather than mere logic. The Tree of Life is a logically coherent meta-structure of metaphysical knowledge -- its own body of wisdom. And it lives within us.
Per Ankh
Ankh is the Egyptian term meaning “life.”The hieroglyph ankh, originally perhaps representing a knot or a bow, is a symbol for divine life, for the “breath of life,” provided by Shu and other gods, and for regenerating the power of water.
Ankh also designates a floral bouquet (offered to the gods) and a mirror, itself an important metaphysical symbol., also seen in the sistrum and later the crux ansata.
Per ankh means the House of Life -- a temple scriptorium and advanced school for esoteric training whose priests maintained an oral tradition of initiation and also produced writings in different branches of knowledge. This included theology, mathematics, ritual expertise, hieratic liturgy, hermeneutics, genealogy, astrology, sacred geography, mineralogy, medicine, mythography, architecture, the science of theurgic talismans and image-making.
The staff of every per ankh were lector-priests (heri heb) whose role was associated with sacred books and the heka-power, as well as with preservation of maat, the cosmic order, and maintaining the theurgic tradition of mystical ascent and assimilation to the gods.
Only through esoteric knowledge and initiation into the invisible realm, that is, through symbolic death and rebirth, accomplished in the House of Life, was one able to reveal one sakh-identity and be united with immortal divine principles. In the diagram of the per ankh (Pap. Salt 825) it is depicted as a symbolic mandala with Osiris at the center.
Isis and Nepthys occupy the corners at the side of his feet, Horus and Thoth are at the corners at the side of the head, Geb represents the ground, Nut–the sky. The priests of the House of Life follow “the secret way of Thoth.” One of the chief lector-priests (heri tep) said regarding the formula imbued with the heka-power: “Do not reveal it to the common man–it is a mystery of the House of Life.” (Pap. Leiden344r)
The House of Life was the center of cultural endeavor to preserve and ensure progress of cosmic, political, and social life. A holy place and scriptorium, The House of Life contained secret, magical writings the Egyptians believed had the power to renew and sustain life and further the rebirth of Osiris at his annual festival.
The significance of the House of Life and the rituals performed there was universal. Like the temples it stood for the whole creation, just as the reborn Osiris symbolized eternal life in general. According to tradition, time and again people went to the House of Life to consult ancient writings when they needed answers to problems of their day.
In ancient Egyptian writings and architecture, the House of Life was an institution aligned with kingship, preserving and creating knowledge in written and pictorial form. The overseer of the private rooms of the king, bore the title of 'overseer of writing in the House of Life, a man to whom all sacred matters are revealed', and 'keeper of secrets of the House of Life.'
The ancient Egyptian civilization was strongly connected with nature and the Universe that surrounded them. The school of Abydos House of Life, attracted many healers in the course of time and was an important base of knowledge about healing and medicines. They knew mind and body were strongly connected. Therefore they created various ways to maintain a sound physical body. They analyzed the plants in their neighborhood and built various schools.
The Per Ankh, House of Life, is a solar temple of sacred science (mystery school) and an institution of learning, healing and training. The House of Life, (Per Ankh), is an organization of Egyptian Magicians, founded by the God of Learning, Thoth.
The Per-Ankh texts were transcribed and kept by scribes, including the “books of the dead”. The House of Life was also a restricted access center of esoteric training where students may have undertaken a course of spiritual development, resulting in initiations into “various degrees of symbolic death and rebirth."
https://books.google.com/books?id=WRfHSnGlX7QC&pg=PA216&lpg=PA216&dq=per+ankh+house+of+life&source=bl&ots=kjNlwISk85&sig=frZYvP2n-r_h2Scl3GlywnqjXBc&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwiLr_Ch_KLLAhXH6CYKHWVKATg4FBDoAQgzMAU#v=onepage&q=per%20ankh%20house%20of%20life&f=false
I REVERENCE YOU
LABYRINTHINE LINES
THE QUICK & THE DEAD
The Last Branch Supports Me
Lost Histories from the Book of Life
Individuation is a natural process. It is what makes a tree turn into a tree; if it is interfered with, then it becomes sick and cannot function as a tree, but left to itself it develops into a tree. That is individuation.
--Jung, C.G. Jung Speaking; Interviews and Encounters, Pages 205-218
Take pains to waken the dead. Dig deep mines and throw in sacrificial gifts, so that they reach the dead. Reflect in good heart upon evil, this is the way to the ascent. But before the ascent, everything is night and Hell. ~Carl Jung, The Red Book, Page 244.
"Doctrine of the Genealogical Unity of Mankind"
The family is a symbol, as well as a history, and social category. Primeval kinship and bonding gave birth to human society.
Because of the way genetics and family trees work, every single human alive on the planet today can trace their family lines back to one common ancestor, one who lived from 8,000-2,000 years ago. As observed in a 2004 paper on the Most Recent Common Ancestor:
“No matter the languages we speak or the color of our skin, we share ancestors who planted rice on the banks of the Yangtze, who first domesticated horses on the steppes of the Ukraine, who hunted giant sloths in the forests of North and South America, and who labored to build the Great Pyramid of Khufu.”
THE QUICK & THE DEAD
The Last Branch Supports Me
Lost Histories from the Book of Life
Individuation is a natural process. It is what makes a tree turn into a tree; if it is interfered with, then it becomes sick and cannot function as a tree, but left to itself it develops into a tree. That is individuation.
--Jung, C.G. Jung Speaking; Interviews and Encounters, Pages 205-218
Take pains to waken the dead. Dig deep mines and throw in sacrificial gifts, so that they reach the dead. Reflect in good heart upon evil, this is the way to the ascent. But before the ascent, everything is night and Hell. ~Carl Jung, The Red Book, Page 244.
"Doctrine of the Genealogical Unity of Mankind"
The family is a symbol, as well as a history, and social category. Primeval kinship and bonding gave birth to human society.
Because of the way genetics and family trees work, every single human alive on the planet today can trace their family lines back to one common ancestor, one who lived from 8,000-2,000 years ago. As observed in a 2004 paper on the Most Recent Common Ancestor:
“No matter the languages we speak or the color of our skin, we share ancestors who planted rice on the banks of the Yangtze, who first domesticated horses on the steppes of the Ukraine, who hunted giant sloths in the forests of North and South America, and who labored to build the Great Pyramid of Khufu.”
LAND OF THE DEAD
ANCIENT LIVES & LIVING LINES
Alone, Yet Not Alone
Living With the Time You Have Given Me
'Chronesthesia'
"The core of the individual is a mystery of life, which dies when it is 'grasped.' That is also why symbols want to keep their secrets; they are mysterious not only because we are unable to clearly see what is at their bottom."
(C. G. Jung, Hans Schmid-Guisan, The Question of Psychological Types)
Mental Time Travel
In nature, we look up and see the past, stars and galaxies millions of years old; then we look down and see the past in the earth, in the bones of dinosaurs and the dust of ancestors, and fossils. Time is the raw material of creation.
Ancient mythology has much to teach us about grief and mortality. The Mesopotamian myth, the Descent of Inanna is the earliest written goddess tale.
It begins with listening: “From the Great Above she opened her ear to the Great Below.”
In Sumerian, the word for ear also means wisdom. Because she seeks wisdom, Inanna is called to listen to the Great Below, the realm of dream, death, depression, and the unconscious. Without knowledge of loss and mortality, engaged individuation, and compassionate mirroring, she is not whole.
Deep within the unconscious darkness something new is being born, and Inanna cries out from this pain of giving birth. She returns to life -- lost, humbled, and displaced. We descend into the redeeming darkness, making that walk, not because we want to, but because we must.
“All descents provide entry into different levels of consciousness and can enhance life creatively. All of them imply suffering. All of them can serve as initiations. Meditation and dreaming and active imaginations are modes of descent. So too are depressions, anxiety attacks, and experiences with hallucinogenic drugs.” (Perera, 1981)
In many ancient myths, descent is an integral part of the Great Feminine Round of Life and Death. We are mortal and vulnerable. We live in a world of catastrophe and chaos, personal loss and social threat. We are thrown down by chaotic defensive furies, such as rage and greed. We are helped up by the dynamics of rebirth. Miraculously, we find our way to life again.
Self-Referential Memory
Our ancestors are our past and our transcendental future. Autonoetic consciousness is the human ability to mentally place ourselves in the past, in the future, or in counterfactual situations, and to analyze our own thoughts.
Semiotics & Symptomatics
Our sense of self affects our behavior, in the present, past and future, and our sense of ancestral metamemory, including memory, physiological (unconscious) memories (spinal cord and ganglia) and embedded tissue memories, unconscious motivation, unconscious conceptualization, and aesthetic unconscious (art, myth, and dream).
Jung said, "The unconscious has no chance of coming into the conscious unless the conscious makes a hole for it to come through." And that hole or portal is our genealogy -- our family tree, a site of potential transformation.
We are each the sentinel who guards and keeps watch on our end of the lines that are anchored by the genealogies of gods and goddesses which have passed into the 'collective unconscious.' First and foremost our genealogical quest is informed by multidimensional, autonomous psyche.
Mute Signs & Voiceless Speech
We should be confidantes of our own mysteries and ancestors. We must cross our own Acheron, or river of woe and pain to reach that psychological underworld. We plunge from raw life into the encounter with the powers of darkness. We follow our chthonic serpentine lines back through primal generativity and fertility.
Jung claims, "The serpent shows the way to hidden things and expresses the introverting libido, which leads man to go beyond the point of safety, and beyond the limits of consciousness, as expressed by the deep crater." (1925 Seminar, Page 102)
Our ancestors guide us on our journey, handing us along, one by one to their forebears. We ritualize the science and art of parting. We step into the mythological plot through the world of the afterlife immersed in our hordes of ancestors, without being fictionalized ourselves.
We retrieve the treasure, 'hard to attain,' whose presence we suspected in the dark prima materia -- self-knowledge. The treasure is variously symbolized in myth and fairy tale as a ring or golden egg, white feather, coat of many colors, fountain of youth, elixir of Life. We gain experiential knowledge of all known realms by
confronting, or identifying with subterrestrial, terrestrial and cosmic energies.
Jung suggested that the assimilation of the objective and subjective collective unconscious is achieved by realizing both the outer and inner meaning: 1. concrete actions and 2. subjective thinking and feeling as purely inner experience, or experience via the subject (inwardly lived). "Undeveloped, therefore archaic, symbolic, ambiguous, phenomenal, irrational, actus purus naturae, can only imperfectly be formulated and grasped intellectually, projected."
The symbolic unconscious content is "not exclusively valid either (1) for the outer or (2) for the inner realm, but for both together, that is, for their operating together." "The core of the individual is a mystery of life, which dies when it is 'grasped.' That is also why symbols want to keep their secrets; they are mysterious not only because we are unable to clearly see what is at their bottom."
Paraphrasing Jung, genealogy helps us "to come to those hidden and unopenable symbols, in which the seed of life lies securely hidden like the tender seed in the hard shell." (Jung, Han Guisan Schmid, Page 9)
Autonoetic Consciousness
Episodic memory is identified with autonoetic consciousness, which gives rise to remembering in the sense of self-recollection in the mental re-enactment of previous events at which one was present. While Jung's approach was largely scientific, he also spoke of “living” knowledge as opposed to “scientific” knowledge.
Autonoetic consciousness is distinguished from noetic consciousness, which gives rise to awareness of the past that is limited to feelings of familiarity or knowing. Noetic consciousness is identified not with episodic but with semantic memory, which involves general knowledge.
We all divide our experience into time categories; the difference is simply how. The transcendental future time perspective affects philosophical problems of personality, the process of self-knowledge, the formation of value orientations and life course of constructing identity.
Inroads in Mental Time;
Feeling & Conscious Awareness of Subjective Time
Mental time travel, or chronesthesia, is the brain's use of memory to think about the past, present, and future... a form of consciousness that allows individuals to think about the subjective time in which they live and that makes it possible for them to “mentally travel” in such time. But is memory distorted, constructed, or confabulated? How can we know who we are if we don't know where we've been?
Remembering and knowing do not correspond with degrees of confidence in memory. Nor does remembering always control the memory response. The transcendental future is ’subjective time’ that can be called a belief in some future Utopia.
The latest dream of immortality is paradoxically couched under Transhumanism, an overcoming of limited organic nature with technology and designer bodies. The outer universe becomes subjective, from the outer reality the person emerges in what the scientists call reality. The outer universe become the subjective controllable reality.
People often have firm ideas related to a transcendental future but notions of 'new time after death' [or its absence] remain controversial, being rooted in faith. It is an aspect of worldview with behavioral imperatives, prohibitions, values, and consequences. The transcendental future encompasses different events that include divine judgment, reunion with loved ones, eternal life, achieving oneness with nature or cosmos.
Transcendence is existence or experience beyond the normal or physical level. It encompasses the time from the imaginal death of the physical body to infinity. It may include goals, such as reunion with deceased loved ones, reincarnation, eternal life, avoidance of damnation, and elimination of poverty, suffering, pain, and shame. It signifies belief in something larger than life, including immanent or transcendent beings beyond the self.
Out of Time
Transcendental future is a time perspective – a personality trait that describes how often a person imagines one’s afterlife with positive or negative attitude, intrusions, retrieval, shuffling, fluency, distinctiveness, and false recognition. Transcendental Future Time is one of the dimensions of subjective time and is related to individual beliefs about the time period after physical death. It partitions the psychological future into pre- and post-death time frames, transcending life and living.
An `extraordinary' time perspective, one that partitions the future into pre- and post-death time frames. The `transcendental-future' extends from the point of imagined death of the physical body to infinity, yet may influence present behavior.
Related to numerous psychological variables, the transcendental-future is a component of, but not synonymous with, many religious beliefs. From the perspective of the transcendental-future, behaviors often seen as irrational, such as suicide, extreme heroism, and excessive tithing, are transformed into rational behaviors expected to lead to fulfillment of transcendental-future goals.
People think or imagine themselves in a transcendental future context with positive or negative thoughts. The importance of transcendental future to well-being has yet to be studied, but many issues have already been assessed in clinical hypnotherapy with its timeline excursions, spontaneous and suggested, past and future, and with ancestors.
Making Your Time Matter
At a certain point in anthropological time the human brain had developed to the
level that people became aware of time and of their own existence. Together with the ability to imagine one’s future a new kind of mental stress also appeared – awareness of the inevitability of death. To allay this stressor, our early ancestors came up with a myth – a belief that death must be survivable. Today the bigger part of people’s beliefs has been passed on to them by their ancestors through religion or philosophy.
Chronesthesia, or mental time travel, is a mental ability to be aware of one's past or future. Studies have been conducted to map out areas of the brain that may be responsible for mental time travel, which include the left hippocampus and posterior visuospatial regions which are are involved in past and future event construction, neural differentiation. The right hippocampus, right frontopolar cortex, and the left ventrolateral prefrontal cortex are involved in future event construction.
The elaboration phase, unlike the construction phase, has overlap in the cortical areas comprising the autobiographical memory retrieval network. The left hippocampus and the right middle occipital gyrus were significantly activated during past and future event construction, while the right hippocampus was significantly deactivated during past event construction. It was only activated during the creation of future events.
Episodic future thinking involves multiple component processes: retrieval and integration of relevant information from memory, processing of subjective time, and self-referential processing. The ventral medial prefrontal cortex and posterior cingulate cortex are the most activated areas when imagining future events that are relevant to one's personal goals than to unrelated ones. This shows that these brain regions play a role in personal goal processing, which is a critical feature of episodic future thinking.
We can't technically travel through time (yet), when we think of the past or the future we engage in a sort of mental time travel. This uniquely human ability to psychologically travel through time arguably sets us apart from other species. Researchers have recently looked at how mental time travel is represented in the sensorimotor systems that regulate human movement. It turns out our perceptions of space and time are tightly coupled.
Engaging in mental time travel (a.k.a. chronesthesia) resulted in physical movements corresponding to the metaphorical direction of time. Those who thought of the past swayed backward while those who thought of the future moved forward. Chronesthesia may be grounded in processes that link spatial and temporal metaphors (e.g., future= forward, past= backward) to our systems of perception and action. "The embodiment of time and space yields an overt behavioral marker of an otherwise invisible mental operation," explains Miles and colleagues.
The ability to remember the past and imagine the future can significantly affect our life decisions and scripts. Scientists refer to the brain’s ability to think about the past, present, and future as "chronesthesia," or mental time travel...the neural correlates of mental time travel and metaphorical "travel."
"Mental time travel consists of two independent sets of processes: (1) those that determine the contents of any act of such ‘travel’: what happens, who are the 'actors,' where does the action occur; it is similar to the contents of watching a movie – everything that you see on the screen; and (2) those that determine the subjective moment of time in which the action takes place – past, present, or future," Tulving told PhysOrg.com.
‘Supernatural’ is a word that conjures spine-tingling feelings of mystical awe, fear, and joy. Does it exist as a concept, or as a phenomenon, however, among all peoples? What does it mean as a cultural construction and as a response to reality? What is its relationship to religion and spirituality, to experiences of ghosts and ideas about gods? What part of the ineffable world that informs cosmologies is captured by the term ‘supernatural’, and what is distorted or left out when we use it? Why is it such a contentious term in anthropology, vigorously condemned by some, championed by others, and blithely used by the rest?
Alone, Yet Not Alone
Living With the Time You Have Given Me
'Chronesthesia'
"The core of the individual is a mystery of life, which dies when it is 'grasped.' That is also why symbols want to keep their secrets; they are mysterious not only because we are unable to clearly see what is at their bottom."
(C. G. Jung, Hans Schmid-Guisan, The Question of Psychological Types)
Mental Time Travel
In nature, we look up and see the past, stars and galaxies millions of years old; then we look down and see the past in the earth, in the bones of dinosaurs and the dust of ancestors, and fossils. Time is the raw material of creation.
Ancient mythology has much to teach us about grief and mortality. The Mesopotamian myth, the Descent of Inanna is the earliest written goddess tale.
It begins with listening: “From the Great Above she opened her ear to the Great Below.”
In Sumerian, the word for ear also means wisdom. Because she seeks wisdom, Inanna is called to listen to the Great Below, the realm of dream, death, depression, and the unconscious. Without knowledge of loss and mortality, engaged individuation, and compassionate mirroring, she is not whole.
Deep within the unconscious darkness something new is being born, and Inanna cries out from this pain of giving birth. She returns to life -- lost, humbled, and displaced. We descend into the redeeming darkness, making that walk, not because we want to, but because we must.
“All descents provide entry into different levels of consciousness and can enhance life creatively. All of them imply suffering. All of them can serve as initiations. Meditation and dreaming and active imaginations are modes of descent. So too are depressions, anxiety attacks, and experiences with hallucinogenic drugs.” (Perera, 1981)
In many ancient myths, descent is an integral part of the Great Feminine Round of Life and Death. We are mortal and vulnerable. We live in a world of catastrophe and chaos, personal loss and social threat. We are thrown down by chaotic defensive furies, such as rage and greed. We are helped up by the dynamics of rebirth. Miraculously, we find our way to life again.
Self-Referential Memory
Our ancestors are our past and our transcendental future. Autonoetic consciousness is the human ability to mentally place ourselves in the past, in the future, or in counterfactual situations, and to analyze our own thoughts.
Semiotics & Symptomatics
Our sense of self affects our behavior, in the present, past and future, and our sense of ancestral metamemory, including memory, physiological (unconscious) memories (spinal cord and ganglia) and embedded tissue memories, unconscious motivation, unconscious conceptualization, and aesthetic unconscious (art, myth, and dream).
Jung said, "The unconscious has no chance of coming into the conscious unless the conscious makes a hole for it to come through." And that hole or portal is our genealogy -- our family tree, a site of potential transformation.
We are each the sentinel who guards and keeps watch on our end of the lines that are anchored by the genealogies of gods and goddesses which have passed into the 'collective unconscious.' First and foremost our genealogical quest is informed by multidimensional, autonomous psyche.
Mute Signs & Voiceless Speech
We should be confidantes of our own mysteries and ancestors. We must cross our own Acheron, or river of woe and pain to reach that psychological underworld. We plunge from raw life into the encounter with the powers of darkness. We follow our chthonic serpentine lines back through primal generativity and fertility.
Jung claims, "The serpent shows the way to hidden things and expresses the introverting libido, which leads man to go beyond the point of safety, and beyond the limits of consciousness, as expressed by the deep crater." (1925 Seminar, Page 102)
Our ancestors guide us on our journey, handing us along, one by one to their forebears. We ritualize the science and art of parting. We step into the mythological plot through the world of the afterlife immersed in our hordes of ancestors, without being fictionalized ourselves.
We retrieve the treasure, 'hard to attain,' whose presence we suspected in the dark prima materia -- self-knowledge. The treasure is variously symbolized in myth and fairy tale as a ring or golden egg, white feather, coat of many colors, fountain of youth, elixir of Life. We gain experiential knowledge of all known realms by
confronting, or identifying with subterrestrial, terrestrial and cosmic energies.
Jung suggested that the assimilation of the objective and subjective collective unconscious is achieved by realizing both the outer and inner meaning: 1. concrete actions and 2. subjective thinking and feeling as purely inner experience, or experience via the subject (inwardly lived). "Undeveloped, therefore archaic, symbolic, ambiguous, phenomenal, irrational, actus purus naturae, can only imperfectly be formulated and grasped intellectually, projected."
The symbolic unconscious content is "not exclusively valid either (1) for the outer or (2) for the inner realm, but for both together, that is, for their operating together." "The core of the individual is a mystery of life, which dies when it is 'grasped.' That is also why symbols want to keep their secrets; they are mysterious not only because we are unable to clearly see what is at their bottom."
Paraphrasing Jung, genealogy helps us "to come to those hidden and unopenable symbols, in which the seed of life lies securely hidden like the tender seed in the hard shell." (Jung, Han Guisan Schmid, Page 9)
Autonoetic Consciousness
Episodic memory is identified with autonoetic consciousness, which gives rise to remembering in the sense of self-recollection in the mental re-enactment of previous events at which one was present. While Jung's approach was largely scientific, he also spoke of “living” knowledge as opposed to “scientific” knowledge.
Autonoetic consciousness is distinguished from noetic consciousness, which gives rise to awareness of the past that is limited to feelings of familiarity or knowing. Noetic consciousness is identified not with episodic but with semantic memory, which involves general knowledge.
We all divide our experience into time categories; the difference is simply how. The transcendental future time perspective affects philosophical problems of personality, the process of self-knowledge, the formation of value orientations and life course of constructing identity.
Inroads in Mental Time;
Feeling & Conscious Awareness of Subjective Time
Mental time travel, or chronesthesia, is the brain's use of memory to think about the past, present, and future... a form of consciousness that allows individuals to think about the subjective time in which they live and that makes it possible for them to “mentally travel” in such time. But is memory distorted, constructed, or confabulated? How can we know who we are if we don't know where we've been?
Remembering and knowing do not correspond with degrees of confidence in memory. Nor does remembering always control the memory response. The transcendental future is ’subjective time’ that can be called a belief in some future Utopia.
The latest dream of immortality is paradoxically couched under Transhumanism, an overcoming of limited organic nature with technology and designer bodies. The outer universe becomes subjective, from the outer reality the person emerges in what the scientists call reality. The outer universe become the subjective controllable reality.
People often have firm ideas related to a transcendental future but notions of 'new time after death' [or its absence] remain controversial, being rooted in faith. It is an aspect of worldview with behavioral imperatives, prohibitions, values, and consequences. The transcendental future encompasses different events that include divine judgment, reunion with loved ones, eternal life, achieving oneness with nature or cosmos.
Transcendence is existence or experience beyond the normal or physical level. It encompasses the time from the imaginal death of the physical body to infinity. It may include goals, such as reunion with deceased loved ones, reincarnation, eternal life, avoidance of damnation, and elimination of poverty, suffering, pain, and shame. It signifies belief in something larger than life, including immanent or transcendent beings beyond the self.
Out of Time
Transcendental future is a time perspective – a personality trait that describes how often a person imagines one’s afterlife with positive or negative attitude, intrusions, retrieval, shuffling, fluency, distinctiveness, and false recognition. Transcendental Future Time is one of the dimensions of subjective time and is related to individual beliefs about the time period after physical death. It partitions the psychological future into pre- and post-death time frames, transcending life and living.
An `extraordinary' time perspective, one that partitions the future into pre- and post-death time frames. The `transcendental-future' extends from the point of imagined death of the physical body to infinity, yet may influence present behavior.
Related to numerous psychological variables, the transcendental-future is a component of, but not synonymous with, many religious beliefs. From the perspective of the transcendental-future, behaviors often seen as irrational, such as suicide, extreme heroism, and excessive tithing, are transformed into rational behaviors expected to lead to fulfillment of transcendental-future goals.
People think or imagine themselves in a transcendental future context with positive or negative thoughts. The importance of transcendental future to well-being has yet to be studied, but many issues have already been assessed in clinical hypnotherapy with its timeline excursions, spontaneous and suggested, past and future, and with ancestors.
Making Your Time Matter
At a certain point in anthropological time the human brain had developed to the
level that people became aware of time and of their own existence. Together with the ability to imagine one’s future a new kind of mental stress also appeared – awareness of the inevitability of death. To allay this stressor, our early ancestors came up with a myth – a belief that death must be survivable. Today the bigger part of people’s beliefs has been passed on to them by their ancestors through religion or philosophy.
Chronesthesia, or mental time travel, is a mental ability to be aware of one's past or future. Studies have been conducted to map out areas of the brain that may be responsible for mental time travel, which include the left hippocampus and posterior visuospatial regions which are are involved in past and future event construction, neural differentiation. The right hippocampus, right frontopolar cortex, and the left ventrolateral prefrontal cortex are involved in future event construction.
The elaboration phase, unlike the construction phase, has overlap in the cortical areas comprising the autobiographical memory retrieval network. The left hippocampus and the right middle occipital gyrus were significantly activated during past and future event construction, while the right hippocampus was significantly deactivated during past event construction. It was only activated during the creation of future events.
Episodic future thinking involves multiple component processes: retrieval and integration of relevant information from memory, processing of subjective time, and self-referential processing. The ventral medial prefrontal cortex and posterior cingulate cortex are the most activated areas when imagining future events that are relevant to one's personal goals than to unrelated ones. This shows that these brain regions play a role in personal goal processing, which is a critical feature of episodic future thinking.
We can't technically travel through time (yet), when we think of the past or the future we engage in a sort of mental time travel. This uniquely human ability to psychologically travel through time arguably sets us apart from other species. Researchers have recently looked at how mental time travel is represented in the sensorimotor systems that regulate human movement. It turns out our perceptions of space and time are tightly coupled.
Engaging in mental time travel (a.k.a. chronesthesia) resulted in physical movements corresponding to the metaphorical direction of time. Those who thought of the past swayed backward while those who thought of the future moved forward. Chronesthesia may be grounded in processes that link spatial and temporal metaphors (e.g., future= forward, past= backward) to our systems of perception and action. "The embodiment of time and space yields an overt behavioral marker of an otherwise invisible mental operation," explains Miles and colleagues.
The ability to remember the past and imagine the future can significantly affect our life decisions and scripts. Scientists refer to the brain’s ability to think about the past, present, and future as "chronesthesia," or mental time travel...the neural correlates of mental time travel and metaphorical "travel."
"Mental time travel consists of two independent sets of processes: (1) those that determine the contents of any act of such ‘travel’: what happens, who are the 'actors,' where does the action occur; it is similar to the contents of watching a movie – everything that you see on the screen; and (2) those that determine the subjective moment of time in which the action takes place – past, present, or future," Tulving told PhysOrg.com.
‘Supernatural’ is a word that conjures spine-tingling feelings of mystical awe, fear, and joy. Does it exist as a concept, or as a phenomenon, however, among all peoples? What does it mean as a cultural construction and as a response to reality? What is its relationship to religion and spirituality, to experiences of ghosts and ideas about gods? What part of the ineffable world that informs cosmologies is captured by the term ‘supernatural’, and what is distorted or left out when we use it? Why is it such a contentious term in anthropology, vigorously condemned by some, championed by others, and blithely used by the rest?
Cupid & Psyche, Van Dyke
A LONG WAY HOME
NEXT OF KIN
Last Twig On the Branch
The 'Spirit' or Ruach of the Tree of Life which corresponds to the Intellect and Yetzirah (the Formative World) also corresponds with the Psyche. The Formative World) also corresponds with the Psyche. The Merriam-Webster Dictionary defines of 'Psyche' as soul, mind, and "The specialized cognitive, conative, and affective aspects of a psychosomatic unity : mind; specifically : the totality of the id, ego, and superego including both conscious and unconscious components."
Death also is in Paradise
Therefore, the Ruach/Breath of life (vital breath) and the Psyche are essentially one and the same. In psychology, the psyche is the totality of the mind (conscious and unconscious) and states stemming from the six types of senses, vision, hearing, smell, taste, touch and mind; the breath of life; the vital force which animates the body and shows itself in breathing; life, a living being: ψυχή ζῶσα, a living soul, the seat of the feelings, desires, affections, aversions. a moral being designed for everlasting life; an essence which differs from the body and is not dissolved by death.
ψυχή (Psyche) is Psyxḗ (from psyxō, "to breathe, blow" which is the root of the English words "psyche," "psychology") – soul (psyche); a person's distinct identity (unique personhood), i.e. individual personality. And that identity, that psyche comes to us through manifestation of our essence in our family tree.
Genealogy allows us to engrave our lines in history. As we journey up through our lines of descent we are always asking Who, Where, and When -- the questions that define the next of kin in our search pattern as we flesh out our family tree as its genealogical midwives.
Who from the family tree am I looking for at the moment?
The particular form the genealogical tree takes depends on who is identified as genealogical father and who is identified as genealogical mother to whom.
That identification is the basis upon which a conceptual system expressed in terms of symbols and relationships among symbols. When invaders become ancestors it reconfigures ethnicities, embodying systematic changes.
"The tree has a cosmic significance—it is the worldtree, the world-pillar, the world-axis.
Only think of Yggdrasill, the world-ash of Nordic mythology, a majestic, evergreen tree growing at the center of the world.
The tree, particularly its crown, is the abode of the gods. the world-tree.
But, as the alchemical symbolism clearly shows, it is also a transformation symbol, a symbol of the process of self-realization.
According to certain alchemical sources, the adept climbs the tree—a very ancient shamanistic motif.
The shaman, in an ecstasy, climbs the magical tree in order to reach the upper world where he will find his true self.
By climbing the magical tree, which is at the same time a tree of knowledge, he gains possession of his spiritual personality.
To the eye of the psychologist, the shamanistic and alchemical symbolism is a projected representation of the process of individuation.
(Jung, C.G. Jung Speaking: Interviews and Encounters, Pages 353-358.)
- Plato ( 428-348 BC) in the Timaeus says: " Therefore, according to a probable thesis , it must be said that this world was born as a human being really has a soul and intelligence in accordance with the divine will ."
This vision is refined later in the Alexandrian and Neo-Platonic thought and finds wide success in the Hellenized Egyptian thinker , Plotinus of Lycopolis ( 204-270 ) .
- Plotinus in the Enneads (IV , 4, 45 ) writes:
" ... It is clear that every being that is in the universe, according to its nature and constitution, contributes to the formation of the universe with his action and his suffering, in the same manner in which each part of the individual animal , in reason of his natural constitution , cooperate with the body as a whole , making the service that competes with its role and its function. Each part also gives and receives from its other , as his receptive nature allows. "
He also states that the simple is what is the basis of life . This is because the soul of an organism and is worth much more than all the parts put together : every body is a unit , an indivisible whole , something extraordinarily simple at first glance while being composed . This "simple" that is the basis of the compound can not be a material entity , because no matter what material may be designed or divided in half , even only conceptually . The multitude of souls in the world is itself intelligible only on the assumption that they all have a common origin. This unit is what explains the meaning of the Anima Mundi . The One remained transcendent itself and the individual deities were conceived as immanent forces of creation , as we would say today energies , and were , therefore , partakers of the same Spirit of the World that becomes a summation and archetypal energy .
Plotinus says , in fact, that ( Enneads , II, 3:16) : " ... the opposites are reconciled , and without them the universe is not such, and so is the other living beings ."
For Dionysius the Areopagite ( fifth-sixth century ) , the Anima Mundi , just like the One of Plotinus and the Holy Spirit Christian, it is life-giving and " distributing itself is not divided ." As, indeed , the idea that the Trinity is not affected indeed strengthened in comparison with the previous and the widespread propensity to triad recovered from Pythagoreanism , Neoplatonism and by Proclus.
William of Conches (1080-1145 AC) , one of the greatest exponents of the Platonism of the famous school of Chartres, in his : Glosses on Timaeus of Plato, says, " The Soul of the World is a natural energy beings for which some have only the ability to move , the other to grow , others to perceive through the senses , others to judge . The question is ... what is that energy. But, as it seems to me natural that energy is the Holy Spirit , which is a benign and divine harmony that is that from which all realities have to be, to move, to grow , the feeling, the experience , the judge.
Marsilio Ficino argued , in his Platonic Theology, that the soul " is the greatest of all miracles of nature. All other things are under God always be a single soul on the other hand is all things together "..." the nature center , the middle term of all things , the chain of the world , the bond and the seam of the universe, the face of everything."
Always Marsilio Ficino (1433-1499)
- In his Platonic Theology , Book III , Chapter I, states that the Anima Mundi is the mirror of divine realities , the life of those mortals and the nexus of both.
- And in the De vita says: " The Soul mundi ... according to the Platonic oldest , by means of his reasons , he has built in the sky, beyond the stars , the astral figures and parts of figures , such that they themselves become figures, and impressed in all these figures certain properties ... And specifically, it has no place in heaven forty-eight figures universal , twelve in the Zodiac , thirty-six out of the Zodiac. »
The scholar, philosopher and priest Marsilio Ficino made his Neoplatonic reading of the Anima Mundi syntonic with the Christian vision. He understood the sacred junction between the upper and the lower world. Ficino departed from the field and gradually climbed up the form, then the Soul, and then the Angel of God The Soul stood in the center, and it was the junction point between the physical and the spiritual.
For this Ficino called the Anima mundi et copula and that is the Soul as a node between the physical reality and the intelligible and therefore " copula " or union of the world with another dimension.
In its Platonic Theology of immortalitate animarum , Marsilio Ficino defines the soul as " Centrum naturae, universorum medium mundi series Voltes nodusque et omnium copula mundi."
Therefore raises the Soul in the middle of nature. He sees it as what mediatra nature and the universe, understood in its plurality of planetary epiphanies, but also as a node of all things, in the sense of what holds together the infinite parts of the world. Defines it as the face of all things and " copula, " i.e. union, the world itself with the divine. (La Primavera di Botticelli, cosmic mystery of the Anima Mundi , Vincenzo Guzzo and Gaspare Licandro ).
In the sixteenth century , the notion that the most vital vitalistic Soul of the world emerged especially in Giordano Bruno , who conceived the presence of the divine in nature in a vision closer to pan-enteismo that pantheism to which he was burned alive , and then Tommaso Campanella , according to which all the elements of reality are sentient beings and therefore have a kind of consciousness.
In the following centuries the idea of Anima Mundi was almost forgotten, and severely hampered by the spread of the mechanistic conceptions. Descartes with the distinction between res cogitans and res extensa deprived the Nature of the Soul and the Soul of its vital relationship with the Whole.
With Goethe's concept of Anima Mundi Schelling made a mental note and then shooting the Neoplatonic conception that sees the intelligent principle already present in embryonic form in nature or potential . The nature , for Schelling , is a ' " dormant intelligence ," a "spirit of power" and could not evolve to produce the man if he had not already within themselves the divine spirit . The organizations below are only minor aspects or limitations of the only universal in the human body is fully realized . The soul of the world in fact become fully self-conscious only in man, that is so over the top, the point of transition from nature to God, which is reflected in it . In nature there is therefore purposive intentionality , which is specified in organisms gradually more complex starting from a principle , however, simple and absolutely unified.
Schopenhauer , then , stated that the individual souls of individuals are an expression of the will of a single life , however, operates in an unconscious manner , and only humans can become self-conscious.
The idea of Anima Mundi emerges so cogent in Carl Jung, the concept of the collective unconscious. James Hillman (1926 - 2011) re-evaluates the validity of the idea of Psyche Member of the mind , not as merely rational , but as Anima (original meaning of the word Psyche) and enhances well the ideas and the valuable role of the philosophers of the Renaissance as they represented the Anima Mundi.
We are souls who choose life ... who have chosen to exist. And in my opinion, to exist is to choose to love and to be loved in spite of and, above all, open to our relationship with the world ... We are in a sense just the relationships we have with the world, because they are made of our own imaginal substance. We share the same Unus Mundus.
Things ' transparent '
who allow themselves to go through the light of the world acquire a cosmic depth.
The thing that shines the power of the world has become a symbol. So every finite thing can become a symbol, ' representative ' of the universe, where everything appears and shines in it, as a consequence, the world can not become a symbol just as in things finite meets its own image and reflected in the symbol itself. * So symbol , image, origin , but also ritual, form, light, and what in the language and practice of art means the art. The soul of the world as a mediating force , life-giving and life refers to the life-world of art."
The soul of the world, life and death.
In the dense network in which everything and everyone we connect (Anima Mundi?), sharing the idea that nothing is created and nothing is destroyed, everything is transformed, and knowing that the immensity of the Mystery embraces everything that we intended to Soul and understand it, we have no reason to feel far away or lost the stars disappeared on our horizon. We ourselves are neither close nor distant than everything disappears but these, like all of our deceased loved ones are to us. Atoms and galaxies are One and the transition from the phenomenon of becoming the idea of being constantly and occurs with simultaneous reciprocity, constancy and love in the heart of the mystery in which everything is where everything becomes. - Vincenzo Guzzo.
STAY WITH THE LIVING
We Are Alive; It's All We Know
Life is a luminous pause between two great mysteries,
which themselves are one. --C.G. Jung
Over the course of the millennia, all these ancestors in your tree, generation upon generation, have come down to this moment in time--to give birth to you. There has never been, nor will ever be, another like you. You have been given a tremendous responsibility. You carry the hopes and dreams of all those who have gone before. Hopes and dreams for a better world. What will you do with your time on this Earth? How will you contribute to the ongoing story of humankind? History remembers only the celebrated, genealogy remembers them all. --Laurence Overmire
“The neurosis is as a rule a pathological, one-sided development of the personality, the imperceptible beginnings of which can be traced back almost indefinitely into the earliest years of childhood. Only a very arbitrary judgment can say where the neurosis actually begins. If we were to relegate the determining cause as far back as the patient’s prenatal life, thus involving the physical and psychic disposition of the parents at the time of conception and pregnancy—a view that seems not at all improbable in certain cases—such an attitude would be more justifiable than the arbitrary selection of a definite point of neurotic origin in the individual life of the patient” (Jung, CW 16, 257-258).
"It isn’t primarily a practice of thinking of one’s last hour, or of death as a physical phenomenon; it is a seeing of every moment of life against the horizon of death, and a challenge to incorporate that awareness of dying into every moment so as to become more fully alive."
—Brother David Steindl-Rast Parabola, 1977.
Assemblage theory
"Deleuze's theory (metaphor?) of assemblage as a way of thinking about the social world is an intriguing one. Fundamentally the idea is that there does not exist a fixed and stable ontology for the social world that proceeds from "atoms" to "molecules" to "materials". Rather, social formations are assemblages of other complex configurations, and they in turn play roles in other, more extended configurations.
What is appealing to me about this way of talking about the social world is that it takes us away from the presuppositions we often bring about the social world as consisting of a range of discrete social objects or things. According to this static way of thinking, the state is a thing composed of other things; likewise Islam is an extended social thing; likewise Chicago; and so on. The assemblage approach suggests a different set of metaphors for the social world: mosaic, patchwork, heterogeneity, fluidity, transitory configuration. And this seems like a more realistic way of characterizing large extended social formation like states or regulatory agencies.
The downside of this way of talking and thinking about the social world is precisely the indefiniteness and indeterminacy it suggests for the composition relation. This poses a very hard problem for explanation. How are we to explain the properties and behavior of the composite entity if there is so much contingency in its parts and the ways in which they interact? The strategy of aggregative explanation seems to be a non-starter, since it is stipulated that composition is not a strongly rule-governed process. But so do the comparative and generalizing strategies. If the composites are indeed sui generis and unique configurations we can't generalize across instances and can't usefully compare them."
http://understandingsociety.blogspot.nl/…/assemblage-theory…
INVISIBLE LOYALTIES
Legacies of invisible loyalties and obligations from the past that are passed on through generations, including unconscious limitations. The invisible fibers of loyalty consist of consanguinity, maintenance of biological life and family lineage on the one hand and earned merit among members on the other. (1973, p. 52) Loyalty is a mark of belonging to a group and therefore manifests itself both as a group characteristic and as an individual attitude. Loyalty, as an individual attitude, goes beyond mere identification with the group.
To be a loyal member of the group implies internalizing the spirit of its expectations and complying with its internalized injunctions. Failure to live up to the demands of loyalty leads to feelings of existential guilt which constitute a system of secondary regulative forces which play a part in maintaining the homeostasis of the family system. The development of loyalty is determined by the history of the family group, the type of justice in force within it and its myths. The nature of each of the group members’ obligations depends on his/her emotional disposition and his/ her position in respect of the family ledger , which recapitulates what each member of the family owes.
NEXT OF KIN
Last Twig On the Branch
The 'Spirit' or Ruach of the Tree of Life which corresponds to the Intellect and Yetzirah (the Formative World) also corresponds with the Psyche. The Formative World) also corresponds with the Psyche. The Merriam-Webster Dictionary defines of 'Psyche' as soul, mind, and "The specialized cognitive, conative, and affective aspects of a psychosomatic unity : mind; specifically : the totality of the id, ego, and superego including both conscious and unconscious components."
Death also is in Paradise
Therefore, the Ruach/Breath of life (vital breath) and the Psyche are essentially one and the same. In psychology, the psyche is the totality of the mind (conscious and unconscious) and states stemming from the six types of senses, vision, hearing, smell, taste, touch and mind; the breath of life; the vital force which animates the body and shows itself in breathing; life, a living being: ψυχή ζῶσα, a living soul, the seat of the feelings, desires, affections, aversions. a moral being designed for everlasting life; an essence which differs from the body and is not dissolved by death.
ψυχή (Psyche) is Psyxḗ (from psyxō, "to breathe, blow" which is the root of the English words "psyche," "psychology") – soul (psyche); a person's distinct identity (unique personhood), i.e. individual personality. And that identity, that psyche comes to us through manifestation of our essence in our family tree.
Genealogy allows us to engrave our lines in history. As we journey up through our lines of descent we are always asking Who, Where, and When -- the questions that define the next of kin in our search pattern as we flesh out our family tree as its genealogical midwives.
Who from the family tree am I looking for at the moment?
- Where were they when a particular event occurred?
- When was it that the event likely took place?
The particular form the genealogical tree takes depends on who is identified as genealogical father and who is identified as genealogical mother to whom.
That identification is the basis upon which a conceptual system expressed in terms of symbols and relationships among symbols. When invaders become ancestors it reconfigures ethnicities, embodying systematic changes.
"The tree has a cosmic significance—it is the worldtree, the world-pillar, the world-axis.
Only think of Yggdrasill, the world-ash of Nordic mythology, a majestic, evergreen tree growing at the center of the world.
The tree, particularly its crown, is the abode of the gods. the world-tree.
But, as the alchemical symbolism clearly shows, it is also a transformation symbol, a symbol of the process of self-realization.
According to certain alchemical sources, the adept climbs the tree—a very ancient shamanistic motif.
The shaman, in an ecstasy, climbs the magical tree in order to reach the upper world where he will find his true self.
By climbing the magical tree, which is at the same time a tree of knowledge, he gains possession of his spiritual personality.
To the eye of the psychologist, the shamanistic and alchemical symbolism is a projected representation of the process of individuation.
(Jung, C.G. Jung Speaking: Interviews and Encounters, Pages 353-358.)
- Plato ( 428-348 BC) in the Timaeus says: " Therefore, according to a probable thesis , it must be said that this world was born as a human being really has a soul and intelligence in accordance with the divine will ."
This vision is refined later in the Alexandrian and Neo-Platonic thought and finds wide success in the Hellenized Egyptian thinker , Plotinus of Lycopolis ( 204-270 ) .
- Plotinus in the Enneads (IV , 4, 45 ) writes:
" ... It is clear that every being that is in the universe, according to its nature and constitution, contributes to the formation of the universe with his action and his suffering, in the same manner in which each part of the individual animal , in reason of his natural constitution , cooperate with the body as a whole , making the service that competes with its role and its function. Each part also gives and receives from its other , as his receptive nature allows. "
He also states that the simple is what is the basis of life . This is because the soul of an organism and is worth much more than all the parts put together : every body is a unit , an indivisible whole , something extraordinarily simple at first glance while being composed . This "simple" that is the basis of the compound can not be a material entity , because no matter what material may be designed or divided in half , even only conceptually . The multitude of souls in the world is itself intelligible only on the assumption that they all have a common origin. This unit is what explains the meaning of the Anima Mundi . The One remained transcendent itself and the individual deities were conceived as immanent forces of creation , as we would say today energies , and were , therefore , partakers of the same Spirit of the World that becomes a summation and archetypal energy .
Plotinus says , in fact, that ( Enneads , II, 3:16) : " ... the opposites are reconciled , and without them the universe is not such, and so is the other living beings ."
For Dionysius the Areopagite ( fifth-sixth century ) , the Anima Mundi , just like the One of Plotinus and the Holy Spirit Christian, it is life-giving and " distributing itself is not divided ." As, indeed , the idea that the Trinity is not affected indeed strengthened in comparison with the previous and the widespread propensity to triad recovered from Pythagoreanism , Neoplatonism and by Proclus.
William of Conches (1080-1145 AC) , one of the greatest exponents of the Platonism of the famous school of Chartres, in his : Glosses on Timaeus of Plato, says, " The Soul of the World is a natural energy beings for which some have only the ability to move , the other to grow , others to perceive through the senses , others to judge . The question is ... what is that energy. But, as it seems to me natural that energy is the Holy Spirit , which is a benign and divine harmony that is that from which all realities have to be, to move, to grow , the feeling, the experience , the judge.
Marsilio Ficino argued , in his Platonic Theology, that the soul " is the greatest of all miracles of nature. All other things are under God always be a single soul on the other hand is all things together "..." the nature center , the middle term of all things , the chain of the world , the bond and the seam of the universe, the face of everything."
Always Marsilio Ficino (1433-1499)
- In his Platonic Theology , Book III , Chapter I, states that the Anima Mundi is the mirror of divine realities , the life of those mortals and the nexus of both.
- And in the De vita says: " The Soul mundi ... according to the Platonic oldest , by means of his reasons , he has built in the sky, beyond the stars , the astral figures and parts of figures , such that they themselves become figures, and impressed in all these figures certain properties ... And specifically, it has no place in heaven forty-eight figures universal , twelve in the Zodiac , thirty-six out of the Zodiac. »
The scholar, philosopher and priest Marsilio Ficino made his Neoplatonic reading of the Anima Mundi syntonic with the Christian vision. He understood the sacred junction between the upper and the lower world. Ficino departed from the field and gradually climbed up the form, then the Soul, and then the Angel of God The Soul stood in the center, and it was the junction point between the physical and the spiritual.
For this Ficino called the Anima mundi et copula and that is the Soul as a node between the physical reality and the intelligible and therefore " copula " or union of the world with another dimension.
In its Platonic Theology of immortalitate animarum , Marsilio Ficino defines the soul as " Centrum naturae, universorum medium mundi series Voltes nodusque et omnium copula mundi."
Therefore raises the Soul in the middle of nature. He sees it as what mediatra nature and the universe, understood in its plurality of planetary epiphanies, but also as a node of all things, in the sense of what holds together the infinite parts of the world. Defines it as the face of all things and " copula, " i.e. union, the world itself with the divine. (La Primavera di Botticelli, cosmic mystery of the Anima Mundi , Vincenzo Guzzo and Gaspare Licandro ).
In the sixteenth century , the notion that the most vital vitalistic Soul of the world emerged especially in Giordano Bruno , who conceived the presence of the divine in nature in a vision closer to pan-enteismo that pantheism to which he was burned alive , and then Tommaso Campanella , according to which all the elements of reality are sentient beings and therefore have a kind of consciousness.
In the following centuries the idea of Anima Mundi was almost forgotten, and severely hampered by the spread of the mechanistic conceptions. Descartes with the distinction between res cogitans and res extensa deprived the Nature of the Soul and the Soul of its vital relationship with the Whole.
With Goethe's concept of Anima Mundi Schelling made a mental note and then shooting the Neoplatonic conception that sees the intelligent principle already present in embryonic form in nature or potential . The nature , for Schelling , is a ' " dormant intelligence ," a "spirit of power" and could not evolve to produce the man if he had not already within themselves the divine spirit . The organizations below are only minor aspects or limitations of the only universal in the human body is fully realized . The soul of the world in fact become fully self-conscious only in man, that is so over the top, the point of transition from nature to God, which is reflected in it . In nature there is therefore purposive intentionality , which is specified in organisms gradually more complex starting from a principle , however, simple and absolutely unified.
Schopenhauer , then , stated that the individual souls of individuals are an expression of the will of a single life , however, operates in an unconscious manner , and only humans can become self-conscious.
The idea of Anima Mundi emerges so cogent in Carl Jung, the concept of the collective unconscious. James Hillman (1926 - 2011) re-evaluates the validity of the idea of Psyche Member of the mind , not as merely rational , but as Anima (original meaning of the word Psyche) and enhances well the ideas and the valuable role of the philosophers of the Renaissance as they represented the Anima Mundi.
We are souls who choose life ... who have chosen to exist. And in my opinion, to exist is to choose to love and to be loved in spite of and, above all, open to our relationship with the world ... We are in a sense just the relationships we have with the world, because they are made of our own imaginal substance. We share the same Unus Mundus.
Things ' transparent '
who allow themselves to go through the light of the world acquire a cosmic depth.
The thing that shines the power of the world has become a symbol. So every finite thing can become a symbol, ' representative ' of the universe, where everything appears and shines in it, as a consequence, the world can not become a symbol just as in things finite meets its own image and reflected in the symbol itself. * So symbol , image, origin , but also ritual, form, light, and what in the language and practice of art means the art. The soul of the world as a mediating force , life-giving and life refers to the life-world of art."
The soul of the world, life and death.
In the dense network in which everything and everyone we connect (Anima Mundi?), sharing the idea that nothing is created and nothing is destroyed, everything is transformed, and knowing that the immensity of the Mystery embraces everything that we intended to Soul and understand it, we have no reason to feel far away or lost the stars disappeared on our horizon. We ourselves are neither close nor distant than everything disappears but these, like all of our deceased loved ones are to us. Atoms and galaxies are One and the transition from the phenomenon of becoming the idea of being constantly and occurs with simultaneous reciprocity, constancy and love in the heart of the mystery in which everything is where everything becomes. - Vincenzo Guzzo.
STAY WITH THE LIVING
We Are Alive; It's All We Know
Life is a luminous pause between two great mysteries,
which themselves are one. --C.G. Jung
Over the course of the millennia, all these ancestors in your tree, generation upon generation, have come down to this moment in time--to give birth to you. There has never been, nor will ever be, another like you. You have been given a tremendous responsibility. You carry the hopes and dreams of all those who have gone before. Hopes and dreams for a better world. What will you do with your time on this Earth? How will you contribute to the ongoing story of humankind? History remembers only the celebrated, genealogy remembers them all. --Laurence Overmire
“The neurosis is as a rule a pathological, one-sided development of the personality, the imperceptible beginnings of which can be traced back almost indefinitely into the earliest years of childhood. Only a very arbitrary judgment can say where the neurosis actually begins. If we were to relegate the determining cause as far back as the patient’s prenatal life, thus involving the physical and psychic disposition of the parents at the time of conception and pregnancy—a view that seems not at all improbable in certain cases—such an attitude would be more justifiable than the arbitrary selection of a definite point of neurotic origin in the individual life of the patient” (Jung, CW 16, 257-258).
"It isn’t primarily a practice of thinking of one’s last hour, or of death as a physical phenomenon; it is a seeing of every moment of life against the horizon of death, and a challenge to incorporate that awareness of dying into every moment so as to become more fully alive."
—Brother David Steindl-Rast Parabola, 1977.
Assemblage theory
"Deleuze's theory (metaphor?) of assemblage as a way of thinking about the social world is an intriguing one. Fundamentally the idea is that there does not exist a fixed and stable ontology for the social world that proceeds from "atoms" to "molecules" to "materials". Rather, social formations are assemblages of other complex configurations, and they in turn play roles in other, more extended configurations.
What is appealing to me about this way of talking about the social world is that it takes us away from the presuppositions we often bring about the social world as consisting of a range of discrete social objects or things. According to this static way of thinking, the state is a thing composed of other things; likewise Islam is an extended social thing; likewise Chicago; and so on. The assemblage approach suggests a different set of metaphors for the social world: mosaic, patchwork, heterogeneity, fluidity, transitory configuration. And this seems like a more realistic way of characterizing large extended social formation like states or regulatory agencies.
The downside of this way of talking and thinking about the social world is precisely the indefiniteness and indeterminacy it suggests for the composition relation. This poses a very hard problem for explanation. How are we to explain the properties and behavior of the composite entity if there is so much contingency in its parts and the ways in which they interact? The strategy of aggregative explanation seems to be a non-starter, since it is stipulated that composition is not a strongly rule-governed process. But so do the comparative and generalizing strategies. If the composites are indeed sui generis and unique configurations we can't generalize across instances and can't usefully compare them."
http://understandingsociety.blogspot.nl/…/assemblage-theory…
INVISIBLE LOYALTIES
Legacies of invisible loyalties and obligations from the past that are passed on through generations, including unconscious limitations. The invisible fibers of loyalty consist of consanguinity, maintenance of biological life and family lineage on the one hand and earned merit among members on the other. (1973, p. 52) Loyalty is a mark of belonging to a group and therefore manifests itself both as a group characteristic and as an individual attitude. Loyalty, as an individual attitude, goes beyond mere identification with the group.
To be a loyal member of the group implies internalizing the spirit of its expectations and complying with its internalized injunctions. Failure to live up to the demands of loyalty leads to feelings of existential guilt which constitute a system of secondary regulative forces which play a part in maintaining the homeostasis of the family system. The development of loyalty is determined by the history of the family group, the type of justice in force within it and its myths. The nature of each of the group members’ obligations depends on his/her emotional disposition and his/ her position in respect of the family ledger , which recapitulates what each member of the family owes.
LIVING WITH THE DEAD
When We Are No More
Mysteries are primal 'secrets' regarding all human evolution. We can mine our ancestral memories. But those secrets are in the experiential aspects of the process. It is not the conceptual part that is secret, but the lived reality unique to each individual -- the realization of self and spirit. They are the signposts along the primal path of alchemy leading to Gnosis. The first masters on Earth were all Dragons and Serpents. They bestowed wisdom and the means of experiencing Gnosis. Unbound consciousness is the basis of metaphysics.
Physics and metaphysics are not so separate as some philosophers and physicists indicate. In fact they are in a sense symbiotic. Physics cannot exist without metaphysical postulates upon which it can rest its own theories, while metaphysics can, in turn, be directly influenced by physical experiments. The meaning of this is that there is nothing unscientific about spirituality and its arts. Ultimately it is fully empirical. The only issue is perception. It is only in perception that materiality "appears" to separated from the divine or spiritual oncology. This also means that there is no mysterious "magic" about the higher realm of spirituality.
The search for truths in metaphysics should be supplemented by progress and advances that occur in physics, while physics should regard itself as being able to provide not final truths about reality, but truths that are dependent upon a more general metaphysical scheme. If metaphysics rejects physics as a valid partner in the search for truth, then its explanations can be valid to those who need final and ultimate answers, but the goal of metaphysics should not be to pose as any arbiter, but as the one that provides the best final and ultimate answers. Where do explanations cease?
When We Are No More
Mysteries are primal 'secrets' regarding all human evolution. We can mine our ancestral memories. But those secrets are in the experiential aspects of the process. It is not the conceptual part that is secret, but the lived reality unique to each individual -- the realization of self and spirit. They are the signposts along the primal path of alchemy leading to Gnosis. The first masters on Earth were all Dragons and Serpents. They bestowed wisdom and the means of experiencing Gnosis. Unbound consciousness is the basis of metaphysics.
Physics and metaphysics are not so separate as some philosophers and physicists indicate. In fact they are in a sense symbiotic. Physics cannot exist without metaphysical postulates upon which it can rest its own theories, while metaphysics can, in turn, be directly influenced by physical experiments. The meaning of this is that there is nothing unscientific about spirituality and its arts. Ultimately it is fully empirical. The only issue is perception. It is only in perception that materiality "appears" to separated from the divine or spiritual oncology. This also means that there is no mysterious "magic" about the higher realm of spirituality.
The search for truths in metaphysics should be supplemented by progress and advances that occur in physics, while physics should regard itself as being able to provide not final truths about reality, but truths that are dependent upon a more general metaphysical scheme. If metaphysics rejects physics as a valid partner in the search for truth, then its explanations can be valid to those who need final and ultimate answers, but the goal of metaphysics should not be to pose as any arbiter, but as the one that provides the best final and ultimate answers. Where do explanations cease?
Hermes says, “The upper open spirit is hidden in the earth. Work the open upper spirit with the lower secret one,
so will the living one awaken the dead,
and be to it a well of life and work great wonders.”
so will the living one awaken the dead,
and be to it a well of life and work great wonders.”
IN A SIMILAR VEIN
Because You're Mine, I "Walk the Lines"
But if you have nothing at all to create, then perhaps you create yourself.
--Carl Jung, CW 11, Page 556, Para 906.
"I feel very strongly that I am under the influence of things or questions which were left incomplete and unanswered by my parents and grandparents and more distant ancestors. It often seems as if there were an impersonal karma within a family which is passed on from parents to children. It has always seemed to me that I had to answer questions which fate had posed to my forefathers, and which had not yet been answered, or as if I had to complete, or perhaps continue, things which previous ages had left unfinished." -- Jung, Memories, Dreams, Reflections
“The whole life of the individual is nothing but the process of giving birth to himself; indeed, we should be fully born when we die.” --Erich Fromm
Because You're Mine, I Walk the Lineage
Genealogy uses historical, phenomenological, and psychological methods. By "walking the lines" backward in each of the tangled branches of our Family Tree, we can engage layers of multidimensional imagery.
Our family tree emerges from each couple and their own respective networked lines of ancestors and their interpersonal relational interaction. Metaphorically, we walk in their footsteps in a 'magical' circumabulation of our ancestral field. The principle involves making a clear and conscious connection with the ancestors and the idea of oneness. 'Walking the Way' is a form of deep veneration.
Ensouled Body
Genealogy clears a walkway through the ancestral landscape. It is a comparative phenomenology of the imagination with an openness to Being. This is a hermeneutic phenomenology (description and interpretation of meaning), an empirical, transcendental, or psychological phenomenology of lived experiences and themes. Here, “transcendental” implies everything is perceived freshly, as if for the first time, without assumptions.
We immerse ourselves in the cosmic wisdom of matter, in the immanence of indeterminate, enigmatic, mysterious phenomena and its own language -- open, visionary, poetic, aesthetic, erotic, sensuous, spiritual, transformative, vocational. We can't decide if it's the right or only path until we travel along it but it informs our genealogical search at every point. One key to achieving that understand is establishing context.
Hermeneutics refers to the liminal nature of Hermes as an interpreter and soul guide (psychopomp) who connects heaven and earth, the realm of the living and the dead. He guides the soul into dreams and the dead to the underworld. The alchemists' defined the prima materia as the "land of the dead."
Jung describes Hermes as, "the arch-authority of Greek alchemy. He is "Hermes Trismegistos" (thrice-greatest Hermes), and is identical with the Egyptian Thoth, the god of learning. Hermes was a leader of souls, a god of revelation and understanding, connected with the human mind, and also the source of dreams.
He was actually the god of the unconscious, and the being who determined the human intellect." (ETH, Alchemy, Lecture XI 11th July, 1941, 224-231)
Jung said he wasn't well-versed in philosophy, but "had to make use of philosophical concepts to formulate my findings." Phenomenology brings to light what would otherwise remain hidden and helps us interpret what it means to exist in the world. Phenomenology becomes hermeneutical when its method is taken to be interpretive, rather than purely descriptive as in transcendental phenomenology.
Hermeneutic phenomenology enables access to subconscious phenomena and provides a means of interpreting our experiences of personal learning journeys. We acknowledge the complexity of a lived experience and subjective validation of it as an integration of our thoughts, feelings, fantasies, and experiences.
Meaning is encoded in cultural symbolism deposited and mediated through myth, religion, art, and language. In a prolonged engagement with a topic, such as genealogy, language itself is an appearance of being -- a means of being manifest and 'seeing' meaning.
With deep questioning of the phenomena, we become attentive to how things appear and speak for themselves, including the ancestors, connecting with the visceral world of attunement, resonance, and sensation. Sympathetic resonance includes physical, emotional, aesthetic, and intuitive responses, not just the verification of cognition.
The moment of vision embodies authentic temporality, illuminating the full meaning of the present in terms of our fate, our mortal future, with a simultaneous retrieval of our past heritage. Language and storytelling have a narrative function that ultimately return to the question of the meaning of being, the self and self-identity.
"...[T]here is a thinking in primordial images, in symbols which are older than the historical man, which are inborn in him from the earliest times, and, eternally living, outlasting all generations, still make up the groundwork of the human psyche. It is only possible to live the fullest life when we are in harmony with these symbols; wisdom is a return to them." (Jung, CW 8, Pages 399-403.)
Evocations of remembrance embody the essential nature of the sensuous radiance of absence. The far greater and darker regions of the unknown give way to becoming, transforming emotional experience. The archetype is not “in” a person but “between” them, within the imaginal space that opens, for example, in evocative moments between ourselves and our ancestors with a sense of presence and place.
At all events wisdom cannot be taught by words. It is only possible by personal contact and by immediate experience. (Jung, Letters Vol. 1, Pages 559-560.)
Condensing Meaning
A narrative reports the life of a single individual, while a phenomenology describes the collective meaning of lived experiences, of a concept, or a phenomenon. Life themes are divided into subthemes describing different dimensions of the process of understanding connected by the guiding theme “narrative.”
Our approach is phenomenal or qualitative rather than analytic. When phenomenology informs narrative analysis, the image is allowed to speak through form, stories and intuition. There is no predetermined framework of meaning. The comparative approach usefully challenges taken-for-granted understandings. Rooted in philosophy, it studies conscious awareness of the world as experienced from the subjective or first person point of view.
Emotion As Epiphany
Phenomenology is an experiential approach to subjective experience. "Experience" (being or existence) is a complex concept -- an "in-relation-to" phenomenon. We can approach our ancestors with phenomenology, and also reflexively consider what we bring to the process from our own perspective and worldview.
As in the case of dreams we must stick as closely to the image as given as possible. Image is the primary phenomenon of psychic life, mytho-poetic imagination, and the prima materia of the phenomenology of the soul.
The phenomenal field focuses on perceptions, feelings, and "how one feels right now." The intergenerational field is a phenomenal field. Hillman referred to soul's self-expression as, “what we are really, and the reality we live, is our psychic reality, which is nothing but ...the poetic imagination going on day and night.” (We’ve Had a Hundred Years of Psychotherapy and the World Is Getting Worse, p. 62)
He sees death as a permanent resident of the psyche, and Thanatos as a mode of soul-making: “loss of soul, not loss of life, should be [the analyst’s] main dread.” Hillman advocates the development of a conscious philosophy of death. He argues that death and life are not psychological opposites and that “...any act which holds off death prevents life” (Suicide and the Soul, p. 61).
"We cannot slay death, as we have already taken all life from it. If we still want to overcome death, then we must enliven it. Therefore on your journey be sure to take golden cups full of the sweet drink of life, red wine, and give it to dead matter, so that it can win life back." (Jung; The Red Book; Liber Primus; Page 244.)
With the phenomenal approach, Mircea Eliade identified “the sacred” as a kind of independent variable—unchanging and timeless even though manifest in completely different times and cultures. “Pure” phenomenology describes the intentional objects of consciousness.
Human experiences are phenomena -- what they experienced and how they experienced it, in holistic and embedded or qualitative perspectives. Hermeneutics renders the object accessible to interpretation, opening new possibilities. Naturally, we have to take account of our own bias, conceptions, and assumed truths into the interpretative activity involved.
We must distinguished interpretation from explanation and causes, focusing on a description of reasons. There is no firm boundary between the dimensions of description and interpretation. Deeper understanding demands more complexity-sensitive ways of thinking and a method that allows interpretation, exploration of dynamics and processes, and involvement of the context.
Presence & Absence
We synthesize the lived-experience from comparative transformations. General psychological structure is deduced from the psychological constituents of the experience. Constituents are context dependent and are necessarily part of the whole structure.
The purpose of this procedure is grounded in the phenomenological concept of parts and wholes. The meaning units are transformed using imaginative variation within the phenomenological attitude and psychological perspective to elucidate their essential psychological meanings.
The eidetic nature of the data or mental image, not necessarily derived from an actual external event or memory, is brought forth through the imaginative variation. We can create and explore eidetic images as a way of coming to terms with transgenerational and traumatic life events.
The phenomenological concept of presences and absences is an important one to use with imaginative variation. Explicit data can reveal implicit meanings [subtext] without them being concretely expressed. During the transformations, we can “see” the explicit meanings, and also uncover the implicit meanings.
Imaginative variation gives us a “sense of the whole.” In this way, the descriptive phenomenological approach is more comprehensive than mere empirical approaches in the natural attitude. This is justified through understanding that what is “present” often implies or indicates an “absent” quality.
In the phenomenological approach, each transformation describes what the meaning unit expresses psychologically without any interpretation or assumptions about its “truth.” The phenomenological approach represents different approaches, from focus on rich description to those more informed by interpretation.
We describe how it was experienced and understood from the subject's point of view without explanation of “why” it was experienced in the way it was. The phenomenological attitude of the researcher in the psychological analysis of the data is what makes the results both phenomenological and psychological.
We can reduce the information to significant statements or quotes and combine the statements into themes. Then we develop a textural description of the experiences of the persons (what participants experienced), a structural description of their experiences (how they experienced it in terms of the conditions, situations, or context), and a combination of the textural and structural descriptions to convey an overall essence of the experience.
We can describe what all participants have in common as they experience a phenomenon (e.g., grief is universally experienced). The basic purpose of phenomenology is to reduce individual experiences with a phenomenon to a description of the universal essence, to “grasp of the very nature of the thing.”
Contextualization
There is only one method: the comparative method. There are five core approaches to qualitative research: narrative study, a phenomenology, a grounded theory, an ethnography, and a case study. At the fundamental level, the five differ in what they are trying to accomplish with their foci or the primary objectives of the studies.
Exploring a life is different from generating a theory or describing the behavior of a cultural group. Narrative is both a method and phenomenon of study. Individuals are enabled and constrained by social resources, socially situated in interactive performances, and how narrators develop interpretations of the multileveled context of a life. A first-person psychological perspective is sought so that an empathetic position can be adopted.
In genealogy we are gathering data through the collection of their stories (biographical study), reporting individual experiences, and chronologically ordering (or using life course stages) the timeline and meaning of those experiences. Restoring them means re-storying them, reframing them with sensitive descriptions and imaginative variation.
We need to collect extensive information about each ancestor, and to have a clear understanding of the context of the individual’s life. It takes a keen eye to identify in the source material gathered the particular stories that capture the individual’s experiences. Narrative study tells the story of individuals unfolding in a chronology of their experiences, set within their personal, social, and historical context, and includes the important themes in those lived experiences.
Narrative inquiry concerns stories lived and told. A phenomenological perspective of the mind acknowledges consciousness as the most fundamental life-quality that coexists with the body. A person is regarded as an embodied consciousness. People know one another’s consciousness through their physical bodies. This means that we know our own consciousness by reflection but cannot know the consciousness of the other except through the body.
Three-dimensional narrative inquiry space includes the personal and social (the interaction); the past, present, and future (continuity); and the place (situation). This story line may include information about the setting or context of the participants’ experiences. Beyond the chronology, we might detail themes that arise from the story to provide a more detailed discussion of the meaning of the story.
Tracing the Path
'Walking the lines' is a ritual situated in the imaginal landscape suggested by our genealogical ascent which leads into our collective ancestral past. Along the path, or circuits of ancestral nodes, the secret meaning of life is discovered. Our ancient path of pilgrimage is rich with meaning and is a powerful tool for seeking soul and spirit in a movement toward transcendence. Perhaps facing our mortality inspires us to live more fully.
The main quest in the oldest myths is for immortality. We search for immortality. We cannot know anything final about that and all the possible means of 'living', but many strive for germline immortality, an ersatz-immortality in their offspring. The immortality of the soul is concerned with personal identity, not just in conscious and unconscious states, but in mutable conditions and alternating states of being.
Embodied & Disembodied Soul
In the Phaedo, Plato describes an immortal soul. Thus, while the natural body and the experiential mind are merely phenomenal clothing of the ontological soul, the latter is immortal as a living entity. Aristotle distinguishes between ontological and experiential soul.
As Danish physicist Niels Bohr quipped, "A Great Truth is a Truth the opposite of which is also a Great Truth." In the paradoxical nature of reality, immortality remains largely a concept and source of ontological argument. For example, Buddhism does not conceive of the soul as ultimately real.
Perhaps the latest version of the soul describes a field ontology and a functional dualism (mind/matter). Our form emerges from a primordial field of consciousness/energy (groundstate) in which we remain embedded, and to which we return.
Ancestral Field
This zero-point field has many names. That field is the energetic “void”, or “vacuum”, the space of the “ether”, the subtle but ultra-powerful energy potential. The Heart Sutra tells us that, "Form is not other than Void, Void is not other than Form." This implies that our human form is not other than void, and biophysics shows this to be true. This notion differs from survival of personal identity (self-movement) or soul, but is a conservation of primordial information.
Jung contends the archetype of rebirth and resurrection is a metaphorical experiences of [ego] death as a metaphorical precursor to five forms of rebirth:
1. Metempsychosis, or transmigration of souls.
2. Reincarnation, human personality is regarded as continuous and accessible to memory; re-birth in a human body.
3. Resurrection means a reestablishment of human existence in an incorruptible carnal or subtle body after death.
4. Rebirth within the span of individual life. Renovation, renewal or total rebirth of the essential nature (transmutation).
5. Indirect rebirth via participation in death-rebirth, the rite of transformation. (Jung, CW 9I, para 200- 205)
Experiential psychology is not pure ontology, and relies mostly on the rebirth experience and the truth and beauty of intuition for transformation. We have to be content with its psychic reality. Natural transformation processes announce themselves mainly in dreams. There is a contrast between phenomenal and noumenal, experiential and eternal, relative and absolute, biological and ontological.
Psychologically, immortality is the attempt to grant distinct ontological status to the symbolic self, to deny the finality of organic death. In other words, it is a denial of death. Soul beliefs, discreetly or indiscreetly, transform the ontology of creativity into an immortality ideology.
James Hillman shifted Jung's conversation from individuation to "soul-making," a way of seeing and reflection that makes meaning possible. "By soul I mean, first of all, a perspective rather than a substance, a viewpoint toward things rather than a thing itself." He describes five things about the nature of soul as the imaginative possibilities of nature: the soul (1) makes all meaning possible, (2) turns events into experiences, (3) involves a deepening of experience, (4) is communicated in love, and (5) has a special relation with death (Hillman, 1977, p. xvi; Hillman, 1976, pp. 44-47).
Hillman's anima mundi is at home in the 'real' world -- the imaginal realm where real world spirit regains its zest and vision, addressing our sufferings after transformation. In the everyday, the best of the "unfathomable, multiple, prior, generative highly intentional and necessary" archetypal world of both the "noumenal" and the "phenomenal" manifests itself in the everyday tribal and familial context. Family history is transformed into myth.
Facts & Artifacts
In terms of ontological wholeness, immortality of one's being expressed in the continuance of one's proper name or even dynasty falls short of the unconscious belief in life after death. Immortality is an organic philosophical desire for life that should always be lived. It is a religious desire for another life, affirming an act of faith in a transcendent existence, or renewal without end of what is here in this world. This is the difference between cosmic pantheism and theistic (theosophic or transcendental) ontology.
Von Franz notes, "The analysis of older people provides a wealth of dream symbols that psychically prepare the dreams for impending death. It is in fact true, as Jung has emphasized, that the unconscious psyche pays very little attention to the abrupt end of bodily life and behaves as if the psychic life of the individual, that is, the individuation process, will simply continue. …The unconscious “believes” quite obviously in a life after death." (von Franz (1987), ix.)
Like the shamans of old who ascended and descended the archetypal World Tree, genealogists can "walk the tree" -- "The Big Tree" or the "World Family Tree" -- from one end to the other, or "up" toward the past and then back "down" to the present on another line. Timelines help us arrange the numerous names and events that take place simultaneously and sequentially.
Some family trees will look like stumpy, dead sticks with a few twigs, while others will shared vast underground connections and vigorous thick growth, like as a yew tree. Within the Family Tree and World Tree, people are either connected by "bloodlines" or through marriage. Bloodlines can include adoptions and illegitimacy, either acknowledged or unacknowledged. Ancestors are only those from whom you directly descend, though cousin lines may share blood.
Spirit People
Family is the midwife of the soul. Jung reminds us that the source of unifying images which animated our ancestors and linked them to Mystery are generated by the symbol-making function we all possess. The same mysterious dream place gives birth to those mediating images which arise when we encounter the mysterious Other, the animated presence in our lives.
The family is the primordial psychophysical initiatory vessel or vehicle of our destiny -- the archetypal family and biological self. Family births us, develops us, procreates us, and buries us. Regardless of the pain and travail it may create for us, family is the grail within which the sacred nectar of our physical and psychic DNA is carried from the lips and organs of one generation to the next.
Long lines, about 13 generations back lead into medieval times. "Walking the path" means you MUST visit every profile in both paths, no shortcuts. We find ourselves walking the lines and paths around and up to legendary figures, and further back, purely mythic characters -- liminal entities.
Three modalities -- resonance, depth and numinosity -- describe the presence of that autonomous Other which we call soul and an experiential psychic connection to the Other, and a sense of self grounded in a transcendent order. Those images are conduits into the natural world, with its specific tribal mythos, and assist in later moving the community members into a world beyond mortality.
Genealogy is a sort of psychic archaeology where we dig up the dead with their own information and 'advice' -- hidden historical crumbs and clues, synchronicities, and intuitions. Genealogy reveals complex behaviors of distributed systems. Naturally they lead backwards to origins vastly different from the kinds of practices present in different time frames.
Genealogy is an archaeology of the individual and a therapeutic art -- optimally coordinated interpersonal synchronicity and optimized subsequent interactions. Similar personality traits align in rapport and return with greater simultaneous coordination. The interaction of pairs displays complementary simultaneous coordination. Coherent emotional charge states converge under effective conditions after an interval of time.
Archaeology of Knowledge
The archaeological level is what made an event or a situation possible. Archaeology and genealogy alternate and support each other. Archaeology is structuralist. It tries to take an objective neutral position and it avoids causal theories of change.
Foucault calls it, "the union of erudite knowledge and local memories which allows us to establish a historical knowledge of struggles and to make use of this knowledge tactically today." (Genealogy and Social Criticism, p.42)
The genealogical side of analysis tries to grasp the power of constituting a domain of objects. Genealogy uncovers the creation of tangible objects. A society institutes the role of medicine man and gives him special privileges. Then we establish and institutionalize this practice, the psychosocial role of a "medicine man."
Treading the Path
Walking a path is symbolically a spiritual practice, a pilgrimage, like walking or tracing a labyrinth -- a contemplative spiritual exercise of circumnavigating a sacred path. We turn back to our center, to our origin, by a devotional path. A walk through the World Tree or a walk in the labyrinth is a cosmic journey through the heavens.
There is no right or wrong way; we have to enter and follow a path with presence. Our attitudes, focus, experience, consolation, and reflection may shift each time, or as we follow path. Traversing the labyrinth brings us into wholeness with all parts of our being. When we walk the labyrinth it recreates a very ancient expression of thanks and remembrance of the divine in all things. So does the family tree, expressing our completeness outwardly.
Like labyrinth, your genealogy has one way in and one way out -- you. Such an initiation, shifting perspectives, awakens the knowledge encoded within. Walking the labyrinth and walking our lines share a spirit. The circuits of the labyrinth pattern and genealogy share the same meaning -- a maze of ancestors, and a way to meander through them -- spiritual umbilical cords.
We walk a labyrinth by stepping into the entrance and putting one foot in front of the other. After traveling through all the paths and windings, the walker comes into the center - the six - petal rosette - the rose line, a symbol of the Holy Grail. Like walking the labyrinth, genealogy can be an exercise in self-healing. Both are journeys to the center and back out again to the ordinary world.
Seeking the Ancestors
Our genealogy is a sensorium of multisensory informational content. Relationship paths connect you to closest blood relationships via a given ancestor through several families, via either parent, male or female, or combinations thereof. There can be many relationship paths to the same ancestors.
Intergenerational Encounter
Collapsing the space between us, each ancestor, or avatar of our descent, touches us with an imaginal poem that is a product of their embedding in our ancestral history - layer after emerging layer of our augmented reality. They begin to talk to us in many ways: ambiance, serendipity, synchronicity, personal, contextual, instructively and artistically.
The image of the World Tree invites us to explore the vertical or depth dimension, while Family is the most prominent landmark on the horizontal plane of relational otherness. Family mediates this world and its essential, phenomenal reality and can enhance or dampen, devastatingly, our interaction with this dimension of psyche. The family seeds imagination.
Because You're Mine, I "Walk the Lines"
But if you have nothing at all to create, then perhaps you create yourself.
--Carl Jung, CW 11, Page 556, Para 906.
"I feel very strongly that I am under the influence of things or questions which were left incomplete and unanswered by my parents and grandparents and more distant ancestors. It often seems as if there were an impersonal karma within a family which is passed on from parents to children. It has always seemed to me that I had to answer questions which fate had posed to my forefathers, and which had not yet been answered, or as if I had to complete, or perhaps continue, things which previous ages had left unfinished." -- Jung, Memories, Dreams, Reflections
“The whole life of the individual is nothing but the process of giving birth to himself; indeed, we should be fully born when we die.” --Erich Fromm
Because You're Mine, I Walk the Lineage
Genealogy uses historical, phenomenological, and psychological methods. By "walking the lines" backward in each of the tangled branches of our Family Tree, we can engage layers of multidimensional imagery.
Our family tree emerges from each couple and their own respective networked lines of ancestors and their interpersonal relational interaction. Metaphorically, we walk in their footsteps in a 'magical' circumabulation of our ancestral field. The principle involves making a clear and conscious connection with the ancestors and the idea of oneness. 'Walking the Way' is a form of deep veneration.
Ensouled Body
Genealogy clears a walkway through the ancestral landscape. It is a comparative phenomenology of the imagination with an openness to Being. This is a hermeneutic phenomenology (description and interpretation of meaning), an empirical, transcendental, or psychological phenomenology of lived experiences and themes. Here, “transcendental” implies everything is perceived freshly, as if for the first time, without assumptions.
We immerse ourselves in the cosmic wisdom of matter, in the immanence of indeterminate, enigmatic, mysterious phenomena and its own language -- open, visionary, poetic, aesthetic, erotic, sensuous, spiritual, transformative, vocational. We can't decide if it's the right or only path until we travel along it but it informs our genealogical search at every point. One key to achieving that understand is establishing context.
Hermeneutics refers to the liminal nature of Hermes as an interpreter and soul guide (psychopomp) who connects heaven and earth, the realm of the living and the dead. He guides the soul into dreams and the dead to the underworld. The alchemists' defined the prima materia as the "land of the dead."
Jung describes Hermes as, "the arch-authority of Greek alchemy. He is "Hermes Trismegistos" (thrice-greatest Hermes), and is identical with the Egyptian Thoth, the god of learning. Hermes was a leader of souls, a god of revelation and understanding, connected with the human mind, and also the source of dreams.
He was actually the god of the unconscious, and the being who determined the human intellect." (ETH, Alchemy, Lecture XI 11th July, 1941, 224-231)
Jung said he wasn't well-versed in philosophy, but "had to make use of philosophical concepts to formulate my findings." Phenomenology brings to light what would otherwise remain hidden and helps us interpret what it means to exist in the world. Phenomenology becomes hermeneutical when its method is taken to be interpretive, rather than purely descriptive as in transcendental phenomenology.
Hermeneutic phenomenology enables access to subconscious phenomena and provides a means of interpreting our experiences of personal learning journeys. We acknowledge the complexity of a lived experience and subjective validation of it as an integration of our thoughts, feelings, fantasies, and experiences.
Meaning is encoded in cultural symbolism deposited and mediated through myth, religion, art, and language. In a prolonged engagement with a topic, such as genealogy, language itself is an appearance of being -- a means of being manifest and 'seeing' meaning.
With deep questioning of the phenomena, we become attentive to how things appear and speak for themselves, including the ancestors, connecting with the visceral world of attunement, resonance, and sensation. Sympathetic resonance includes physical, emotional, aesthetic, and intuitive responses, not just the verification of cognition.
The moment of vision embodies authentic temporality, illuminating the full meaning of the present in terms of our fate, our mortal future, with a simultaneous retrieval of our past heritage. Language and storytelling have a narrative function that ultimately return to the question of the meaning of being, the self and self-identity.
"...[T]here is a thinking in primordial images, in symbols which are older than the historical man, which are inborn in him from the earliest times, and, eternally living, outlasting all generations, still make up the groundwork of the human psyche. It is only possible to live the fullest life when we are in harmony with these symbols; wisdom is a return to them." (Jung, CW 8, Pages 399-403.)
Evocations of remembrance embody the essential nature of the sensuous radiance of absence. The far greater and darker regions of the unknown give way to becoming, transforming emotional experience. The archetype is not “in” a person but “between” them, within the imaginal space that opens, for example, in evocative moments between ourselves and our ancestors with a sense of presence and place.
At all events wisdom cannot be taught by words. It is only possible by personal contact and by immediate experience. (Jung, Letters Vol. 1, Pages 559-560.)
Condensing Meaning
A narrative reports the life of a single individual, while a phenomenology describes the collective meaning of lived experiences, of a concept, or a phenomenon. Life themes are divided into subthemes describing different dimensions of the process of understanding connected by the guiding theme “narrative.”
Our approach is phenomenal or qualitative rather than analytic. When phenomenology informs narrative analysis, the image is allowed to speak through form, stories and intuition. There is no predetermined framework of meaning. The comparative approach usefully challenges taken-for-granted understandings. Rooted in philosophy, it studies conscious awareness of the world as experienced from the subjective or first person point of view.
Emotion As Epiphany
Phenomenology is an experiential approach to subjective experience. "Experience" (being or existence) is a complex concept -- an "in-relation-to" phenomenon. We can approach our ancestors with phenomenology, and also reflexively consider what we bring to the process from our own perspective and worldview.
As in the case of dreams we must stick as closely to the image as given as possible. Image is the primary phenomenon of psychic life, mytho-poetic imagination, and the prima materia of the phenomenology of the soul.
The phenomenal field focuses on perceptions, feelings, and "how one feels right now." The intergenerational field is a phenomenal field. Hillman referred to soul's self-expression as, “what we are really, and the reality we live, is our psychic reality, which is nothing but ...the poetic imagination going on day and night.” (We’ve Had a Hundred Years of Psychotherapy and the World Is Getting Worse, p. 62)
He sees death as a permanent resident of the psyche, and Thanatos as a mode of soul-making: “loss of soul, not loss of life, should be [the analyst’s] main dread.” Hillman advocates the development of a conscious philosophy of death. He argues that death and life are not psychological opposites and that “...any act which holds off death prevents life” (Suicide and the Soul, p. 61).
"We cannot slay death, as we have already taken all life from it. If we still want to overcome death, then we must enliven it. Therefore on your journey be sure to take golden cups full of the sweet drink of life, red wine, and give it to dead matter, so that it can win life back." (Jung; The Red Book; Liber Primus; Page 244.)
With the phenomenal approach, Mircea Eliade identified “the sacred” as a kind of independent variable—unchanging and timeless even though manifest in completely different times and cultures. “Pure” phenomenology describes the intentional objects of consciousness.
Human experiences are phenomena -- what they experienced and how they experienced it, in holistic and embedded or qualitative perspectives. Hermeneutics renders the object accessible to interpretation, opening new possibilities. Naturally, we have to take account of our own bias, conceptions, and assumed truths into the interpretative activity involved.
We must distinguished interpretation from explanation and causes, focusing on a description of reasons. There is no firm boundary between the dimensions of description and interpretation. Deeper understanding demands more complexity-sensitive ways of thinking and a method that allows interpretation, exploration of dynamics and processes, and involvement of the context.
Presence & Absence
We synthesize the lived-experience from comparative transformations. General psychological structure is deduced from the psychological constituents of the experience. Constituents are context dependent and are necessarily part of the whole structure.
The purpose of this procedure is grounded in the phenomenological concept of parts and wholes. The meaning units are transformed using imaginative variation within the phenomenological attitude and psychological perspective to elucidate their essential psychological meanings.
The eidetic nature of the data or mental image, not necessarily derived from an actual external event or memory, is brought forth through the imaginative variation. We can create and explore eidetic images as a way of coming to terms with transgenerational and traumatic life events.
The phenomenological concept of presences and absences is an important one to use with imaginative variation. Explicit data can reveal implicit meanings [subtext] without them being concretely expressed. During the transformations, we can “see” the explicit meanings, and also uncover the implicit meanings.
Imaginative variation gives us a “sense of the whole.” In this way, the descriptive phenomenological approach is more comprehensive than mere empirical approaches in the natural attitude. This is justified through understanding that what is “present” often implies or indicates an “absent” quality.
In the phenomenological approach, each transformation describes what the meaning unit expresses psychologically without any interpretation or assumptions about its “truth.” The phenomenological approach represents different approaches, from focus on rich description to those more informed by interpretation.
We describe how it was experienced and understood from the subject's point of view without explanation of “why” it was experienced in the way it was. The phenomenological attitude of the researcher in the psychological analysis of the data is what makes the results both phenomenological and psychological.
We can reduce the information to significant statements or quotes and combine the statements into themes. Then we develop a textural description of the experiences of the persons (what participants experienced), a structural description of their experiences (how they experienced it in terms of the conditions, situations, or context), and a combination of the textural and structural descriptions to convey an overall essence of the experience.
We can describe what all participants have in common as they experience a phenomenon (e.g., grief is universally experienced). The basic purpose of phenomenology is to reduce individual experiences with a phenomenon to a description of the universal essence, to “grasp of the very nature of the thing.”
Contextualization
There is only one method: the comparative method. There are five core approaches to qualitative research: narrative study, a phenomenology, a grounded theory, an ethnography, and a case study. At the fundamental level, the five differ in what they are trying to accomplish with their foci or the primary objectives of the studies.
Exploring a life is different from generating a theory or describing the behavior of a cultural group. Narrative is both a method and phenomenon of study. Individuals are enabled and constrained by social resources, socially situated in interactive performances, and how narrators develop interpretations of the multileveled context of a life. A first-person psychological perspective is sought so that an empathetic position can be adopted.
In genealogy we are gathering data through the collection of their stories (biographical study), reporting individual experiences, and chronologically ordering (or using life course stages) the timeline and meaning of those experiences. Restoring them means re-storying them, reframing them with sensitive descriptions and imaginative variation.
We need to collect extensive information about each ancestor, and to have a clear understanding of the context of the individual’s life. It takes a keen eye to identify in the source material gathered the particular stories that capture the individual’s experiences. Narrative study tells the story of individuals unfolding in a chronology of their experiences, set within their personal, social, and historical context, and includes the important themes in those lived experiences.
Narrative inquiry concerns stories lived and told. A phenomenological perspective of the mind acknowledges consciousness as the most fundamental life-quality that coexists with the body. A person is regarded as an embodied consciousness. People know one another’s consciousness through their physical bodies. This means that we know our own consciousness by reflection but cannot know the consciousness of the other except through the body.
Three-dimensional narrative inquiry space includes the personal and social (the interaction); the past, present, and future (continuity); and the place (situation). This story line may include information about the setting or context of the participants’ experiences. Beyond the chronology, we might detail themes that arise from the story to provide a more detailed discussion of the meaning of the story.
Tracing the Path
'Walking the lines' is a ritual situated in the imaginal landscape suggested by our genealogical ascent which leads into our collective ancestral past. Along the path, or circuits of ancestral nodes, the secret meaning of life is discovered. Our ancient path of pilgrimage is rich with meaning and is a powerful tool for seeking soul and spirit in a movement toward transcendence. Perhaps facing our mortality inspires us to live more fully.
The main quest in the oldest myths is for immortality. We search for immortality. We cannot know anything final about that and all the possible means of 'living', but many strive for germline immortality, an ersatz-immortality in their offspring. The immortality of the soul is concerned with personal identity, not just in conscious and unconscious states, but in mutable conditions and alternating states of being.
Embodied & Disembodied Soul
In the Phaedo, Plato describes an immortal soul. Thus, while the natural body and the experiential mind are merely phenomenal clothing of the ontological soul, the latter is immortal as a living entity. Aristotle distinguishes between ontological and experiential soul.
As Danish physicist Niels Bohr quipped, "A Great Truth is a Truth the opposite of which is also a Great Truth." In the paradoxical nature of reality, immortality remains largely a concept and source of ontological argument. For example, Buddhism does not conceive of the soul as ultimately real.
Perhaps the latest version of the soul describes a field ontology and a functional dualism (mind/matter). Our form emerges from a primordial field of consciousness/energy (groundstate) in which we remain embedded, and to which we return.
Ancestral Field
This zero-point field has many names. That field is the energetic “void”, or “vacuum”, the space of the “ether”, the subtle but ultra-powerful energy potential. The Heart Sutra tells us that, "Form is not other than Void, Void is not other than Form." This implies that our human form is not other than void, and biophysics shows this to be true. This notion differs from survival of personal identity (self-movement) or soul, but is a conservation of primordial information.
Jung contends the archetype of rebirth and resurrection is a metaphorical experiences of [ego] death as a metaphorical precursor to five forms of rebirth:
1. Metempsychosis, or transmigration of souls.
2. Reincarnation, human personality is regarded as continuous and accessible to memory; re-birth in a human body.
3. Resurrection means a reestablishment of human existence in an incorruptible carnal or subtle body after death.
4. Rebirth within the span of individual life. Renovation, renewal or total rebirth of the essential nature (transmutation).
5. Indirect rebirth via participation in death-rebirth, the rite of transformation. (Jung, CW 9I, para 200- 205)
Experiential psychology is not pure ontology, and relies mostly on the rebirth experience and the truth and beauty of intuition for transformation. We have to be content with its psychic reality. Natural transformation processes announce themselves mainly in dreams. There is a contrast between phenomenal and noumenal, experiential and eternal, relative and absolute, biological and ontological.
Psychologically, immortality is the attempt to grant distinct ontological status to the symbolic self, to deny the finality of organic death. In other words, it is a denial of death. Soul beliefs, discreetly or indiscreetly, transform the ontology of creativity into an immortality ideology.
James Hillman shifted Jung's conversation from individuation to "soul-making," a way of seeing and reflection that makes meaning possible. "By soul I mean, first of all, a perspective rather than a substance, a viewpoint toward things rather than a thing itself." He describes five things about the nature of soul as the imaginative possibilities of nature: the soul (1) makes all meaning possible, (2) turns events into experiences, (3) involves a deepening of experience, (4) is communicated in love, and (5) has a special relation with death (Hillman, 1977, p. xvi; Hillman, 1976, pp. 44-47).
Hillman's anima mundi is at home in the 'real' world -- the imaginal realm where real world spirit regains its zest and vision, addressing our sufferings after transformation. In the everyday, the best of the "unfathomable, multiple, prior, generative highly intentional and necessary" archetypal world of both the "noumenal" and the "phenomenal" manifests itself in the everyday tribal and familial context. Family history is transformed into myth.
Facts & Artifacts
In terms of ontological wholeness, immortality of one's being expressed in the continuance of one's proper name or even dynasty falls short of the unconscious belief in life after death. Immortality is an organic philosophical desire for life that should always be lived. It is a religious desire for another life, affirming an act of faith in a transcendent existence, or renewal without end of what is here in this world. This is the difference between cosmic pantheism and theistic (theosophic or transcendental) ontology.
Von Franz notes, "The analysis of older people provides a wealth of dream symbols that psychically prepare the dreams for impending death. It is in fact true, as Jung has emphasized, that the unconscious psyche pays very little attention to the abrupt end of bodily life and behaves as if the psychic life of the individual, that is, the individuation process, will simply continue. …The unconscious “believes” quite obviously in a life after death." (von Franz (1987), ix.)
Like the shamans of old who ascended and descended the archetypal World Tree, genealogists can "walk the tree" -- "The Big Tree" or the "World Family Tree" -- from one end to the other, or "up" toward the past and then back "down" to the present on another line. Timelines help us arrange the numerous names and events that take place simultaneously and sequentially.
Some family trees will look like stumpy, dead sticks with a few twigs, while others will shared vast underground connections and vigorous thick growth, like as a yew tree. Within the Family Tree and World Tree, people are either connected by "bloodlines" or through marriage. Bloodlines can include adoptions and illegitimacy, either acknowledged or unacknowledged. Ancestors are only those from whom you directly descend, though cousin lines may share blood.
Spirit People
Family is the midwife of the soul. Jung reminds us that the source of unifying images which animated our ancestors and linked them to Mystery are generated by the symbol-making function we all possess. The same mysterious dream place gives birth to those mediating images which arise when we encounter the mysterious Other, the animated presence in our lives.
The family is the primordial psychophysical initiatory vessel or vehicle of our destiny -- the archetypal family and biological self. Family births us, develops us, procreates us, and buries us. Regardless of the pain and travail it may create for us, family is the grail within which the sacred nectar of our physical and psychic DNA is carried from the lips and organs of one generation to the next.
Long lines, about 13 generations back lead into medieval times. "Walking the path" means you MUST visit every profile in both paths, no shortcuts. We find ourselves walking the lines and paths around and up to legendary figures, and further back, purely mythic characters -- liminal entities.
Three modalities -- resonance, depth and numinosity -- describe the presence of that autonomous Other which we call soul and an experiential psychic connection to the Other, and a sense of self grounded in a transcendent order. Those images are conduits into the natural world, with its specific tribal mythos, and assist in later moving the community members into a world beyond mortality.
Genealogy is a sort of psychic archaeology where we dig up the dead with their own information and 'advice' -- hidden historical crumbs and clues, synchronicities, and intuitions. Genealogy reveals complex behaviors of distributed systems. Naturally they lead backwards to origins vastly different from the kinds of practices present in different time frames.
Genealogy is an archaeology of the individual and a therapeutic art -- optimally coordinated interpersonal synchronicity and optimized subsequent interactions. Similar personality traits align in rapport and return with greater simultaneous coordination. The interaction of pairs displays complementary simultaneous coordination. Coherent emotional charge states converge under effective conditions after an interval of time.
Archaeology of Knowledge
The archaeological level is what made an event or a situation possible. Archaeology and genealogy alternate and support each other. Archaeology is structuralist. It tries to take an objective neutral position and it avoids causal theories of change.
Foucault calls it, "the union of erudite knowledge and local memories which allows us to establish a historical knowledge of struggles and to make use of this knowledge tactically today." (Genealogy and Social Criticism, p.42)
The genealogical side of analysis tries to grasp the power of constituting a domain of objects. Genealogy uncovers the creation of tangible objects. A society institutes the role of medicine man and gives him special privileges. Then we establish and institutionalize this practice, the psychosocial role of a "medicine man."
Treading the Path
Walking a path is symbolically a spiritual practice, a pilgrimage, like walking or tracing a labyrinth -- a contemplative spiritual exercise of circumnavigating a sacred path. We turn back to our center, to our origin, by a devotional path. A walk through the World Tree or a walk in the labyrinth is a cosmic journey through the heavens.
There is no right or wrong way; we have to enter and follow a path with presence. Our attitudes, focus, experience, consolation, and reflection may shift each time, or as we follow path. Traversing the labyrinth brings us into wholeness with all parts of our being. When we walk the labyrinth it recreates a very ancient expression of thanks and remembrance of the divine in all things. So does the family tree, expressing our completeness outwardly.
Like labyrinth, your genealogy has one way in and one way out -- you. Such an initiation, shifting perspectives, awakens the knowledge encoded within. Walking the labyrinth and walking our lines share a spirit. The circuits of the labyrinth pattern and genealogy share the same meaning -- a maze of ancestors, and a way to meander through them -- spiritual umbilical cords.
We walk a labyrinth by stepping into the entrance and putting one foot in front of the other. After traveling through all the paths and windings, the walker comes into the center - the six - petal rosette - the rose line, a symbol of the Holy Grail. Like walking the labyrinth, genealogy can be an exercise in self-healing. Both are journeys to the center and back out again to the ordinary world.
Seeking the Ancestors
Our genealogy is a sensorium of multisensory informational content. Relationship paths connect you to closest blood relationships via a given ancestor through several families, via either parent, male or female, or combinations thereof. There can be many relationship paths to the same ancestors.
Intergenerational Encounter
Collapsing the space between us, each ancestor, or avatar of our descent, touches us with an imaginal poem that is a product of their embedding in our ancestral history - layer after emerging layer of our augmented reality. They begin to talk to us in many ways: ambiance, serendipity, synchronicity, personal, contextual, instructively and artistically.
The image of the World Tree invites us to explore the vertical or depth dimension, while Family is the most prominent landmark on the horizontal plane of relational otherness. Family mediates this world and its essential, phenomenal reality and can enhance or dampen, devastatingly, our interaction with this dimension of psyche. The family seeds imagination.
The decisive question for man is: Is he related to something infinite or not?
That is the telling question of his life.
Only if we know that the thing which truly matters is the infinite can we avoid fixing our interest upon futilities, and upon all kinds of goals which are not of real importance.
Thus we demand that the world grant us recognition for qualities which we regard as personal possessions: our talent or our beauty.
The more a man lays stress on false possessions, and the less sensitivity he has for what is essential, the less satisfying is his life.
He feels limited because he has limited aims, and the result is envy and jealousy.
If we understand and feel that here in this life we already have a link with the infinite, desires and attitudes change.
In the final analysis, we count for something only because of the essential we embody, and if we do not embody that, life is wasted.
In our relationships to other men, too, the crucial question is whether an element of boundlessness is expressed in the relationship. --Carl Jung, MDR, Page 325
That is the telling question of his life.
Only if we know that the thing which truly matters is the infinite can we avoid fixing our interest upon futilities, and upon all kinds of goals which are not of real importance.
Thus we demand that the world grant us recognition for qualities which we regard as personal possessions: our talent or our beauty.
The more a man lays stress on false possessions, and the less sensitivity he has for what is essential, the less satisfying is his life.
He feels limited because he has limited aims, and the result is envy and jealousy.
If we understand and feel that here in this life we already have a link with the infinite, desires and attitudes change.
In the final analysis, we count for something only because of the essential we embody, and if we do not embody that, life is wasted.
In our relationships to other men, too, the crucial question is whether an element of boundlessness is expressed in the relationship. --Carl Jung, MDR, Page 325
HERE IS WHERE I AM
Dreaming of the Bones
Dreaming of the Bones
ANCESTRAL BRANCHES
Entangled Roots & Branches of the Family Tree
"You excuse yourself with your disbelief in the immortality of the soul.
Do you think that the dead do not exist because you have' devised the impossibility of immortality? You believe in your idols of words.
The dead produce effects, that is sufficient. In the inner world there is no explaining away, as little as you can explain away the sea in the outer world.
You must finally understand your purpose in explaining away, namely to seek protection." --Jung, Red Book, Page 298.
Entangled Roots & Branches of the Family Tree
"You excuse yourself with your disbelief in the immortality of the soul.
Do you think that the dead do not exist because you have' devised the impossibility of immortality? You believe in your idols of words.
The dead produce effects, that is sufficient. In the inner world there is no explaining away, as little as you can explain away the sea in the outer world.
You must finally understand your purpose in explaining away, namely to seek protection." --Jung, Red Book, Page 298.
THE GREENING OF THE TREE
Your Ancestors Make It Matter
The growing one is the TREE OF LIFE. It greens by heaping up growing living matter.
Good and evil unite in the growth of the tree. In their divinity life and love stand opposed. ~Diahmon, Liber Novus, Page 351.
Genealogy is our map of the unconscious -- the Land of the Dead. The Red Thread, the thread of destiny, connects to the Source. It shows us the way, igniting imagination with the alchemy of 'seeing', awakening the soul. The red threads of your blood link you and your Tree to the World Tree, your history to world history and mythology. The bloodline is also called the "underground stream," a transmission of cultural influences of ancestors. Knowing who our ancestors were is fundamental to our sense of who we are.
Genealogical Embeddedness
We often feel nostalgic about the long-lost time “when place, identity, culture and ancestry coincided.” "Standing on the land that ancestors knew” can thus produce a sense of genealogical connection that is sometimes explained as an inexpressible sense of spiritual affinity, and often experienced bodily in “shivers down the spine” and “goosebumps.” It is easy to imagine a shared physical experience that links ancestors to their descendants across time.
Soul of Evolution
Charles Darwin first realized the entire natural system is actually “founded on descent” and is thereby “genealogical in its arrangement.” Genealogical connectedness is, in fact, “the linchpin of evolution,” which is “first and foremost
a genealogical process” that awakens latent potentials.
Genealogies are more than mere reflections of nature or mere records of history. Rather than simply passively documenting who our ancestors were, they are the narratives we construct to actually make them our ancestors.
http://www.salon.com/2011/11/08/why_do_we_care_about_our_ancestors/
https://books.google.com/books?id=tVjuzNPfLcgC&printsec=frontcover#v=onepage&q&f=false
Rethinking Our Ancestry
Are we really alive if we remain 'dead' to the true nature of Reality? Without a deep visceral understanding of our own embodiment, kith and kin, without knowledge of our family tree, and without the personal story of who we are and where we come from, we remain rootless without a living connection.
Every single one of our ancestors is indispensable to our existence. Without genealogical context within which to “make sense of themselves” identity problems can arise in those who experience such a “genealogical void,” or existential vacuum, feeling cut off from the life giving forces of nature. Nature itself is sacred and holds the promise of eternal life.
Dreaming of the Bones
Psychic dissociation is desacralization -- loss of soul. Psychological integrity is linked to genealogical roots. You have to bring your experience to the process to make that connection with a new perspective and a new way to hear old wisdom. But, we are connected to the ancestors like long forgotten dreams, even when they remain unconscious. Like an artist, we simply need to engage. The unconscious runs through everything. Phenomena simply show themselves to us as revelations of psyche's nature.
Thierry Gaillard frames it succinctly: "At birth, we unconsciously inherit unfinished stories of our parents, our ancestors and our society. Like open circuits, the charges of this heritage influence our lives for we cannot cut ourselves off from our roots without losing an essential part of ourselves. These histories replay themselves in some of the difficulties we encounter in our own lives, often programming the same outcomes again and again."
Petrified Wood
Generally, we only remember our ancestors for a few generations unless there is a historical reason for records and stories to be preserved. But the cultural practice and rituals of genealogy have served individuals, tribes and nations throughout the history of mankind. The ancestors are like 'living fossils' in our our psyche, which we can differentiate out from the pointless forest of an undelineated Tree. We may descend from several undelineated families.
Bare Bones
From Europe to Asia, genealogy is a “blueprint for action.” Historically genealogical records have been lost and recreated many times, and there have been several periods of genealogical reconstruction and confabulation with legends and myth, produced as politically compelling narratives of descent and right to rulership. Also, historically, writing genealogies only vaguely depends on records.
From Belle Epoch America to modern China, if they don’t have the records, they just make it up. It may be a fraudulent genealogist, social climbers, or an inexperienced family member copying from inaccurate trees. Even with accurate records, some try to embellish their family history, making it grander than it really was.
Those writing a new genealogy can easily borrow pieces of any story from extant records and claim it. It’s easy to claim that your ancestors have an important name, or were important officials. But, to knowingly do so would indicate some kind of shadow problem, and persona issues -- blocks to true meaning, which can be as disabling as inflations from pure fantasies or superstitions about noble lines.
Branching Out
Genealogical narrative has its own power. Most people know it has its own fictional conventions. The fictions of our family are a source of metaphors delineating relationships in familial terms. It opens ground into the further unknown. In a group of their contemporaries and peers an individual loses uniqueness. But that same person, as the latest member of a lineage of forebears, automatically assumes a certain status.
The narration of a genealogy inevitably highlights the last member. Not only do the achievements of the ancestors accrue to the most recent descendant, but the ancestors themselves appear to be more forerunners pointing to what is yet to come. Arguably, length of genealogy confers prestige on an individual; likewise, length of history confers prestige on a nation.
Ritual, a way to perform genealogies, invokes the 'spirits' -- ordered relationships between human beings in the here-and-now and non-immediate sources of power, authority, and value. The fundamental efficacy of ritual lies in its ability to have people embody assumptions about their place in the larger order of things.
Generational analysis is one such ritual. But even more than trying to make the unconscious conscious, genealogy is about looking for routes into the unconscious areas. As genealogists, we know this is where we will find the gods at the roots of our longest lines -- the god inside each of us.
Ancestral Linkage
We can build our Family Tree as an aspirational framework with genealogy and psychogenealogy, and our paths through the Tree of Life. Heraclitus observed that we can never discover the extent of the soul, no matter how many paths we travel, because of its profound nature.
"Walking the path" of our various branches step-by-step, we discover precisely which ancestors connect us and how to older common ancestors. This is the first step in revealing hidden truth and differentiating ourselves from our unconscious collective - the prima materia or massa confusa.
Jung thought, "A tree is not a bad analogy, because we do not understand how a tree functions either, how it raises up to its crown the huge volume of water that circulates in its system, for example, yet the tree is an indisputable fact, a natural process." Jung thought individuation was such a natural process, like an oak growing from an acorn.
Ancestors are 'Made', not Born
'Raising to consciousness' formerly unknown ancestors is a metaphorical 'resurrection,' that increases our self-knowledge and leads toward assimilation or transgenerational integration. Consciousness can also block individuation through resistance by not allowing what is in the unconscious to develop.
Complexes may be related to environmental traumatic experience, or internal conflicts. The core of any complex is a universal pattern of experience, or archetype. Complexes originate in the archetypal depths of the psyche -- deep structures, patterns and ways of living that represent an inherited memory of the history of human culture. The primordial psyche is magical and archaic, and may be a source for much of what is interpreted as past lives, which might be 'passed' lives.
Ghost Sickness
Complexes and repetition compulsions can be associated with unconscious ancestral effects. Important groups of unconscious associations, conflicting beliefs that stand on their own like a splinter identity, or a strong unconscious impulse can be embodied as ancestors. We encounter them embodied as images that self-present themselves in their own imaginal, precise detail. Hillman claimed that imagination itself provides grounding and body.
Healing Momentum
We raise patterns and images to consciousness from the psychoid depths, finding our purpose in the universe and give expression to what we realize. Such gnosis and healing potential is derived from knowledge of the unconscious -- represented unconscious contents. Patterns of unfolding consciousness reveal archetypal structure, promoting wholeness and balance between wholesale identification with myth and outright rejection of it, restoring the free flow of consciousness.
We share unconscious contents through participation mystique - a symbiosis where contents of one's personal unconscious are experienced in another or through another person. Jung claimed, "The participation mystique by which society contains the individual may be understood as a statement of the fact that individuals are still undifferentiated from each other, that is to say, they have not yet been self-consciously broken up into individual personalities." (C.G. Jung Speaking; Interviews and Encounters).
Projection and archaic identification are often mythological motifs surrounding situations and objects, including other persons, dead or alive. In an unconscious process we 'meet our projections' rather than make them. Ancestors are 'hooks' for projecting our unconscious qualities. We can learn something about ourselves withdrawing or dissolving projections.
"We tend to identify our chthonic nature with evil and our spiritual nature with good. We must accept the dark forces and stop projecting them." (C.G. Jung Speaking: Interviews and Encounters, Pages 359-364)
"This union, which should not come about, is the union of the pairs of opposites in ourselves. This is what the devil wants to prevent at any cost." (Jung, Han Guisan Schmid, Pages 131-142)
Genealogical Imagination
Genealogy is a sequence of corporeal births, but also psychic events. 'Walking a path' is much like 'walking a labyrinth. We begin with our self and proceed back to the progenitor of each direct ancestor, both male and female. "Walking the path" means you must visit every profile in both paths, no shortcuts. Jung called the sequence of psychic events a connection, a solid sequence, that either begins with a prime cause or follows a final cause.
Beyond causal qualities, obvious connections are demonstrated by the sequence of events, but our family tree also expresses nonlocal qualities, beyond mind, body, space and time. In everyday life, distance and location are mundane absolutes. Yet physics now suggests that at the most fundamental level, the universe is nonlocal—there is no such thing as place or distance.
Nonlocal Ancestors
Ancestral line, bloodline, line of descent, line of succession, and line of inheritance are all linear descriptors -- chains with causal implications. But not all ancestral effects, like vicarious participation and the genealogical experience of history, are causal.
Nonlocal consciousness is not confined to specific points in space, including brains or bodies, nor to the present moment. It is an ordering principle that can inject information into disorganized or random systems.
Two classically identical expressions for mutual information generally differ when the quantum systems are involved. This difference defines the quantum discord. It can be used as a measure of the quantumness of correlations. In quantum information theory, quantum discord is processing quantum mutual information.
It is a measure of nonclassical correlations between two subsystems of a quantum system. It includes correlations that are due to quantum physical effects but do not necessarily involve quantum entanglement. Encoded information that can only be accessed by coherent quantum interactions. So a system can have no entanglement but consuming quantum discord.
Panpsychism, essentially the alchemical view, is a doctrine (belief) that everything material (including the atoms and the galaxies) has an element of individual consciousness. But, is it correct to equate the concept of psyche and the concept of consciousness? Panpsychism suggests that everything in the universe might be conscious, or at least potentially conscious, or conscious in certain configurations. Panprotopsychism postulates that fundamental physical entities are proto-conscious.
Is the universe made of matter/consciousness? How does consciousness arise from seemingly inanimate matter? The nondual approach says everything is mind and matter is its manifestation. Consciousness does not emerge from the brain but is conditioned by it. The entire Universe of mind and matter arises from a fundamental non-dual reality.
Panprotopsychism and Panexperientialism describe emergence of primal non-conscious processes. Panprotopsyhism suggests proto-consciousness may exist in the universe as a “fundamental property” without depending at all on anything physical.
By focusing on experience rather than mentality panexperientialism avoids some of the traditional objections to panpsychism. Absolute space is the noumenal source of phenomenal consciousness, a fundamental quality, and Mind is a higher order hyperspace field outside brain's EM field. Fundamental proto-consciousness finds more particular expression when matter comes together in a certain way.
There are reports of non-ordinary experiences during pregnancy, for example, where obscure episodes from the lives of parents and unknowable details of ancestors, minute physiological characteristics of various animal and plant species, and arcane details of world mythologies of which the person clearly had no prior knowledge. The imaginal world is neither literal nor abstract.
Nonlocality operates beyond mere awareness, unconsciously, drawing on individual and collective consciousness, as well as the world or environment. Coherence or resonance may be expressed as compassion, empathy, love, unity, oneness, and connectedness. Consciousness affects or informs human and nonhuman or inanimate forms alike.
Consciousness is present everywhere in spacetime, so has no need to “go” or “be sent” via a medium or carrier. Synchronous events, including intentional or directed healing, may work via coherence, an entanglement or resonance effect, but we should be careful not to mistake this field effect for the mind itself, which permeates and undergirds all. Still none of us has any idea how anything material could be conscious, so we must simply stand in that Mystery. We share its essential nature; it is the cosmos within us. We are that.
Nonlocal events, like synchronicity are apparently 1) unmediated, requiring no go-between signal; 2) unmitigated, with no diminishing of effect with distance; 3) immediate, apparently outside of time and space as we commonly understand them. In this acausal process, consciousness is fundamental, not derivative and unexplainable in terms of anything more basic.
Jung advised, “This feeling for the infinite can be attained only if we are bounded to the utmost. In knowing ourselves to be ultimately limited we possess also the capacity for becoming conscious of the infinite. But only then!”
Recent experiments (2016) have suggested that no such hidden or nonlocal reality exists. But the theory of connectivity still holds in other models. They have only ruled out a specific class of theories in which the hidden reality of any particle is local, and not influenced by something far away.
Bohm’s ideas involve non-local hidden reality, in which everything depends on everything. Everything happening in a distant galaxy is influencing you right now and vice versa, however minor the effect. Bohm’s theory says that and electron is both a wave and particle: an electron is a particle with a definite trajectory, but this path is governed by a wave upon which the electron rides. The wave can also be influenced by other particles, which in turn changes the trajectory of the electron.
https://www.newscientist.com/article/2078251-quantum-weirdness-may-hide-an-orderly-reality-after-all/
Quantum entanglement—which occurs when two or more particles are correlated in such a way that they can influence each other even across large distances—is not an all-or-nothing phenomenon, but occurs in various degrees. The more a quantum state is entangled with its partner, the better the states will perform in quantum information applications.
The paths of our descent remain correlated, entangled forever. Each time we retrace our roots we are commemorating and reenacting the glorious time of the beginnings. The contrast image of ascent and descent on the Tree of Life is the primary metaphor, unlocking a treasure of family knowledge and self-knowledge, and a new sense of presence.
We have another life than the life we consciously intend to have. Alchemy stresses redemption of the physical body, or matter, while actively striving toward creation of a subtle, immortal body, which has no apparent physical basis. Matter is the raw unconscious. We enter that unconsciousness for the purpose of raising it to consciousness, to raise up the treasure -- the precious heritage of the ancestors.
“The alchemist saw the union of opposites under the symbol of the tree… the symbol of the cosmic tree rooted in this world and growing up to heaven -- the tree that is also man. In the history of symbols this tree is described as the way of life itself, a growing into that which eternally is and does not change; which springs from the union of opposites and, by its eternal presence, also makes that union possible.” (Jung, CW 9i, para. 198)
World Soul; World Tree
The world-tree is an expression of anima-mundi or world-soul. It is the axis that aligns us with the cosmos, but more tangibly, it is the shared ancestral tree, rather than a stand-alone tree. Alchemy requires resurrection of the soul of body. The challenge we encounter in developing and "owning" this fresh worldview is to "see through" to a unified vision of mundane physical processes with spiritual values and vision.
In shamanism, the ancestors were venerated as the effect was a preventive therapy that maintained those vital connections with the past. While the World Tree meant one thing in shamanic culture today it refers to the definitive family tree for the entire world, a collaboration on shared ancestry by constantly expanding and improving the tree. The World Family Tree currently has more than 100 million profiles.
The World Family Tree is like having millions of people solving the same jigsaw puzzle together instead of each of us solving a separate, tiny puzzle. Traditionally, people have embarked on individual studies of their family history in the hope of preserving it for future generations. However, this isolated approach results in the same research being repeated over and over again. By combining all research into a single, collaborative tree, users can focus on verifying existing information and pursue new leads rather than wasting time repeating what others have already found.
With the World Family Tree you will be delighted to constantly discover new information about your family because so many other users are constantly working to improve it with new findings. Sources and citations are included so the work of others can be checked and enhanced.
If mistakes are found, you can fix them quickly on the World Family Tree, which is not possible with standalone trees that are controlled by someone else. Thus, errors gradually disappear instead of perpetuating, growing worse, and achieving the false notion of accuracy simply by being repeated by others.
The World Family Tree allows identical profiles to be merged into one, reducing duplication and collecting the best information for all to share. Profiles support multiple languages so you can easily document names and biographies separately in different languages. The World Family Tree is also curated by a large team of expert volunteer Curators.
Entangled Particles
We can develop awareness of the psychophysical ordering processes inherent in matter -- in our matter. The physical body is a living metaphor -- a metaphorm -- for psychic transformation. Life begets life in creative manifestation.
According to Jung, psyche is not different from matter. At the psychoid or psychophysical ground level, they are different perspectives on the phenomenal world. Psyche is the womb of manifestation. The collective unconscious is also projected into the inner aspect of our own bodies. The substance of our mind is deeply connected somehow to the physical world.
In Psychology of Religion, Jung said, Jung, “We might well say, on the contrary, that physical existence is a mere inference, since we know of matter only in so far as we perceive psychic images.” And, Jung comments, “In reality, there is nothing but a living body. That is the fact, and psyche is as much a living body as body is living psyche: it is just the same.” (Nietzsche’s Zarathustra, vol. 1, p. 396.)
The psychoid nature of archetypes extends beyond a neurophysiological basis into the general dynamical patterns of all matter and energy -- the unconscious properties of the physiological world. Both psyche and matter are in a constant process of redefinition.
In pilot-wave theory, if space and time behave like a superfluid, or a fluid that experiences no dissipation at all, then 'path memory' could conceivably give rise to the strange quantum phenomenon of entanglement. When two particles become entangled, a measurement of the state of one instantly affects that of the other, even at vast distances. The superfluid/quantum correlation mirrors the collective unconscious field as a vast ocean of potential.
In standard quantum mechanics, the effect is rationalized as the instantaneous collapse of the particles’ joint probability wave. But in the pilot-wave version of events, an interaction between two particles in a superfluid universe sets them on paths that stay correlated forever. The interaction permanently affects the contours of the superfluid, accounting for nonlocal correlations.”
Entangled Lives
Jung referred to unitary reality consisting of both psyche and matter as transcendental -- an unextended energetic intensity, or potential. He argued, "...Psyche cannot be totally different from matter for how otherwise could it move matter? And matter cannot be alien to psyche, for how else could matter produce psyche? Psyche and matter exist in the same world, and each partakes of the other, otherwise any reciprocal action would be impossible."
We are each a personal part of the world's impersonal fabric, so psyche and soma interpentrate. Waves in this potential spacetime mysteriously “collapse” into particles in actual spacetime. They collapse from their ghostly state into definite quantum particles.
This idea shares much with a holistic or integral perspective, an approach which we can extend to our family tree. In psychosomatics, psyche carries the potential, while soma is the actuality. In the absence of a voice, the body can articulate complex affective and relational losses.
Paleopoetics
We can engage the somatic unconscious as an experiential space of relations and imagination of the heart. The three instincts are self-preservation, sexual, and social. How did humans, given their non-symbolic mammalian heritage, come to represent their knowledge in symbolic form?
All non-verbal communication is mimetic (rehearsal loop), a self-started representational act -- the ability to alternate between various self-perspectives and other-perspectives. The archaic basis of episode recognition patterns is different from generalized, procedural memory. We learned to represent a situation and reflect on it (metacognition, orientation, time, space, date, specific place).
Jung suggested we cannot stand to live a meaningless life. but individuation means to find one's own meaning and connection to universal meaning. The collective unconscious doesn't express personal wishes and intentions as it is an absolutely transpersonal, neutral, psychic 'entity,' which, like nature, is an emanative form of appearance.
Cultural Networks
Humans are linked from birth to a vast cultural storehouse of knowledge and skill accumulated as cultural memory over aeons. We are sensitive to understanding the significance of environmental effects and mimesis (motor skill and imagination) allows us to invent intentional representations.
Culture is mimetic framework. Mirror neurons allow us to love, to socialize, and to empathize with the experience of others through collective shaping of network architecture. In the genealogical context, we are more than a fixed point in a particular cultural network. The genealogy symbolizes the angular momentum of descent. Our responsibility is to make that path easier. Such is the way of nature. Psychogenealogy modulates consciousness in a marked and novel way.
Episodic memories are locked in details of specific experiences such as the death of a loved one. Mythical culture institutionalized meaning by codifying significant contents of individual experience. Internal memory became external culture. We developed theories to predict and explain through symbolic culture. We are still rooted in episodic experience, as well as being mythic, symbolic, and theoretical. Theoretical development strips away previous mythic meanings, demystifying them.
Metaphysics of Presence
The psychoid level of archetypes correlates with wave/particle duality and the heritable DNA biohologram. Expressive nature can be likened to epigenetics, heritable changes in gene expression that are not due to changes in DNA sequence. Every cell in the body has the same genetic information. Cells, tissues and organs differentiate when different sets of genes are turned on or expressed.
We exist in relation to ourselves, to others, to myths, to images, and to archetypes. Their expression is the essence of our being. The body is inescapably a relational body with the potential for overcoming the boundaries of flesh to perpetuate relationality, received wisdom (lucidity), and power-knowledge even in the absence of material embodiment.
Quantum entanglement and nonlocality are models or metaphors for how we may actually remain connected. Our entangled pairs close the locality loophole. David Bohm suggested we have an almost universal tendency to fragment the world and ignore the dynamical interconnectedness of things. This is responsible for many of our problems, not only in science but in our lives and culture -- and in our relations with our own ancestors.
Unexamined Ground
Genealogy can help bridge that interconnectedness gap -- the unconscious, unexamined ground. Genealogy is a differential element of values. It is a field in which relationships operate -- a realm of conscious and unconscious cooperation represented by point to point networks of individuals, dead and alive. The sociality is not merely objective, because of our deep psychophysical involvement. Theory describes "Soul as Intersubjective Reality and Spirit as Interobjective Reality."
Genealogy is complex and requires a broad context -- an open value network with communication, non-control, open-access and value creation. It has its own space-time relationality. As relational selves we stand in intricate and intimate webs of connection with all we contact—whether human or animal, animate or inanimate. 'Path memory' stimulates the right probabilities.
Agents, relationships, and the field of relationality in which relationships occur close the objective-subjective loop with assertion and intentionality. Atomistic individualism is rejected for a relational self, a balance between individual agency and collective communion.
Genealogy can energize the relationships that mobilize action across different interwoven dimensions of relationality. It helps us organize ancestral incoherence and multiplicity. Our pathways of descent or family branches are like converging or parallel realities.
Embodied Relationality
Relationality considers relationships the foundation of subjectivity, including the tangible and intangible beyond the boundaries of life/death in the absence of the corporeal or embodied other. Separation of families occurs by disappearance, miscarriage, migration, displacement, divorce, war, and death.
Archetypal ideas can be correlated with fundamental physiological processes. For example, the union of opposites can be linked to the sympathetic and parasympathic systems - ergotrophic and trophotropic systems of arousal. The 'rein' effect is the emotional alchemy of our ecstatic and transcendent nature. One system, ergotrophic, energizes us; the other, trophotropic, tranquilizes us. The E-system is Yang, while the T-system is Yin. http://ionamiller.weebly.com/emotional-alchemy.html
Family members who have died are only 'relatively disembodied.' Bonds are not severed by death but continue in an interactive psychophysical relationship. Even after death attachments and continuing bonds remain apparent. Bereavement, depression, and symptoms are some examples.
Metaphorically, at least, quantum entanglement (relational entanglement) is mirrored in the twisted limbs of our ancestral branches, particularly the first 5-6 generations that connect us with the more widely shared World Tree. Actions performed on one affect the other, even when separated by great distances.
Psychophysical Relativity
Despite our inherent relationality, a “crisis of nonrelation” often marks our psychic entanglements. What gets in the way and leaves us facing pathological alternatives instead? What is it about our relationality that tempts us to disavow the very thing that makes us who we are?
Why do we tend to avoid our relationality pursuing narcissistic solace and solitary self-enclosure? Ancestral connection, attachment, and intersubjectivity is one way to overcome such tendencies with the interconnectedness of processes of individuation, relationality and affect. Relationality is shaped across global and local contexts by gender and generation, including aspects of emotions and embodiment.
Collective Individuation
Such radical decentering establishes a number of shifts that enable us to think in categories and concepts like the individual, the subject, the group, the threshold, relationality, co-implication and so on. Breaking with both subject-centerdness and the individual as model or starting point is an epistemological shift. We can be part of an undivided whole and still possess our own unique qualities.
Singularity, rather than that of the individual, coupled to the standpoint of relationality enables us to think of the self — other, human—animal, nature— culture and human — world in terms of complex becoming. Intersubjectivity and interbeing incorporate a sense of the dynamic web of relationships that are constitutive for our being at a given moment.
Personal & Universal
The co-constitution of all life has major implications regarding responsibility for the other and responsibility for the world. Grounding in the standpoint of the temporality and historicity of being is our existential condition and circumscribes our relation to the other. http://bod.sagepub.com/content/16/1/129.abstract
Western societies presume death signifies an absolute loss of the other in the demise of their physical body. But we can recognize that embodied relational experience can continue after death, encompassing a ‘me’, a ‘you’ and an ‘us’. After death ‘me’ and ‘us’ remain (though changed) while crucial dimensions of ‘you’ persist too. Caring for the dead involves including them in the family, remembering them, and acting in ways they would approve. Imaginal dialogue provides comfort and guidance.
Relational Identity
The binary divide between living and dead bodies mirrors other related dichotomies of mind/body, self/other, internal/external, and nature/social. Empirical and anecdotal research suggests that embodied relationality expresses how connectedness is lived out after death and/or disruptive transitions in material practices and felt experiences.
Research continues to imply that we are not just ontologically bounded units or entities. We don't just participate in relationships, but are constituted by them, especially those directly related to us. Embodied relationality includes caring after death.
Family descent and history is one key dimension of categories of identity. Social membership and 'belonging' is another. Genealogy is framed by waves of mobility and intercultural history.
Ancestral home and place of origin is another dimension. The material landscapes of certain prehistoric lands are part of our heritage because our ancestors were there when it was being shaped. This is native belonging. Alternatives are settler presence, or collective displacement, shaped by long histories of migrations.
Spirits of the Ancestors
Entanglement is an instantaneous nonlocal connection at the quantal and subquantal level. Two or more objects or subjects can only be described in relation to one another even when widely separated. In quantum entanglement two particles can be intimately linked to each other even if separated by billions of light-years of space or time. This supermemory is a bizarre intersection of entanglement, information and time.
Family Matters
A change induced in one affects the other; unity of mind is achieved by quantum entanglement. Entanglement remains as long as neither has any significant interactions with other objects to break the entanglement. Particles of energy/matter can become correlated to predictably interact with each other. No signal is sent, no influence transmitted. But the fate of one embodies and reveals the fate of the other.
Unconscious images, beliefs, compulsions and physical symptoms can be the result of being entangled with family and ancestors. Unconscious entanglements with family members or ancestors play a significant role in our emotional conflicts, physical illnesses and spiritual distress. These entanglements also influence the way we cope with the challenges of growing up in our families.
Causal Ambiguity
Bizarre quantum bonds connect distinct moments in time, suggesting that quantum links -- not space-time -- constitute the fundamental structure of the universe. What happens now can be correlated with what happens later, in ways that elude a simple mechanistic explanation. In effect, you can have spooky action at a delay.
These strong temporal correlations between time and space are seriously counterintuitive. Not only can two events be correlated, linking the earlier to the later one, two events can become correlated so that it becomes impossible to say which is earlier and which is later. Each of these events is the cause of the other, as if each were the first to occur.
https://www.quantamagazine.org/20160119-time-entanglement/
Once Connected Matter
It is a physical fact we contain our ancestral genetics and epigenetics and it remains a psychological fact, too. Further, Scientific American reports that "It is remarkable that it is so common for cells from one individual to integrate into the tissues of another distinct person."
We now know that cells from a developing fetus cross the placenta, allowing the baby’s DNA to become part of the mother’s body. These fetal cells persist in a woman’s body into her old age. If she has been pregnant with a male child it’s likely she’ll have some Y-chromosomes drifting around for a few decades too, even if the baby she carried didn’t live to be born. The cells of that child stay with her, resonating in ways that mothers have known intuitively throughout time. Male cells were found in the brains of women and had been living there, in some cases, for several decades.
Fetal cells you contributed to your own mother may be found in her blood, bone marrow, skin, kidney, and liver. These fetal cells appear to “treat” her when she is ill or injured.
In one case, a woman stopped treatment against medical advice. A liver biopsy showed “thousands of male cells” determined to be from a pregnancy terminated nearly 20 years earlier. These cells helped her body recover just as fetal cells you gave your mother rush to help repair her from within when she’s unwell.
Any woman who has ever been pregnant, even if she miscarried so early she never knew she was with child, is likely to be a microchimera (a person who carries the cells of another person). Fetal cells have the imprint of her child’s father and his ancestry.
Fetal cells can be shared from one pregnancy to another, meaning the cells of older siblings may float within younger siblings. The presence of fetal cells in a woman’s body is associated with substantially improved longevity, with an overall mortality rate 60 percent lower than women whose bodies don’t contain such cells. According to such findings, we heal our mothers and our children heal us. http://lauragraceweldon.com/2012/06/12/mother-child-are-linked-at-the-cellular-level/
We imagine ourselves as singular autonomous individuals, but these foreign cells suggest that most people carry remnants of other individuals, including absorbed twins.
If the fetus is absorbed completely, there are usually no further complications to the pregnancy, other than first trimester vaginal bleeding. This occurs when a twin or multiple disappears in the uterus during pregnancy as a result of a miscarriage of one twin or multiple. The fetal tissue is absorbed by the survivor.
Men have failed paternity tests because of this phenomena. A man's DNA may not match because the man's unborn twin is technically the genetic father of their son.
An intriguing new study suggests children may resemble a mother’s previous sexual partner. The effect may be due to molecules in the semen of the first mate being absorbed by the female's immature eggs where they influence future offspring.
The quantum level of interconnectedness between once-connected matter could explain the frequent stories of mothers knowing when something has gone wrong at a distance for their spouses, children. or siblings, and vice versa. If we can 'talk' to the cells of our bodies to good healing effect and immune stimulation, we might reasonably also speak with and mobilize the cells of others circulating in our system.
Politics of Belonging
Jung asks, not what childhood trauma creates a fixation, but what obstacle in the life path are we unable to overcome, and what is the cause of the regression? Our lives remain literally entangled with our immediate family and the souls, spirits, and issues of our ancestors. Our branches criss-cross continents, oceans, and culture wars. The lost or forgotten knowledge and secrets of our ancient ancestors, shapes the creative and moral future reality.
Quantum entanglement is a physical phenomenon that occurs when pairs or groups of particles are generated or interact in ways such that the quantum state of each particle cannot be described independently. Instead, a quantum state may be given for the system as a whole.
In a similar way we are entangled with the fate of our ancestors and carry their burdens. When the root of the problem is brought to light, we don't have to repeat the fate of our ancestors with whom we were entangled. Only when these indeterminate causal relations between events are pruned away — so that nature realizes only some of the possibilities available to it — do space and time become meaningful. Quantum correlations come first, space-time later.
Measurements of physical properties such as position, momentum, spin, polarization, etc., performed on entangled particles are found to be appropriately correlated. Schrödinger said, "I would not call [entanglement] one but rather the characteristic trait of quantum mechanics, the one that enforces its entire departure from classical lines of thought."
Ancestor Syndrome
The psychological term for negative entanglement is enmeshment. Our ancestors reflect our dissociated and unintegrated personality facets. Its most positive expression is the unus mundus, the essential heart of the World Soul.
Family Constellations (a subset application of Systemic Constellations) is an experiential process of releasing and resolving profound tensions within and between people. The process diverges from conventional forms of cognitive, behavior and psychodynamic psychotherapy in several key respects.
Family Constellations attempt to reveal a previously unrecognized systemic dynamic that spans multiple generations in a given family. We can resolve the harmful effects of that dynamic by encouraging acceptance of the factual reality of the past, psychophysical transformation, and transcendence.
Your Ancestors Make It Matter
The growing one is the TREE OF LIFE. It greens by heaping up growing living matter.
Good and evil unite in the growth of the tree. In their divinity life and love stand opposed. ~Diahmon, Liber Novus, Page 351.
Genealogy is our map of the unconscious -- the Land of the Dead. The Red Thread, the thread of destiny, connects to the Source. It shows us the way, igniting imagination with the alchemy of 'seeing', awakening the soul. The red threads of your blood link you and your Tree to the World Tree, your history to world history and mythology. The bloodline is also called the "underground stream," a transmission of cultural influences of ancestors. Knowing who our ancestors were is fundamental to our sense of who we are.
Genealogical Embeddedness
We often feel nostalgic about the long-lost time “when place, identity, culture and ancestry coincided.” "Standing on the land that ancestors knew” can thus produce a sense of genealogical connection that is sometimes explained as an inexpressible sense of spiritual affinity, and often experienced bodily in “shivers down the spine” and “goosebumps.” It is easy to imagine a shared physical experience that links ancestors to their descendants across time.
Soul of Evolution
Charles Darwin first realized the entire natural system is actually “founded on descent” and is thereby “genealogical in its arrangement.” Genealogical connectedness is, in fact, “the linchpin of evolution,” which is “first and foremost
a genealogical process” that awakens latent potentials.
Genealogies are more than mere reflections of nature or mere records of history. Rather than simply passively documenting who our ancestors were, they are the narratives we construct to actually make them our ancestors.
http://www.salon.com/2011/11/08/why_do_we_care_about_our_ancestors/
https://books.google.com/books?id=tVjuzNPfLcgC&printsec=frontcover#v=onepage&q&f=false
Rethinking Our Ancestry
Are we really alive if we remain 'dead' to the true nature of Reality? Without a deep visceral understanding of our own embodiment, kith and kin, without knowledge of our family tree, and without the personal story of who we are and where we come from, we remain rootless without a living connection.
Every single one of our ancestors is indispensable to our existence. Without genealogical context within which to “make sense of themselves” identity problems can arise in those who experience such a “genealogical void,” or existential vacuum, feeling cut off from the life giving forces of nature. Nature itself is sacred and holds the promise of eternal life.
Dreaming of the Bones
Psychic dissociation is desacralization -- loss of soul. Psychological integrity is linked to genealogical roots. You have to bring your experience to the process to make that connection with a new perspective and a new way to hear old wisdom. But, we are connected to the ancestors like long forgotten dreams, even when they remain unconscious. Like an artist, we simply need to engage. The unconscious runs through everything. Phenomena simply show themselves to us as revelations of psyche's nature.
Thierry Gaillard frames it succinctly: "At birth, we unconsciously inherit unfinished stories of our parents, our ancestors and our society. Like open circuits, the charges of this heritage influence our lives for we cannot cut ourselves off from our roots without losing an essential part of ourselves. These histories replay themselves in some of the difficulties we encounter in our own lives, often programming the same outcomes again and again."
Petrified Wood
Generally, we only remember our ancestors for a few generations unless there is a historical reason for records and stories to be preserved. But the cultural practice and rituals of genealogy have served individuals, tribes and nations throughout the history of mankind. The ancestors are like 'living fossils' in our our psyche, which we can differentiate out from the pointless forest of an undelineated Tree. We may descend from several undelineated families.
Bare Bones
From Europe to Asia, genealogy is a “blueprint for action.” Historically genealogical records have been lost and recreated many times, and there have been several periods of genealogical reconstruction and confabulation with legends and myth, produced as politically compelling narratives of descent and right to rulership. Also, historically, writing genealogies only vaguely depends on records.
From Belle Epoch America to modern China, if they don’t have the records, they just make it up. It may be a fraudulent genealogist, social climbers, or an inexperienced family member copying from inaccurate trees. Even with accurate records, some try to embellish their family history, making it grander than it really was.
Those writing a new genealogy can easily borrow pieces of any story from extant records and claim it. It’s easy to claim that your ancestors have an important name, or were important officials. But, to knowingly do so would indicate some kind of shadow problem, and persona issues -- blocks to true meaning, which can be as disabling as inflations from pure fantasies or superstitions about noble lines.
Branching Out
Genealogical narrative has its own power. Most people know it has its own fictional conventions. The fictions of our family are a source of metaphors delineating relationships in familial terms. It opens ground into the further unknown. In a group of their contemporaries and peers an individual loses uniqueness. But that same person, as the latest member of a lineage of forebears, automatically assumes a certain status.
The narration of a genealogy inevitably highlights the last member. Not only do the achievements of the ancestors accrue to the most recent descendant, but the ancestors themselves appear to be more forerunners pointing to what is yet to come. Arguably, length of genealogy confers prestige on an individual; likewise, length of history confers prestige on a nation.
Ritual, a way to perform genealogies, invokes the 'spirits' -- ordered relationships between human beings in the here-and-now and non-immediate sources of power, authority, and value. The fundamental efficacy of ritual lies in its ability to have people embody assumptions about their place in the larger order of things.
Generational analysis is one such ritual. But even more than trying to make the unconscious conscious, genealogy is about looking for routes into the unconscious areas. As genealogists, we know this is where we will find the gods at the roots of our longest lines -- the god inside each of us.
Ancestral Linkage
We can build our Family Tree as an aspirational framework with genealogy and psychogenealogy, and our paths through the Tree of Life. Heraclitus observed that we can never discover the extent of the soul, no matter how many paths we travel, because of its profound nature.
"Walking the path" of our various branches step-by-step, we discover precisely which ancestors connect us and how to older common ancestors. This is the first step in revealing hidden truth and differentiating ourselves from our unconscious collective - the prima materia or massa confusa.
Jung thought, "A tree is not a bad analogy, because we do not understand how a tree functions either, how it raises up to its crown the huge volume of water that circulates in its system, for example, yet the tree is an indisputable fact, a natural process." Jung thought individuation was such a natural process, like an oak growing from an acorn.
Ancestors are 'Made', not Born
'Raising to consciousness' formerly unknown ancestors is a metaphorical 'resurrection,' that increases our self-knowledge and leads toward assimilation or transgenerational integration. Consciousness can also block individuation through resistance by not allowing what is in the unconscious to develop.
Complexes may be related to environmental traumatic experience, or internal conflicts. The core of any complex is a universal pattern of experience, or archetype. Complexes originate in the archetypal depths of the psyche -- deep structures, patterns and ways of living that represent an inherited memory of the history of human culture. The primordial psyche is magical and archaic, and may be a source for much of what is interpreted as past lives, which might be 'passed' lives.
Ghost Sickness
Complexes and repetition compulsions can be associated with unconscious ancestral effects. Important groups of unconscious associations, conflicting beliefs that stand on their own like a splinter identity, or a strong unconscious impulse can be embodied as ancestors. We encounter them embodied as images that self-present themselves in their own imaginal, precise detail. Hillman claimed that imagination itself provides grounding and body.
Healing Momentum
We raise patterns and images to consciousness from the psychoid depths, finding our purpose in the universe and give expression to what we realize. Such gnosis and healing potential is derived from knowledge of the unconscious -- represented unconscious contents. Patterns of unfolding consciousness reveal archetypal structure, promoting wholeness and balance between wholesale identification with myth and outright rejection of it, restoring the free flow of consciousness.
We share unconscious contents through participation mystique - a symbiosis where contents of one's personal unconscious are experienced in another or through another person. Jung claimed, "The participation mystique by which society contains the individual may be understood as a statement of the fact that individuals are still undifferentiated from each other, that is to say, they have not yet been self-consciously broken up into individual personalities." (C.G. Jung Speaking; Interviews and Encounters).
Projection and archaic identification are often mythological motifs surrounding situations and objects, including other persons, dead or alive. In an unconscious process we 'meet our projections' rather than make them. Ancestors are 'hooks' for projecting our unconscious qualities. We can learn something about ourselves withdrawing or dissolving projections.
"We tend to identify our chthonic nature with evil and our spiritual nature with good. We must accept the dark forces and stop projecting them." (C.G. Jung Speaking: Interviews and Encounters, Pages 359-364)
"This union, which should not come about, is the union of the pairs of opposites in ourselves. This is what the devil wants to prevent at any cost." (Jung, Han Guisan Schmid, Pages 131-142)
Genealogical Imagination
Genealogy is a sequence of corporeal births, but also psychic events. 'Walking a path' is much like 'walking a labyrinth. We begin with our self and proceed back to the progenitor of each direct ancestor, both male and female. "Walking the path" means you must visit every profile in both paths, no shortcuts. Jung called the sequence of psychic events a connection, a solid sequence, that either begins with a prime cause or follows a final cause.
Beyond causal qualities, obvious connections are demonstrated by the sequence of events, but our family tree also expresses nonlocal qualities, beyond mind, body, space and time. In everyday life, distance and location are mundane absolutes. Yet physics now suggests that at the most fundamental level, the universe is nonlocal—there is no such thing as place or distance.
Nonlocal Ancestors
Ancestral line, bloodline, line of descent, line of succession, and line of inheritance are all linear descriptors -- chains with causal implications. But not all ancestral effects, like vicarious participation and the genealogical experience of history, are causal.
Nonlocal consciousness is not confined to specific points in space, including brains or bodies, nor to the present moment. It is an ordering principle that can inject information into disorganized or random systems.
Two classically identical expressions for mutual information generally differ when the quantum systems are involved. This difference defines the quantum discord. It can be used as a measure of the quantumness of correlations. In quantum information theory, quantum discord is processing quantum mutual information.
It is a measure of nonclassical correlations between two subsystems of a quantum system. It includes correlations that are due to quantum physical effects but do not necessarily involve quantum entanglement. Encoded information that can only be accessed by coherent quantum interactions. So a system can have no entanglement but consuming quantum discord.
Panpsychism, essentially the alchemical view, is a doctrine (belief) that everything material (including the atoms and the galaxies) has an element of individual consciousness. But, is it correct to equate the concept of psyche and the concept of consciousness? Panpsychism suggests that everything in the universe might be conscious, or at least potentially conscious, or conscious in certain configurations. Panprotopsychism postulates that fundamental physical entities are proto-conscious.
Is the universe made of matter/consciousness? How does consciousness arise from seemingly inanimate matter? The nondual approach says everything is mind and matter is its manifestation. Consciousness does not emerge from the brain but is conditioned by it. The entire Universe of mind and matter arises from a fundamental non-dual reality.
Panprotopsychism and Panexperientialism describe emergence of primal non-conscious processes. Panprotopsyhism suggests proto-consciousness may exist in the universe as a “fundamental property” without depending at all on anything physical.
By focusing on experience rather than mentality panexperientialism avoids some of the traditional objections to panpsychism. Absolute space is the noumenal source of phenomenal consciousness, a fundamental quality, and Mind is a higher order hyperspace field outside brain's EM field. Fundamental proto-consciousness finds more particular expression when matter comes together in a certain way.
There are reports of non-ordinary experiences during pregnancy, for example, where obscure episodes from the lives of parents and unknowable details of ancestors, minute physiological characteristics of various animal and plant species, and arcane details of world mythologies of which the person clearly had no prior knowledge. The imaginal world is neither literal nor abstract.
Nonlocality operates beyond mere awareness, unconsciously, drawing on individual and collective consciousness, as well as the world or environment. Coherence or resonance may be expressed as compassion, empathy, love, unity, oneness, and connectedness. Consciousness affects or informs human and nonhuman or inanimate forms alike.
Consciousness is present everywhere in spacetime, so has no need to “go” or “be sent” via a medium or carrier. Synchronous events, including intentional or directed healing, may work via coherence, an entanglement or resonance effect, but we should be careful not to mistake this field effect for the mind itself, which permeates and undergirds all. Still none of us has any idea how anything material could be conscious, so we must simply stand in that Mystery. We share its essential nature; it is the cosmos within us. We are that.
Nonlocal events, like synchronicity are apparently 1) unmediated, requiring no go-between signal; 2) unmitigated, with no diminishing of effect with distance; 3) immediate, apparently outside of time and space as we commonly understand them. In this acausal process, consciousness is fundamental, not derivative and unexplainable in terms of anything more basic.
Jung advised, “This feeling for the infinite can be attained only if we are bounded to the utmost. In knowing ourselves to be ultimately limited we possess also the capacity for becoming conscious of the infinite. But only then!”
Recent experiments (2016) have suggested that no such hidden or nonlocal reality exists. But the theory of connectivity still holds in other models. They have only ruled out a specific class of theories in which the hidden reality of any particle is local, and not influenced by something far away.
Bohm’s ideas involve non-local hidden reality, in which everything depends on everything. Everything happening in a distant galaxy is influencing you right now and vice versa, however minor the effect. Bohm’s theory says that and electron is both a wave and particle: an electron is a particle with a definite trajectory, but this path is governed by a wave upon which the electron rides. The wave can also be influenced by other particles, which in turn changes the trajectory of the electron.
https://www.newscientist.com/article/2078251-quantum-weirdness-may-hide-an-orderly-reality-after-all/
Quantum entanglement—which occurs when two or more particles are correlated in such a way that they can influence each other even across large distances—is not an all-or-nothing phenomenon, but occurs in various degrees. The more a quantum state is entangled with its partner, the better the states will perform in quantum information applications.
The paths of our descent remain correlated, entangled forever. Each time we retrace our roots we are commemorating and reenacting the glorious time of the beginnings. The contrast image of ascent and descent on the Tree of Life is the primary metaphor, unlocking a treasure of family knowledge and self-knowledge, and a new sense of presence.
We have another life than the life we consciously intend to have. Alchemy stresses redemption of the physical body, or matter, while actively striving toward creation of a subtle, immortal body, which has no apparent physical basis. Matter is the raw unconscious. We enter that unconsciousness for the purpose of raising it to consciousness, to raise up the treasure -- the precious heritage of the ancestors.
“The alchemist saw the union of opposites under the symbol of the tree… the symbol of the cosmic tree rooted in this world and growing up to heaven -- the tree that is also man. In the history of symbols this tree is described as the way of life itself, a growing into that which eternally is and does not change; which springs from the union of opposites and, by its eternal presence, also makes that union possible.” (Jung, CW 9i, para. 198)
World Soul; World Tree
The world-tree is an expression of anima-mundi or world-soul. It is the axis that aligns us with the cosmos, but more tangibly, it is the shared ancestral tree, rather than a stand-alone tree. Alchemy requires resurrection of the soul of body. The challenge we encounter in developing and "owning" this fresh worldview is to "see through" to a unified vision of mundane physical processes with spiritual values and vision.
In shamanism, the ancestors were venerated as the effect was a preventive therapy that maintained those vital connections with the past. While the World Tree meant one thing in shamanic culture today it refers to the definitive family tree for the entire world, a collaboration on shared ancestry by constantly expanding and improving the tree. The World Family Tree currently has more than 100 million profiles.
The World Family Tree is like having millions of people solving the same jigsaw puzzle together instead of each of us solving a separate, tiny puzzle. Traditionally, people have embarked on individual studies of their family history in the hope of preserving it for future generations. However, this isolated approach results in the same research being repeated over and over again. By combining all research into a single, collaborative tree, users can focus on verifying existing information and pursue new leads rather than wasting time repeating what others have already found.
With the World Family Tree you will be delighted to constantly discover new information about your family because so many other users are constantly working to improve it with new findings. Sources and citations are included so the work of others can be checked and enhanced.
If mistakes are found, you can fix them quickly on the World Family Tree, which is not possible with standalone trees that are controlled by someone else. Thus, errors gradually disappear instead of perpetuating, growing worse, and achieving the false notion of accuracy simply by being repeated by others.
The World Family Tree allows identical profiles to be merged into one, reducing duplication and collecting the best information for all to share. Profiles support multiple languages so you can easily document names and biographies separately in different languages. The World Family Tree is also curated by a large team of expert volunteer Curators.
Entangled Particles
We can develop awareness of the psychophysical ordering processes inherent in matter -- in our matter. The physical body is a living metaphor -- a metaphorm -- for psychic transformation. Life begets life in creative manifestation.
According to Jung, psyche is not different from matter. At the psychoid or psychophysical ground level, they are different perspectives on the phenomenal world. Psyche is the womb of manifestation. The collective unconscious is also projected into the inner aspect of our own bodies. The substance of our mind is deeply connected somehow to the physical world.
In Psychology of Religion, Jung said, Jung, “We might well say, on the contrary, that physical existence is a mere inference, since we know of matter only in so far as we perceive psychic images.” And, Jung comments, “In reality, there is nothing but a living body. That is the fact, and psyche is as much a living body as body is living psyche: it is just the same.” (Nietzsche’s Zarathustra, vol. 1, p. 396.)
The psychoid nature of archetypes extends beyond a neurophysiological basis into the general dynamical patterns of all matter and energy -- the unconscious properties of the physiological world. Both psyche and matter are in a constant process of redefinition.
In pilot-wave theory, if space and time behave like a superfluid, or a fluid that experiences no dissipation at all, then 'path memory' could conceivably give rise to the strange quantum phenomenon of entanglement. When two particles become entangled, a measurement of the state of one instantly affects that of the other, even at vast distances. The superfluid/quantum correlation mirrors the collective unconscious field as a vast ocean of potential.
In standard quantum mechanics, the effect is rationalized as the instantaneous collapse of the particles’ joint probability wave. But in the pilot-wave version of events, an interaction between two particles in a superfluid universe sets them on paths that stay correlated forever. The interaction permanently affects the contours of the superfluid, accounting for nonlocal correlations.”
Entangled Lives
Jung referred to unitary reality consisting of both psyche and matter as transcendental -- an unextended energetic intensity, or potential. He argued, "...Psyche cannot be totally different from matter for how otherwise could it move matter? And matter cannot be alien to psyche, for how else could matter produce psyche? Psyche and matter exist in the same world, and each partakes of the other, otherwise any reciprocal action would be impossible."
We are each a personal part of the world's impersonal fabric, so psyche and soma interpentrate. Waves in this potential spacetime mysteriously “collapse” into particles in actual spacetime. They collapse from their ghostly state into definite quantum particles.
This idea shares much with a holistic or integral perspective, an approach which we can extend to our family tree. In psychosomatics, psyche carries the potential, while soma is the actuality. In the absence of a voice, the body can articulate complex affective and relational losses.
Paleopoetics
We can engage the somatic unconscious as an experiential space of relations and imagination of the heart. The three instincts are self-preservation, sexual, and social. How did humans, given their non-symbolic mammalian heritage, come to represent their knowledge in symbolic form?
All non-verbal communication is mimetic (rehearsal loop), a self-started representational act -- the ability to alternate between various self-perspectives and other-perspectives. The archaic basis of episode recognition patterns is different from generalized, procedural memory. We learned to represent a situation and reflect on it (metacognition, orientation, time, space, date, specific place).
Jung suggested we cannot stand to live a meaningless life. but individuation means to find one's own meaning and connection to universal meaning. The collective unconscious doesn't express personal wishes and intentions as it is an absolutely transpersonal, neutral, psychic 'entity,' which, like nature, is an emanative form of appearance.
Cultural Networks
Humans are linked from birth to a vast cultural storehouse of knowledge and skill accumulated as cultural memory over aeons. We are sensitive to understanding the significance of environmental effects and mimesis (motor skill and imagination) allows us to invent intentional representations.
Culture is mimetic framework. Mirror neurons allow us to love, to socialize, and to empathize with the experience of others through collective shaping of network architecture. In the genealogical context, we are more than a fixed point in a particular cultural network. The genealogy symbolizes the angular momentum of descent. Our responsibility is to make that path easier. Such is the way of nature. Psychogenealogy modulates consciousness in a marked and novel way.
Episodic memories are locked in details of specific experiences such as the death of a loved one. Mythical culture institutionalized meaning by codifying significant contents of individual experience. Internal memory became external culture. We developed theories to predict and explain through symbolic culture. We are still rooted in episodic experience, as well as being mythic, symbolic, and theoretical. Theoretical development strips away previous mythic meanings, demystifying them.
Metaphysics of Presence
The psychoid level of archetypes correlates with wave/particle duality and the heritable DNA biohologram. Expressive nature can be likened to epigenetics, heritable changes in gene expression that are not due to changes in DNA sequence. Every cell in the body has the same genetic information. Cells, tissues and organs differentiate when different sets of genes are turned on or expressed.
We exist in relation to ourselves, to others, to myths, to images, and to archetypes. Their expression is the essence of our being. The body is inescapably a relational body with the potential for overcoming the boundaries of flesh to perpetuate relationality, received wisdom (lucidity), and power-knowledge even in the absence of material embodiment.
Quantum entanglement and nonlocality are models or metaphors for how we may actually remain connected. Our entangled pairs close the locality loophole. David Bohm suggested we have an almost universal tendency to fragment the world and ignore the dynamical interconnectedness of things. This is responsible for many of our problems, not only in science but in our lives and culture -- and in our relations with our own ancestors.
Unexamined Ground
Genealogy can help bridge that interconnectedness gap -- the unconscious, unexamined ground. Genealogy is a differential element of values. It is a field in which relationships operate -- a realm of conscious and unconscious cooperation represented by point to point networks of individuals, dead and alive. The sociality is not merely objective, because of our deep psychophysical involvement. Theory describes "Soul as Intersubjective Reality and Spirit as Interobjective Reality."
Genealogy is complex and requires a broad context -- an open value network with communication, non-control, open-access and value creation. It has its own space-time relationality. As relational selves we stand in intricate and intimate webs of connection with all we contact—whether human or animal, animate or inanimate. 'Path memory' stimulates the right probabilities.
Agents, relationships, and the field of relationality in which relationships occur close the objective-subjective loop with assertion and intentionality. Atomistic individualism is rejected for a relational self, a balance between individual agency and collective communion.
Genealogy can energize the relationships that mobilize action across different interwoven dimensions of relationality. It helps us organize ancestral incoherence and multiplicity. Our pathways of descent or family branches are like converging or parallel realities.
Embodied Relationality
Relationality considers relationships the foundation of subjectivity, including the tangible and intangible beyond the boundaries of life/death in the absence of the corporeal or embodied other. Separation of families occurs by disappearance, miscarriage, migration, displacement, divorce, war, and death.
Archetypal ideas can be correlated with fundamental physiological processes. For example, the union of opposites can be linked to the sympathetic and parasympathic systems - ergotrophic and trophotropic systems of arousal. The 'rein' effect is the emotional alchemy of our ecstatic and transcendent nature. One system, ergotrophic, energizes us; the other, trophotropic, tranquilizes us. The E-system is Yang, while the T-system is Yin. http://ionamiller.weebly.com/emotional-alchemy.html
Family members who have died are only 'relatively disembodied.' Bonds are not severed by death but continue in an interactive psychophysical relationship. Even after death attachments and continuing bonds remain apparent. Bereavement, depression, and symptoms are some examples.
Metaphorically, at least, quantum entanglement (relational entanglement) is mirrored in the twisted limbs of our ancestral branches, particularly the first 5-6 generations that connect us with the more widely shared World Tree. Actions performed on one affect the other, even when separated by great distances.
Psychophysical Relativity
Despite our inherent relationality, a “crisis of nonrelation” often marks our psychic entanglements. What gets in the way and leaves us facing pathological alternatives instead? What is it about our relationality that tempts us to disavow the very thing that makes us who we are?
Why do we tend to avoid our relationality pursuing narcissistic solace and solitary self-enclosure? Ancestral connection, attachment, and intersubjectivity is one way to overcome such tendencies with the interconnectedness of processes of individuation, relationality and affect. Relationality is shaped across global and local contexts by gender and generation, including aspects of emotions and embodiment.
Collective Individuation
Such radical decentering establishes a number of shifts that enable us to think in categories and concepts like the individual, the subject, the group, the threshold, relationality, co-implication and so on. Breaking with both subject-centerdness and the individual as model or starting point is an epistemological shift. We can be part of an undivided whole and still possess our own unique qualities.
Singularity, rather than that of the individual, coupled to the standpoint of relationality enables us to think of the self — other, human—animal, nature— culture and human — world in terms of complex becoming. Intersubjectivity and interbeing incorporate a sense of the dynamic web of relationships that are constitutive for our being at a given moment.
Personal & Universal
The co-constitution of all life has major implications regarding responsibility for the other and responsibility for the world. Grounding in the standpoint of the temporality and historicity of being is our existential condition and circumscribes our relation to the other. http://bod.sagepub.com/content/16/1/129.abstract
Western societies presume death signifies an absolute loss of the other in the demise of their physical body. But we can recognize that embodied relational experience can continue after death, encompassing a ‘me’, a ‘you’ and an ‘us’. After death ‘me’ and ‘us’ remain (though changed) while crucial dimensions of ‘you’ persist too. Caring for the dead involves including them in the family, remembering them, and acting in ways they would approve. Imaginal dialogue provides comfort and guidance.
Relational Identity
The binary divide between living and dead bodies mirrors other related dichotomies of mind/body, self/other, internal/external, and nature/social. Empirical and anecdotal research suggests that embodied relationality expresses how connectedness is lived out after death and/or disruptive transitions in material practices and felt experiences.
Research continues to imply that we are not just ontologically bounded units or entities. We don't just participate in relationships, but are constituted by them, especially those directly related to us. Embodied relationality includes caring after death.
Family descent and history is one key dimension of categories of identity. Social membership and 'belonging' is another. Genealogy is framed by waves of mobility and intercultural history.
Ancestral home and place of origin is another dimension. The material landscapes of certain prehistoric lands are part of our heritage because our ancestors were there when it was being shaped. This is native belonging. Alternatives are settler presence, or collective displacement, shaped by long histories of migrations.
Spirits of the Ancestors
Entanglement is an instantaneous nonlocal connection at the quantal and subquantal level. Two or more objects or subjects can only be described in relation to one another even when widely separated. In quantum entanglement two particles can be intimately linked to each other even if separated by billions of light-years of space or time. This supermemory is a bizarre intersection of entanglement, information and time.
Family Matters
A change induced in one affects the other; unity of mind is achieved by quantum entanglement. Entanglement remains as long as neither has any significant interactions with other objects to break the entanglement. Particles of energy/matter can become correlated to predictably interact with each other. No signal is sent, no influence transmitted. But the fate of one embodies and reveals the fate of the other.
Unconscious images, beliefs, compulsions and physical symptoms can be the result of being entangled with family and ancestors. Unconscious entanglements with family members or ancestors play a significant role in our emotional conflicts, physical illnesses and spiritual distress. These entanglements also influence the way we cope with the challenges of growing up in our families.
Causal Ambiguity
Bizarre quantum bonds connect distinct moments in time, suggesting that quantum links -- not space-time -- constitute the fundamental structure of the universe. What happens now can be correlated with what happens later, in ways that elude a simple mechanistic explanation. In effect, you can have spooky action at a delay.
These strong temporal correlations between time and space are seriously counterintuitive. Not only can two events be correlated, linking the earlier to the later one, two events can become correlated so that it becomes impossible to say which is earlier and which is later. Each of these events is the cause of the other, as if each were the first to occur.
https://www.quantamagazine.org/20160119-time-entanglement/
Once Connected Matter
It is a physical fact we contain our ancestral genetics and epigenetics and it remains a psychological fact, too. Further, Scientific American reports that "It is remarkable that it is so common for cells from one individual to integrate into the tissues of another distinct person."
We now know that cells from a developing fetus cross the placenta, allowing the baby’s DNA to become part of the mother’s body. These fetal cells persist in a woman’s body into her old age. If she has been pregnant with a male child it’s likely she’ll have some Y-chromosomes drifting around for a few decades too, even if the baby she carried didn’t live to be born. The cells of that child stay with her, resonating in ways that mothers have known intuitively throughout time. Male cells were found in the brains of women and had been living there, in some cases, for several decades.
Fetal cells you contributed to your own mother may be found in her blood, bone marrow, skin, kidney, and liver. These fetal cells appear to “treat” her when she is ill or injured.
In one case, a woman stopped treatment against medical advice. A liver biopsy showed “thousands of male cells” determined to be from a pregnancy terminated nearly 20 years earlier. These cells helped her body recover just as fetal cells you gave your mother rush to help repair her from within when she’s unwell.
Any woman who has ever been pregnant, even if she miscarried so early she never knew she was with child, is likely to be a microchimera (a person who carries the cells of another person). Fetal cells have the imprint of her child’s father and his ancestry.
Fetal cells can be shared from one pregnancy to another, meaning the cells of older siblings may float within younger siblings. The presence of fetal cells in a woman’s body is associated with substantially improved longevity, with an overall mortality rate 60 percent lower than women whose bodies don’t contain such cells. According to such findings, we heal our mothers and our children heal us. http://lauragraceweldon.com/2012/06/12/mother-child-are-linked-at-the-cellular-level/
We imagine ourselves as singular autonomous individuals, but these foreign cells suggest that most people carry remnants of other individuals, including absorbed twins.
If the fetus is absorbed completely, there are usually no further complications to the pregnancy, other than first trimester vaginal bleeding. This occurs when a twin or multiple disappears in the uterus during pregnancy as a result of a miscarriage of one twin or multiple. The fetal tissue is absorbed by the survivor.
Men have failed paternity tests because of this phenomena. A man's DNA may not match because the man's unborn twin is technically the genetic father of their son.
An intriguing new study suggests children may resemble a mother’s previous sexual partner. The effect may be due to molecules in the semen of the first mate being absorbed by the female's immature eggs where they influence future offspring.
The quantum level of interconnectedness between once-connected matter could explain the frequent stories of mothers knowing when something has gone wrong at a distance for their spouses, children. or siblings, and vice versa. If we can 'talk' to the cells of our bodies to good healing effect and immune stimulation, we might reasonably also speak with and mobilize the cells of others circulating in our system.
Politics of Belonging
Jung asks, not what childhood trauma creates a fixation, but what obstacle in the life path are we unable to overcome, and what is the cause of the regression? Our lives remain literally entangled with our immediate family and the souls, spirits, and issues of our ancestors. Our branches criss-cross continents, oceans, and culture wars. The lost or forgotten knowledge and secrets of our ancient ancestors, shapes the creative and moral future reality.
Quantum entanglement is a physical phenomenon that occurs when pairs or groups of particles are generated or interact in ways such that the quantum state of each particle cannot be described independently. Instead, a quantum state may be given for the system as a whole.
In a similar way we are entangled with the fate of our ancestors and carry their burdens. When the root of the problem is brought to light, we don't have to repeat the fate of our ancestors with whom we were entangled. Only when these indeterminate causal relations between events are pruned away — so that nature realizes only some of the possibilities available to it — do space and time become meaningful. Quantum correlations come first, space-time later.
Measurements of physical properties such as position, momentum, spin, polarization, etc., performed on entangled particles are found to be appropriately correlated. Schrödinger said, "I would not call [entanglement] one but rather the characteristic trait of quantum mechanics, the one that enforces its entire departure from classical lines of thought."
Ancestor Syndrome
The psychological term for negative entanglement is enmeshment. Our ancestors reflect our dissociated and unintegrated personality facets. Its most positive expression is the unus mundus, the essential heart of the World Soul.
Family Constellations (a subset application of Systemic Constellations) is an experiential process of releasing and resolving profound tensions within and between people. The process diverges from conventional forms of cognitive, behavior and psychodynamic psychotherapy in several key respects.
Family Constellations attempt to reveal a previously unrecognized systemic dynamic that spans multiple generations in a given family. We can resolve the harmful effects of that dynamic by encouraging acceptance of the factual reality of the past, psychophysical transformation, and transcendence.
SOUL DREAMS ITS WAY HOME
The mystery of love is greater than the mystery of death.
--Oscar Wilde, Salome (1893)
All life is bound to individual carriers who realize it,
and it is simply inconceivable without them.
--Carl Jung, Psychology and Alchemy, Page 222
The process of individuation, of becoming whole, includes by definition the totality of the phenomenon Man and the totality of the riddle of Nature, whose division into physical and spiritual aspects is merely an act of discrimination in the interests of human cognition.
--Jung, Letters Vol. II, Pages 617-620
Since man is relatively free to choose the way he will go, he is also free to go the wrong way and, instead of coming to grips with the reality of his unconscious, to speculate about it and cut himself off from the truth of nature. --Jung, Letters Vol. II, Pages 617-620
We must give time to nature so that she may be a mother to us.
I have found the way to live here as part of nature, to live in my own time.
People in the modern world are always living so that something better is to happen tomorrow, always in the future, so they don't think to live their lives.
They are up in the head. When a man begins to know himself, to discover the roots of his past in himself, it is a new way of life.
--Jung, C.G. Jung Speaking: Interviews and Encounters, Pages 156-163
The mystery of love is greater than the mystery of death.
--Oscar Wilde, Salome (1893)
All life is bound to individual carriers who realize it,
and it is simply inconceivable without them.
--Carl Jung, Psychology and Alchemy, Page 222
The process of individuation, of becoming whole, includes by definition the totality of the phenomenon Man and the totality of the riddle of Nature, whose division into physical and spiritual aspects is merely an act of discrimination in the interests of human cognition.
--Jung, Letters Vol. II, Pages 617-620
Since man is relatively free to choose the way he will go, he is also free to go the wrong way and, instead of coming to grips with the reality of his unconscious, to speculate about it and cut himself off from the truth of nature. --Jung, Letters Vol. II, Pages 617-620
We must give time to nature so that she may be a mother to us.
I have found the way to live here as part of nature, to live in my own time.
People in the modern world are always living so that something better is to happen tomorrow, always in the future, so they don't think to live their lives.
They are up in the head. When a man begins to know himself, to discover the roots of his past in himself, it is a new way of life.
--Jung, C.G. Jung Speaking: Interviews and Encounters, Pages 156-163
"The ancients knew the beneficial and therapeutic potential links between generations that we rediscover today with generational analysis. The recognition of what is transmitted across generations refreshes a consciousness that existed at the time of the first shamanic communities. The revival of a long-forgotten knowledge explains the simultaneous emergence of "transgenerational" in many areas;. depth psychology, transgenerational psychoanalysis, family therapy, psycho, sociology, anthropology, epigenetics, literature and Culture This unique book shows how the study of the links between generations can connect contemporary therapeutic approaches to ancestral and shamanic wisdom. in a spirit of openness and research specialists from different backgrounds contribute to dialogue and reconciliation of knowledge " --Thierry Gaillard
ECODITION: http://www.ecodition.net/en/thierry-gaillard/
ECODITION: http://www.ecodition.net/en/thierry-gaillard/
"Everywhere geneticists look, they see populations more different than any living people, mixing with each other in small fractions. It is no evolutionary tree. Our evolutionary history is like a braided stream."
"...the urge to individuation, gathers together what is scattered and multifarious and exalts it to the original of the One, the Primordial Man." --C.G. Jung
We all have genes that come from our ancestors that aren't used - they're not turned on. So we actually carry ancient genes with us. If you could figure out how to turn those on, you could resurrect ancient characteristics from our ancestors. --Jack Horner
"...the urge to individuation, gathers together what is scattered and multifarious and exalts it to the original of the One, the Primordial Man." --C.G. Jung
We all have genes that come from our ancestors that aren't used - they're not turned on. So we actually carry ancient genes with us. If you could figure out how to turn those on, you could resurrect ancient characteristics from our ancestors. --Jack Horner
THE LONG DEAD
"Follow in the footsteps of your ancestors, for the mind is trained through knowledge. Behold, their words endure… follow their wise counsel."
-- "The Book of Kheti," The Husia: Sacred Wisdom of Ancient Egypt
In the Beginning
The majority of the human race is descended, according to
the Human Genome project, from about 3,000 people. The evidence from the Toba supereruption, 71,000 years ago, indicates that the world's population of Modern Humans was reduced to a bottleneck total of around 2,000-10,000 adults.
Early humans living about one million years ago were extremely close to extinction. Genetic tests of ancient DNA suggests that the population of early human species was 55,500 individuals, including Homo erectus, H. ergaster and archaic H. sapiens. After much research, estimates of Homo sapiens coalescence all fall around 200,000 years ago (mtDNA), a little earlier (nuclear DNA), or a little later (Y chromosome), with a range of 270,000 to 200,000 years ago.
Researchers estimate that the effective population size of human ancestors living before 1.2 million years ago was 18,500 - 26,000. Genome regions that contain
mobile element insertion events provide unique information about ancient population history because of their deep genealogies. Genetic diversity is greatest in sub-Saharan Africa, also supporting a single origin place.
http://www.pnas.org/content/107/5/2147.full.pdf
Misconceptions include the idea that all modern humans can be traced back to one female, "mitochondrial Eve." The mitochondrial ancestor was not the only female living, or the only one who passed on mtDNA, but part of a population. Low levels of mtDNA diversity may indicate a population bottleneck, when as few as 1500 female humans lived, perhaps due to environmental conditions, or our population size may always have been small.
Somehow our ancestors escaped such local and global near-extinction events, when the earth became a wasteland from volcanoes, climate change, or space debris. Population bottlenecks accelerated the differentiation of isolated human populations and encouraged increased cooperation within tribal groups for survival.
http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/humans-might-have-faced-extinction/
"Follow in the footsteps of your ancestors, for the mind is trained through knowledge. Behold, their words endure… follow their wise counsel."
-- "The Book of Kheti," The Husia: Sacred Wisdom of Ancient Egypt
In the Beginning
The majority of the human race is descended, according to
the Human Genome project, from about 3,000 people. The evidence from the Toba supereruption, 71,000 years ago, indicates that the world's population of Modern Humans was reduced to a bottleneck total of around 2,000-10,000 adults.
Early humans living about one million years ago were extremely close to extinction. Genetic tests of ancient DNA suggests that the population of early human species was 55,500 individuals, including Homo erectus, H. ergaster and archaic H. sapiens. After much research, estimates of Homo sapiens coalescence all fall around 200,000 years ago (mtDNA), a little earlier (nuclear DNA), or a little later (Y chromosome), with a range of 270,000 to 200,000 years ago.
Researchers estimate that the effective population size of human ancestors living before 1.2 million years ago was 18,500 - 26,000. Genome regions that contain
mobile element insertion events provide unique information about ancient population history because of their deep genealogies. Genetic diversity is greatest in sub-Saharan Africa, also supporting a single origin place.
http://www.pnas.org/content/107/5/2147.full.pdf
Misconceptions include the idea that all modern humans can be traced back to one female, "mitochondrial Eve." The mitochondrial ancestor was not the only female living, or the only one who passed on mtDNA, but part of a population. Low levels of mtDNA diversity may indicate a population bottleneck, when as few as 1500 female humans lived, perhaps due to environmental conditions, or our population size may always have been small.
Somehow our ancestors escaped such local and global near-extinction events, when the earth became a wasteland from volcanoes, climate change, or space debris. Population bottlenecks accelerated the differentiation of isolated human populations and encouraged increased cooperation within tribal groups for survival.
http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/humans-might-have-faced-extinction/
Carnal, Carnation & Incarnation
Carnal is a related term of carnation. As adjectives the difference between carnal and carnation is that carnal is relating to the physical and especially sexual appetites -- the material, or natural body; connected by birth -- while carnation is of a rosy pink or red color, like human flesh. As nouns the difference between incarnation and rebirth is that incarnation is an incarnate being or form while rebirth is reincarnation; new birth subsequent to one's first.
To be that which you are is the bath of rebirth.
~Carl Jung, The Red Book, Page 266
Carnal is a related term of carnation. As adjectives the difference between carnal and carnation is that carnal is relating to the physical and especially sexual appetites -- the material, or natural body; connected by birth -- while carnation is of a rosy pink or red color, like human flesh. As nouns the difference between incarnation and rebirth is that incarnation is an incarnate being or form while rebirth is reincarnation; new birth subsequent to one's first.
To be that which you are is the bath of rebirth.
~Carl Jung, The Red Book, Page 266
DEARLY DEPARTED
In The Soul's Code James Hillman explains that, according to (Plotinus 205-270 ACE), "we elected the body, the parents, the place, and the circumstances that suited the soul and that, as the myth says, belong to its necessity. This suggests that the circumstances, including my body and my parents whom I may curse, are my soul;'s own choice -- and I do not understand this because I have forgotten."
He adds, "so that we do not forget, Plato tells the myth, and in the very last passage, says that by preserving the myth we may better preserve ourselves and prosper. In other words, the myth has a redemptive psychological function, and a psychology derived from it can inspire a life founded on it."
An ancestor is a person from whom you have directly descended. An ancestor or forebear is a parent or (recursively) the parent of an ancestor (i.e., a grandparent, great-grandparent, great-great-grandparent, and so forth). An 'ancestor chart'
shows a person and all of their ancestors in a graphical format.
Family is viewed as a closely united group of living and dead relatives. The ancestors are not limited to our blood and family lineages, but biological ancestors are most influential and important to engage for personal and family healing. To 'be' is to perceive and be perceived.
Shaman and traditional cultures emphasize active relations between generations. The ancestors weld the community to its origins or roots, assuring a certain individual and collective balance. Today this healing potential has been rediscovered and applied in "Transgenerational Integration."
Ancestral connections correlate with well-being. Even while we 'grow up,' we simultaneously grow down into our roots, where we are entangled with our ancestral 'invisibles.'
The Ancients managed their ancestral inheritance in many ways, including connections to Earth and Sky, and applied artistic intelligence -- signs of a symbolic psyche and self-awareness. Evidence of tools and art as old as 40,000 years, from South Africa to Siberia, have been discovered, and the date keeps getting pushed backwards.
"The ancients brought over some of the beauty of God into this world, and this world became so beautiful that it appeared to the spirit of the time to be fulfillment, and better than the bosom of the Godhead." (Jung, Liber Novus, Page 238.)
Ancestor veneration preserved memories and living family histories. Such rites celebrate the ancestors and moderate intergenerational issues that could affect descendants. Descendants affected can heal through deepening their ancestral connections.
The progenitor is the (sometimes legendary) founder of a family, line of descent, clan or tribe, noble house or people group. In genealogy or family history a progenitor is the earliest recorded ancestor of a consanguineous family group of descendants. Traditionally, progenitors are patrilineal. In a patrilineal dynasty, each such dynasty has only one progenitor. There is a 1-2% rate of "false paternity" per generation, so the genetic root may or may not be transmitted downline.
No Man's Land is All Sacred
In medieval times it was said that 'the King is the land'. One is the other; the King and the land are one -- our transpersonal state of health. In the Arthurian mythos, Arthur falls into despair, so the kingdom falls prey to blight.
Only when the connection is made can the cure -- the Quest for the Holy Grail, the journey of psychological transformation -- begin. Arthur is King by divine right, so more than just a ruler: the King is the land at a deep spiritual level. In psychological terms this represents the union of the conscious self with the unconscious.
But he is not the only one tied to the land. The 'land' is our psychophysical basis. We are all the land in this sense. The transpersonal is immanent to our physical being. Metaphorically, the king is not only tied to the land or matter, the land supports the king, as the body supports the transpersonal.
The king is primordial, neither of this world nor the next. The archetypal couple, the parent images of the unconscious (Sol and Luna), represent the spiritual and chthonic nature of the hierosgamos, the sacred union of unconscious wholeness -- the undiscovered country.
The term "no man's land" expresses a profound truth: the earth does not belong to us -- if anything, we belong to the earth and the sky. In the syzygy, the archetypal couple symbolize the moment when heaven and earth come together, creating the Holy Union. The Sacred Marriage, hierosgamos is consummated.
The Navajo say, "the earth is my mother, and the sky is my father." There is always a mythology behind our personal psychogenealogy. The myth needs to earth to reincarnate, to make our personal mythology alive and real, inviting us to take care of that image and that earth with an ecological preservation.
RETROSPECTIVE ANALYSIS
Genealogy is a retrospective analysis of our ancestors and inherited genetic lines. People love finding out that they have a famous relative, or they’re descended from royalty. Thanks to genetic testing it’s easy to get a rundown of your potentially regal DNA. But being related to long-ago kings doesn’t make us special—it just makes us human.
Interregnum
Geneticist Adam Rutherford pointed out that family trees grow backwards exponentially, so the amount of ancestors people should have from the ninth century is larger than the amount of people who were alive during the ninth century. That means anyone with European ancestry is related to King Charlemagne.
Tangled Trees
“Everyone alive in the ninth century who left descendants is the ancestor of every living European today, including Charlemagne,” Rutherford writes, explaining that Europeans alive today are probably related to the long-dead Holy Roman Emperor even if their DNA test doesn’t show it. The new DNA tests make it possible to determine kinship up to 5-7 generations back.
Because of the way the DNA deck is shuffled every time a sperm or egg is made, it doesn’t keep halving perfectly as you meander up through your family tree. If you’re fully outbred (which you aren’t), you should have 256 great-great-great-great-great-great-grandparents. But their genetic contribution to you is not equal. Before long, you will find ancestors from whom you bear no DNA. They are your family, your blood, but their genes have been diluted out of your bloodline. Even though you are directly descended from Charlemagne, you may well carry none of his DNA.
As fun as it is to find out you’re the direct descendant of an old royal line, it’s pretty meaningless. Often genetic ancestry relies on the Y chromosome, which is inherited only via the paternal line, or mitochondrial DNA, which is only passed on from mothers. These make for persuasive – but often simplistic – analyses of ancestry. These two chunks of DNA make up 2% of your genome. But the other 98% has to come from somewhere too, and that is a pick-and-mix from all the rest of your ancestors. And you have numerous ancestors from whom you have no DNA. They are your family, your blood, but their genes have been diluted out of your bloodline.
"The communication of the dead is tongued with fire
beyond the language of the living." - T. S. Eliot
"If you look deeply into the palm of your hand, you will see your parents and all generations of your ancestors. All of them are alive in this moment. Each is present in your body. You are the continuation of each of these people."
--Thich Nhat Hanh
In The Soul's Code James Hillman explains that, according to (Plotinus 205-270 ACE), "we elected the body, the parents, the place, and the circumstances that suited the soul and that, as the myth says, belong to its necessity. This suggests that the circumstances, including my body and my parents whom I may curse, are my soul;'s own choice -- and I do not understand this because I have forgotten."
He adds, "so that we do not forget, Plato tells the myth, and in the very last passage, says that by preserving the myth we may better preserve ourselves and prosper. In other words, the myth has a redemptive psychological function, and a psychology derived from it can inspire a life founded on it."
An ancestor is a person from whom you have directly descended. An ancestor or forebear is a parent or (recursively) the parent of an ancestor (i.e., a grandparent, great-grandparent, great-great-grandparent, and so forth). An 'ancestor chart'
shows a person and all of their ancestors in a graphical format.
Family is viewed as a closely united group of living and dead relatives. The ancestors are not limited to our blood and family lineages, but biological ancestors are most influential and important to engage for personal and family healing. To 'be' is to perceive and be perceived.
Shaman and traditional cultures emphasize active relations between generations. The ancestors weld the community to its origins or roots, assuring a certain individual and collective balance. Today this healing potential has been rediscovered and applied in "Transgenerational Integration."
Ancestral connections correlate with well-being. Even while we 'grow up,' we simultaneously grow down into our roots, where we are entangled with our ancestral 'invisibles.'
The Ancients managed their ancestral inheritance in many ways, including connections to Earth and Sky, and applied artistic intelligence -- signs of a symbolic psyche and self-awareness. Evidence of tools and art as old as 40,000 years, from South Africa to Siberia, have been discovered, and the date keeps getting pushed backwards.
"The ancients brought over some of the beauty of God into this world, and this world became so beautiful that it appeared to the spirit of the time to be fulfillment, and better than the bosom of the Godhead." (Jung, Liber Novus, Page 238.)
Ancestor veneration preserved memories and living family histories. Such rites celebrate the ancestors and moderate intergenerational issues that could affect descendants. Descendants affected can heal through deepening their ancestral connections.
The progenitor is the (sometimes legendary) founder of a family, line of descent, clan or tribe, noble house or people group. In genealogy or family history a progenitor is the earliest recorded ancestor of a consanguineous family group of descendants. Traditionally, progenitors are patrilineal. In a patrilineal dynasty, each such dynasty has only one progenitor. There is a 1-2% rate of "false paternity" per generation, so the genetic root may or may not be transmitted downline.
No Man's Land is All Sacred
In medieval times it was said that 'the King is the land'. One is the other; the King and the land are one -- our transpersonal state of health. In the Arthurian mythos, Arthur falls into despair, so the kingdom falls prey to blight.
Only when the connection is made can the cure -- the Quest for the Holy Grail, the journey of psychological transformation -- begin. Arthur is King by divine right, so more than just a ruler: the King is the land at a deep spiritual level. In psychological terms this represents the union of the conscious self with the unconscious.
But he is not the only one tied to the land. The 'land' is our psychophysical basis. We are all the land in this sense. The transpersonal is immanent to our physical being. Metaphorically, the king is not only tied to the land or matter, the land supports the king, as the body supports the transpersonal.
The king is primordial, neither of this world nor the next. The archetypal couple, the parent images of the unconscious (Sol and Luna), represent the spiritual and chthonic nature of the hierosgamos, the sacred union of unconscious wholeness -- the undiscovered country.
The term "no man's land" expresses a profound truth: the earth does not belong to us -- if anything, we belong to the earth and the sky. In the syzygy, the archetypal couple symbolize the moment when heaven and earth come together, creating the Holy Union. The Sacred Marriage, hierosgamos is consummated.
The Navajo say, "the earth is my mother, and the sky is my father." There is always a mythology behind our personal psychogenealogy. The myth needs to earth to reincarnate, to make our personal mythology alive and real, inviting us to take care of that image and that earth with an ecological preservation.
RETROSPECTIVE ANALYSIS
Genealogy is a retrospective analysis of our ancestors and inherited genetic lines. People love finding out that they have a famous relative, or they’re descended from royalty. Thanks to genetic testing it’s easy to get a rundown of your potentially regal DNA. But being related to long-ago kings doesn’t make us special—it just makes us human.
Interregnum
Geneticist Adam Rutherford pointed out that family trees grow backwards exponentially, so the amount of ancestors people should have from the ninth century is larger than the amount of people who were alive during the ninth century. That means anyone with European ancestry is related to King Charlemagne.
Tangled Trees
“Everyone alive in the ninth century who left descendants is the ancestor of every living European today, including Charlemagne,” Rutherford writes, explaining that Europeans alive today are probably related to the long-dead Holy Roman Emperor even if their DNA test doesn’t show it. The new DNA tests make it possible to determine kinship up to 5-7 generations back.
Because of the way the DNA deck is shuffled every time a sperm or egg is made, it doesn’t keep halving perfectly as you meander up through your family tree. If you’re fully outbred (which you aren’t), you should have 256 great-great-great-great-great-great-grandparents. But their genetic contribution to you is not equal. Before long, you will find ancestors from whom you bear no DNA. They are your family, your blood, but their genes have been diluted out of your bloodline. Even though you are directly descended from Charlemagne, you may well carry none of his DNA.
As fun as it is to find out you’re the direct descendant of an old royal line, it’s pretty meaningless. Often genetic ancestry relies on the Y chromosome, which is inherited only via the paternal line, or mitochondrial DNA, which is only passed on from mothers. These make for persuasive – but often simplistic – analyses of ancestry. These two chunks of DNA make up 2% of your genome. But the other 98% has to come from somewhere too, and that is a pick-and-mix from all the rest of your ancestors. And you have numerous ancestors from whom you have no DNA. They are your family, your blood, but their genes have been diluted out of your bloodline.
"The communication of the dead is tongued with fire
beyond the language of the living." - T. S. Eliot
"If you look deeply into the palm of your hand, you will see your parents and all generations of your ancestors. All of them are alive in this moment. Each is present in your body. You are the continuation of each of these people."
--Thich Nhat Hanh
Ancient religions and traditions have often used the pomegranate tree and its fruit as signifying the 'Tree of Life'.
The Tree of Life becomes the genealogical tree, the family tree, filled with a multitude of pomegranate seeds -- a universal symbol of regeneration, self renewal, and victory over death. Its flowers are a symbol of love and the fruit - of noble birth and fertility...the vegetative form of the bloodline, whose animal icon is the dragon.
Throughout the East the pomegranate is the symbol of luxuriant fertility and of life. Because of its many seeds, it was also a symbol of fertility, and resurrection. Each seed is like a drop of blood.
The Tree of Life becomes the genealogical tree, the family tree, filled with a multitude of pomegranate seeds -- a universal symbol of regeneration, self renewal, and victory over death. Its flowers are a symbol of love and the fruit - of noble birth and fertility...the vegetative form of the bloodline, whose animal icon is the dragon.
Throughout the East the pomegranate is the symbol of luxuriant fertility and of life. Because of its many seeds, it was also a symbol of fertility, and resurrection. Each seed is like a drop of blood.
THE TREE & THE BLOOD
LIVING INTO OUR HERITAGE
by Iona Miller, (c)2016
I have frequently seen people become neurotic when they content themselves with inadequate or wrong answers to the questions of life. They seek position, marriage, reputation, outward success or money, and remain unhappy and neurotic even when they have attained what they were seeking. Such people are usually confined to too narrow a spiritual horizon. Their life has not sufficient content, sufficient meaning. If they are enabled to develop into more spacious personalities, the neurosis generally disappears. ~Carl Jung, MDR, Page 140.
The driving force, so far as it is possible for us to grasp it,
seems to be in essence only an urge towards self-realization. —C. G. Jung
Am I a combination of the lives of these ancestors and do I embody these lives again? Have I lived before in the past as a specific personality, and did I progress so far in that life that I am now able to seek a solution? I do not know...
In old age one begins to let memories unroll before the mind's eye and, musing, to recognize oneself in the inner and outer images of the past. This is like a preparation for an existence in the hereafter, just as, in Plato's view, philosophy is a preparation for death. ~Carl Jung, Memories Dreams and Reflections
Man's whole history consists from the very beginning in a conflict between his feeling of inferiority and his arrogance. Wisdom seeks the middle path and pays for this audacity by a dubious affinity with daemon and beast, and so is open to moral misinterpretation. ~Carl Jung, CW I, Pages 23-24
Time means a past and a future, and so the individual is only complete when we add his actual structure as the result of past events, and at the same time the actual structure taken as the starting point of new tendencies.
~Jung, 1925 Seminar, Page 137
This meaning of events is the supreme meaning, that is not in events, and not in the soul, but is the God standing between events and the soul, the mediator of life, the way, the bridge and the going across. ~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 239.
Non-Conscious integrates information further back than conscious processes.
What Is Time to the Unconscious Mind?
For most of us, our everyday conscious minds feel the stream of conscious experience flowing linearly through what we call the past, present and future. But how do non-conscious mental processes interact with events that take place in time? By definition, we aren’t privy to our non-conscious minds, so to get at this question, we have to use some tricks. I will first briefly describe current neuroscientific and psychological ideas about how everyday conscious awareness creates a sense of order and temporal flow. Then we will delve into the methods used to examine how non-conscious processes interact with events, and how the results of such experiments can inform our understanding about the nature of reality and time. Specifically, I will describe the methods and implications of experiments examining non-conscious “time bending” (i.e., differences between our everyday conscious version of time and the versions accessed by non-conscious processes), including presentiment/precognition experiments and their implications. Finally, I will discuss a new model describing how the so-called past, present, and future collapse under the influence non-conscious processing. Taken from another point of view, this model also addresses how the past, present, and future are manufactured for use by everyday conscious processes.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-y5MFbDcDA8
LIVING INTO OUR HERITAGE
by Iona Miller, (c)2016
I have frequently seen people become neurotic when they content themselves with inadequate or wrong answers to the questions of life. They seek position, marriage, reputation, outward success or money, and remain unhappy and neurotic even when they have attained what they were seeking. Such people are usually confined to too narrow a spiritual horizon. Their life has not sufficient content, sufficient meaning. If they are enabled to develop into more spacious personalities, the neurosis generally disappears. ~Carl Jung, MDR, Page 140.
The driving force, so far as it is possible for us to grasp it,
seems to be in essence only an urge towards self-realization. —C. G. Jung
Am I a combination of the lives of these ancestors and do I embody these lives again? Have I lived before in the past as a specific personality, and did I progress so far in that life that I am now able to seek a solution? I do not know...
In old age one begins to let memories unroll before the mind's eye and, musing, to recognize oneself in the inner and outer images of the past. This is like a preparation for an existence in the hereafter, just as, in Plato's view, philosophy is a preparation for death. ~Carl Jung, Memories Dreams and Reflections
Man's whole history consists from the very beginning in a conflict between his feeling of inferiority and his arrogance. Wisdom seeks the middle path and pays for this audacity by a dubious affinity with daemon and beast, and so is open to moral misinterpretation. ~Carl Jung, CW I, Pages 23-24
Time means a past and a future, and so the individual is only complete when we add his actual structure as the result of past events, and at the same time the actual structure taken as the starting point of new tendencies.
~Jung, 1925 Seminar, Page 137
This meaning of events is the supreme meaning, that is not in events, and not in the soul, but is the God standing between events and the soul, the mediator of life, the way, the bridge and the going across. ~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 239.
Non-Conscious integrates information further back than conscious processes.
What Is Time to the Unconscious Mind?
For most of us, our everyday conscious minds feel the stream of conscious experience flowing linearly through what we call the past, present and future. But how do non-conscious mental processes interact with events that take place in time? By definition, we aren’t privy to our non-conscious minds, so to get at this question, we have to use some tricks. I will first briefly describe current neuroscientific and psychological ideas about how everyday conscious awareness creates a sense of order and temporal flow. Then we will delve into the methods used to examine how non-conscious processes interact with events, and how the results of such experiments can inform our understanding about the nature of reality and time. Specifically, I will describe the methods and implications of experiments examining non-conscious “time bending” (i.e., differences between our everyday conscious version of time and the versions accessed by non-conscious processes), including presentiment/precognition experiments and their implications. Finally, I will discuss a new model describing how the so-called past, present, and future collapse under the influence non-conscious processing. Taken from another point of view, this model also addresses how the past, present, and future are manufactured for use by everyday conscious processes.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-y5MFbDcDA8
ARCHAI
PALEOPOETICS
The Life of the Past Nourishes and Shapes the Present
With an average of fifteen years per generation, the ancestral artists of Lascaux and Chauvet, who painted the living walls of those dim caverns, lived approximately 18,000 and 33,000 generations ago (15,000 - 30,000 or 32,000 years old). Genealogy is the labyrinth of our ancestral self and we leave our handprint at the entrance when we commence our initiatory journey to the depths.
Arche is a Greek word with primary senses "beginning", "origin" or "source of action". (εξ’ ἀρχής: from the beginning, οr εξ’ ἀρχής λόγος: the original argument), and later first principle or element, principles of knowledge (ἀρχαί) (Aristot. Metaph. 995b8). By extension, it may mean "first place, power", "method of government", "empire, realm", "authorities" (in plural: ἀρχαί), "command".[1]
The first principle or element corresponds to the "ultimate underlying substance" and "ultimate undemonstrable principle".[2], designates the source, origin or root of things that exist, the element or principle of a thing.
We now have a pretty good estimate of how many ancestors our own species had at various times in the past. Our ancestors went through two different phases of population “bottlenecking” (constriction): one occurred about three million years ago, when a large population declined to around 10,000 individuals. The authors note that while this may reflect population size decline associated with the origin of hominins after our split with the lineage that produced modern chimps, they also say that this could be an artifact of ancient genetic polymorphisms maintained by natural selection.
The second bottleneck is the one of interest, for it’s the one associated with a reduced population size as humans left Africa. For the Chinese, Korean, and European genomes, effective population size fell from about 13,500 (at 150,000 years ago) to about 1200 between 20,000 and 40,000 years ago. Now this is the effective population size, almost certainly an underestimate of census size, but that only makes the problem worse:
we never went through a bottleneck of anything near two individuals,
as the Biblical Adam-and-Eve story suggests.
We also see a somewhat less severe bottleneck in the African samples: from about 16,100 people about 100,000-150,000 years ago to 5,700 about 50,000 years ago. It’s not clear why the populations in Africa bottlenecked as well.Finally, we also see the population recover in size, with a huge increase in all populations beginning roughly 20,000 years ago. This clearly reflects population growth in both Africa and in areas colonized from Africa as humans expanded around the globe.
The Life of the Past Nourishes and Shapes the Present
With an average of fifteen years per generation, the ancestral artists of Lascaux and Chauvet, who painted the living walls of those dim caverns, lived approximately 18,000 and 33,000 generations ago (15,000 - 30,000 or 32,000 years old). Genealogy is the labyrinth of our ancestral self and we leave our handprint at the entrance when we commence our initiatory journey to the depths.
Arche is a Greek word with primary senses "beginning", "origin" or "source of action". (εξ’ ἀρχής: from the beginning, οr εξ’ ἀρχής λόγος: the original argument), and later first principle or element, principles of knowledge (ἀρχαί) (Aristot. Metaph. 995b8). By extension, it may mean "first place, power", "method of government", "empire, realm", "authorities" (in plural: ἀρχαί), "command".[1]
The first principle or element corresponds to the "ultimate underlying substance" and "ultimate undemonstrable principle".[2], designates the source, origin or root of things that exist, the element or principle of a thing.
We now have a pretty good estimate of how many ancestors our own species had at various times in the past. Our ancestors went through two different phases of population “bottlenecking” (constriction): one occurred about three million years ago, when a large population declined to around 10,000 individuals. The authors note that while this may reflect population size decline associated with the origin of hominins after our split with the lineage that produced modern chimps, they also say that this could be an artifact of ancient genetic polymorphisms maintained by natural selection.
The second bottleneck is the one of interest, for it’s the one associated with a reduced population size as humans left Africa. For the Chinese, Korean, and European genomes, effective population size fell from about 13,500 (at 150,000 years ago) to about 1200 between 20,000 and 40,000 years ago. Now this is the effective population size, almost certainly an underestimate of census size, but that only makes the problem worse:
we never went through a bottleneck of anything near two individuals,
as the Biblical Adam-and-Eve story suggests.
We also see a somewhat less severe bottleneck in the African samples: from about 16,100 people about 100,000-150,000 years ago to 5,700 about 50,000 years ago. It’s not clear why the populations in Africa bottlenecked as well.Finally, we also see the population recover in size, with a huge increase in all populations beginning roughly 20,000 years ago. This clearly reflects population growth in both Africa and in areas colonized from Africa as humans expanded around the globe.
ANCESTRAL ARCHAEOLOGY
Genealogy: What We Are & Where We Come From
Genealogy is the archaeology of the soul, offering new depths of insight into ethnography, lineage and kinship. It looks beyond regional, continental, and psychic barriers. A coherence is experienced from within, bringing forth that which was formerly hidden. It includes not only the personal connections, but the myths of life-after-death and life-before-birth —the simultaneous reality of spirit and matter.
Commit the Body to the Ground
Genealogy becomes a radical embrace of the earth, our psychophysical ground and structural foundation. The common ground of psyche and matter is "deep" psychophysical correlates. Jung's psychoid realm is the physical and metaphysical ground of being. The divine masculine and feminine are primordial dimensions of reality.
In Mysterium Coniunctionis, Jung explained that the unus mundus corresponds with this transcendental psychophysical background of vast potential. Psyche and matter continuously emerge from that transcendental matrix -- the eternal presence of the singular creative act. We emerge from the broader universe that supports us.
Figure-Ground Modulation
Shared knowledge is the common ground -- shared "grounding." It teaches us to read our psychophysical landscape back to our own creation myth, grounded in universal creation motifs. It symbolizes the ultimate meaning of our own existence, and that of the cosmos.
By consciously descending into the depths, descending toward primordial time, into our long-buried past, we ignite a light in the darkness. The ancestors are figures of time and meaning.
Transgenerational Psychophysical Ground
Everything is already there from the beginning in the unconscious. We now know deep memory and heredity are closely linked. "Retrieval" doesn't mean the *same* but rather a "memory" of behaviors and attitudes that had previously been "forgotten." We dig, then dig deeper, and sift, and sort looking for some shred of new evidence because we feel it in our bones.
Jung notes, "The dissolution of our time-bound form in eternity brings no loss of meaning." (Letters Vol. 1, Page 343.) He described his vision: "The bodies are the individual lives, twisting and turning and writhing themselves into a sort of pattern that dissolves and reforms again and again. It is the river of time, of life, in other words." (Visions Seminar, Page 321)
Don't Forget They Were Our Creators
Genealogy is a living demonstration of the newness of the old as well as the oldness of the new. According to Jung, when a personal experience corresponds to a latent primordial image, an archetype is activated. The new model is contemplation, participation, comprehension, poesis. Poetry has a way of "plumbing the depths." Human consciousness is an embodied self-referential system, symbolized in Uroboros.
Esther Harding describes how Jung "found a symbol of the psychic structure which joins into an organic unity everything from the mineral world through the animal, the unconscious and ordinary consciousness up to the Anthropos, which is quality-less and so, like the old Uroboros, touches the primordial condition of Chaos with its forces constituting matter, from which the whole cycle springs again." (C.G. Jung Speaking: Interviews and Encounters and Encounters, 171-179). Genealogy is a potent symbol of such a notion.
Gene Tree
The genealogy chart is a way to visualize and navigate the set of reconstructed ancestors, and narratives of pressures faced by our own ancestors. Everything about us as individuals is a product of complex interactions between our genetic instructions and aspects of the environments in which they are expressed [epigenetics]. If experience is not coming from the body it's not 'known' and going to change your life. The body contains the feeling which the soul gives the creative opportunity to expand.
Everyone alive today is descended from a long, long line of successful ancestors. There is a very good reason we rely on heuristics – evolution. Our distant ancestors when faced with complex life-threatening problems didn’t have time to weigh up the situation, so developed quick-fire methods.
Probabilities
But our ancient ancestors had access to little data other than their own ... Instead, they use quick and dirty heuristics that are less than perfect but that work well. Those that worked were passed down through generations, and we are still relying on them, often when we shouldn’t.
What advantage do we, humans, have? One is the ability to solve new problems, those on which evolution did not train generations of our ancestors. The brain has evolved many mental shortcuts, or heuristics. Heuristic shortcuts evolved that helped our ancestors deal with political problems in small-scale social groups.
However, the world we currently live in is radically different from the world our ancestors lived in when these mental heuristics evolved. In some instances heuristics can lead us to misjudge and make mistakes due to the biases that heuristics can blind us to.
Sense and Sensibility
True, the "sense" is often something that could just as well be called "nonsense," for there is a certain incommensurability between the mystery of existence and human understanding. ~Carl Jung, CW 12, Page 222
"Sense" and "nonsense" are merely man-made labels which serve to give us a reasonably valid sense of direction. ~Carl Jung, Psychology and Alchemy, Page 222
The pendulum of the mind alternates between sense and nonsense, not between right and wrong. ~Carl Jung, Memories Dreams and Reflections, Page 154.
Dreams Reach Forward; Wonder Reaches Back
How can we look at something and claim to know it if our own flesh isn't included? Instinct is felt physiologically and experienced as numinous images that seem to contrast to mere bodily sensations and mechanisms.
Archetypes are instincts "raised to a high frequency," just as instincts emanate from an archetype's "low frequency." Just as instincts impel toward behavior, the archetypes impel toward certain kinds of perceptions. Our task is to find our destiny lived from the wholeness or totality of our being.
People would rather hang on to the old dogmas than let experience speak.
--Jung, Letters Vol. II, Pages 598-599
Genealogy: What We Are & Where We Come From
Genealogy is the archaeology of the soul, offering new depths of insight into ethnography, lineage and kinship. It looks beyond regional, continental, and psychic barriers. A coherence is experienced from within, bringing forth that which was formerly hidden. It includes not only the personal connections, but the myths of life-after-death and life-before-birth —the simultaneous reality of spirit and matter.
Commit the Body to the Ground
Genealogy becomes a radical embrace of the earth, our psychophysical ground and structural foundation. The common ground of psyche and matter is "deep" psychophysical correlates. Jung's psychoid realm is the physical and metaphysical ground of being. The divine masculine and feminine are primordial dimensions of reality.
In Mysterium Coniunctionis, Jung explained that the unus mundus corresponds with this transcendental psychophysical background of vast potential. Psyche and matter continuously emerge from that transcendental matrix -- the eternal presence of the singular creative act. We emerge from the broader universe that supports us.
Figure-Ground Modulation
Shared knowledge is the common ground -- shared "grounding." It teaches us to read our psychophysical landscape back to our own creation myth, grounded in universal creation motifs. It symbolizes the ultimate meaning of our own existence, and that of the cosmos.
By consciously descending into the depths, descending toward primordial time, into our long-buried past, we ignite a light in the darkness. The ancestors are figures of time and meaning.
Transgenerational Psychophysical Ground
Everything is already there from the beginning in the unconscious. We now know deep memory and heredity are closely linked. "Retrieval" doesn't mean the *same* but rather a "memory" of behaviors and attitudes that had previously been "forgotten." We dig, then dig deeper, and sift, and sort looking for some shred of new evidence because we feel it in our bones.
Jung notes, "The dissolution of our time-bound form in eternity brings no loss of meaning." (Letters Vol. 1, Page 343.) He described his vision: "The bodies are the individual lives, twisting and turning and writhing themselves into a sort of pattern that dissolves and reforms again and again. It is the river of time, of life, in other words." (Visions Seminar, Page 321)
Don't Forget They Were Our Creators
Genealogy is a living demonstration of the newness of the old as well as the oldness of the new. According to Jung, when a personal experience corresponds to a latent primordial image, an archetype is activated. The new model is contemplation, participation, comprehension, poesis. Poetry has a way of "plumbing the depths." Human consciousness is an embodied self-referential system, symbolized in Uroboros.
Esther Harding describes how Jung "found a symbol of the psychic structure which joins into an organic unity everything from the mineral world through the animal, the unconscious and ordinary consciousness up to the Anthropos, which is quality-less and so, like the old Uroboros, touches the primordial condition of Chaos with its forces constituting matter, from which the whole cycle springs again." (C.G. Jung Speaking: Interviews and Encounters and Encounters, 171-179). Genealogy is a potent symbol of such a notion.
Gene Tree
The genealogy chart is a way to visualize and navigate the set of reconstructed ancestors, and narratives of pressures faced by our own ancestors. Everything about us as individuals is a product of complex interactions between our genetic instructions and aspects of the environments in which they are expressed [epigenetics]. If experience is not coming from the body it's not 'known' and going to change your life. The body contains the feeling which the soul gives the creative opportunity to expand.
Everyone alive today is descended from a long, long line of successful ancestors. There is a very good reason we rely on heuristics – evolution. Our distant ancestors when faced with complex life-threatening problems didn’t have time to weigh up the situation, so developed quick-fire methods.
Probabilities
But our ancient ancestors had access to little data other than their own ... Instead, they use quick and dirty heuristics that are less than perfect but that work well. Those that worked were passed down through generations, and we are still relying on them, often when we shouldn’t.
What advantage do we, humans, have? One is the ability to solve new problems, those on which evolution did not train generations of our ancestors. The brain has evolved many mental shortcuts, or heuristics. Heuristic shortcuts evolved that helped our ancestors deal with political problems in small-scale social groups.
However, the world we currently live in is radically different from the world our ancestors lived in when these mental heuristics evolved. In some instances heuristics can lead us to misjudge and make mistakes due to the biases that heuristics can blind us to.
Sense and Sensibility
True, the "sense" is often something that could just as well be called "nonsense," for there is a certain incommensurability between the mystery of existence and human understanding. ~Carl Jung, CW 12, Page 222
"Sense" and "nonsense" are merely man-made labels which serve to give us a reasonably valid sense of direction. ~Carl Jung, Psychology and Alchemy, Page 222
The pendulum of the mind alternates between sense and nonsense, not between right and wrong. ~Carl Jung, Memories Dreams and Reflections, Page 154.
Dreams Reach Forward; Wonder Reaches Back
How can we look at something and claim to know it if our own flesh isn't included? Instinct is felt physiologically and experienced as numinous images that seem to contrast to mere bodily sensations and mechanisms.
Archetypes are instincts "raised to a high frequency," just as instincts emanate from an archetype's "low frequency." Just as instincts impel toward behavior, the archetypes impel toward certain kinds of perceptions. Our task is to find our destiny lived from the wholeness or totality of our being.
People would rather hang on to the old dogmas than let experience speak.
--Jung, Letters Vol. II, Pages 598-599
Trangenerational Process
QUESTION 5: Can I help the spirit of my dead father by trying to live in accordance with the demands of the unconscious?
Dr. Jung: Yes, provided—one must always add—that the spirit of the dead father [remains a living idea].
I call this idea hygienic, because when I think that way everything is right in my psychic life and when I don't think that way everything goes wrong, then somewhere things don't click, at least in the biological sense.
~Carl Jung, C.G. Jung Speaking: Interviews and Encounters, Pages 383-386.
Obviously, all genealogy is transgenerational. What distinguishes Transgenerational Genealogy from conventional or Jungian approaches is plunging deeper into the Medieval, legendary, and mythic layers of one's pedigree, rather than just the first few generations. But we can not concentrate only on the royal lines, because many other descents far out number them. Genetically, they have no priority.
As someone's descendant we answer the call. The transgenerational group is integrated within the individual. For Jung, fantasy is an integrative function. Imaginative expressions of hidden forces appear spontaneously as the direct expression of psychic life, creative and imaginative activity.
Our lineage is our own personal Mystery Play. We can allow the phenomena to speak - the multitude of personalities to speak, to be personified. Images are also voices -- messages from the dead. We need a sense of the ancestors. “The lived body” is a receptacle of past experiences, of a knowing that bypasses knowledge.
They can also impress themselves on us. The children of the traumatized have always carried their parents’ suffering under their skin. Some carry secrets more slippery, combustible and secret than sex and more dangerous than any shadow or ghost.” Epigenetics transmits the experiences of one generation which insinuate themselves into the next.
https://newrepublic.com/article/120144/trauma-genetic-scientists-say-parents-are-passing-ptsd-kids
Being is an aspect of non-being.
Non-being is no different than being.
Until you understand this Truth,
You won't see anything clearly.
One is all...All are One.
When you realize this,
What reason for holiness or wisdom?
~Seng Ts'an~
QUESTION 5: Can I help the spirit of my dead father by trying to live in accordance with the demands of the unconscious?
Dr. Jung: Yes, provided—one must always add—that the spirit of the dead father [remains a living idea].
I call this idea hygienic, because when I think that way everything is right in my psychic life and when I don't think that way everything goes wrong, then somewhere things don't click, at least in the biological sense.
~Carl Jung, C.G. Jung Speaking: Interviews and Encounters, Pages 383-386.
Obviously, all genealogy is transgenerational. What distinguishes Transgenerational Genealogy from conventional or Jungian approaches is plunging deeper into the Medieval, legendary, and mythic layers of one's pedigree, rather than just the first few generations. But we can not concentrate only on the royal lines, because many other descents far out number them. Genetically, they have no priority.
As someone's descendant we answer the call. The transgenerational group is integrated within the individual. For Jung, fantasy is an integrative function. Imaginative expressions of hidden forces appear spontaneously as the direct expression of psychic life, creative and imaginative activity.
Our lineage is our own personal Mystery Play. We can allow the phenomena to speak - the multitude of personalities to speak, to be personified. Images are also voices -- messages from the dead. We need a sense of the ancestors. “The lived body” is a receptacle of past experiences, of a knowing that bypasses knowledge.
They can also impress themselves on us. The children of the traumatized have always carried their parents’ suffering under their skin. Some carry secrets more slippery, combustible and secret than sex and more dangerous than any shadow or ghost.” Epigenetics transmits the experiences of one generation which insinuate themselves into the next.
https://newrepublic.com/article/120144/trauma-genetic-scientists-say-parents-are-passing-ptsd-kids
Being is an aspect of non-being.
Non-being is no different than being.
Until you understand this Truth,
You won't see anything clearly.
One is all...All are One.
When you realize this,
What reason for holiness or wisdom?
~Seng Ts'an~
ENDOGENOUS ANCESTORS
At the End of the Line
At the End of the Line
The transformation of the libido through symbols has occurred since the beginnings of humanity. Symbols were (and are) never devised consciously but always unconsciously. It is more than probable that most of the historical symbols derive directly from dreams or are at least influenced by them.
--Jung, C., Collected Works of C. G. Jung, Vol. 8. 2nd ed., Princeton University Press, 1972. 588 p. (p. 45-61
--Jung, C., Collected Works of C. G. Jung, Vol. 8. 2nd ed., Princeton University Press, 1972. 588 p. (p. 45-61
Endogenous means having an internal cause or origin, growing or originating from within an organism, or a disease or symptom not attributable to any external or environmental factor. In some sense, this describes our entanglement with our ancestors all the way back to the dawn of time -- a sort of spiritual endogenesis.
Sometimes large shoots spring from our root, while others are tiny branches. End-of-line ancestors are our research leading edge. Parents of some ancestors are unknown and virtually unknowable, at least at this time. We all have them. We think about them. We study them. We even dream about them. Once we find their parents, we do a quick Genealogy Happy Dance, and then it starts over again - we now have new end-of-line ancestors.
Who are your end-of-line ancestors? "Direct-line ancestors with no parents" option. Your direct-line ancestors who do not have known parents are your end-of-line ancestors. So what is the strategy for extending a line? Especially a line that has reached or nearly reached the theoretical or practical limit. There are a lot of posts and other articles on the so-called brick wall problem.
Historical Fiction
Place your ancestors in time and space. Where were you born? If you don't know, then that is the first step in your genealogical digging. Your mother was there when you were born. Your grandmother was there when your father was born and so forth and so on. So how did your mother get to where you were born? By the way, the same rule does not hold true for your father. He may have been just about anywhere or even deceased when you were born. We spend an awful lot of time looking for male members of our families when it is the females that hold all the links to all the information.
The idea is to locate at least one event in a particular location. The problem in finding your great-great-grandfather isn't really about him, it is about his children, at least one of whom survived to adulthood or you would not be here. There is one more rule, it may seem very cynical, but you have a much better chance of identifying the true mother of your ancestor than you do the true father. No matter how certain you may think you are, there is always a measure of uncertainty in any pedigree where the mothers are not positively identified. If you want to blindly ignore this principle, you do so at your own peril.
If you don't know where a relative was born or where he or she lived, then you are skipping a generation. Focus on the children. Find out as much as you can about the children. Where and when were they born? Where did they live? On and on and on. Focus on those events and places where you can positively identify the time period in which they lived and the place. Look for records at that time and in that place. Instead of spending years looking for your great-great-grandfather, spend you time looking for your great-grandfather and finding your great-great-grandfather just might take care of itself.
First, end-of-line ancestors are part of genealogy. That doesn't mean there is nothing you can do. Most often though people pound against the brick wall that is the end-of-line ancestor, never wavering. This usually results in nothing but frustration. Instead, you may need to attack the problem from a different angle or a different generation. Stand back from your end-of-line ancestor.
Some suffers invent imaginary ancestors or link to unproven connections. This delusion can be seen by the proliferation of ancestors named Mr. or Mrs. End-of-line on many online family trees. Some of these invented individuals take on the same name as the last verified ancestor with the same birthdate, and thereby allow the sufferer to extend the ancestral line for many generations. Both of these situations can be seen in the following screenshot where father and son have the same names and the same wives' names and the line is extended with a Mr. and Mrs.
Evaluate Where You Are
Evaluating where you are in your research means more than just simply looking at your pedigree chart or family group sheet of your end-of-line ancestor. It means reexamining all your research on that line up to this point. To effectively accomplish such a reevaluation requires that you have some method of organization when it comes to the copies you have made.
In addition to organizing the records you have found, you must also be tracking your negative research. After all, with the positive research, you have photocopies or transcriptions that let you know that you looked in a given source. With negative evidence, there is nothing to show for the search unless you are recording that information. Research logs are critical to this. Research logs should be used for both negative and positive research. A research log, when properly kept, can aid you during this time of reexamination.
What Are You Missing?
As you look at your pedigree chart and family group sheets, look at them from the aspect of what you might not have done in your research. With a discerning eye, see if you have jumped over some records in your zeal to get back another generation. It is tempting to skip records if our ancestors are showing up in the census records. But those records we skipped may hold the clues to where you should go next. They may be the records that prove your previous information is in error, especially if all you have has come from the census records.
Perhaps you might want to compare your research to a resources checklist to see what records you may have overlooked in your research. It is natural for us to stick with what we know. When comparing the records we have already checked with such a list, we often discover new resources that may solve the brick wall.
In Conclusion
"More Than Kin, and Less Than Kind"
Usually when you go back and review your past research you will often discover overlooked records or incorrect evaluations in past research. In some instances your ever growing knowledge and experience will give you a better eye to evaluating the information found and not found than you had when you originally did the research. If you find no information, after making a reasonably exhaustive search, you may be at the end of your line.
Pedigree Collapse - http://genealogysstar.blogspot.com/2011/10/pedigree-collapse-and-end-of-line.html
Sometimes large shoots spring from our root, while others are tiny branches. End-of-line ancestors are our research leading edge. Parents of some ancestors are unknown and virtually unknowable, at least at this time. We all have them. We think about them. We study them. We even dream about them. Once we find their parents, we do a quick Genealogy Happy Dance, and then it starts over again - we now have new end-of-line ancestors.
Who are your end-of-line ancestors? "Direct-line ancestors with no parents" option. Your direct-line ancestors who do not have known parents are your end-of-line ancestors. So what is the strategy for extending a line? Especially a line that has reached or nearly reached the theoretical or practical limit. There are a lot of posts and other articles on the so-called brick wall problem.
Historical Fiction
Place your ancestors in time and space. Where were you born? If you don't know, then that is the first step in your genealogical digging. Your mother was there when you were born. Your grandmother was there when your father was born and so forth and so on. So how did your mother get to where you were born? By the way, the same rule does not hold true for your father. He may have been just about anywhere or even deceased when you were born. We spend an awful lot of time looking for male members of our families when it is the females that hold all the links to all the information.
The idea is to locate at least one event in a particular location. The problem in finding your great-great-grandfather isn't really about him, it is about his children, at least one of whom survived to adulthood or you would not be here. There is one more rule, it may seem very cynical, but you have a much better chance of identifying the true mother of your ancestor than you do the true father. No matter how certain you may think you are, there is always a measure of uncertainty in any pedigree where the mothers are not positively identified. If you want to blindly ignore this principle, you do so at your own peril.
If you don't know where a relative was born or where he or she lived, then you are skipping a generation. Focus on the children. Find out as much as you can about the children. Where and when were they born? Where did they live? On and on and on. Focus on those events and places where you can positively identify the time period in which they lived and the place. Look for records at that time and in that place. Instead of spending years looking for your great-great-grandfather, spend you time looking for your great-grandfather and finding your great-great-grandfather just might take care of itself.
First, end-of-line ancestors are part of genealogy. That doesn't mean there is nothing you can do. Most often though people pound against the brick wall that is the end-of-line ancestor, never wavering. This usually results in nothing but frustration. Instead, you may need to attack the problem from a different angle or a different generation. Stand back from your end-of-line ancestor.
Some suffers invent imaginary ancestors or link to unproven connections. This delusion can be seen by the proliferation of ancestors named Mr. or Mrs. End-of-line on many online family trees. Some of these invented individuals take on the same name as the last verified ancestor with the same birthdate, and thereby allow the sufferer to extend the ancestral line for many generations. Both of these situations can be seen in the following screenshot where father and son have the same names and the same wives' names and the line is extended with a Mr. and Mrs.
Evaluate Where You Are
Evaluating where you are in your research means more than just simply looking at your pedigree chart or family group sheet of your end-of-line ancestor. It means reexamining all your research on that line up to this point. To effectively accomplish such a reevaluation requires that you have some method of organization when it comes to the copies you have made.
In addition to organizing the records you have found, you must also be tracking your negative research. After all, with the positive research, you have photocopies or transcriptions that let you know that you looked in a given source. With negative evidence, there is nothing to show for the search unless you are recording that information. Research logs are critical to this. Research logs should be used for both negative and positive research. A research log, when properly kept, can aid you during this time of reexamination.
What Are You Missing?
As you look at your pedigree chart and family group sheets, look at them from the aspect of what you might not have done in your research. With a discerning eye, see if you have jumped over some records in your zeal to get back another generation. It is tempting to skip records if our ancestors are showing up in the census records. But those records we skipped may hold the clues to where you should go next. They may be the records that prove your previous information is in error, especially if all you have has come from the census records.
Perhaps you might want to compare your research to a resources checklist to see what records you may have overlooked in your research. It is natural for us to stick with what we know. When comparing the records we have already checked with such a list, we often discover new resources that may solve the brick wall.
In Conclusion
"More Than Kin, and Less Than Kind"
Usually when you go back and review your past research you will often discover overlooked records or incorrect evaluations in past research. In some instances your ever growing knowledge and experience will give you a better eye to evaluating the information found and not found than you had when you originally did the research. If you find no information, after making a reasonably exhaustive search, you may be at the end of your line.
Pedigree Collapse - http://genealogysstar.blogspot.com/2011/10/pedigree-collapse-and-end-of-line.html
We are just beginning to learn what lurks in our genome and psyche, and what these ancestral forms or ancestral sequences mean to us today. Some hark back to the macroevolution of our species. Ancient viruses are still with us from our earliest common primate ancestors via proviral insertion. Ancient viral DNA may play a key role in how human stem cells work.
We also have relics from other hominid species, such as Neanderthal and Denisovan. Endogenous substances and processes are those that originate from within an organism, tissue, or cell. Endogenous viral elements (EVEs) are DNA sequences derived from viruses that are ancestrally inserted into the genomes of germ cells. Caused or produced by factors within a model, organism, organization, or system.
http://www.evolutionnews.org/2011/05/do_shared_ervs_support_common_046751.html
http://www.fsmitha.com/time/timeline.htm
In The Forgotten Language, Erich Fromm opens up the world of symbolic language, “the one foreign language that each of us must learn.” Understanding symbols, he posits, helps us reach the hidden layers of our individual personalities, as well as connect with our common human experiences. By grasping the symbolic language of dreams, Fromm explains, we can then also understand the deeper wisdom of myths, art, and literature. This also gives us access to what we, and our society, usually repress.
"The murder of speech is the self-murder of the human animal, a suicidal evisceration of our species' specific endowment. Like tigers losing their stripes, like beached whales and blind eagles are we without our rhetoric. Speech is our body, speech is our shape, speech is our beauty." (James Hillman)
Dead Ends are where real research begins.
What is it, at this moment and in this individual, that represents the natural urge of life? That is the question. That question neither science, nor worldly wisdom, nor religion, nor the best of advice can resolve for him. The resolution can come solely from absolutely impartial observation of those psychological germs of life which are born of the natural collaboration of the conscious and the unconscious on the one hand and of the individual and the collective on the other. Where do we find these germs of life? One man seeks them in the conscious, another in the unconscious. ~Carl Jung, CW 7, Page 290.
We also have relics from other hominid species, such as Neanderthal and Denisovan. Endogenous substances and processes are those that originate from within an organism, tissue, or cell. Endogenous viral elements (EVEs) are DNA sequences derived from viruses that are ancestrally inserted into the genomes of germ cells. Caused or produced by factors within a model, organism, organization, or system.
http://www.evolutionnews.org/2011/05/do_shared_ervs_support_common_046751.html
http://www.fsmitha.com/time/timeline.htm
In The Forgotten Language, Erich Fromm opens up the world of symbolic language, “the one foreign language that each of us must learn.” Understanding symbols, he posits, helps us reach the hidden layers of our individual personalities, as well as connect with our common human experiences. By grasping the symbolic language of dreams, Fromm explains, we can then also understand the deeper wisdom of myths, art, and literature. This also gives us access to what we, and our society, usually repress.
"The murder of speech is the self-murder of the human animal, a suicidal evisceration of our species' specific endowment. Like tigers losing their stripes, like beached whales and blind eagles are we without our rhetoric. Speech is our body, speech is our shape, speech is our beauty." (James Hillman)
Dead Ends are where real research begins.
What is it, at this moment and in this individual, that represents the natural urge of life? That is the question. That question neither science, nor worldly wisdom, nor religion, nor the best of advice can resolve for him. The resolution can come solely from absolutely impartial observation of those psychological germs of life which are born of the natural collaboration of the conscious and the unconscious on the one hand and of the individual and the collective on the other. Where do we find these germs of life? One man seeks them in the conscious, another in the unconscious. ~Carl Jung, CW 7, Page 290.
"(It is with people as with trees.) The more one seeks to rise into height and light, the more vigorously do ones roots struggle earthward, downward, into the dark, the deep — into evil." - Nietzsche
When I say "Psyche" I mean something unknown,
to which I give the name "Psyche."
~Carl Jung, Letters Vol. II, Pages 583-584
"Psychoanalysis cannot be considered a method of education if by education we mean the topiary art of clipping a tree into a beautiful artificial shape. But those who have a higher conception of education will prize most the method of cultivating a tree so that it fulfills to perfection its own natural conditions of growth." --Jung, The Theory of Psychoanalysis (1953)
to which I give the name "Psyche."
~Carl Jung, Letters Vol. II, Pages 583-584
"Psychoanalysis cannot be considered a method of education if by education we mean the topiary art of clipping a tree into a beautiful artificial shape. But those who have a higher conception of education will prize most the method of cultivating a tree so that it fulfills to perfection its own natural conditions of growth." --Jung, The Theory of Psychoanalysis (1953)
HALL OF RECORDS
VITA BREVIS, GENEALOGIA LONGA
20/20 Hindsight - Family History & the Human Family
Circles With A Spiritual Center
VITA BREVIS, GENEALOGIA LONGA
20/20 Hindsight - Family History & the Human Family
Circles With A Spiritual Center
Nature centers into balls,
And her proud ephemerals,
Fast to surface and outside,
Scan the profile of the sphere;
Knew they what that signified,
A new genesis were here.
--Emerson, Circles, http://www.emersoncentral.com/circles.htm
"The eye is first circle; the horizon which it forms is the second; and throughout nature this primary figure is repeated without end.
Our life is an apprenticeship to the truth that around every circle another can be drawn; that there is no end in nature, but every end is a beginning; that there is always another dawn risen on mid-noon, and under every deep a lower deep opens.”
Here Emerson is linking up the idea of that little orbit, or the pupil through which we perceive the world, with the symbol of God, it is the equivalent of God.
It is the creative eye that sees everything and creates everything.
The first cosmogonic myth was the creation of light, the seeing – out of the eye of God came the first light. So when we enter the pupil, are we entering our own eye, or the creative womb of the world?” ~Carl Jung, Visions Seminar, Page 307
And her proud ephemerals,
Fast to surface and outside,
Scan the profile of the sphere;
Knew they what that signified,
A new genesis were here.
--Emerson, Circles, http://www.emersoncentral.com/circles.htm
"The eye is first circle; the horizon which it forms is the second; and throughout nature this primary figure is repeated without end.
Our life is an apprenticeship to the truth that around every circle another can be drawn; that there is no end in nature, but every end is a beginning; that there is always another dawn risen on mid-noon, and under every deep a lower deep opens.”
Here Emerson is linking up the idea of that little orbit, or the pupil through which we perceive the world, with the symbol of God, it is the equivalent of God.
It is the creative eye that sees everything and creates everything.
The first cosmogonic myth was the creation of light, the seeing – out of the eye of God came the first light. So when we enter the pupil, are we entering our own eye, or the creative womb of the world?” ~Carl Jung, Visions Seminar, Page 307
Hermeneutic Union
Hermes was messenger and interpreter between gods and mortals. Hermeneutics is "to make clear." It is an approach cultivating our ability to interpret or understand from another's perspective, and applying that insight, empathy, and understanding to interpretation or making sense of any situation.
Hermeneutics is a technique for background understanding of another’s mind and worldview. It concerns judging psychological accuracy from inaccuracy. Accurate beliefs deliver long-term satisfactions by distinguishing between accurate and inaccurate readings of situations by contextualizing them and comparing them.
Text & Context
Hermeneutics is a research paradigm we can apply in genealogy research. A hermeneutical and less epistemological understanding of the genealogical method avoids the paradoxes of perspectivism and the metaphorics of vision by construing the phenomenon not as a physical object but as a text.
Introspection does not provide full self-knowledge. We want to understand our presuppositions, pivotal experiences and abilities on which our knowledge-claims are based. We seek understanding rather than explanations. Self-aware people know that they have blind spots. Self-aware people know they have unconscious baggage that is hard to notice or overcome.
Genealogical explanations concern the relations between the act or state of believing and the content that is believed. A genealogy explains the advent of a belief, in the sense of a believing, (an attitude) in terms of contingencies of its etiology, appealing exclusively to facts that are not evidence, that do not provide reasons or justifications, for the truth of what is believed.
Knowledge Transfer Pathways
Human affairs aren't governed by a set of natural laws, so hermeneutics provides interpretive understanding of the actions and meanings created by historically and culturally situated actors. Our ancestors are symbolically situated along the knowledge transfer pathways of the branches of the family tree, genetic and epigenetic vectors. These convergent ancestral lines are like great caravan routes of the mind, littered with the bones of ancient journeys.
Verification procedures are both internal and relative to the particular kinds of perspectives. We develop systems of meaning and justification to make sense out of the world, understanding perennial aspects of the lived experience of meaning.
Relational hermeneutics is a full-bodied, soul-engaged, heart-transforming encounter that involves the subjective worldview of the interpreter as much as the process of interpretation. Theories of embodiment are grounded in a phenomenological comprehension of the lived-body, including knowledge embedded within our physical form.
Life, Expression, Understanding
The hermeneutic tradition values and explores the meanings of human experiences as they are lived. Such meanings are lived in cultural, sub-cultural, linguistic, religious, and gendered contexts. Sociocultural perspectives on psychological phenomena require careful attention. Not merely inner experience, lived experience recognizes the historical dimension in the psychological.
Hermeneutic philosophy sketches a more balanced and credible approach to finding a genuine alternative to modern individualism and postmodernist relativism. What is the power of interpretation? What can we get at through interpreting? Can we get at Essences of things? Like the difference between symbol and image, hermeneutics subordinates the universal to the particular.
Interpretive Perspectives
In philosophy and psychology it includes the interpretation of all texts and systems of meaning, including experiences. In the domain of genealogy it also includes recognition, metaphors, and insinuation. Psychological hermeneutics is the body of knowledge enabling insight and the discussion of biopsychosocial cause and effect.
Whatever is conscious exists along with psychological meanings in relation to present, past and future relationships between people -- and in relation to the relationship that people have with themselves. The ways of making sense of people in all situations is inextricably tied up with emotions and working out what exists for them and about them.
However, we are never other people nor do we ever have access to their consciousness. We cannot feel what they do or have the same life experiences as they. We can only interpret others from our prior understanding. Empathy occurs within oneself but is the central connection to others. To be empathic is to interpret empathy “out of” one’s own experience of other people.
Genealogy As Context
Experiences derive meaning from their overall position in the totality of our involvements in the world. Once born into the specific body, family, place and time in which we live, we have to deal with the details of ordinary life, temporal contexts, and social relationships. In this view there is no doing without being, no thought without feeling, no action without reaction, no values without ethics, no self without others. Being in a context is a multi-faceted whole, classically symbolized in the genealogical chart.
Hermeneutic engagement works with both Above and Below. Hermeneutic union lies in the shared realities through which we create meaning. It amplifies environmental identity for our ancestors. We all create symbolic and imaginal worlds.
Our genealogy personal history is the best promise we have for understanding our shared humanity because it is physiologically grounded. As genealogists we interpret our own psycho-history. Psychogenealogy is a rigorous psychological and historical analysis of our lineage and its interactive effect on ourselves.
The genealogist does claim to be capturing the phenomenon as it really is. Genealogy is not simply another perspective. The only way to challenge the results of one genealogical analysis would be to produce another genealogical analysis either of the original phenomenon or of the initial genealogical account itself. Genealogy is not easy to do successfully.
Hermes was messenger and interpreter between gods and mortals. Hermeneutics is "to make clear." It is an approach cultivating our ability to interpret or understand from another's perspective, and applying that insight, empathy, and understanding to interpretation or making sense of any situation.
Hermeneutics is a technique for background understanding of another’s mind and worldview. It concerns judging psychological accuracy from inaccuracy. Accurate beliefs deliver long-term satisfactions by distinguishing between accurate and inaccurate readings of situations by contextualizing them and comparing them.
Text & Context
Hermeneutics is a research paradigm we can apply in genealogy research. A hermeneutical and less epistemological understanding of the genealogical method avoids the paradoxes of perspectivism and the metaphorics of vision by construing the phenomenon not as a physical object but as a text.
Introspection does not provide full self-knowledge. We want to understand our presuppositions, pivotal experiences and abilities on which our knowledge-claims are based. We seek understanding rather than explanations. Self-aware people know that they have blind spots. Self-aware people know they have unconscious baggage that is hard to notice or overcome.
Genealogical explanations concern the relations between the act or state of believing and the content that is believed. A genealogy explains the advent of a belief, in the sense of a believing, (an attitude) in terms of contingencies of its etiology, appealing exclusively to facts that are not evidence, that do not provide reasons or justifications, for the truth of what is believed.
Knowledge Transfer Pathways
Human affairs aren't governed by a set of natural laws, so hermeneutics provides interpretive understanding of the actions and meanings created by historically and culturally situated actors. Our ancestors are symbolically situated along the knowledge transfer pathways of the branches of the family tree, genetic and epigenetic vectors. These convergent ancestral lines are like great caravan routes of the mind, littered with the bones of ancient journeys.
Verification procedures are both internal and relative to the particular kinds of perspectives. We develop systems of meaning and justification to make sense out of the world, understanding perennial aspects of the lived experience of meaning.
Relational hermeneutics is a full-bodied, soul-engaged, heart-transforming encounter that involves the subjective worldview of the interpreter as much as the process of interpretation. Theories of embodiment are grounded in a phenomenological comprehension of the lived-body, including knowledge embedded within our physical form.
Life, Expression, Understanding
The hermeneutic tradition values and explores the meanings of human experiences as they are lived. Such meanings are lived in cultural, sub-cultural, linguistic, religious, and gendered contexts. Sociocultural perspectives on psychological phenomena require careful attention. Not merely inner experience, lived experience recognizes the historical dimension in the psychological.
Hermeneutic philosophy sketches a more balanced and credible approach to finding a genuine alternative to modern individualism and postmodernist relativism. What is the power of interpretation? What can we get at through interpreting? Can we get at Essences of things? Like the difference between symbol and image, hermeneutics subordinates the universal to the particular.
Interpretive Perspectives
In philosophy and psychology it includes the interpretation of all texts and systems of meaning, including experiences. In the domain of genealogy it also includes recognition, metaphors, and insinuation. Psychological hermeneutics is the body of knowledge enabling insight and the discussion of biopsychosocial cause and effect.
Whatever is conscious exists along with psychological meanings in relation to present, past and future relationships between people -- and in relation to the relationship that people have with themselves. The ways of making sense of people in all situations is inextricably tied up with emotions and working out what exists for them and about them.
However, we are never other people nor do we ever have access to their consciousness. We cannot feel what they do or have the same life experiences as they. We can only interpret others from our prior understanding. Empathy occurs within oneself but is the central connection to others. To be empathic is to interpret empathy “out of” one’s own experience of other people.
Genealogy As Context
Experiences derive meaning from their overall position in the totality of our involvements in the world. Once born into the specific body, family, place and time in which we live, we have to deal with the details of ordinary life, temporal contexts, and social relationships. In this view there is no doing without being, no thought without feeling, no action without reaction, no values without ethics, no self without others. Being in a context is a multi-faceted whole, classically symbolized in the genealogical chart.
Hermeneutic engagement works with both Above and Below. Hermeneutic union lies in the shared realities through which we create meaning. It amplifies environmental identity for our ancestors. We all create symbolic and imaginal worlds.
Our genealogy personal history is the best promise we have for understanding our shared humanity because it is physiologically grounded. As genealogists we interpret our own psycho-history. Psychogenealogy is a rigorous psychological and historical analysis of our lineage and its interactive effect on ourselves.
The genealogist does claim to be capturing the phenomenon as it really is. Genealogy is not simply another perspective. The only way to challenge the results of one genealogical analysis would be to produce another genealogical analysis either of the original phenomenon or of the initial genealogical account itself. Genealogy is not easy to do successfully.
Goddess of Childbirth
The name Artemis, from αρτεμέω , means “to be safe and sound.” In the first century, Strabo (63/64 BC–ca. AD 24) wrote in his Geography, “Artemis has her name from the fact that she makes people ‘artemeas’ meaning sound, well, or delivered.” Strabo connects “Artemis” with deliverance. Artemis, having special sympathy for women in travail from her first days, came to be associated with virginity and midwifery, especially in Ephesus.
In Attic Greek, the concepts of “deliver” and “save” went together. Although Artemis Ephesia is associated with “childbirth” and midwifery, she is not linked with mothering or domestic life. A distinction must be made between delivering babies and actually bearing children—between midwifery and fertility or sexuality.
Rather than a fertility goddess, Artemis Ephesia was revered for delivering a woman through life’s most dangerous passage, childbirth -- the number one cause of death in women. The fully female, yet undomesticated goddess presided at births without links to sex, fertility, or nurturing. As there is midwifery for birth, there is midwifery for death -- for a Dark Goddess midwife of the soul and authentic clarity. Nature is our balm and our spirit is fed by the earth.
Images are the "creative womb of the world," and we are each the midwife of the soul. Jung says you "must give dignity to your image as a life-giving factor, you must know that your imagination is capable of something, that it is able to create, no matter what its apparent antecedents were." (Visions Seminar, Page 306.)
Trans-Sensory Aesthetic
We perceive psychic imagery from an expanded palette of perceptual nuance. Psychic images are 'perceived' as trans-sensory. Synesthesia is a melding of senses unconstrained by external perception, combining different sensory stimuli extending to new sensory domains. Multisensory aesthetics engages them all in aesthetic totality. Creativity is a necessary factor in coming to know and opening to the other. To uncover or discover something is to come upon it.
Images come in from outside through our senses, and are generated internally by unconscious dynamics as an immediate multisensory narrative of experience, often metaphorical in nature. We rarely focus our conscious awareness on this imaginal wellspring, but sometimes it intrudes on consciousness during our gaps in awareness – day dreaming, fantasies, reverie, lacunae, inspiration, discovery.
Experience is never a full encounter with primary 'raw' material, but we may find ourselves in the otherness of existence. Jeanne Achterberg describes how pre-verbal imagery acts on our cellular, biochemical, and physiological activity to alter our physical being. She suggests a sort of nonlocal imagery transfer from one person to the physical substrate of others.
For metaphor to elicit nuance it must be fresh, not dead; it must shock the mind into wonder by opening up a gap, an abyss, a void. The patterning principle transcends and contains all forms. Imagery is the natural expression of the pregnant void urgently fleshing itself out to the fullest extent. These images are not ‘ours’, but arise from the primordial matrix. This image stream is full of unborn information and we are its midwife.
Such transpersonal imagery is qualitative yet effective. Poetry helps us bring together what life has separated or violence torn apart, defying the space that separates with metaphor and correspondence -- conjunction, making connections, past and present. Almost forgotten archaeological layers of belief still poke through the surface, old echoes that stretch sacred religious absolutes.
Transpersonal imagery is psycho-sensory imagery that exists and acts across persons -- from one person to another, and we can add alive or not. The imagery functions as a bridge, connecting the conscious or unconscious, imaginal content or activity of one person with the conscious or unconscious, physiological or psychological activities or experiences of another person.
Reflection gives shape to the imaginal. Each ancestor, object, or body is also an imaginal image. We can call it resonance, or reflected waveforms, or echoes. Echoes sound in a deep dark unity, as vast as night itself and as the light, scents, colors, and sounds correspond. The image stream or imaginal process is our primary experience and permeates and conditions all facets of human life.
Synaesthetic Imagery
In "Correspondences", Baudelaire says, " As far-off echoes from a distance sound In unity profound and recondite, Boundless as night itself and as the light, Sounds, fragrances, and colors correspond." He reasoned that sound should suggest color, and color a melody as a reciprocal analogy of sensory modes, as indivisible totality.
Nature, as Anima Mundi is a primeval partner with humanity that 'talks', 'watches', symbolizes, and associates. A sense of clustering associations between individual and collective past is a 'genuine' experience.
Naturally, in genealogy, such experiences explore processes that extend beyond ordinary conditions of knowing, being, and doing. They encompass wider aspects of humankind, life, psyche and cosmos, placing the personal in a larger 'spiritual' context and awareness in which we are coterminous and continual. Such images can be exciting or calming. We can attune to the powers of archetypal symbols. Capacity for symbol use is universal, innate, and central to understanding. Images are always unique and contextual.
Encountering the Past
The reach of the imaginal includes distant knowing and distant imaginal influences. Henri Corbin has described the different forms of imaginal process or creative imagination where it becomes possible to directly perceive subtle or spiritual realities. Such empowered imagination is dynamic and nonlocal.
Our ancient ancestors may have taken such phenomena much more literally, as animistic and ontological 'beings' with names derived from their cultural beliefs. Without metaphorical understanding, everything is only what it is and must be met on the simplest, most direct material level.
But we don't need to defend against separation by returning to participation mystique or literalism. The truth of the psyche precedes every other kind of truth, back to the phenomenological ground, to the images themselves, not a return to the things.
Real Presences, Not Literal
Modern thought often tries to find body by gathering literal data and making it concrete. But Hillman sees literalism and reification psychologically as an ego viewpoint, the enemy of the soul, and suggests we seek the bodies of ideas and words themselves, the body of an image. Though the soul does not construct its reality out of literal sense impressions, and it cannot be observed only by the physical senses, it is no less real.
"Rationality is only one aspect of the world and does not cover the whole field of experience. Psychic events are not caused merely from without and mental contents are not mere derivatives of sense-perceptions." (Jung, Letters Vol. II, P. 600-603) Both Jung and Hillman, who represents 3rd generation Jungian thought, caution us against literalism:
"Even a genuine and original inner life has a tendency to succumb again and again to the sensualism and rationalism of consciousness, i.e., to literal-mindedness. (Jung, Letters Vol. II, Pages 600-603)
“An axiom of depth psychology asserts that what is not admitted into awareness irrupts in ungainly obsessive, literalistic ways, affecting consciousness with precisely the qualities it strives to exclude. Personifying not allowed as a metaphorical vision returns in concrete form: we seize upon people, we cling to other persons.” (Hillman, Re-Visioning Psychology, p. 46.)
Hillman's argument can also be applied to psychogenealogy:
"It is this dayworld style of thinking—literal realities, natural comparisons, contrary opposites, processional steps—that must be set aside in order to pursue the dream into its home territory. There thinking moves in images, resemblances, correspondences. To go in this direction, we must sever the link with the dayworld, foregoing all ideas that originate there—translation, reclamation, compensation. We must go over the bridge and let it fall behind us, and if it will not fall, then let it burn." (The Dream and the Underworld)
The future looks even more bizarre than our wildest dreams,
but, as a modern fantasy, it may suggest or help us conceptualize a way to revision our ancestors:
Imagine a world where the entire World-Wide Web (augmented by the coming 3-D Metaverse, successor to 2-D Internet) becomes your exocortex with instant access to information and virtual reality experience. You can interact with and/or experience yourself as any person on the planet ever lived - AI would recreate that person out of available records and collective subconscious. Furthermore, you can experience virtually any being, creature, historical or imaginary, any idea or entity, or collective of minds.
From the evolutionary point of view our biological brains are a bridge to post-biological artificial superbrains. And one could argue with a high degree of certainty that posthumanity will represent a highly organized network of digital minds of our post-biological descendants, substrate independent advanced informational beings, "infomorphs".
While infomorphs may have multiple cybernetic and virtual bodies, they will possess near-perfect information-handling abilities by using holographic language, instant data and knowledge transfer, inherent synthetic telepathy and intersubjective mind sharing for interaction as well as conceptual merging/un-merging
http://www.ecstadelic.net/ecstadelic/tue-feb-09-2016
The core point is that humans are inherently delusional and that most (not all) efforts at secrecy are aimed at preserving delusions. The one antidote to delusion is reciprocal accountability and criticism — others do not share your delusions. They can use evidence to point out your errors… and you will return the favor. This is the very heart of science — not some gnosticmystic search for “hidden codes.”
The validity of preverbal imagery as an accurate means of knowing and efficacy has been demonstrated by Larry Dossey, MD and others in immunological, physiological and behavioral studies. The imagery is 'transpersonal' by definition because it acts on a person other than the 'source' from which it originates, or a person other than the person in whom it is acting.
Jung claimed in his Visions Seminar: "Thinking would be up in the head; sensation about the level of the mouth; intuition in the region of the heart; and then down below in the abdomen would be feeling. You feel with the abdomen, not the heart, and that is of course a particular kind of feeling."
Some are more acutely aware of the imaginal, more open to the reflective instinct. The perpetual stream of consciousness is undergird by a dynamic flux of multisensory imagery, which springs from the creative fountain within us all. We imagine rather than perceive images. Images are a dynamic meld of multimodal textures. Imagination itself has an intermediary status between the physical and conceptual level of spirit.
Morphing images are the only reality we apprehend directly. When we look at fantasy images we see the face of instinctual libido staring back at us. Fantasy is an imaginal activity that is the flow of psychic energy. Image and meaning are identical, embodied perpetually in the dynamically shifting image stream. The entire image conveys its own mood and meaning instinctually and does not require analysis or interpretation.
Images only relate indirectly to external reality. They emerge as reverie, proto-emotion, impulse, and amorphous cognition. An image carries its own inherent meaning which is sort of a ‘condensed expression of the psychic situation as a whole.’ Further, ‘the image is an expression of the unconscious as well as the conscious situation of the moment,’ according to Jung.
Images are self-revelatory. Imagination is a direct expression of psychic life. Imagination flows forth from the imaginal field continually, self-organizing its multisensory narrative and conditioning our experiences. In fact, this imaginal dimension is our experience. Everything we perceive of ourselves, others and world is filtered through it.
Anyone can apply as much or little of such ideas as they like to their ancestral project. We all have the capacity. But we can enhance our capacity through preparedness, familiarity with the imaginal world, self-regulation, concentration, and developing skill in negotiating this realm with creative imagination...and knowing our living lineage. Genealogy can be a death/rebirth initiation.
We die at home in history. Confronting non-being, existence takes on vitality. Confronting death bring us to the threshold of living authentically. It may change what we perceive is real about life. Here and now takes on the importance of the moment.
The Sum of All Fears
Adversity is like a strong wind. It tears away from us all but the things that cannot be torn, so that we see ourselves as we really are. --Arthur Golden
Awareness and openness to the reality of death is a link to all we value in human experience, from love to creativity, to yearning for immortality. We all struggle for the courage to confront death and to struggle against it. Fear of death and creativity are related through the long term perspective we bring to it.
Rebirth brings a reassessment of the meaning of life and the means to express buried creative energy. Genealogy is the sum of all histories -- a path integral formulation which generalizes all action into a unique trajectory -- a sum over history of probabilities and fundamental events.
We all develop fictions about our lives. We build things up over the years in our imagination and come to believe them as true. Healing and integration comes when we discover or rediscover our own personal story. Almost any story is certainly some kind of 'lie' but also contains the greater truth of primal patterns.
We learn to 'read' the lives of our ancestor like a painter read the marks, or behaviors on the canvas as one might read a literary passage. Our vocabulary needs building and in this process verbal discussion can be very helpful. Genealogy provides an adequately functional vocabulary.
Archetypes represent such sums deriving individual histories from fundamental processes. Larger fundamental processes are one of the great central ideas in managing infinities. The sum of all ancestors implies we do travel every possible path and choose our individual path through interference patterns from those infinities.
Jung thought it necessary to coordinate the activities streaming out of the matrix of the unconscious with consciousness. He funneled the fantasies of the unconscious into the conscious mind, not in order to destroy them but to develop them. "Developing fantasy means perfecting our humanity." "The repressed tendencies that are made conscious should not be destroyed but, on the contrary, should be developed further."
Genealogy is an ultimate integral symbol. Integral means necessary, very important, essential to completeness, composed of constituent parts, elemental, indispensable, intrinsic, fundamental. As Jung suggests, “Until you make the unconscious conscious, it will direct your life and you will call it fate.”
In Jung's depth-oriented approach, depth-oriented approach. “Wholeness is not achieved by cutting off a portion of one's being, but by integration of the contraries.” To paraphrase Jung, our genealogy contains 'readable archetypes', and presents not only a picture of the actual situation but also of the future, exactly like dreams. According to Jung, when a personal experience corresponds to a latent primordial image, an archetype is activated.
What is the sum of all nostrils that have breathed, all teeth that have eaten, all fingers that have felt, ears that heard, and eyes that have seen? The sum of all parts -- the indefinite integral essential to completeness -- the sum of all helical gears from the endpoint of genetic potential is a mutual awakening.
Psychological distress can be managed by experientially-based, self-directed change and integration. With our genealogical integration, we re-member ourselves to honor and embrace every legitimate aspect of human consciousness. There is a Source underlying the creation and evolution of the universe from which all things originate and to which all things return.
"The older I grow the more impressed I am by the frailty and uncertainty of our understanding, and all the more I take recourse to the simplicity of immediate experience so as not to lose contact with the essentials, namely the dominants which rule human existence throughout the millenniums." (Jung, Letters Vol. II, Pages 579-580)
As Nietzsche says: "Out of such abysses, from such severe sicknesses, one returns newborn...with a more delicate taste for joy, with a more tender tongue for all good things, with merrier senses, with a second dangerous innocence in joy."
https://books.google.com/books?id=YPD9dymggnYC&pg=PA450&lpg=PA450&dq=trans-sensory+imagery&source=bl&ots=-fPM4ZEm0F&sig=BRlRZ0_u2St9HwLQlUV0_CNwyuM&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjttZ-LouHKAhUC4SYKHTB7BZYQ6AEIHDAA#v=onepage&q=trans-sensory%20imagery&f=false
The name Artemis, from αρτεμέω , means “to be safe and sound.” In the first century, Strabo (63/64 BC–ca. AD 24) wrote in his Geography, “Artemis has her name from the fact that she makes people ‘artemeas’ meaning sound, well, or delivered.” Strabo connects “Artemis” with deliverance. Artemis, having special sympathy for women in travail from her first days, came to be associated with virginity and midwifery, especially in Ephesus.
In Attic Greek, the concepts of “deliver” and “save” went together. Although Artemis Ephesia is associated with “childbirth” and midwifery, she is not linked with mothering or domestic life. A distinction must be made between delivering babies and actually bearing children—between midwifery and fertility or sexuality.
Rather than a fertility goddess, Artemis Ephesia was revered for delivering a woman through life’s most dangerous passage, childbirth -- the number one cause of death in women. The fully female, yet undomesticated goddess presided at births without links to sex, fertility, or nurturing. As there is midwifery for birth, there is midwifery for death -- for a Dark Goddess midwife of the soul and authentic clarity. Nature is our balm and our spirit is fed by the earth.
Images are the "creative womb of the world," and we are each the midwife of the soul. Jung says you "must give dignity to your image as a life-giving factor, you must know that your imagination is capable of something, that it is able to create, no matter what its apparent antecedents were." (Visions Seminar, Page 306.)
Trans-Sensory Aesthetic
We perceive psychic imagery from an expanded palette of perceptual nuance. Psychic images are 'perceived' as trans-sensory. Synesthesia is a melding of senses unconstrained by external perception, combining different sensory stimuli extending to new sensory domains. Multisensory aesthetics engages them all in aesthetic totality. Creativity is a necessary factor in coming to know and opening to the other. To uncover or discover something is to come upon it.
Images come in from outside through our senses, and are generated internally by unconscious dynamics as an immediate multisensory narrative of experience, often metaphorical in nature. We rarely focus our conscious awareness on this imaginal wellspring, but sometimes it intrudes on consciousness during our gaps in awareness – day dreaming, fantasies, reverie, lacunae, inspiration, discovery.
Experience is never a full encounter with primary 'raw' material, but we may find ourselves in the otherness of existence. Jeanne Achterberg describes how pre-verbal imagery acts on our cellular, biochemical, and physiological activity to alter our physical being. She suggests a sort of nonlocal imagery transfer from one person to the physical substrate of others.
For metaphor to elicit nuance it must be fresh, not dead; it must shock the mind into wonder by opening up a gap, an abyss, a void. The patterning principle transcends and contains all forms. Imagery is the natural expression of the pregnant void urgently fleshing itself out to the fullest extent. These images are not ‘ours’, but arise from the primordial matrix. This image stream is full of unborn information and we are its midwife.
Such transpersonal imagery is qualitative yet effective. Poetry helps us bring together what life has separated or violence torn apart, defying the space that separates with metaphor and correspondence -- conjunction, making connections, past and present. Almost forgotten archaeological layers of belief still poke through the surface, old echoes that stretch sacred religious absolutes.
Transpersonal imagery is psycho-sensory imagery that exists and acts across persons -- from one person to another, and we can add alive or not. The imagery functions as a bridge, connecting the conscious or unconscious, imaginal content or activity of one person with the conscious or unconscious, physiological or psychological activities or experiences of another person.
Reflection gives shape to the imaginal. Each ancestor, object, or body is also an imaginal image. We can call it resonance, or reflected waveforms, or echoes. Echoes sound in a deep dark unity, as vast as night itself and as the light, scents, colors, and sounds correspond. The image stream or imaginal process is our primary experience and permeates and conditions all facets of human life.
Synaesthetic Imagery
In "Correspondences", Baudelaire says, " As far-off echoes from a distance sound In unity profound and recondite, Boundless as night itself and as the light, Sounds, fragrances, and colors correspond." He reasoned that sound should suggest color, and color a melody as a reciprocal analogy of sensory modes, as indivisible totality.
Nature, as Anima Mundi is a primeval partner with humanity that 'talks', 'watches', symbolizes, and associates. A sense of clustering associations between individual and collective past is a 'genuine' experience.
Naturally, in genealogy, such experiences explore processes that extend beyond ordinary conditions of knowing, being, and doing. They encompass wider aspects of humankind, life, psyche and cosmos, placing the personal in a larger 'spiritual' context and awareness in which we are coterminous and continual. Such images can be exciting or calming. We can attune to the powers of archetypal symbols. Capacity for symbol use is universal, innate, and central to understanding. Images are always unique and contextual.
Encountering the Past
The reach of the imaginal includes distant knowing and distant imaginal influences. Henri Corbin has described the different forms of imaginal process or creative imagination where it becomes possible to directly perceive subtle or spiritual realities. Such empowered imagination is dynamic and nonlocal.
Our ancient ancestors may have taken such phenomena much more literally, as animistic and ontological 'beings' with names derived from their cultural beliefs. Without metaphorical understanding, everything is only what it is and must be met on the simplest, most direct material level.
But we don't need to defend against separation by returning to participation mystique or literalism. The truth of the psyche precedes every other kind of truth, back to the phenomenological ground, to the images themselves, not a return to the things.
Real Presences, Not Literal
Modern thought often tries to find body by gathering literal data and making it concrete. But Hillman sees literalism and reification psychologically as an ego viewpoint, the enemy of the soul, and suggests we seek the bodies of ideas and words themselves, the body of an image. Though the soul does not construct its reality out of literal sense impressions, and it cannot be observed only by the physical senses, it is no less real.
"Rationality is only one aspect of the world and does not cover the whole field of experience. Psychic events are not caused merely from without and mental contents are not mere derivatives of sense-perceptions." (Jung, Letters Vol. II, P. 600-603) Both Jung and Hillman, who represents 3rd generation Jungian thought, caution us against literalism:
"Even a genuine and original inner life has a tendency to succumb again and again to the sensualism and rationalism of consciousness, i.e., to literal-mindedness. (Jung, Letters Vol. II, Pages 600-603)
“An axiom of depth psychology asserts that what is not admitted into awareness irrupts in ungainly obsessive, literalistic ways, affecting consciousness with precisely the qualities it strives to exclude. Personifying not allowed as a metaphorical vision returns in concrete form: we seize upon people, we cling to other persons.” (Hillman, Re-Visioning Psychology, p. 46.)
Hillman's argument can also be applied to psychogenealogy:
"It is this dayworld style of thinking—literal realities, natural comparisons, contrary opposites, processional steps—that must be set aside in order to pursue the dream into its home territory. There thinking moves in images, resemblances, correspondences. To go in this direction, we must sever the link with the dayworld, foregoing all ideas that originate there—translation, reclamation, compensation. We must go over the bridge and let it fall behind us, and if it will not fall, then let it burn." (The Dream and the Underworld)
The future looks even more bizarre than our wildest dreams,
but, as a modern fantasy, it may suggest or help us conceptualize a way to revision our ancestors:
Imagine a world where the entire World-Wide Web (augmented by the coming 3-D Metaverse, successor to 2-D Internet) becomes your exocortex with instant access to information and virtual reality experience. You can interact with and/or experience yourself as any person on the planet ever lived - AI would recreate that person out of available records and collective subconscious. Furthermore, you can experience virtually any being, creature, historical or imaginary, any idea or entity, or collective of minds.
From the evolutionary point of view our biological brains are a bridge to post-biological artificial superbrains. And one could argue with a high degree of certainty that posthumanity will represent a highly organized network of digital minds of our post-biological descendants, substrate independent advanced informational beings, "infomorphs".
While infomorphs may have multiple cybernetic and virtual bodies, they will possess near-perfect information-handling abilities by using holographic language, instant data and knowledge transfer, inherent synthetic telepathy and intersubjective mind sharing for interaction as well as conceptual merging/un-merging
http://www.ecstadelic.net/ecstadelic/tue-feb-09-2016
The core point is that humans are inherently delusional and that most (not all) efforts at secrecy are aimed at preserving delusions. The one antidote to delusion is reciprocal accountability and criticism — others do not share your delusions. They can use evidence to point out your errors… and you will return the favor. This is the very heart of science — not some gnosticmystic search for “hidden codes.”
The validity of preverbal imagery as an accurate means of knowing and efficacy has been demonstrated by Larry Dossey, MD and others in immunological, physiological and behavioral studies. The imagery is 'transpersonal' by definition because it acts on a person other than the 'source' from which it originates, or a person other than the person in whom it is acting.
Jung claimed in his Visions Seminar: "Thinking would be up in the head; sensation about the level of the mouth; intuition in the region of the heart; and then down below in the abdomen would be feeling. You feel with the abdomen, not the heart, and that is of course a particular kind of feeling."
Some are more acutely aware of the imaginal, more open to the reflective instinct. The perpetual stream of consciousness is undergird by a dynamic flux of multisensory imagery, which springs from the creative fountain within us all. We imagine rather than perceive images. Images are a dynamic meld of multimodal textures. Imagination itself has an intermediary status between the physical and conceptual level of spirit.
Morphing images are the only reality we apprehend directly. When we look at fantasy images we see the face of instinctual libido staring back at us. Fantasy is an imaginal activity that is the flow of psychic energy. Image and meaning are identical, embodied perpetually in the dynamically shifting image stream. The entire image conveys its own mood and meaning instinctually and does not require analysis or interpretation.
Images only relate indirectly to external reality. They emerge as reverie, proto-emotion, impulse, and amorphous cognition. An image carries its own inherent meaning which is sort of a ‘condensed expression of the psychic situation as a whole.’ Further, ‘the image is an expression of the unconscious as well as the conscious situation of the moment,’ according to Jung.
Images are self-revelatory. Imagination is a direct expression of psychic life. Imagination flows forth from the imaginal field continually, self-organizing its multisensory narrative and conditioning our experiences. In fact, this imaginal dimension is our experience. Everything we perceive of ourselves, others and world is filtered through it.
Anyone can apply as much or little of such ideas as they like to their ancestral project. We all have the capacity. But we can enhance our capacity through preparedness, familiarity with the imaginal world, self-regulation, concentration, and developing skill in negotiating this realm with creative imagination...and knowing our living lineage. Genealogy can be a death/rebirth initiation.
We die at home in history. Confronting non-being, existence takes on vitality. Confronting death bring us to the threshold of living authentically. It may change what we perceive is real about life. Here and now takes on the importance of the moment.
The Sum of All Fears
Adversity is like a strong wind. It tears away from us all but the things that cannot be torn, so that we see ourselves as we really are. --Arthur Golden
Awareness and openness to the reality of death is a link to all we value in human experience, from love to creativity, to yearning for immortality. We all struggle for the courage to confront death and to struggle against it. Fear of death and creativity are related through the long term perspective we bring to it.
Rebirth brings a reassessment of the meaning of life and the means to express buried creative energy. Genealogy is the sum of all histories -- a path integral formulation which generalizes all action into a unique trajectory -- a sum over history of probabilities and fundamental events.
We all develop fictions about our lives. We build things up over the years in our imagination and come to believe them as true. Healing and integration comes when we discover or rediscover our own personal story. Almost any story is certainly some kind of 'lie' but also contains the greater truth of primal patterns.
We learn to 'read' the lives of our ancestor like a painter read the marks, or behaviors on the canvas as one might read a literary passage. Our vocabulary needs building and in this process verbal discussion can be very helpful. Genealogy provides an adequately functional vocabulary.
Archetypes represent such sums deriving individual histories from fundamental processes. Larger fundamental processes are one of the great central ideas in managing infinities. The sum of all ancestors implies we do travel every possible path and choose our individual path through interference patterns from those infinities.
Jung thought it necessary to coordinate the activities streaming out of the matrix of the unconscious with consciousness. He funneled the fantasies of the unconscious into the conscious mind, not in order to destroy them but to develop them. "Developing fantasy means perfecting our humanity." "The repressed tendencies that are made conscious should not be destroyed but, on the contrary, should be developed further."
Genealogy is an ultimate integral symbol. Integral means necessary, very important, essential to completeness, composed of constituent parts, elemental, indispensable, intrinsic, fundamental. As Jung suggests, “Until you make the unconscious conscious, it will direct your life and you will call it fate.”
In Jung's depth-oriented approach, depth-oriented approach. “Wholeness is not achieved by cutting off a portion of one's being, but by integration of the contraries.” To paraphrase Jung, our genealogy contains 'readable archetypes', and presents not only a picture of the actual situation but also of the future, exactly like dreams. According to Jung, when a personal experience corresponds to a latent primordial image, an archetype is activated.
What is the sum of all nostrils that have breathed, all teeth that have eaten, all fingers that have felt, ears that heard, and eyes that have seen? The sum of all parts -- the indefinite integral essential to completeness -- the sum of all helical gears from the endpoint of genetic potential is a mutual awakening.
Psychological distress can be managed by experientially-based, self-directed change and integration. With our genealogical integration, we re-member ourselves to honor and embrace every legitimate aspect of human consciousness. There is a Source underlying the creation and evolution of the universe from which all things originate and to which all things return.
"The older I grow the more impressed I am by the frailty and uncertainty of our understanding, and all the more I take recourse to the simplicity of immediate experience so as not to lose contact with the essentials, namely the dominants which rule human existence throughout the millenniums." (Jung, Letters Vol. II, Pages 579-580)
As Nietzsche says: "Out of such abysses, from such severe sicknesses, one returns newborn...with a more delicate taste for joy, with a more tender tongue for all good things, with merrier senses, with a second dangerous innocence in joy."
https://books.google.com/books?id=YPD9dymggnYC&pg=PA450&lpg=PA450&dq=trans-sensory+imagery&source=bl&ots=-fPM4ZEm0F&sig=BRlRZ0_u2St9HwLQlUV0_CNwyuM&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjttZ-LouHKAhUC4SYKHTB7BZYQ6AEIHDAA#v=onepage&q=trans-sensory%20imagery&f=false
Werner Hornung, "Don't settle for anything less"; motion effects by George RedHawk
Genealogical Mystery Tour
Through Your Family Tree
Through Your Family Tree
"Nothing has a stronger influence psychologically on their environment and especially on their children than the unlived life of the parent." --Jung, Contributions To Analytical Psychology (1928)
"Great talents are the most lovely and often the most dangerous fruits on the tree of humanity. They hang upon the most slender twigs that are easily snapped off." (Jung, Psychological Aspects of the Mother Archetype (1938))
"Great talents are the most lovely and often the most dangerous fruits on the tree of humanity. They hang upon the most slender twigs that are easily snapped off." (Jung, Psychological Aspects of the Mother Archetype (1938))
THE ART OF CROSSING OVER
ReKINdled
Joy comes from fulfillment, but not from longing.
~Philemon to Carl Jung; The Red Book; Page 341
Similarly, the unconscious pits itself against the conscious, and it is the special tragedy of man that in order to win consciousness he is forced into dissociation with nature. ~Carl Jung, 1925 Seminar, Page 38
"What is the human? . . .The myths in which our lives are embedded . . . are built deeply into character, often below awareness, so that they are essentially religious, matters of faith.'' --Gregory Bateson
The unconscious is not just evil by nature, it is also the source of the highest good: not only dark but also light, not only bestial, semihuman, and demonic but superhuman, spiritual, and, in the classical sense of the word, “divine.”
--Jung, The Practice of Psychotherapy (1953)
Drawing forth the subtle resonances through which the ground of awakening can be discovered is what the great thirteenth-century kabbalistic master Isaac the Blind called “suckling.” It is based on a thirst for the nourishment of absolute meaning in the midst of the barrage of its relative projections. It coaxes and draws forth its nutrition by direct immersion in the onslaught of mind’s upheaval, accepting and rejecting nothing, always reaching further and deeper to recognize what is truly meaningful with single-pointed focus.
The suckling is accomplished through the flesh and blood of appearance, poised at the cusp of its emergence and dissolution. As poetic resonances flood the perceptual fields the ground of space sparkles with scintillating life, suffusing it with ungraspable beauty. Contemplation trains the mind to enter this boundless resource no matter what things appear to do or not do. It hangs with the spread of pure possibility, hiding within the parade of everyday details, displaying and consuming itself like the Ouroboros serpent swallowing its own tail.
--David Chaim Smith, "The Awakening Ground" (Inner Traditions 2016)
ReKINdled
Joy comes from fulfillment, but not from longing.
~Philemon to Carl Jung; The Red Book; Page 341
Similarly, the unconscious pits itself against the conscious, and it is the special tragedy of man that in order to win consciousness he is forced into dissociation with nature. ~Carl Jung, 1925 Seminar, Page 38
"What is the human? . . .The myths in which our lives are embedded . . . are built deeply into character, often below awareness, so that they are essentially religious, matters of faith.'' --Gregory Bateson
The unconscious is not just evil by nature, it is also the source of the highest good: not only dark but also light, not only bestial, semihuman, and demonic but superhuman, spiritual, and, in the classical sense of the word, “divine.”
--Jung, The Practice of Psychotherapy (1953)
Drawing forth the subtle resonances through which the ground of awakening can be discovered is what the great thirteenth-century kabbalistic master Isaac the Blind called “suckling.” It is based on a thirst for the nourishment of absolute meaning in the midst of the barrage of its relative projections. It coaxes and draws forth its nutrition by direct immersion in the onslaught of mind’s upheaval, accepting and rejecting nothing, always reaching further and deeper to recognize what is truly meaningful with single-pointed focus.
The suckling is accomplished through the flesh and blood of appearance, poised at the cusp of its emergence and dissolution. As poetic resonances flood the perceptual fields the ground of space sparkles with scintillating life, suffusing it with ungraspable beauty. Contemplation trains the mind to enter this boundless resource no matter what things appear to do or not do. It hangs with the spread of pure possibility, hiding within the parade of everyday details, displaying and consuming itself like the Ouroboros serpent swallowing its own tail.
--David Chaim Smith, "The Awakening Ground" (Inner Traditions 2016)
THE LAST LEAF ON THE TREE
THE CRADLE OF AWAKENING
"It is indeed a major effort-the magnum opus in fact-to escape in time from the narrowness of its embrace and to liberate our mind to the vision of the immensity of the world, of which we form an infinitesimal part." (Jung, Letters Vol. II, Pages 579-580)
Life Force
Stay in your living presence, feel all the life going on in you at once; feel the cohesion, the live presence of open awareness, here and now. See how you come directly to life. Come into living presence, more and more.
We are called to remembrance of where we came from -- the cradle of nature -- to refresh the dream of mythic origins. Feel the rhythm of awakening to the lifeworld, the root pulse encoding our becoming.
Contemplate the origin of the universe, the creation of matter, and the creation of life and reproduction -- "they who engender, they who create" -- evolution entering into time.
Oceanic Metaphor
We chart our legacy in an ancestral sea with many shores -- an almost infinite genepool of lifeforms. Jung called the sea, "one of the best known symbols for the prima materia, as the mother of all life. All life came from the sea, and we feel life streaming into us from an unknown source, as it were from the sea." Water is a metaphor for prima materia, psychical nature, and concealed unconscious processes.
We navigate between our role-bound persona currents and the rip tides of mythic imperatives. The abyss of the transcendent imagination is symbolized by the sea. Those waters, swelling waves of humanity, are charged with memories. You can see the past. Between our ordinary social lives and the timeless mythic realm we remain attentive to whatever comes to presence.
As we move forward in imaginal space with only our shadows behind, we find our passed lives in front of us. The serpent curls back to eat its tail and digests childhood, gestation, the ancestors, our phylogeny.
The personal and universal tale of psyche quickens and sustains us through cyclic emergence, death and resurrection, connecting individual destiny with transcendent humanity. Unknowable transpersonal nature, non-conscious, integrates us further back than conscious processes.
Collective Generative Space
Genealogy is a dynamic expression and an experience of psycho-historical recovery of the self. It is our initiation into a deeper awareness, larger order, a greater ecology of Being. Why waste the time of eternity?
Embarking on our genealogical project is essentially a contract with ourselves to make a labyrinthine transformational journey through psycho-history and human development to complete it. Psyche informs our experience of ourselves and the universe in the most fundamental ways, including trans-sensory imagery or synesthesia.
We compress time to quickly mull over a prospective path before embarking upon it. As generators of reality, we feel where our center of gravity pulls most fully. There lies our spring of awakening. Through our dreams we know what life has to offer.
When we listen, psyche speaks. Even sadness, grief, and pain carry sacred life energy. Stay close to those sensations and surround it with presence and with warmth. Not your story ‘about’ sadness or pain, nor an interpretations of it, but the raw sensations coursing through you as a living guide of aliveness, come to remind you of something you’ve forgotten.
We Being
Our project is one of both ancestral and psycho-historical recovery. A virtually indescribable sense of wonder accompanies any new discovery. The fusion of history and psyche is a marriage of what we have been and what we eternally are. The shock of recognition is mediated and nuanced by our ancestors. Metaphor makes symbolic use of historical material.
We can use our genealogy to engage the figures of our ancestors, those who came before. We find well-being when we are connected to Source, to the 'well' of our psychic creativity, the 'well of living water' or the 'still waters' of the inner soul, symbol of the unchanging source from which we all drink deeply.
From ancient times, the well is symbolically, and literally, located at the center of the community. There they drew water, the basic sustenance for life. Metaphorically, the well represents all the social resources of the community necessary to endure and thrive. If the well falls into disrepair, if the life giving water is polluted or diminished in quantity, the community suffers [like Flint, Michigan recently].
The well is a symbol for our 'inner community'. The well is a universal symbol for that which sustains life. We enrich our lives by delving deeply into our essential natures to reach the source of true nourishment. The well is also a symbol of healthy community.
Beyond heroic counseling and ordinary external well-being is 'we-being' and the reality of the living psyche, also reflected in the I Ching hexagram, The Well. It also appears as the image of a woman as a source of water: cross-culturally, the well serves as an image and symbol of woman. You might find your spouse at the well in times past.
We may understand being unconsciously conscious but we can also be consciously aware of the unconscious. Stimulating us, perhaps we stimulating it, an energy exchange is occurring. As we begin to know about this, the energy exchange occurs as waves of energy that flow through us and perhaps some means that establishes a coherence.
Paths of Transformation
We are each living metaphors. Our genealogy is our natural History. Our psychogenealogy is the natural history of our soul. The ancestors saturate our ordinary lives, as do successful rituals such as genealogy practice which are central to our lives. There is another kind of primordial human in us that responds to a transgenerational approach to the family tree -- a therapy of the heart and ideas.
This biologically encoded history of the human race is present in every person at the unconscious level as archaic traits. In this sense, the meaning of life is you. Gnosis (not Gnosticism) dissolves the idea that outer and inner or personal and cosmic distinctions exist, allowing phenomena to return to its basis -- the awakening ground -- as a single, uninterrupted continuum, as symbolized in our Family Tree.
Unlimited, Immortal Archetype
"Self-reflection, or – what comes to the same thing – the urge to individuation, gathers together what is scattered and multifarious and exalts it to the original of the One, the Primordial Man.
In this way our existence as separate beings, our former ego nature, is abolished, the circle of consciousness is widened, and because the paradoxes have been made conscious, the sources of conflict are dried up." --Jung, Collected Works 11, Transformation Symbolism in the Mass; Paragraph 401
Jung called the primordial ancestor 'the two million year old man," the instinctive self, rooted in nature, who speaks the forgotten symbolic language of the unconscious. It encompasses the entire history of the human race. The age is arbitrary. In 1997 a 4.4 million-year-old human ancestor was found, the most primitive hominid species known. The father of all men is 340,000 years old.
https://www.newscientist.com/article/dn23240-the-father-of-all-men-is-340000-years-old/
http://phys.org/news/2014-07-scientists-timeline-human.html
Our unknown companion -- the 'Indigenous One' or indigenous root -- symbolizes the emergence of our species as a personal revelation. "Well now, I have within myself a “man” who is millions of years old, and he perhaps can throw light on these metaphysical problems." (Jung, 1925 Seminar, Page 12).
The "Seed of Mankind"
Genealogy and depth psychology are both psychic archaeology, seeking elemental wisdom to reconnect us and heal our wounds. Both are a move from biological to cultural transformation. How can we know the unknowable, much less make friends and relations of this archetypal self as a mirror of our universe, this healing principle of our species from the beginning of time?
Our survival is mutually entwined with our instincts, connection to nature, and unforgotten wisdom. Giving up our roots results in a restlessness of the soul that leads to many forms of mental and emotional problems, the worst of which is meaninglessness. Sir Francis Bacon said, 'In order for the light to shine so brightly, the darkness must be present.' And, "wounds cannot be cured without searching." Our separation is painful because it is more than our souls can stand.
As Hermann Hesse noted in Reflections, "We each and all of us, contain within us the entire history of the world, and just as our body records Man’s genealogy as far back as the fish and then some, so our soul encompasses everything that has ever existed in human souls. All gods and devils that have ever existed are within us as possibilities, as desires, as solutions."
"The other Gods died of their temporality, yet the supreme meaning never dies, it turns into meaning and then into absurdity, and out of the fire and blood of their collision the supreme meaning rises up rejuvenated anew." (Jung, Liber Novus, Page 230.)
All epochs dwell in us as the unconscious, timeless, creative matrix of the psyche. It only seems like we experience the archetypes at the existential levels for the first time, because they are inherent. Our personal history is rooted in the collective transhistorical journey. Recovering old knowledge creates new possibilities. We realize ourselves as living history.
Our genealogy reflects the metaphor of a landscape and travelers. The travelers obey inherited rules (archetypes) that determine loosely which routes are possible and which not, separating the feasible from the impossible. The rules are hidden, but are recorded in our charts and patterns, in the form of myths, stories, rituals, norms and other archetypal images.
Surprisingly, even with vast correlations, only a few pathways (patterns) emerge. Each branch of the tree is a set of parallel landscapes, corresponding to different levels of being or consciousness, but all part of the same world (unus mundus).
Ancestral Medicine Ways
Gaining consciousness within the flow of the Spirit is the sacred purpose of Ancestral ways. Medicine is revealed when this consciousness is established. Discoveries that follow are from the participation with the Great Spirit and Mother Life. A carrier of these ways accepts the responsibilities, ethics, principles and records that are held accountable to all that exists.
Resolution or failure of an epigenetic crisis by a global historical figure can have potent consequences in their own age, and perhaps others, including their descendants. Psycho-history is full of such examples, especially in noble and royal lines.
We all have ancestors, both of blood and of spirit, and each of our lives rests firmly on the foundation of their sacrifice. They are as near to us as our breath and bones, and when related with in conscious ways, they can be a tremendous source of healing, guidance, and companionship. We can learn to accept life with all its imperfections -- unconditional acceptance of life itself.
The ancestors we choose to honor may include not only recent and more distant family but also beloved friends and community, cultural and religious leaders, and even other-than-human kin such as companion animals. Our ancestors bring vital support to fulfill our potential here on Earth, and, through involvement in our lives, also further their own growth and maturation in the spirit realms.
Like the living, spirits of the deceased run the full spectrum from wise and loving to self-absorbed and harmful. Physical death is a major event for the soul, a rite of passage we will all face, and the living can provide critical momentum for the recently deceased to make the initiatory leap to become a helpful ancestor.
Once the dead have become ancestors, part of their post-death journey may include making repairs for wrongs committed while here on Earth. For their sake and for ours, it’s good to spend a little time now and again feeding our relationships with the ancestors. We think and speak about life in terms of travel: birth as “arrival,” death as “departure,” careers as “paths” and choices as “crossroads.”
Direct contact with the spirits of the ancestors can be cultivated through ritual practices; however, communication may also happen spontaneously in forms such as dream contact, waking encounters, and synchronicity. When we have a framework to receive their outreach, their work is made easier and we are open to the enjoyment of conscious, ongoing relationship.
You don’t have to be an indigenous shaman or ghost whisperer to have a direct, intimate, and healthy relationship with your ancestors. We all have loving ancestors who want us to fulfill our destiny as happy and well-adjusted people, and in my experience, our ancestors are the ideal guides for family healing as they are invested in seeing their future generations thrive.
Just as in any meaningful relationship, our bonds with the ancestors call for care and renewal. By proactively engaging in simple actions to honor and feed these relationships, our ancestors can become a tremendous source of healing, empowerment, and nourishment in our everyday lives. Fortunately, these practices of tending are relatively simply and can be carried out by anyone with sincere intent.
http://ancestralmedicine.org/five-ways-to-honor-your-ancestors/
Going Nowhere: Ascending & Descending
As a whole, the Tree symbolizes the true self. Ancestors are among the most essential ways we have of participating with realities greater than ourselves. Our lines are full of ascending and descending currents we can follow to Source and Ground -- the One in the Many and the Many in the One. Genealogy is a metaphysical map of our personal paths back to the legendary and mythic layers of our being in connective boundary-transcending conscious events.
Consciousness is the alchemical prima materia, our awareness, our true selves -- the essence of the Great Work. The mystical marriage is the unification and transcendence of male/female duality. Conflicting drives originating on the spiritual, mental, emotional, and physical levels create splits in the personality. "We can conquer unconsciousness by regular work but never by a grand gesture." (Jung, 1925 Seminar, Page 31)
Jung says that, "The obvious analogy, in the psychic sphere, to this problem of opposites is the dissociation of the personality brought about by the conflict of incompatible tendencies resulting as a rule from an inharmonious disposition. The repression of one of the opposites leads only to a prolongation and extension of the conflict, in other words, to a neurosis."
Further, Jung said that "it very often does not depend upon the use one makes of an image, but rather upon the use the archetypes make of ourselves, which decides the question whether it will be artistic creation or a change of religious attitude.
I find that this "choice" is in many cases rather a fate than a voluntary decision.
I see that many of my pupils indulge in a superstitious belief in our so-called " free will" and pay little attention to the fact that the archetypes are, as a rule, autonomous entities, and not only material subject to our choice.
They are, as a matter of fact, dominants up to a certain point. That is the reason why one is confronted with an archetype, because we cannot undo it by merely making it conscious. It has to be taken into account and that is the main task of any prolonged analysis. The deviation from the dominants causes a certain dissociation, i.e., a loss of vitality, what the primitives call "a loss of soul." (Jung, Letters Vol. II, Pages 625-626)
Conscious Relationships
An integrated approach roots us in both past and present, as a common model for real life and consciousness that fosters transgenerational bonds, transformation, and integration. Both Transgenerational Integration (TI) and genealogy are full of rich themes to explore, including family ties, legacies, parenting, matriarchy and patriarchy (Gaillard).
https://books.google.com/books?id=_8xCBgAAQBAJ&pg=PP1&lpg=PP1&dq=Rooted+in+the+Present,+The+Emergence+of+the+Self+By+Thierry+Gaillard&source=bl&ots=sgePs-mKEu&sig=hz8-_otrO0u3ve0lHsusWYC7gHM&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwi63I7Eg8HKAhUCsoMKHVf3BocQ6AEIIzAB#v=onepage&q=Rooted%20in%20the%20Present%2C%20The%20Emergence%20of%20the%20Self%20By%20Thierry%20Gaillard&f=false
"It is possible that a certain historical atmosphere is born with us by means of which we can repeat strange details almost as if they were historical facts." (Carl Jung, 1925 Seminar, Page 39.)
In The Undiscovered Self, Jung poses a challenge that is relevant to psychogenealogy and the urgency of recovering our ancestral heritage:
"We are living in what the Greeks called the right time for a “metamorphosis of the gods,” i.e. of the fundamental principles and symbols. This peculiarity of our time, which is certainly not of our conscious choosing, is the expression of the unconscious man within us who is changing. Coming generations will have to take account of this momentous transformation if humanity is not to destroy itself through the might of its own technology and science."
The Transgenerational Integration movement is developing such awareness for both therapists and the general population. Part of that school of thought is an active psychological approach to genealogy and the ebb and flow of life itself, whether self-initiated or in the therapeutic relationship.
TI has its own genealogy rooted in the works of Freud, Jung, Fromm, and other methods, such as Gestalt, Transactional Analysis, and Metaphor Therapy. It also draws on established conceptual models from family therapy, including the genogram, a map of the family system that discloses the deeper forces that unknowingly influence our thoughts, behaviors and emotional experiences.
Entanglement & Re-enactment
TI does not suggest a radical paradigm shift to different tenets or fundamental assumptions, say, about the nature of reality -- changing initial conditions and/or assumptions. It amplifies existing therapeutic models. However, it helps account for errors and anomalies in the old or waning and competing paradigms and provides greater clarity and a higher information ratio.
All knowledge has gaps, and our self-knowledge is no exception. Climbing our family tree helps us fill in some of those gaps with myth, symbol, history, and immediate experiences of the power of presence and healing transformation. An occurrence can appear and be understood as a material event or a psychological experience, depending on the attitude, faith, and worldview of the observer.
Transgenerational therapy focuses on the relationships in a family. We carry many patterns from the generations that preceded us in our family tree. Family patterns are a very important factor that affects the 'inner child’. Many unconsciously "take on" destructive familial patterns of anxiety, depression, anger, guilt, loneliness, alcoholism, and even illness as a way of "belonging" in our families.
The impact of historical trauma and grief is transferred across successive generations. Transgenerational trauma manifests in current, repetitive personal issues and collective social issues. Trauma symptomology can include depression, unresolved grief, risk of self harm, relationship problems, destructive behaviors, emotional storms, and suicide. In the worst case, the trauma eliminates the ability to experience. If we hide ourselves or go numb to survive, to make pain and suffering go away, we make ourselves go away.
We can disentangle our destructive parts like we disentangle our ancestral lines. There is a truism in the recovery movement, that we must 'take care of it or pass it on,' to future generations. As invisible as Hades to our metaphorical blindness, hidden psychic contents or symptoms exert their influence upon us through the opacity of memory, locked in relationship between symptom and consciousness. There is a live past and a dead past, in generational dynamics.
The same fatal mistakes can be transmitted and repeated. Tragedies include ancestral fault, inherited guilt and family curses, a liability for transgressions, such as a self destructive disposition. Reflecting on death can sometimes help us see more clearly what’s important and what’s not. It’s a practice that can help us be able to experience more directly—and remind ourselves—what our real priorities are.
Greek tragedy has the recurrent motif of catastrophe that strikes not only the immediate family but determines the course of life for future offspring. Epigenetics as gene expression supports that notion. Networks of genes respond to social experiences, and because the unconscious does not distinguish, those experiences can be 'real' or imaginal. The soul is the true mother of the divine child.
Jung discovered that "the unconscious is working out enormous collective fantasies." (1925 Seminar, Page 35) Trauma can be inherited, but so can resilience.
Liminal Entities
“I am not what happened to me, I am what I choose to become.”
― C.G. Jung
“We are one, after all, you and I, together we suffer,
together exist, and forever will recreate each other.”
― Pierre Teilhard de Chardin
“The future belongs to those who give the next generation reason for hope.”
― Pierre Teilhard de Chardin
“A genuine odyssey is not about piling up experiences. It is a deeply felt, risky, unpredictable tour of the soul.” ―Thomas Moore, Care of the Soul
The fact, too, that the subject of these visions is very old and in confinio mortis suggests that a glance has been cast beyond the border, or that something from the other side has seeped through into our three-dimensional world. ~Carl Jung, Letters Vol. II, Pages 611-612
We in our Western ignorance do not see, or have forgotten, that man has or is visited by subjective inner experiences of an irrational nature which cannot be successfully dealt with by rational argument, scientific evidence, and depreciative diagnosis. ~Carl Jung, Letters Vol. II, Pages 600-603
Historically, there has been no shortage of metaphysical descriptions of the afterlife and the beings who allegedly inhabit it, but this is not that. We are concerned here only with certain imaginal approaches to the ancestors, relevant to psychogenealogy, the art of darkness, and unconscious exclusion. There is an impulse to both express and repress intuition.
With imagination we can go beyond ordinary reality. Accessing multidimensional reality includes intellectual, emotional and empathic knowing, as well as sensual or somatic knowing, including visionary and intuitive realizations. Spiritual knowing is related to participatory action or co-creation. These are excursions into the depths of the body, encounters with others, self, and eternity. Intuition demands representation for communication.
Jung notes, "Fantasy is a pre-stage of the symbol, but it is an essential characteristic of the symbol that it is not mere fantasy." (1925 Seminar, Page 11). There are many techniques that evoke a first-hand experience of the self through imagination, yet none are quite as personal and resonant as the ancestors and their transpersonal gnosis.
All knowing means we are engaged and participating, as well as experiencing. Insight is experiential vision, encompassing wisdom aspects of humankind, life, psyche, and cosmos. It is an emergent phenomena co-created by the different elements involved in the participatory event -- a personal engagement in world-transfiguring events as well as states of mind.
Rather than our ancestors, we can only look at the character of the knowledge they provide in ordinary and non-ordinary ways. Hidden knowledge’ is where fragile new ideas incubate. Conceptual confusion leads to metaphysical speculation and epistemological assumptions. Raw experience entangles with cultural forms.
What we know is that our god-image and self-images get transferred by interpretation of the nature of our own self-images, relationships, and experiences. Attachment is strong affectional bonds in which we play out emotional joy and distress, personality disturbance, anxiety, anger, depression, and detachment from unwilling separation or loss.
We feel the reality of the image as a specific value -- a transposition of psychological consciousness. Feelings are inherent in the image. The psychic realm is the spirit realm. Our descent to the depths is a pilgrimage to the inner universe, beyond rational consciousness. The background becomes present. The relationship involving the whole being simply is, and spoken to directly. God is the worldwide relation to all relations. Our fuller life includes the ancestors.
Relational Model
Genealogy is a relational model. Our part is to acknowledge the living relationship, nurture it with attention, and interpret it with intuition as a mental or spiritual relationship. We abandon the world of sensation and melt into the in-between where that relationship is foremost. Any splitting is only for purposes of interpretation or description. But it is only in that "in between" place that we can access who we are at the heart of it all.
The 'other' is abstraction through which we can experience the world, sometimes in a less or unlimited way in the world of relation -- a self-aware coherence with the other and unlimited store of wisdom. Life unfolding understanding emerges in the now, which is always present and timeless. Presence implies coming alive to this present moment, wherever we are, without changing our conditions.
Liminality Theory
Liminality is a motif, a transition, and a potentially numinous phenomenon. Liminal gaps allow libido to fall into the unfathomable psychic depths. Jung says, "The psychic depths are nature, and nature is creative life." Those psychic depths are so vast compared to ordinary space that emotion feels like it drains away into that immensity. Jung said, “…The main interest of my work is not concerned with the treatment of neuroses but rather with the approach to the numinous.” (1973: 377)
The challenge is to create a liminal space that operates as a bridge between the present and the future – beyond the status quo, and yet able to engage with it. Such linking experiences, a living and peopled drama, compare to our ancestors and their linking places in the family tree -- the drama of kinship.
An emotional storm can ignite with liminal entities that must be allowed to speak in a sense that somehow goes with truth and learning by experience. Liminal refers to a marginalized space of fertile chaos and creative potential ...a definition that reminiscent of our genealogical project.
A liminal presence is an unknown and unknowable something that exists outside all categories of our world (or any other) but between them. The branches of our family tree are liminal pathways, some visible, most invisible and undeterminable. “Liminal moments are times of tension, extreme reactions, and great opportunity,” a shift in the constitution.
Liminal Archetype
In Greek mythology, Hermes is the god of liminality and guide of souls. He guides both the souls of the dead to the underworld and sleepers to the realm of dreams. His ability to cross boundaries makes Hermes a mediator between the human and the divine realm, or between the personal psyche and the unconscious.
Messages from beyond the border of everyday reality illuminate our experience and bring eternity into time. The ancient Greeks viewed Hermes as psychopomp. They knew that without his guidance their disembodied shades would wander the earth eternally and–perhaps more frightening still–would leave them while still alive at the mercy of the lost shades of others.
The task of guiding the soul into the underworld cannot be minimized or omitted from psychology,” notes Lopez-Pedraza, because “death is death–the always fearful opposite of life –in spite of the fact that our culture has systematically repressed what death is to the psyche.” The value of having Hermes as one's companion in the descent to the underworld rather than Hades is that the psychopomp's role is to guide us in whatever ways are required to learn the lessons which a knowledge of death brings to the living of life.
More importantly, since we no longer are able to experience death as a communal experience, notes Lopez-Pedraza, if we look at solitary modern man's “desolation in the face of death from a psychology of depth, it has been to man's gain, because it provides him with the freedom to make death his own imaginative and intimate concern, to become better acquainted with his own images and emotions concerning death, thus enriching his psychic life” (93).
An aspect of Hermes' role as psychopomp is his unique ability to make the transition between the realms of the living and the dead, between the world of consciousness and the depths of the personal and collective unconscious. Because of his great skill at passing “in between” dimensions—whether these dimensions are physical, chronological, or psychological in nature–Hermes is also the god of all things liminal, all things transitional. “Ever a transitional figure,” Doty states with simplicity, “Hermes divinizes transition” (137).
“He is there, at all transitions,marking them as sacred, as eventful, as epiphany,” adds Downing, and “his presence reminds us that the crossing of every threshold is a sacred event” (56, 65). As a result, she concludes, “our awareness of Hermes' presence opens us to the sacredness of such moments, of those in-between times that are strangely frightening and we so often try to hurry past” (56).
Just as Hermes leads Priam to the place where he will retrieve the corpse of his beloved son, the place “where death will be faced and grief will meet its maker,” as Stein described the scene, so too have I been confronted with knowledge of the dead places within myself and the need to mourn the passing of those aspects of myself. Equally importantly, as Stein also notes of this episode from the Iliad, “this encounter with death also brings consciousness of a dead past that needs to be buried” (36). I am now arriving at that place where I am able to allow the injuries of a constricted childhood to be laid to rest, to let these wounds finally heal and scarify, and finally begin to look to a future more whole and alive than I had ever imagined.
possible.http://www.soulmyths.com/hermes.pdf
Public Liminality
Ritual and drama are public liminality. In Greek drama, Antigone is the daughter/sister of Oedipus and his mother, Jocasta. Her name means "worthy of one's parents" or "in place of one's parents". She descended across the horizon of consciousness -- the Bridge of Acheron into the archaic depths of the Underworld, prying open the chasm between the stark light of interrogation and the plunging darkness of the abyss.
The family of Oedipus is a kinship of tragedy because of incest (e.g. Antigone is the fruit of an incestuous union), slaying of kin, ancestral curses and personal errors that can be related to inherited guilt.
"Ismene my true sister, born from the same mother, is there any torment Oedipus suffered which Zeus will not impose on us while we yet live? There is nothing —
neither grief nor violence, shame nor dishonor —no evil you and I have not endured already." (Translation by Fainlight-Littman 2009, 139)
Antigone exposes a tragic ethical rift between the so-called feminine "Divine Law" which Antigone represents and the "Human Law," represented by the ruler Creon. A female figure questions the role of the patriarchal state and challenges the system that writes her off as insignificant. She denies, she refuses, she means it. Her authentic voice and claim to autonomy suggests a knowledge of unknown origin but consequence.
Questioning the system and political struggles and multiple exclusions is a very modern theme for an ancient tragedy. How many times has Antigone been reborn with the same predicament of delayed and displaced punishment? But she demands and maintains her voice, and sticks up for her family values without making her true self disappear. Her name is a homologue of that: Anti-Gone.
Antigone is a paradigm of bodily exposure and exile, political and gender struggles, bare and naked life -- naked awareness. In Sophocles, she puts the will of the gods ahead of man-made laws, but a cascade of fateful deaths still ensues to close the tragedy. But in Euripides, the calamity is averted by the intercession of Dionysus, followed by the marriage of Antigone and Hæmon.
Liminal Wisdom
Some sense of death hovers in the body. That cleft leads down directly to the unplumbed depths of the unconscious. If the quality of life is compromised, the issue is not survival alone, but the of quality of life we have have in surviving. We are dealing with an unsolvable fracture, which cannot be mended. We can try to soften the rupture.
Ancestors can rebuke or approve our behavior, whether this coincides with our conscious imagination, our understanding, or not. We may be surprised. Begging forgiveness can go either way.
Ordinarily, we are 'outsiders' to our inner life, but there are ways we can make inroads along our ancestral lines. If our own inner life is unknown, the inner lives of our ancestors is real terra incognita, a vast, unexplored territory we scarcely recognize and usually avoid.
Liminal Dreaming
Liminal entities are 'life stories' -- voices, faces, and names. Our psychophysiology is a liminal bridge. Language or dialog is another bridge. Mythic ancestors play cosmological roles. They hold the place of or define mythic concepts. Mythic ancestors often emerge in male/female pairs who are also mythical teachers.
Liminal entities help us ponder on our relationship with nature’s body and to our own bodies. Our inner and outer worlds remain largely disconnected -- dissociated. But, even then, we are unconsciously co-mingled with our ancestors. Out of misery comes fantasy. Even pain is information; the body tells us 'pay attention,' something is wrong here. Pain is a great teacher that makes us wiser.
Even if we master the external world, it is grounding to map our Tree as the landscape of our inner lives - our hopes and fears, values and beliefs, needs and motivations, complexities and contradictions. The impact they have on our everyday choices and behaviors roots us in deeper reality and self-awareness.
Doing genealogy or not, we can all experience spontaneous liminal experiences, even nightmarish ones (liminal terror) in dreams. Encounters with liminal phenomena almost always produce a sense of strangeness, uncomfortableness, or uncanniness.
Something that falls on the interstices of our conceptual and cultural "world" tends to reminds us of the fact that virtual mountains of phenomena have been, and are being, excluded from consciousness. Whereas reality itself is much bigger and stranger and more unbounded than ordinarily perceived.
Liminal Body
Liminality is a heuristic model in which our borderlands that both divide and connect become more permeable. Imagination transcends the physical limits of ancestral connectivity. In the midst of our own life-passages, such as (adolescence, mating, parenting, midlife, or old age), we become more liminal ourselves and perhaps more inclined to look for 'signs.' Ancient wisdom and patterns have a way of making themselves known.
Liminal phenomena are normally relegated to the periphery of our attention. It's as if attention quickens the ancestors. Because we are wired for pattern-recognition, sometimes we perceive patterns that aren't really there in regular noise, but then we find a 'real' meaning in that perception of what was formerly unknown or subconscious. The family tree is a multi-vocal symbol. The World Tree is our collective liminal body.
Liminal Bridge
Death is the ultimate liminal bridge that makes transformation from one realm to another possible. Ancestral bridges span liminal (threshold) spaces between worlds. Transformation comes in the unstable, unpredictable, precarious place without clear borders. Liminality is unstable, so it can pave the way for access to esoteric knowledge or understanding of both sides. Liminality is sacred, alluring, and dangerous.
“Between-ness” defines these spaces. Liminal places can range from borders and frontiers to no man’s lands and disputed territories, to crossroads, marshes, springs, caves, shores, rivers, volcanic calderas. In mythology, religion, and esoterics liminality can include such realms as the Abyss, Purgatory, or Da’at. When theologians deny they actually exist, they become doubly liminal.
Meaningful information can cross the threshold between the unconscious and conscious mind in a variety of traditional and idiosyncratic ways. Some might call it prayer, or ESP, "second sight," gnosis, guidance, or visionary experience. It doesn't matter what we call it. That only reflects our beliefs about the phenomena.
Liminal Ambiguity
Liminal personae slip through any network of classifications. The interpretation of 'conversations' is a subjective process, the content of which is meaningful primarily to the inquirer. It is simply a natural model of liminal states or entities in cultural domains -- the symbolic encoding of transitional phenomena.
Spaces can appear, disappear, reappear, and travel around between cracks of structures, resisting any concrete definitions or developmental progress. We play with elements of the familiar and unfamiliar. We might find ourselves traveling through another's body in a liminal narrative. The liminal field is personal, fictive, and mythic, just like the family tree.
Although irrepresentable and intangible, archetypes and ancestors can be visualized through their effects -- archetypal patterns, symbols, images, plots, characters and situations. These dynamic effects, can be expressed in myths, dreams, metaphors and generally narratives.
Transliminal
Liminality might appear at first glance as suggesting a loss of power and vitality, due to its location on the "edge", it is in fact a powerful source of creativity, generating symbolic forms of culture from rituals and mythologies and up until works of art and analytic tools in terms of root metaphors or models of reality.
Liminality is the site of reflection, a 'threshold' space between conscious and unconscious, open to all kind of possibilities, ready to be populated by imagined realities. When we work in the liminal we separate from ordinary consciousness, suspend disbelief and enter the space of imagination, drama, and metaphor. No matter how strong the experience, sooner or later, we return to our ordinary selves.
In a liminal state we are freed from the demands of daily life. The 'go betweens' become the site of the action, which remains a temporary passage, bridging the empty space and providing new perspectives, reinforcement, creative and artistic inspiration -- signs of a symbolic psyche and self-awareness. It is a spontaneous communion in transitional, sacred space where internal decisions and special behavior is required.
We may be temporarily uplifted, swept away, or 'taken over,' in a psychological rather than metaphysical, religious, or supernatural way in the 'I-you dialog'. There is a bit of all the ancestors in us with which we can imagine a direct, unmediated experience. We don't merge identities or submerge in them but preserve their uniqueness as well as our own values, and perhaps share a moment of transport, changing attitudes, or intersubjective illumination.
Separation, Transition, Incorporation
After a time, we deliberately reassimilate or reassociate with our ordinary awareness. We divest our personality, become open to new information with a 'beginner's mind' and cross a threshold to a new identity and powers. There are many ways to accomplish the transformation. Our actions or objects take on a new value.
Liminal entities are regenerated by our interest. They are neither 'here nor there'; they are in between 'realms'. Liminal dialog or conversations can be seen as an informal ritual act during which we are also essentially interactive liminal entities. We deal with the character’s consistent personality which allows them to deal with the world. In other words, mythic characters impose their will on the mythic world, while non-mythic characters are imposed upon by their non-mythic world.
Liminality collapses categories. We can take a liminal stance and engage in imaginal conversations with our ancestors, who we can consider a class or category of liminal entities in the imaginal field of consciousness, or soul. Some of these experiences may feel numinous or mythic. Such 'threshold people' are naturally ambiguous inner beings represent the co-presence of opposites, both human and spirit, dead but somehow 'alive' for us. Ancestors have differentiated identities.
Liminality is not outside of the social structure or on its edges, it is in the cracks within the social structure itself. It signifies an imaginal freedom of movement among states, areas, and time. Ultimately, liminality (like liminal figures) is hard to pin down. It is evanescent, like a wisp of smoke in the wind. Only in literature and the arts is it a permanent trait of certain figures. In the real world, even though it can theoretically be a permanent state, it is generally a temporary state and thus can be very hard to grasp at times.
As liminal entities, ancestors are images at their core with effects that can range from change agent, to mentor to trickster. Such liminal personas represent and highlight the semi-autonomous boundaries of the imaginal world. The powers that shape the neophytes in liminality for the incumbency of new status are felt, in rites all over the world, to be more than human powers, though they are invoked and channeled by the representatives of the community.
The attributes of liminality or of liminal personae ("threshold people") are necessarily ambiguous, since this condition and these persons elude or slip through the network of classifications that normally locate states and positions in cultural space. Liminal entities are neither here nor there; they are betwixt and between the positions assigned and arrayed by law, custom, convention, and ceremonial. As such, their ambiguous and indeterminate attributes are expressed by a rich variety of symbols in the many societies that ritualize social and cultural transitions. Thus, liminality is frequently likened to death, to being in the womb, to invisibility, to darkness, to bisexuality, to the wilderness, and to an eclipse of the sun or moon. http://faculty.dwc.edu/wellman/Turner.htm
Psychology is a 'study of the soul,' so a psychological approach to our family tree means working that tree with a focus toward its effect on our soul, and honoring the 'transgenerational laws' that have been neglected in modern culture. The object of the psychological approach is the inside subject engaged with psyche. Insight completes the work of integration.
Thus, it is possible in the psychological approach to speak of 'subtle bodies' without yoga, 'rebirth' without 'reincarnation', and 'resurrection' without a religious worldview. They are real phenomena but psychic events, not limited to paranormal or superstitious interpretations. What was buried in the past becomes available to us as a transformative resource.
To be engaged with the psyche, inevitably means to be engaged with the ancestors:
"There is one ego in the conscious and another made up of unconscious ancestral elements, by the force of which a man who has been fairly himself over a period of years suddenly falls under the sway of an ancestor." (Jung, 1925 Seminar, pg 38.)
"Perhaps certain traits belonging to the ancestors get buried away in the mind as complexes with a life of their own which has never been assimilated into the life of the individual, and then, for some unknown reason, these complexes become activated, step out of their obscurity in the folds of the unconscious, and begin to dominate the whole mind." (Jung, 1925 Seminar, Page 39.)
"Therefore there are gates and walls, showing the aspiration is not to be dead and buried in the mandala, but to function through the mandala." (Jung, Visions Seminar, Page 265.)
Subject and psyche reflexively fold back upon one another fusing subject and object on the unus mundus or psychoid level. The family tree graphically represents this vast process, and merely hints at its complexity. At the psychoid (psychophysical) level the unconscious domain is the deep wisdom of nature -- our connective consciousness of nature and our nature -- our aboriginal knowing field -- an immediate, direct, non-discursive, perception of reality.
In a way the collective unconscious is merely a mirage because unconscious, but it can be also just as real as the tangible world. (Jung, 1925 Seminar, Page 40)
"As soon as one begins to watch one’s mind, one begins to observe the autonomous phenomena in which one exists as a spectator, or even as a victim." (Jung, 1925 Seminar, Page 40.)
Genealogy is a reflexive discipline. Your family tree opens a vast inner realm of ancient, living symbols -- your ancestors. More than learning about them, we want to become familiar with them. We yearn toward eternity, longing for connection. It begs the question, "are we comfortable in the presence of the disembodied?"
The Absence & the Presence
Genealogy is full of mythic power for us individually and collectively, and how we understand what the human condition is all about with its paradoxes and tragedies. We swing from bough to bough and the players and locale shift to the subtle dimension. The deeper we penetrate it, the more we become known to ourselves.
Genealogy is the domain of subtle bodies, neither this nor that. Now a presence it then eludes our grasp, shows itself and hides itself, reveals and conceals itself. Disembodied spirits are a conceptual category, rather than an ontological 'reality' or delusion from beliefs or religion.
Ontology is a branch of metaphysics that deals with the nature of being, the essence of being. But ontology is only the study of anything under the aspect of its being, of what is involved in its existing.
In the psychological context, ontology itself is a mythologizing activity. It is not an ultimate but can have consequences: (1) Ontological security is achieved by routinizing relationships with significant others, and actors therefore become attached to those relationships. (2) Worldview implodes in Ontological Catastrophe. (3) Ontological anarchy insists no "state" can "exist" in chaos, that all ontological claims are spurious except the claim of chaos. In effect, chaos is life. All mess, all roiling energies, all protoplasmic urgency, all movement—is chaos.
Undecideability
What kinds of things actually exist? Meta-questions include: What is existence? and What is the nature of existence? We ask, "What is the nature of the universe?" or "Is there a god?" or "What happens to us when we die?" or "What principles govern the properties of matter?" The entangled nature of quantum entities provides a plausible theory for how our ancestors might 'appear' in our own very material psychophysiology.
Bateson names the connection between opposites with a paradoxical image borrowed from C. G. Jung, who paraphrased ancient Gnosticism -- ''pleroma/creatura.'' This image implies the idea that the fundamental connection is not between two substances, mind and matter. Rather, mind is the pattern and fabric, texture and weave (pleroma) in all matter (creatura). This is the psychophysical essence of psyche, or soul.
We can try to ground our heuristics on firm metaphysical and epistemological foundations. The ontological argument claims to establish the real (as opposed to abstract) existence of some entity with some a priori 'proof.' In its general meaning, ontology is the study or concern about what kinds of things exist - what entities there are in the universe. Such questions are moot speaking of a dead or discarnate, and therefore, 'non-existent' being.
The basic question of ontology is “What exists?” The basic question of metaontology is: are there objective answers to the basic question of ontology? Here ontological realists say yes, and ontological anti-realists say no. (Chalmers) But we don't need to answer or have faith in any ontology to pursue psychogenealogy. We don't need to believe in 'ghosts' for an epistemology of the sacred.
Metaphor is the logic of psyche. We have countless metaphors of appearance and disappearance. It doesn't matter that our ancestral spirits are discarnate, because they 'matter' in terms of psyche, which is indistinguishable from matter -- our matter. One effect of this is psychophysical symptoms rooted in transgenerational issues.
Spirits are not ontological or metaphysical facts, but imaginal realities. The psychological or therapeutic approach does not require ontological speculation or meta-questions. We perceive them as epistemological metaphors, or 'how we know what we know' and what it's 'like,' which awakens their psychophysical aspects.
Trans-Sensory Imagery
We can explore metaphors. They act as a bridge, imaginative propositions, even epistemic intuition. They use a story or illustration to see alternative ways of looking at something. Every culture and religion uses these types of stories, analogies, and parables to improve understanding, make a point more memorable, and help us make positive changes.
The internal/external metaphor is foundational. Metaphors assist transformation. A metaphorical scheme effects a reorganization. Interrelating conceptual, perceptual, and biological metaphors enables a cycle of transformation. They are inherently irrational but unconsciously 'make sense.'
Much of our thinking is a matrix or complex web of metaphors. Emotive metaphors are feelings transformed into a metaphorical equivalent. It is sustained throughout the work and functions as a controlling image. Metaphors deepen the information. The questions used to develop a metaphor develop space not time.
A metaphor awakens conceptions with more force and grace than 'common' language. An epistemological metaphor is personal and unique, translating a feeling or thought into a form that can travel through time to its original.
Zhuangzi metaphorically puts forth three meta-questions or fundamental
questions in epistemology: 1) as an epistemic subject, do I know I myself? 2) Among epistemic subjects, do I know others? 3) What can I know about the world?
Virtual Agents
Epistemology is a knowledge creation metaphor. References to virtual agency are metaphorical, beyond body, death, and social identity. Epistemological metaphors are a gateway to the subconscious, as are dreams, symptoms, and our family tree.
Content-free therapy can be done through metaphor, rather than through directly reliving trauma thereby avoiding re-traumatizing. Metaphors act as a means for the psyche to represent experiences of personal significance in symbolic ways. Metaphoric expressions are tied to some unconscious or implicit aspect of our experience.
Metaphor does something in relation to our understanding. Beyond rhetoric, metaphor is rooted in some quality of the world as it is. Metaphor functions like a dream or symptom in the sense that it simultaneously expresses material from different psychic levels -- topographical, structural, and dynamic.
Metaphor use and exploration gives us a way of linking our experiences across diverse times and situations. In genealogy, history uses veils as epistemological metaphors, reflecting the conception of reality dominant in each respective epoch.
Social Presence in Sacred Space
In our transgenerational work we can extend that self-inquiry, asking ourselves 'where do I feel that in my body', and 'how do I know it's happening when it happens' to develop dynamic images and metaphors of 'what it is like' for process work. It's a functional approach that is used because it works as a tool for exploring personal meaning, fundamental to insight-oriented psychotherapy.
Disembodied Soul
Personifying is a way of making subjective experience, passionate identification, and indwelling images more tangible through conversation and relationship in symbolic form. Hillman (1975) called it “an epistemology of the heart, a thought-mode of feeling.” It imagines what’s inside, outside, and makes this content alive, personal, and even divine. Jung claimed that the inside is the outside, the outside is the inside; the claim is that psyche is matter and matter is psyche.
Theoretical Grounding
The scientific search for knowledge is the search for Truth and Beauty, appealing to both spirit and soul. To know facts is to survive; not to know, or to assess one's environment wrongly, is to lose the fight for survival. With the examination of the sources, nature, and accuracy of our knowledge, we begin to develop epistemic awareness, a more informed understanding of what we know and don't know.
We are faced with two serious epistemological problems: (1) How can we determine which facts are true? and, (2) How can we determine which facts are important? Our minds compare and interface the internal and external realities we navigate through.
Denial is a complex “unconscious defense mechanism for coping with guilt, anxiety and other disturbing emotions aroused by reality.“ Even skepticism and solipsistic arguments – including epistemological relativism – about the existence of objective truth, are generally a social construction.
Rebirth is synonymous with restoring the true history of our origins and integrating our transgenerational inheritance, somewhere between the loss of what we thought we knew and true self-knowledge.
The soul generates images unceasingly. The soul lives on images and metaphor, especially epistemological metaphors--how we know what we know. These images form the basis of our consciousness. All we can know comes through images, through our multi-sensory perceptions. So, this soul always stays close to the body, close to corporeality, to what "matters."
Jung's basic ideas about the unity of knowledge and existence are in principle synonymous with the Platonic tradition, alchemy, Qabala and Gnosticism. Plato treated the end product of the evolution of mathematical concepts, (a fixed system of idealized objects), as an independent beginning point of the evolution of the "world of things." This concrete form of philosophy was determined by the nature of Greek mathematics.
These philosophies seek to reconcile the actual condition with a hypothetical distant ideal, which expansively incorporates both personal and universal dimensions. It is an inward-oriented epistemology. By intuitive perception we can consciously reiterate the laws of Nature and mind which are equivalent to the archetypes themselves.
Going back to the question of fantasizing, if once the resistance to free contact with the unconscious can be overcome, and one can develop the power of sticking to the fantasy, then the play of the images can be watched. ~Carl Jung, 1925 Seminar, Page 38.
"It is indeed a major effort-the magnum opus in fact-to escape in time from the narrowness of its embrace and to liberate our mind to the vision of the immensity of the world, of which we form an infinitesimal part." (Jung, Letters Vol. II, Pages 579-580)
Life Force
Stay in your living presence, feel all the life going on in you at once; feel the cohesion, the live presence of open awareness, here and now. See how you come directly to life. Come into living presence, more and more.
We are called to remembrance of where we came from -- the cradle of nature -- to refresh the dream of mythic origins. Feel the rhythm of awakening to the lifeworld, the root pulse encoding our becoming.
Contemplate the origin of the universe, the creation of matter, and the creation of life and reproduction -- "they who engender, they who create" -- evolution entering into time.
Oceanic Metaphor
We chart our legacy in an ancestral sea with many shores -- an almost infinite genepool of lifeforms. Jung called the sea, "one of the best known symbols for the prima materia, as the mother of all life. All life came from the sea, and we feel life streaming into us from an unknown source, as it were from the sea." Water is a metaphor for prima materia, psychical nature, and concealed unconscious processes.
We navigate between our role-bound persona currents and the rip tides of mythic imperatives. The abyss of the transcendent imagination is symbolized by the sea. Those waters, swelling waves of humanity, are charged with memories. You can see the past. Between our ordinary social lives and the timeless mythic realm we remain attentive to whatever comes to presence.
As we move forward in imaginal space with only our shadows behind, we find our passed lives in front of us. The serpent curls back to eat its tail and digests childhood, gestation, the ancestors, our phylogeny.
The personal and universal tale of psyche quickens and sustains us through cyclic emergence, death and resurrection, connecting individual destiny with transcendent humanity. Unknowable transpersonal nature, non-conscious, integrates us further back than conscious processes.
Collective Generative Space
Genealogy is a dynamic expression and an experience of psycho-historical recovery of the self. It is our initiation into a deeper awareness, larger order, a greater ecology of Being. Why waste the time of eternity?
Embarking on our genealogical project is essentially a contract with ourselves to make a labyrinthine transformational journey through psycho-history and human development to complete it. Psyche informs our experience of ourselves and the universe in the most fundamental ways, including trans-sensory imagery or synesthesia.
We compress time to quickly mull over a prospective path before embarking upon it. As generators of reality, we feel where our center of gravity pulls most fully. There lies our spring of awakening. Through our dreams we know what life has to offer.
When we listen, psyche speaks. Even sadness, grief, and pain carry sacred life energy. Stay close to those sensations and surround it with presence and with warmth. Not your story ‘about’ sadness or pain, nor an interpretations of it, but the raw sensations coursing through you as a living guide of aliveness, come to remind you of something you’ve forgotten.
We Being
Our project is one of both ancestral and psycho-historical recovery. A virtually indescribable sense of wonder accompanies any new discovery. The fusion of history and psyche is a marriage of what we have been and what we eternally are. The shock of recognition is mediated and nuanced by our ancestors. Metaphor makes symbolic use of historical material.
We can use our genealogy to engage the figures of our ancestors, those who came before. We find well-being when we are connected to Source, to the 'well' of our psychic creativity, the 'well of living water' or the 'still waters' of the inner soul, symbol of the unchanging source from which we all drink deeply.
From ancient times, the well is symbolically, and literally, located at the center of the community. There they drew water, the basic sustenance for life. Metaphorically, the well represents all the social resources of the community necessary to endure and thrive. If the well falls into disrepair, if the life giving water is polluted or diminished in quantity, the community suffers [like Flint, Michigan recently].
The well is a symbol for our 'inner community'. The well is a universal symbol for that which sustains life. We enrich our lives by delving deeply into our essential natures to reach the source of true nourishment. The well is also a symbol of healthy community.
Beyond heroic counseling and ordinary external well-being is 'we-being' and the reality of the living psyche, also reflected in the I Ching hexagram, The Well. It also appears as the image of a woman as a source of water: cross-culturally, the well serves as an image and symbol of woman. You might find your spouse at the well in times past.
We may understand being unconsciously conscious but we can also be consciously aware of the unconscious. Stimulating us, perhaps we stimulating it, an energy exchange is occurring. As we begin to know about this, the energy exchange occurs as waves of energy that flow through us and perhaps some means that establishes a coherence.
Paths of Transformation
We are each living metaphors. Our genealogy is our natural History. Our psychogenealogy is the natural history of our soul. The ancestors saturate our ordinary lives, as do successful rituals such as genealogy practice which are central to our lives. There is another kind of primordial human in us that responds to a transgenerational approach to the family tree -- a therapy of the heart and ideas.
This biologically encoded history of the human race is present in every person at the unconscious level as archaic traits. In this sense, the meaning of life is you. Gnosis (not Gnosticism) dissolves the idea that outer and inner or personal and cosmic distinctions exist, allowing phenomena to return to its basis -- the awakening ground -- as a single, uninterrupted continuum, as symbolized in our Family Tree.
Unlimited, Immortal Archetype
"Self-reflection, or – what comes to the same thing – the urge to individuation, gathers together what is scattered and multifarious and exalts it to the original of the One, the Primordial Man.
In this way our existence as separate beings, our former ego nature, is abolished, the circle of consciousness is widened, and because the paradoxes have been made conscious, the sources of conflict are dried up." --Jung, Collected Works 11, Transformation Symbolism in the Mass; Paragraph 401
Jung called the primordial ancestor 'the two million year old man," the instinctive self, rooted in nature, who speaks the forgotten symbolic language of the unconscious. It encompasses the entire history of the human race. The age is arbitrary. In 1997 a 4.4 million-year-old human ancestor was found, the most primitive hominid species known. The father of all men is 340,000 years old.
https://www.newscientist.com/article/dn23240-the-father-of-all-men-is-340000-years-old/
http://phys.org/news/2014-07-scientists-timeline-human.html
Our unknown companion -- the 'Indigenous One' or indigenous root -- symbolizes the emergence of our species as a personal revelation. "Well now, I have within myself a “man” who is millions of years old, and he perhaps can throw light on these metaphysical problems." (Jung, 1925 Seminar, Page 12).
The "Seed of Mankind"
Genealogy and depth psychology are both psychic archaeology, seeking elemental wisdom to reconnect us and heal our wounds. Both are a move from biological to cultural transformation. How can we know the unknowable, much less make friends and relations of this archetypal self as a mirror of our universe, this healing principle of our species from the beginning of time?
Our survival is mutually entwined with our instincts, connection to nature, and unforgotten wisdom. Giving up our roots results in a restlessness of the soul that leads to many forms of mental and emotional problems, the worst of which is meaninglessness. Sir Francis Bacon said, 'In order for the light to shine so brightly, the darkness must be present.' And, "wounds cannot be cured without searching." Our separation is painful because it is more than our souls can stand.
As Hermann Hesse noted in Reflections, "We each and all of us, contain within us the entire history of the world, and just as our body records Man’s genealogy as far back as the fish and then some, so our soul encompasses everything that has ever existed in human souls. All gods and devils that have ever existed are within us as possibilities, as desires, as solutions."
"The other Gods died of their temporality, yet the supreme meaning never dies, it turns into meaning and then into absurdity, and out of the fire and blood of their collision the supreme meaning rises up rejuvenated anew." (Jung, Liber Novus, Page 230.)
All epochs dwell in us as the unconscious, timeless, creative matrix of the psyche. It only seems like we experience the archetypes at the existential levels for the first time, because they are inherent. Our personal history is rooted in the collective transhistorical journey. Recovering old knowledge creates new possibilities. We realize ourselves as living history.
Our genealogy reflects the metaphor of a landscape and travelers. The travelers obey inherited rules (archetypes) that determine loosely which routes are possible and which not, separating the feasible from the impossible. The rules are hidden, but are recorded in our charts and patterns, in the form of myths, stories, rituals, norms and other archetypal images.
Surprisingly, even with vast correlations, only a few pathways (patterns) emerge. Each branch of the tree is a set of parallel landscapes, corresponding to different levels of being or consciousness, but all part of the same world (unus mundus).
Ancestral Medicine Ways
Gaining consciousness within the flow of the Spirit is the sacred purpose of Ancestral ways. Medicine is revealed when this consciousness is established. Discoveries that follow are from the participation with the Great Spirit and Mother Life. A carrier of these ways accepts the responsibilities, ethics, principles and records that are held accountable to all that exists.
Resolution or failure of an epigenetic crisis by a global historical figure can have potent consequences in their own age, and perhaps others, including their descendants. Psycho-history is full of such examples, especially in noble and royal lines.
We all have ancestors, both of blood and of spirit, and each of our lives rests firmly on the foundation of their sacrifice. They are as near to us as our breath and bones, and when related with in conscious ways, they can be a tremendous source of healing, guidance, and companionship. We can learn to accept life with all its imperfections -- unconditional acceptance of life itself.
The ancestors we choose to honor may include not only recent and more distant family but also beloved friends and community, cultural and religious leaders, and even other-than-human kin such as companion animals. Our ancestors bring vital support to fulfill our potential here on Earth, and, through involvement in our lives, also further their own growth and maturation in the spirit realms.
Like the living, spirits of the deceased run the full spectrum from wise and loving to self-absorbed and harmful. Physical death is a major event for the soul, a rite of passage we will all face, and the living can provide critical momentum for the recently deceased to make the initiatory leap to become a helpful ancestor.
Once the dead have become ancestors, part of their post-death journey may include making repairs for wrongs committed while here on Earth. For their sake and for ours, it’s good to spend a little time now and again feeding our relationships with the ancestors. We think and speak about life in terms of travel: birth as “arrival,” death as “departure,” careers as “paths” and choices as “crossroads.”
Direct contact with the spirits of the ancestors can be cultivated through ritual practices; however, communication may also happen spontaneously in forms such as dream contact, waking encounters, and synchronicity. When we have a framework to receive their outreach, their work is made easier and we are open to the enjoyment of conscious, ongoing relationship.
You don’t have to be an indigenous shaman or ghost whisperer to have a direct, intimate, and healthy relationship with your ancestors. We all have loving ancestors who want us to fulfill our destiny as happy and well-adjusted people, and in my experience, our ancestors are the ideal guides for family healing as they are invested in seeing their future generations thrive.
Just as in any meaningful relationship, our bonds with the ancestors call for care and renewal. By proactively engaging in simple actions to honor and feed these relationships, our ancestors can become a tremendous source of healing, empowerment, and nourishment in our everyday lives. Fortunately, these practices of tending are relatively simply and can be carried out by anyone with sincere intent.
http://ancestralmedicine.org/five-ways-to-honor-your-ancestors/
Going Nowhere: Ascending & Descending
As a whole, the Tree symbolizes the true self. Ancestors are among the most essential ways we have of participating with realities greater than ourselves. Our lines are full of ascending and descending currents we can follow to Source and Ground -- the One in the Many and the Many in the One. Genealogy is a metaphysical map of our personal paths back to the legendary and mythic layers of our being in connective boundary-transcending conscious events.
Consciousness is the alchemical prima materia, our awareness, our true selves -- the essence of the Great Work. The mystical marriage is the unification and transcendence of male/female duality. Conflicting drives originating on the spiritual, mental, emotional, and physical levels create splits in the personality. "We can conquer unconsciousness by regular work but never by a grand gesture." (Jung, 1925 Seminar, Page 31)
Jung says that, "The obvious analogy, in the psychic sphere, to this problem of opposites is the dissociation of the personality brought about by the conflict of incompatible tendencies resulting as a rule from an inharmonious disposition. The repression of one of the opposites leads only to a prolongation and extension of the conflict, in other words, to a neurosis."
Further, Jung said that "it very often does not depend upon the use one makes of an image, but rather upon the use the archetypes make of ourselves, which decides the question whether it will be artistic creation or a change of religious attitude.
I find that this "choice" is in many cases rather a fate than a voluntary decision.
I see that many of my pupils indulge in a superstitious belief in our so-called " free will" and pay little attention to the fact that the archetypes are, as a rule, autonomous entities, and not only material subject to our choice.
They are, as a matter of fact, dominants up to a certain point. That is the reason why one is confronted with an archetype, because we cannot undo it by merely making it conscious. It has to be taken into account and that is the main task of any prolonged analysis. The deviation from the dominants causes a certain dissociation, i.e., a loss of vitality, what the primitives call "a loss of soul." (Jung, Letters Vol. II, Pages 625-626)
Conscious Relationships
An integrated approach roots us in both past and present, as a common model for real life and consciousness that fosters transgenerational bonds, transformation, and integration. Both Transgenerational Integration (TI) and genealogy are full of rich themes to explore, including family ties, legacies, parenting, matriarchy and patriarchy (Gaillard).
https://books.google.com/books?id=_8xCBgAAQBAJ&pg=PP1&lpg=PP1&dq=Rooted+in+the+Present,+The+Emergence+of+the+Self+By+Thierry+Gaillard&source=bl&ots=sgePs-mKEu&sig=hz8-_otrO0u3ve0lHsusWYC7gHM&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwi63I7Eg8HKAhUCsoMKHVf3BocQ6AEIIzAB#v=onepage&q=Rooted%20in%20the%20Present%2C%20The%20Emergence%20of%20the%20Self%20By%20Thierry%20Gaillard&f=false
"It is possible that a certain historical atmosphere is born with us by means of which we can repeat strange details almost as if they were historical facts." (Carl Jung, 1925 Seminar, Page 39.)
In The Undiscovered Self, Jung poses a challenge that is relevant to psychogenealogy and the urgency of recovering our ancestral heritage:
"We are living in what the Greeks called the right time for a “metamorphosis of the gods,” i.e. of the fundamental principles and symbols. This peculiarity of our time, which is certainly not of our conscious choosing, is the expression of the unconscious man within us who is changing. Coming generations will have to take account of this momentous transformation if humanity is not to destroy itself through the might of its own technology and science."
The Transgenerational Integration movement is developing such awareness for both therapists and the general population. Part of that school of thought is an active psychological approach to genealogy and the ebb and flow of life itself, whether self-initiated or in the therapeutic relationship.
TI has its own genealogy rooted in the works of Freud, Jung, Fromm, and other methods, such as Gestalt, Transactional Analysis, and Metaphor Therapy. It also draws on established conceptual models from family therapy, including the genogram, a map of the family system that discloses the deeper forces that unknowingly influence our thoughts, behaviors and emotional experiences.
Entanglement & Re-enactment
TI does not suggest a radical paradigm shift to different tenets or fundamental assumptions, say, about the nature of reality -- changing initial conditions and/or assumptions. It amplifies existing therapeutic models. However, it helps account for errors and anomalies in the old or waning and competing paradigms and provides greater clarity and a higher information ratio.
All knowledge has gaps, and our self-knowledge is no exception. Climbing our family tree helps us fill in some of those gaps with myth, symbol, history, and immediate experiences of the power of presence and healing transformation. An occurrence can appear and be understood as a material event or a psychological experience, depending on the attitude, faith, and worldview of the observer.
Transgenerational therapy focuses on the relationships in a family. We carry many patterns from the generations that preceded us in our family tree. Family patterns are a very important factor that affects the 'inner child’. Many unconsciously "take on" destructive familial patterns of anxiety, depression, anger, guilt, loneliness, alcoholism, and even illness as a way of "belonging" in our families.
The impact of historical trauma and grief is transferred across successive generations. Transgenerational trauma manifests in current, repetitive personal issues and collective social issues. Trauma symptomology can include depression, unresolved grief, risk of self harm, relationship problems, destructive behaviors, emotional storms, and suicide. In the worst case, the trauma eliminates the ability to experience. If we hide ourselves or go numb to survive, to make pain and suffering go away, we make ourselves go away.
We can disentangle our destructive parts like we disentangle our ancestral lines. There is a truism in the recovery movement, that we must 'take care of it or pass it on,' to future generations. As invisible as Hades to our metaphorical blindness, hidden psychic contents or symptoms exert their influence upon us through the opacity of memory, locked in relationship between symptom and consciousness. There is a live past and a dead past, in generational dynamics.
The same fatal mistakes can be transmitted and repeated. Tragedies include ancestral fault, inherited guilt and family curses, a liability for transgressions, such as a self destructive disposition. Reflecting on death can sometimes help us see more clearly what’s important and what’s not. It’s a practice that can help us be able to experience more directly—and remind ourselves—what our real priorities are.
Greek tragedy has the recurrent motif of catastrophe that strikes not only the immediate family but determines the course of life for future offspring. Epigenetics as gene expression supports that notion. Networks of genes respond to social experiences, and because the unconscious does not distinguish, those experiences can be 'real' or imaginal. The soul is the true mother of the divine child.
Jung discovered that "the unconscious is working out enormous collective fantasies." (1925 Seminar, Page 35) Trauma can be inherited, but so can resilience.
Liminal Entities
“I am not what happened to me, I am what I choose to become.”
― C.G. Jung
“We are one, after all, you and I, together we suffer,
together exist, and forever will recreate each other.”
― Pierre Teilhard de Chardin
“The future belongs to those who give the next generation reason for hope.”
― Pierre Teilhard de Chardin
“A genuine odyssey is not about piling up experiences. It is a deeply felt, risky, unpredictable tour of the soul.” ―Thomas Moore, Care of the Soul
The fact, too, that the subject of these visions is very old and in confinio mortis suggests that a glance has been cast beyond the border, or that something from the other side has seeped through into our three-dimensional world. ~Carl Jung, Letters Vol. II, Pages 611-612
We in our Western ignorance do not see, or have forgotten, that man has or is visited by subjective inner experiences of an irrational nature which cannot be successfully dealt with by rational argument, scientific evidence, and depreciative diagnosis. ~Carl Jung, Letters Vol. II, Pages 600-603
Historically, there has been no shortage of metaphysical descriptions of the afterlife and the beings who allegedly inhabit it, but this is not that. We are concerned here only with certain imaginal approaches to the ancestors, relevant to psychogenealogy, the art of darkness, and unconscious exclusion. There is an impulse to both express and repress intuition.
With imagination we can go beyond ordinary reality. Accessing multidimensional reality includes intellectual, emotional and empathic knowing, as well as sensual or somatic knowing, including visionary and intuitive realizations. Spiritual knowing is related to participatory action or co-creation. These are excursions into the depths of the body, encounters with others, self, and eternity. Intuition demands representation for communication.
Jung notes, "Fantasy is a pre-stage of the symbol, but it is an essential characteristic of the symbol that it is not mere fantasy." (1925 Seminar, Page 11). There are many techniques that evoke a first-hand experience of the self through imagination, yet none are quite as personal and resonant as the ancestors and their transpersonal gnosis.
All knowing means we are engaged and participating, as well as experiencing. Insight is experiential vision, encompassing wisdom aspects of humankind, life, psyche, and cosmos. It is an emergent phenomena co-created by the different elements involved in the participatory event -- a personal engagement in world-transfiguring events as well as states of mind.
Rather than our ancestors, we can only look at the character of the knowledge they provide in ordinary and non-ordinary ways. Hidden knowledge’ is where fragile new ideas incubate. Conceptual confusion leads to metaphysical speculation and epistemological assumptions. Raw experience entangles with cultural forms.
What we know is that our god-image and self-images get transferred by interpretation of the nature of our own self-images, relationships, and experiences. Attachment is strong affectional bonds in which we play out emotional joy and distress, personality disturbance, anxiety, anger, depression, and detachment from unwilling separation or loss.
We feel the reality of the image as a specific value -- a transposition of psychological consciousness. Feelings are inherent in the image. The psychic realm is the spirit realm. Our descent to the depths is a pilgrimage to the inner universe, beyond rational consciousness. The background becomes present. The relationship involving the whole being simply is, and spoken to directly. God is the worldwide relation to all relations. Our fuller life includes the ancestors.
Relational Model
Genealogy is a relational model. Our part is to acknowledge the living relationship, nurture it with attention, and interpret it with intuition as a mental or spiritual relationship. We abandon the world of sensation and melt into the in-between where that relationship is foremost. Any splitting is only for purposes of interpretation or description. But it is only in that "in between" place that we can access who we are at the heart of it all.
The 'other' is abstraction through which we can experience the world, sometimes in a less or unlimited way in the world of relation -- a self-aware coherence with the other and unlimited store of wisdom. Life unfolding understanding emerges in the now, which is always present and timeless. Presence implies coming alive to this present moment, wherever we are, without changing our conditions.
Liminality Theory
Liminality is a motif, a transition, and a potentially numinous phenomenon. Liminal gaps allow libido to fall into the unfathomable psychic depths. Jung says, "The psychic depths are nature, and nature is creative life." Those psychic depths are so vast compared to ordinary space that emotion feels like it drains away into that immensity. Jung said, “…The main interest of my work is not concerned with the treatment of neuroses but rather with the approach to the numinous.” (1973: 377)
The challenge is to create a liminal space that operates as a bridge between the present and the future – beyond the status quo, and yet able to engage with it. Such linking experiences, a living and peopled drama, compare to our ancestors and their linking places in the family tree -- the drama of kinship.
An emotional storm can ignite with liminal entities that must be allowed to speak in a sense that somehow goes with truth and learning by experience. Liminal refers to a marginalized space of fertile chaos and creative potential ...a definition that reminiscent of our genealogical project.
A liminal presence is an unknown and unknowable something that exists outside all categories of our world (or any other) but between them. The branches of our family tree are liminal pathways, some visible, most invisible and undeterminable. “Liminal moments are times of tension, extreme reactions, and great opportunity,” a shift in the constitution.
Liminal Archetype
In Greek mythology, Hermes is the god of liminality and guide of souls. He guides both the souls of the dead to the underworld and sleepers to the realm of dreams. His ability to cross boundaries makes Hermes a mediator between the human and the divine realm, or between the personal psyche and the unconscious.
Messages from beyond the border of everyday reality illuminate our experience and bring eternity into time. The ancient Greeks viewed Hermes as psychopomp. They knew that without his guidance their disembodied shades would wander the earth eternally and–perhaps more frightening still–would leave them while still alive at the mercy of the lost shades of others.
The task of guiding the soul into the underworld cannot be minimized or omitted from psychology,” notes Lopez-Pedraza, because “death is death–the always fearful opposite of life –in spite of the fact that our culture has systematically repressed what death is to the psyche.” The value of having Hermes as one's companion in the descent to the underworld rather than Hades is that the psychopomp's role is to guide us in whatever ways are required to learn the lessons which a knowledge of death brings to the living of life.
More importantly, since we no longer are able to experience death as a communal experience, notes Lopez-Pedraza, if we look at solitary modern man's “desolation in the face of death from a psychology of depth, it has been to man's gain, because it provides him with the freedom to make death his own imaginative and intimate concern, to become better acquainted with his own images and emotions concerning death, thus enriching his psychic life” (93).
An aspect of Hermes' role as psychopomp is his unique ability to make the transition between the realms of the living and the dead, between the world of consciousness and the depths of the personal and collective unconscious. Because of his great skill at passing “in between” dimensions—whether these dimensions are physical, chronological, or psychological in nature–Hermes is also the god of all things liminal, all things transitional. “Ever a transitional figure,” Doty states with simplicity, “Hermes divinizes transition” (137).
“He is there, at all transitions,marking them as sacred, as eventful, as epiphany,” adds Downing, and “his presence reminds us that the crossing of every threshold is a sacred event” (56, 65). As a result, she concludes, “our awareness of Hermes' presence opens us to the sacredness of such moments, of those in-between times that are strangely frightening and we so often try to hurry past” (56).
Just as Hermes leads Priam to the place where he will retrieve the corpse of his beloved son, the place “where death will be faced and grief will meet its maker,” as Stein described the scene, so too have I been confronted with knowledge of the dead places within myself and the need to mourn the passing of those aspects of myself. Equally importantly, as Stein also notes of this episode from the Iliad, “this encounter with death also brings consciousness of a dead past that needs to be buried” (36). I am now arriving at that place where I am able to allow the injuries of a constricted childhood to be laid to rest, to let these wounds finally heal and scarify, and finally begin to look to a future more whole and alive than I had ever imagined.
possible.http://www.soulmyths.com/hermes.pdf
Public Liminality
Ritual and drama are public liminality. In Greek drama, Antigone is the daughter/sister of Oedipus and his mother, Jocasta. Her name means "worthy of one's parents" or "in place of one's parents". She descended across the horizon of consciousness -- the Bridge of Acheron into the archaic depths of the Underworld, prying open the chasm between the stark light of interrogation and the plunging darkness of the abyss.
The family of Oedipus is a kinship of tragedy because of incest (e.g. Antigone is the fruit of an incestuous union), slaying of kin, ancestral curses and personal errors that can be related to inherited guilt.
"Ismene my true sister, born from the same mother, is there any torment Oedipus suffered which Zeus will not impose on us while we yet live? There is nothing —
neither grief nor violence, shame nor dishonor —no evil you and I have not endured already." (Translation by Fainlight-Littman 2009, 139)
Antigone exposes a tragic ethical rift between the so-called feminine "Divine Law" which Antigone represents and the "Human Law," represented by the ruler Creon. A female figure questions the role of the patriarchal state and challenges the system that writes her off as insignificant. She denies, she refuses, she means it. Her authentic voice and claim to autonomy suggests a knowledge of unknown origin but consequence.
Questioning the system and political struggles and multiple exclusions is a very modern theme for an ancient tragedy. How many times has Antigone been reborn with the same predicament of delayed and displaced punishment? But she demands and maintains her voice, and sticks up for her family values without making her true self disappear. Her name is a homologue of that: Anti-Gone.
Antigone is a paradigm of bodily exposure and exile, political and gender struggles, bare and naked life -- naked awareness. In Sophocles, she puts the will of the gods ahead of man-made laws, but a cascade of fateful deaths still ensues to close the tragedy. But in Euripides, the calamity is averted by the intercession of Dionysus, followed by the marriage of Antigone and Hæmon.
Liminal Wisdom
Some sense of death hovers in the body. That cleft leads down directly to the unplumbed depths of the unconscious. If the quality of life is compromised, the issue is not survival alone, but the of quality of life we have have in surviving. We are dealing with an unsolvable fracture, which cannot be mended. We can try to soften the rupture.
Ancestors can rebuke or approve our behavior, whether this coincides with our conscious imagination, our understanding, or not. We may be surprised. Begging forgiveness can go either way.
Ordinarily, we are 'outsiders' to our inner life, but there are ways we can make inroads along our ancestral lines. If our own inner life is unknown, the inner lives of our ancestors is real terra incognita, a vast, unexplored territory we scarcely recognize and usually avoid.
Liminal Dreaming
Liminal entities are 'life stories' -- voices, faces, and names. Our psychophysiology is a liminal bridge. Language or dialog is another bridge. Mythic ancestors play cosmological roles. They hold the place of or define mythic concepts. Mythic ancestors often emerge in male/female pairs who are also mythical teachers.
Liminal entities help us ponder on our relationship with nature’s body and to our own bodies. Our inner and outer worlds remain largely disconnected -- dissociated. But, even then, we are unconsciously co-mingled with our ancestors. Out of misery comes fantasy. Even pain is information; the body tells us 'pay attention,' something is wrong here. Pain is a great teacher that makes us wiser.
Even if we master the external world, it is grounding to map our Tree as the landscape of our inner lives - our hopes and fears, values and beliefs, needs and motivations, complexities and contradictions. The impact they have on our everyday choices and behaviors roots us in deeper reality and self-awareness.
Doing genealogy or not, we can all experience spontaneous liminal experiences, even nightmarish ones (liminal terror) in dreams. Encounters with liminal phenomena almost always produce a sense of strangeness, uncomfortableness, or uncanniness.
Something that falls on the interstices of our conceptual and cultural "world" tends to reminds us of the fact that virtual mountains of phenomena have been, and are being, excluded from consciousness. Whereas reality itself is much bigger and stranger and more unbounded than ordinarily perceived.
Liminal Body
Liminality is a heuristic model in which our borderlands that both divide and connect become more permeable. Imagination transcends the physical limits of ancestral connectivity. In the midst of our own life-passages, such as (adolescence, mating, parenting, midlife, or old age), we become more liminal ourselves and perhaps more inclined to look for 'signs.' Ancient wisdom and patterns have a way of making themselves known.
Liminal phenomena are normally relegated to the periphery of our attention. It's as if attention quickens the ancestors. Because we are wired for pattern-recognition, sometimes we perceive patterns that aren't really there in regular noise, but then we find a 'real' meaning in that perception of what was formerly unknown or subconscious. The family tree is a multi-vocal symbol. The World Tree is our collective liminal body.
Liminal Bridge
Death is the ultimate liminal bridge that makes transformation from one realm to another possible. Ancestral bridges span liminal (threshold) spaces between worlds. Transformation comes in the unstable, unpredictable, precarious place without clear borders. Liminality is unstable, so it can pave the way for access to esoteric knowledge or understanding of both sides. Liminality is sacred, alluring, and dangerous.
“Between-ness” defines these spaces. Liminal places can range from borders and frontiers to no man’s lands and disputed territories, to crossroads, marshes, springs, caves, shores, rivers, volcanic calderas. In mythology, religion, and esoterics liminality can include such realms as the Abyss, Purgatory, or Da’at. When theologians deny they actually exist, they become doubly liminal.
Meaningful information can cross the threshold between the unconscious and conscious mind in a variety of traditional and idiosyncratic ways. Some might call it prayer, or ESP, "second sight," gnosis, guidance, or visionary experience. It doesn't matter what we call it. That only reflects our beliefs about the phenomena.
Liminal Ambiguity
Liminal personae slip through any network of classifications. The interpretation of 'conversations' is a subjective process, the content of which is meaningful primarily to the inquirer. It is simply a natural model of liminal states or entities in cultural domains -- the symbolic encoding of transitional phenomena.
Spaces can appear, disappear, reappear, and travel around between cracks of structures, resisting any concrete definitions or developmental progress. We play with elements of the familiar and unfamiliar. We might find ourselves traveling through another's body in a liminal narrative. The liminal field is personal, fictive, and mythic, just like the family tree.
Although irrepresentable and intangible, archetypes and ancestors can be visualized through their effects -- archetypal patterns, symbols, images, plots, characters and situations. These dynamic effects, can be expressed in myths, dreams, metaphors and generally narratives.
Transliminal
Liminality might appear at first glance as suggesting a loss of power and vitality, due to its location on the "edge", it is in fact a powerful source of creativity, generating symbolic forms of culture from rituals and mythologies and up until works of art and analytic tools in terms of root metaphors or models of reality.
Liminality is the site of reflection, a 'threshold' space between conscious and unconscious, open to all kind of possibilities, ready to be populated by imagined realities. When we work in the liminal we separate from ordinary consciousness, suspend disbelief and enter the space of imagination, drama, and metaphor. No matter how strong the experience, sooner or later, we return to our ordinary selves.
In a liminal state we are freed from the demands of daily life. The 'go betweens' become the site of the action, which remains a temporary passage, bridging the empty space and providing new perspectives, reinforcement, creative and artistic inspiration -- signs of a symbolic psyche and self-awareness. It is a spontaneous communion in transitional, sacred space where internal decisions and special behavior is required.
We may be temporarily uplifted, swept away, or 'taken over,' in a psychological rather than metaphysical, religious, or supernatural way in the 'I-you dialog'. There is a bit of all the ancestors in us with which we can imagine a direct, unmediated experience. We don't merge identities or submerge in them but preserve their uniqueness as well as our own values, and perhaps share a moment of transport, changing attitudes, or intersubjective illumination.
Separation, Transition, Incorporation
After a time, we deliberately reassimilate or reassociate with our ordinary awareness. We divest our personality, become open to new information with a 'beginner's mind' and cross a threshold to a new identity and powers. There are many ways to accomplish the transformation. Our actions or objects take on a new value.
Liminal entities are regenerated by our interest. They are neither 'here nor there'; they are in between 'realms'. Liminal dialog or conversations can be seen as an informal ritual act during which we are also essentially interactive liminal entities. We deal with the character’s consistent personality which allows them to deal with the world. In other words, mythic characters impose their will on the mythic world, while non-mythic characters are imposed upon by their non-mythic world.
Liminality collapses categories. We can take a liminal stance and engage in imaginal conversations with our ancestors, who we can consider a class or category of liminal entities in the imaginal field of consciousness, or soul. Some of these experiences may feel numinous or mythic. Such 'threshold people' are naturally ambiguous inner beings represent the co-presence of opposites, both human and spirit, dead but somehow 'alive' for us. Ancestors have differentiated identities.
Liminality is not outside of the social structure or on its edges, it is in the cracks within the social structure itself. It signifies an imaginal freedom of movement among states, areas, and time. Ultimately, liminality (like liminal figures) is hard to pin down. It is evanescent, like a wisp of smoke in the wind. Only in literature and the arts is it a permanent trait of certain figures. In the real world, even though it can theoretically be a permanent state, it is generally a temporary state and thus can be very hard to grasp at times.
As liminal entities, ancestors are images at their core with effects that can range from change agent, to mentor to trickster. Such liminal personas represent and highlight the semi-autonomous boundaries of the imaginal world. The powers that shape the neophytes in liminality for the incumbency of new status are felt, in rites all over the world, to be more than human powers, though they are invoked and channeled by the representatives of the community.
The attributes of liminality or of liminal personae ("threshold people") are necessarily ambiguous, since this condition and these persons elude or slip through the network of classifications that normally locate states and positions in cultural space. Liminal entities are neither here nor there; they are betwixt and between the positions assigned and arrayed by law, custom, convention, and ceremonial. As such, their ambiguous and indeterminate attributes are expressed by a rich variety of symbols in the many societies that ritualize social and cultural transitions. Thus, liminality is frequently likened to death, to being in the womb, to invisibility, to darkness, to bisexuality, to the wilderness, and to an eclipse of the sun or moon. http://faculty.dwc.edu/wellman/Turner.htm
Psychology is a 'study of the soul,' so a psychological approach to our family tree means working that tree with a focus toward its effect on our soul, and honoring the 'transgenerational laws' that have been neglected in modern culture. The object of the psychological approach is the inside subject engaged with psyche. Insight completes the work of integration.
Thus, it is possible in the psychological approach to speak of 'subtle bodies' without yoga, 'rebirth' without 'reincarnation', and 'resurrection' without a religious worldview. They are real phenomena but psychic events, not limited to paranormal or superstitious interpretations. What was buried in the past becomes available to us as a transformative resource.
To be engaged with the psyche, inevitably means to be engaged with the ancestors:
"There is one ego in the conscious and another made up of unconscious ancestral elements, by the force of which a man who has been fairly himself over a period of years suddenly falls under the sway of an ancestor." (Jung, 1925 Seminar, pg 38.)
"Perhaps certain traits belonging to the ancestors get buried away in the mind as complexes with a life of their own which has never been assimilated into the life of the individual, and then, for some unknown reason, these complexes become activated, step out of their obscurity in the folds of the unconscious, and begin to dominate the whole mind." (Jung, 1925 Seminar, Page 39.)
"Therefore there are gates and walls, showing the aspiration is not to be dead and buried in the mandala, but to function through the mandala." (Jung, Visions Seminar, Page 265.)
Subject and psyche reflexively fold back upon one another fusing subject and object on the unus mundus or psychoid level. The family tree graphically represents this vast process, and merely hints at its complexity. At the psychoid (psychophysical) level the unconscious domain is the deep wisdom of nature -- our connective consciousness of nature and our nature -- our aboriginal knowing field -- an immediate, direct, non-discursive, perception of reality.
In a way the collective unconscious is merely a mirage because unconscious, but it can be also just as real as the tangible world. (Jung, 1925 Seminar, Page 40)
"As soon as one begins to watch one’s mind, one begins to observe the autonomous phenomena in which one exists as a spectator, or even as a victim." (Jung, 1925 Seminar, Page 40.)
Genealogy is a reflexive discipline. Your family tree opens a vast inner realm of ancient, living symbols -- your ancestors. More than learning about them, we want to become familiar with them. We yearn toward eternity, longing for connection. It begs the question, "are we comfortable in the presence of the disembodied?"
The Absence & the Presence
Genealogy is full of mythic power for us individually and collectively, and how we understand what the human condition is all about with its paradoxes and tragedies. We swing from bough to bough and the players and locale shift to the subtle dimension. The deeper we penetrate it, the more we become known to ourselves.
Genealogy is the domain of subtle bodies, neither this nor that. Now a presence it then eludes our grasp, shows itself and hides itself, reveals and conceals itself. Disembodied spirits are a conceptual category, rather than an ontological 'reality' or delusion from beliefs or religion.
Ontology is a branch of metaphysics that deals with the nature of being, the essence of being. But ontology is only the study of anything under the aspect of its being, of what is involved in its existing.
In the psychological context, ontology itself is a mythologizing activity. It is not an ultimate but can have consequences: (1) Ontological security is achieved by routinizing relationships with significant others, and actors therefore become attached to those relationships. (2) Worldview implodes in Ontological Catastrophe. (3) Ontological anarchy insists no "state" can "exist" in chaos, that all ontological claims are spurious except the claim of chaos. In effect, chaos is life. All mess, all roiling energies, all protoplasmic urgency, all movement—is chaos.
Undecideability
What kinds of things actually exist? Meta-questions include: What is existence? and What is the nature of existence? We ask, "What is the nature of the universe?" or "Is there a god?" or "What happens to us when we die?" or "What principles govern the properties of matter?" The entangled nature of quantum entities provides a plausible theory for how our ancestors might 'appear' in our own very material psychophysiology.
Bateson names the connection between opposites with a paradoxical image borrowed from C. G. Jung, who paraphrased ancient Gnosticism -- ''pleroma/creatura.'' This image implies the idea that the fundamental connection is not between two substances, mind and matter. Rather, mind is the pattern and fabric, texture and weave (pleroma) in all matter (creatura). This is the psychophysical essence of psyche, or soul.
We can try to ground our heuristics on firm metaphysical and epistemological foundations. The ontological argument claims to establish the real (as opposed to abstract) existence of some entity with some a priori 'proof.' In its general meaning, ontology is the study or concern about what kinds of things exist - what entities there are in the universe. Such questions are moot speaking of a dead or discarnate, and therefore, 'non-existent' being.
The basic question of ontology is “What exists?” The basic question of metaontology is: are there objective answers to the basic question of ontology? Here ontological realists say yes, and ontological anti-realists say no. (Chalmers) But we don't need to answer or have faith in any ontology to pursue psychogenealogy. We don't need to believe in 'ghosts' for an epistemology of the sacred.
Metaphor is the logic of psyche. We have countless metaphors of appearance and disappearance. It doesn't matter that our ancestral spirits are discarnate, because they 'matter' in terms of psyche, which is indistinguishable from matter -- our matter. One effect of this is psychophysical symptoms rooted in transgenerational issues.
Spirits are not ontological or metaphysical facts, but imaginal realities. The psychological or therapeutic approach does not require ontological speculation or meta-questions. We perceive them as epistemological metaphors, or 'how we know what we know' and what it's 'like,' which awakens their psychophysical aspects.
Trans-Sensory Imagery
We can explore metaphors. They act as a bridge, imaginative propositions, even epistemic intuition. They use a story or illustration to see alternative ways of looking at something. Every culture and religion uses these types of stories, analogies, and parables to improve understanding, make a point more memorable, and help us make positive changes.
The internal/external metaphor is foundational. Metaphors assist transformation. A metaphorical scheme effects a reorganization. Interrelating conceptual, perceptual, and biological metaphors enables a cycle of transformation. They are inherently irrational but unconsciously 'make sense.'
Much of our thinking is a matrix or complex web of metaphors. Emotive metaphors are feelings transformed into a metaphorical equivalent. It is sustained throughout the work and functions as a controlling image. Metaphors deepen the information. The questions used to develop a metaphor develop space not time.
A metaphor awakens conceptions with more force and grace than 'common' language. An epistemological metaphor is personal and unique, translating a feeling or thought into a form that can travel through time to its original.
Zhuangzi metaphorically puts forth three meta-questions or fundamental
questions in epistemology: 1) as an epistemic subject, do I know I myself? 2) Among epistemic subjects, do I know others? 3) What can I know about the world?
Virtual Agents
Epistemology is a knowledge creation metaphor. References to virtual agency are metaphorical, beyond body, death, and social identity. Epistemological metaphors are a gateway to the subconscious, as are dreams, symptoms, and our family tree.
Content-free therapy can be done through metaphor, rather than through directly reliving trauma thereby avoiding re-traumatizing. Metaphors act as a means for the psyche to represent experiences of personal significance in symbolic ways. Metaphoric expressions are tied to some unconscious or implicit aspect of our experience.
Metaphor does something in relation to our understanding. Beyond rhetoric, metaphor is rooted in some quality of the world as it is. Metaphor functions like a dream or symptom in the sense that it simultaneously expresses material from different psychic levels -- topographical, structural, and dynamic.
Metaphor use and exploration gives us a way of linking our experiences across diverse times and situations. In genealogy, history uses veils as epistemological metaphors, reflecting the conception of reality dominant in each respective epoch.
Social Presence in Sacred Space
In our transgenerational work we can extend that self-inquiry, asking ourselves 'where do I feel that in my body', and 'how do I know it's happening when it happens' to develop dynamic images and metaphors of 'what it is like' for process work. It's a functional approach that is used because it works as a tool for exploring personal meaning, fundamental to insight-oriented psychotherapy.
Disembodied Soul
Personifying is a way of making subjective experience, passionate identification, and indwelling images more tangible through conversation and relationship in symbolic form. Hillman (1975) called it “an epistemology of the heart, a thought-mode of feeling.” It imagines what’s inside, outside, and makes this content alive, personal, and even divine. Jung claimed that the inside is the outside, the outside is the inside; the claim is that psyche is matter and matter is psyche.
Theoretical Grounding
The scientific search for knowledge is the search for Truth and Beauty, appealing to both spirit and soul. To know facts is to survive; not to know, or to assess one's environment wrongly, is to lose the fight for survival. With the examination of the sources, nature, and accuracy of our knowledge, we begin to develop epistemic awareness, a more informed understanding of what we know and don't know.
We are faced with two serious epistemological problems: (1) How can we determine which facts are true? and, (2) How can we determine which facts are important? Our minds compare and interface the internal and external realities we navigate through.
Denial is a complex “unconscious defense mechanism for coping with guilt, anxiety and other disturbing emotions aroused by reality.“ Even skepticism and solipsistic arguments – including epistemological relativism – about the existence of objective truth, are generally a social construction.
Rebirth is synonymous with restoring the true history of our origins and integrating our transgenerational inheritance, somewhere between the loss of what we thought we knew and true self-knowledge.
The soul generates images unceasingly. The soul lives on images and metaphor, especially epistemological metaphors--how we know what we know. These images form the basis of our consciousness. All we can know comes through images, through our multi-sensory perceptions. So, this soul always stays close to the body, close to corporeality, to what "matters."
Jung's basic ideas about the unity of knowledge and existence are in principle synonymous with the Platonic tradition, alchemy, Qabala and Gnosticism. Plato treated the end product of the evolution of mathematical concepts, (a fixed system of idealized objects), as an independent beginning point of the evolution of the "world of things." This concrete form of philosophy was determined by the nature of Greek mathematics.
These philosophies seek to reconcile the actual condition with a hypothetical distant ideal, which expansively incorporates both personal and universal dimensions. It is an inward-oriented epistemology. By intuitive perception we can consciously reiterate the laws of Nature and mind which are equivalent to the archetypes themselves.
Going back to the question of fantasizing, if once the resistance to free contact with the unconscious can be overcome, and one can develop the power of sticking to the fantasy, then the play of the images can be watched. ~Carl Jung, 1925 Seminar, Page 38.
A DREAM DREAMT THROUGHOUT THE WORLD
Psyche Is Matter
What Jungians call the “Collective Unconscious” and physicists call “matter”
in alchemy were always one – the Psyche. ~Marie-Louise von Franz.
The material event of trauma presents a dissonance of belief, which the bodymind may not easily absorb. In some individuals, this forces a temporal splitting between present and past, in which (without appropriate treatment) the trauma event continues to replay in an interminable present, notably in many Holocaust survivors. This severing can be likened to a separation between body and mind dissociation. It is necessary to recognise the time differences, their meanings and somatisation. Therapy must therefore intervene to collate and elide time, permitting integration of the bodymind.
http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/17432979.2013.748976
The proverbial Holy Grail is human curiosity and discovery. Human consciousness has taken many forms, transcending primitive myth, spirituality, religion, philosophy, and science. Today's genealogy combines elements of them all. The family tree has mythic elements, it evokes and challenges our spiritual beliefs and faith, the nature of existence and reality, and our rational materialistic view of self, others, and cosmos.
Genealogy and working the family tree for transgenerational integration can be particularly valuable form of discovery for finding meaning in the second half of life. Like Jung's method being true to who you are carries an innate healing function, especially for uprooted lives divorced from nature. The entire phenomenon of life is alchemy. The human lifecycle and the maturation of psychological stages is an alchemical journey.
The tree creates a sacred and ritual space -- a sacred container for our larger Being and the process of re-connection. Jung defines unconscious in a way that can relate to our experience of the Family Tree and ancestors:
Unconscious: "the sum total of autonomous contents. Each of those contents has a consciousness in itself."
Consciousness: "An association of things with an ego center."
"Wherever there is such a center, there is consciousness. Therefore what we call the unconscious could be a form of consciousness." (Jung, Visions Seminar, Page 154.)
Longing for Belonging
Through this consciously created act, we descend into the unconscious where we are no longer separated or single. Can we assume that just as the unconscious affects us, the increase in our consciousness affects the unconscious, as Jung suggests in his essay 'On Life After Death'? The spiritual and healing practices of our ancestors were designed to modify the collective consciousness and maintain transgenerational laws.
Our tree is a conscious representation of an approximation to totality -- the truth of our nature. The living totality is represented by our embodied self as a living riddle of nature. We are our own representation of the way we came into being.
While it isn't possible to establish a conscious relationship with the archetypal natural self, we can have one that extends toward the realm of the transcendent through our family tree and reconciling the hidden pieces of our lives. We come to terms with our lives when we realize what happened to our own, not just what we may have believed.
The collective unconscious is comprised of the psychic life of our ancestors right back to the earliest beginnings. Our inheritance consists in physiological paths -- mental processes in our ancestors that traced these paths. It matters because we matter as the psychophysical expression of all those who came before us.
We continue to embody them. Thus, the ancestors are personal, collective, and present. They are available to our search for spiritual sustenance as well as family history. If the collective unconscious is a summary of experiences of our ancient ancestors, we all possess specifics of humankind's knowledge from birth. As we realize it, it becomes conscious.
Symbols, images and archetypes are the language of the soul, of the collective unconscious -- perceptions of supra-normal comprehension. Thus, we gain knowledge of, and participate in, the domains of matter (senses), mind (reason; language), soul (feeling; nonordinary states), and spirit (intuition; silence; gnosis).
Collective unconscious influences every aspect of our life, especially the emotional ones. The reflection of the collective unconscious in our family tree helps us consciously see and study collective unconscious, its patterns and ways of influence. Psyche is a unity of three parts: ego, personal unconscious and collective unconscious, a summary of experiences of our ancient ancestors.
Connectivity
The unconscious is the Holy Grail of consciousness, the supreme value of life, which we find when we truly realize ourselves, joining the family of the Grail. In the family tree we find the presence of the most ancient symbolic appearance of the Grail itself -- the illuminated heart. The soul takes flesh and descends...the hidden gate through which all creation moves.
The youth does not know what the Grail is, but he remarks that as they walk, he seems scarcely to move, yet seems to travel far. Gurnemanz says that in this realm, time becomes space (Wagner, "Zum Raum wird hier die Zeit").
Robert Johnson says, “The object of life is not happiness, but to serve God or the Grail.” That is, we serve not our materialistic questing ego, but our inner spirituality. Here we integrate the mother, the father, and the inner masculine/feminine connection to life that brings us to our personal Grail of spirituality. It may appear as our personal spiritual quest, but, in fact, is a shared journey.
The ancestors, the gods, and the Grail were always there in our Tree, which we bring to completion when we finally bring ourselves to it, fully. Here, we serve ourselves, the ancestors, and the gods as revealed in our own family tree. It is our own matter that forms the elements of the Grail tradition, the present embodiment of past times.
We can, in our genealogical quest, do as Meister Eckhart suggests: “Start with yourself therefore and take leave of yourself. If you do not depart from yourself, then wherever you take refuge, you will find obstacles and unrest, wherever it may be.” He also said, “We are all Mothers of God, for God is always needing to be born." We all carry that spirit and seek the inner reality of the Grail behind the symbols and stories.
Your heights are your own mountain, which belongs to you and you alone.
There you are individual and live your very own life.
If you live your own life, you do not live the common life, which is always continuing and never-ending, the life of history and the inalienable and ever-present burdens and products of the human race.
There you live the endlessness of being, but not the becoming.
Becoming belongs to the heights and is full of torment.
~Carl Jung, The Red Book, Page 267.
Relatedness
We depart from ourselves following the paths of our descent back up into the heights and roots of our Tree. Crossing that threshold we begin our Genealogical Journey. Our two branches become four, the four branches become eight, the eight, sixteen great-grandparents, and so on.
Jung left the "Spirit of the Times" to enter the "Spirit of the Depths," where he met ancestors and spirits of the dead and resumed a dialogue with his soul. He explains, "without relatedness individuation is hardly possible. Relatedness begins with conversation mostly." (Letters Vol. II, Pages 609-610).
Go where we went and you will know why.
Psyche Is Matter
What Jungians call the “Collective Unconscious” and physicists call “matter”
in alchemy were always one – the Psyche. ~Marie-Louise von Franz.
The material event of trauma presents a dissonance of belief, which the bodymind may not easily absorb. In some individuals, this forces a temporal splitting between present and past, in which (without appropriate treatment) the trauma event continues to replay in an interminable present, notably in many Holocaust survivors. This severing can be likened to a separation between body and mind dissociation. It is necessary to recognise the time differences, their meanings and somatisation. Therapy must therefore intervene to collate and elide time, permitting integration of the bodymind.
http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/17432979.2013.748976
The proverbial Holy Grail is human curiosity and discovery. Human consciousness has taken many forms, transcending primitive myth, spirituality, religion, philosophy, and science. Today's genealogy combines elements of them all. The family tree has mythic elements, it evokes and challenges our spiritual beliefs and faith, the nature of existence and reality, and our rational materialistic view of self, others, and cosmos.
Genealogy and working the family tree for transgenerational integration can be particularly valuable form of discovery for finding meaning in the second half of life. Like Jung's method being true to who you are carries an innate healing function, especially for uprooted lives divorced from nature. The entire phenomenon of life is alchemy. The human lifecycle and the maturation of psychological stages is an alchemical journey.
The tree creates a sacred and ritual space -- a sacred container for our larger Being and the process of re-connection. Jung defines unconscious in a way that can relate to our experience of the Family Tree and ancestors:
Unconscious: "the sum total of autonomous contents. Each of those contents has a consciousness in itself."
Consciousness: "An association of things with an ego center."
"Wherever there is such a center, there is consciousness. Therefore what we call the unconscious could be a form of consciousness." (Jung, Visions Seminar, Page 154.)
Longing for Belonging
Through this consciously created act, we descend into the unconscious where we are no longer separated or single. Can we assume that just as the unconscious affects us, the increase in our consciousness affects the unconscious, as Jung suggests in his essay 'On Life After Death'? The spiritual and healing practices of our ancestors were designed to modify the collective consciousness and maintain transgenerational laws.
Our tree is a conscious representation of an approximation to totality -- the truth of our nature. The living totality is represented by our embodied self as a living riddle of nature. We are our own representation of the way we came into being.
While it isn't possible to establish a conscious relationship with the archetypal natural self, we can have one that extends toward the realm of the transcendent through our family tree and reconciling the hidden pieces of our lives. We come to terms with our lives when we realize what happened to our own, not just what we may have believed.
The collective unconscious is comprised of the psychic life of our ancestors right back to the earliest beginnings. Our inheritance consists in physiological paths -- mental processes in our ancestors that traced these paths. It matters because we matter as the psychophysical expression of all those who came before us.
We continue to embody them. Thus, the ancestors are personal, collective, and present. They are available to our search for spiritual sustenance as well as family history. If the collective unconscious is a summary of experiences of our ancient ancestors, we all possess specifics of humankind's knowledge from birth. As we realize it, it becomes conscious.
Symbols, images and archetypes are the language of the soul, of the collective unconscious -- perceptions of supra-normal comprehension. Thus, we gain knowledge of, and participate in, the domains of matter (senses), mind (reason; language), soul (feeling; nonordinary states), and spirit (intuition; silence; gnosis).
Collective unconscious influences every aspect of our life, especially the emotional ones. The reflection of the collective unconscious in our family tree helps us consciously see and study collective unconscious, its patterns and ways of influence. Psyche is a unity of three parts: ego, personal unconscious and collective unconscious, a summary of experiences of our ancient ancestors.
Connectivity
The unconscious is the Holy Grail of consciousness, the supreme value of life, which we find when we truly realize ourselves, joining the family of the Grail. In the family tree we find the presence of the most ancient symbolic appearance of the Grail itself -- the illuminated heart. The soul takes flesh and descends...the hidden gate through which all creation moves.
The youth does not know what the Grail is, but he remarks that as they walk, he seems scarcely to move, yet seems to travel far. Gurnemanz says that in this realm, time becomes space (Wagner, "Zum Raum wird hier die Zeit").
Robert Johnson says, “The object of life is not happiness, but to serve God or the Grail.” That is, we serve not our materialistic questing ego, but our inner spirituality. Here we integrate the mother, the father, and the inner masculine/feminine connection to life that brings us to our personal Grail of spirituality. It may appear as our personal spiritual quest, but, in fact, is a shared journey.
The ancestors, the gods, and the Grail were always there in our Tree, which we bring to completion when we finally bring ourselves to it, fully. Here, we serve ourselves, the ancestors, and the gods as revealed in our own family tree. It is our own matter that forms the elements of the Grail tradition, the present embodiment of past times.
We can, in our genealogical quest, do as Meister Eckhart suggests: “Start with yourself therefore and take leave of yourself. If you do not depart from yourself, then wherever you take refuge, you will find obstacles and unrest, wherever it may be.” He also said, “We are all Mothers of God, for God is always needing to be born." We all carry that spirit and seek the inner reality of the Grail behind the symbols and stories.
Your heights are your own mountain, which belongs to you and you alone.
There you are individual and live your very own life.
If you live your own life, you do not live the common life, which is always continuing and never-ending, the life of history and the inalienable and ever-present burdens and products of the human race.
There you live the endlessness of being, but not the becoming.
Becoming belongs to the heights and is full of torment.
~Carl Jung, The Red Book, Page 267.
Relatedness
We depart from ourselves following the paths of our descent back up into the heights and roots of our Tree. Crossing that threshold we begin our Genealogical Journey. Our two branches become four, the four branches become eight, the eight, sixteen great-grandparents, and so on.
Jung left the "Spirit of the Times" to enter the "Spirit of the Depths," where he met ancestors and spirits of the dead and resumed a dialogue with his soul. He explains, "without relatedness individuation is hardly possible. Relatedness begins with conversation mostly." (Letters Vol. II, Pages 609-610).
Go where we went and you will know why.
DEATH BECOMES THE MUSE
Right Now Eternity is Going On
“Our souls as well as our bodies are composed of individual elements which were all already present in the ranks of our ancestors. The "newness" in the individual psyche is an endlessly varied recombination of age-old components. Body and soul therefore have an intensely historical character and find no proper place in what is new, in things that have just come into being. That is to say, our ancestral components are only partly at home in such things.
We are very far from having finished completely with the Middle Ages, classical antiquity, and primitivity, as our modern psyches pretend. Nevertheless, we have plunged down a cataract of progress which sweeps us on into the future with ever wilder violence the farther it takes us from our roots. Once the past has been breached, it is usually annihilated, and there is no stopping the forward motion. But it is precisely the loss of connection with the past, our uprootedness, which has given rise to the "discontents" of civilization and to such a flurry and haste that we live more in the future and its chimerical promises of a golden age than in the present, with which our whole evolutionary background has not yet caught up. We rush impetuously into novelty, driven by a mounting sense of insufficiency, dissatisfaction, and restlessness.”
--Carl G. Jung - Memories, Dreams, Reflections
They evidently live and function in the deeper layers of the unconscious, especially in that phylogenetic substratum which I have called the collective unconscious. This localization explains a good deal of their strangeness: they bring into our ephemeral consciousness an unknown psychic life belonging to a remote past. It is the mind of our unknown ancestors, their way of thinking and feeling , their way of experiencing life and the world, gods and men. The existence of these archaic strata is presumably the source of man's belief in reincarnations and in memories of "previous experiences". Just as the human body is a museum, so to speak, of its phylogenetic history, so too is the psyche.
(Jung, CW vol. 9.I (1959), "Conscious, Unconscious, and Individuation" (1939), ¶518 (pp. 286–287).
Jung left the "Spirit of the Times" to enter the "Spirit of the Depths," where he met Ancestors and Spirits of the Dead and resumed a dialogue with his soul.
Right Now Eternity is Going On
“Our souls as well as our bodies are composed of individual elements which were all already present in the ranks of our ancestors. The "newness" in the individual psyche is an endlessly varied recombination of age-old components. Body and soul therefore have an intensely historical character and find no proper place in what is new, in things that have just come into being. That is to say, our ancestral components are only partly at home in such things.
We are very far from having finished completely with the Middle Ages, classical antiquity, and primitivity, as our modern psyches pretend. Nevertheless, we have plunged down a cataract of progress which sweeps us on into the future with ever wilder violence the farther it takes us from our roots. Once the past has been breached, it is usually annihilated, and there is no stopping the forward motion. But it is precisely the loss of connection with the past, our uprootedness, which has given rise to the "discontents" of civilization and to such a flurry and haste that we live more in the future and its chimerical promises of a golden age than in the present, with which our whole evolutionary background has not yet caught up. We rush impetuously into novelty, driven by a mounting sense of insufficiency, dissatisfaction, and restlessness.”
--Carl G. Jung - Memories, Dreams, Reflections
They evidently live and function in the deeper layers of the unconscious, especially in that phylogenetic substratum which I have called the collective unconscious. This localization explains a good deal of their strangeness: they bring into our ephemeral consciousness an unknown psychic life belonging to a remote past. It is the mind of our unknown ancestors, their way of thinking and feeling , their way of experiencing life and the world, gods and men. The existence of these archaic strata is presumably the source of man's belief in reincarnations and in memories of "previous experiences". Just as the human body is a museum, so to speak, of its phylogenetic history, so too is the psyche.
(Jung, CW vol. 9.I (1959), "Conscious, Unconscious, and Individuation" (1939), ¶518 (pp. 286–287).
Jung left the "Spirit of the Times" to enter the "Spirit of the Depths," where he met Ancestors and Spirits of the Dead and resumed a dialogue with his soul.
Born Star, Matthew Atkinson
Assyrologist Simo Parpola calls the sacred tree a cosmological symbol of the Assyrians, dating from the second millennium BCE: “The crown of the tree is the god of heaven, Anu; its foundation is the god of the netherworld, Nergal; in between heaven and earth, connecting them, is the goddess of love, Ishtar,” and Ashera, the deposed mate of Yahweh.
The Genius of Genealogy
The Past Remains Present
The Past Remains Present
DAIMONS IN THE TREE
What images within us can we trace to our seminal beginnings but also relate to the actual events of the world? How are they connected? How does our individual and specific person belong to the collective identity? What does it take to dedicate ourselves to the service of the psyche, and how can we sustain such a challenge? Should we?
Interlocuteur
"If we became aware of the ancestral lives in us, we might disintegrate. An ancestor might take possession of us and ride us to death." ~Carl Jung, 1925 Seminar, Page 139
"[W]ithout relatedness individuation is hardly possible. Relatedness begins with conversation mostly. Therefore communication is indubitably important." --Jung, Letters Vol. II, Pages 609-610
On this basis the main body of the collective unconscious cannot be strictly said to be psychological but psychical. ~Carl Jung, 1925 Seminar, Page 140
We think we shape ourselves and try to act authentically. But our identity is malleable, and the unconscious plays a big role in that. To adapt with integrity, to be true to yourself, requires a clear sense of who you are, really, and it is still context dependent. Individual human consciousness is formed in the dynamic interrelation of self and other, and therefore is inherently intersubjective.
Deep memories guide our attention and inform our behavior. We are not the authors of our own narrative. Whatever enters our field of perception means something, large or small. Everything speaks to us, and in doing so changes who we are. Perhaps it is never more so than with our ancestors and daimon. Knowing our family tree helps us dream and remember in truth.
Psychological well-being is tied to a coherent sense of self identity, but is not its only source. Genealogy is an intangible asset which lacks physical substance but cannot be assessed or measured. Conscious and unconscious are two forces welded and embodied into one configuration. The later is a persistent inner voice. In the ancestral quest, 'the other' is no longer isolated but full of imaginative possibilities, mutual interaction, and influence without domination.
One cannot exist without the other. But this 'other' is not a parapsychological phenomena, nor a proper subject for a seance, ghostly tidings, a devil, ancient alien, nor a physical haunting, or any other supernatural literalism. But it is a dynamic psychoid reality -- a force majeure, also known as cas fortuit (French) or casus fortuitus (Latin) "chance occurrence, unavoidable accident."
It personifies in a variety of ways what the ancestors are 'dying to show you,' should you be 'dying to meet' them. Hence, we have so many idiomatic expressions that we are 'dying to hear, know, learn, or do,' -- 'dying to be me,' in which a radical transformation is implicit, 'dying to self.' How many ways are we dying to live, love, belong, to see, and to tell the story and to be heard? Or, 'dying to quit', 'dying to leave,' or 'dying to be free' and 'dying to be remembered.'
Mirror, Mirror
"Just remember to follow nature" are ancestral words of wisdom. As nature is the mirror of the psyche, our family tree is the mirror of our own nature, the instinct to reflect. The archaic, meaning more 'original' than 'ancient,' still lives in us buried beneath the persona. Genealogy is a self-creating artform -- the silver backing on our mirror of introspection and our connection with nature. The many ancestors are reflected in the one [descendant].
A reflective perspective "mediates events and makes differences between ourselves and everything that happens. Between us and events, between the doer and the deed, there is a reflective moment—and soul-making means differentiating this middle ground."
James Hillman continues, “...you find your genius by looking in the mirror of your life. Your visible image shows your inner truth, so when you're estimating others, what you see is what you get. It therefore becomes critically important to see generously, or you will get only what you see; to see sharply, so that you discern the mix of traits rather than a generalized lump; and to see deeply into dark shadows, or else you will be deceived.”
As Jung says in CW8, "If we do not fashion for ourselves a picture of the world, we do not see ourselves either, who are the faithful reflections of that world. Only when mirrored in our picture of the world can we see ourselves in the round. Only in our creative acts do we step forth into the light and see ourselves whole and complete. Never shall we put any face on the world other than our own, and we have to do this precisely in order to find ourselves. For higher than science or art as an end in itself stands man, the creator of his instruments." (Jung, "Analytical Psychology and Weltanschauung" (1928). P.737)
Hillman offers no recommendations; he doesn't try to fix things: "My suggestion is that there's no way out of the human condition," he says. "Sex, death, marriage, children, parents, illness. There's no way out. They're a misery, all of them. You can spend 10 years in therapy and it will still be sex, death, marriage . . . " http://www.nytimes.com/1995/04/23/magazine/how-the-soul-is-sold.html?pagewanted=all
We can also apply what depth psychology says about this to our ancestral search. Sure, it's a challenge that sets a high bar, but really just means bringing a certain sensibility and aesthetic to the disciple of ancestral search itself. In this sense, we are 'dead serious' much as in art -- summoning deceased relatives back to consciousness with their wisdom, and hunger, and sacrificial demands.
The Tenth Muse
The tenth muse is your daimon -- the strange attractor of our depths -- helpful awareness through the dark. We can call it a daemon, genius, or muse, guardian angel, death, nature, or any conventional element for the abyss of the transcendent imagination, which has infinite aspects. It is our true calling -- self-determination -- our fate -- soul's intimate connection with death.
When death finds us, it finds us alive. "The reality of the psyche is lived in the death of the literal," according to Gaston Bachelard. The muse connects with the mythic and can help or hinder the creative process. Death is a muse that inform us the darkness of the depths is haunted with loving souls. The essence of soul is the paradox of life/death, light/dark, male/female.
The muse supports imaginal life from the yawning darkness of the psychological depths, the soul of which is love itself -- eros/thanatos. The muse moves within us and the story comes up and out, conjuring images, deepening awareness -- a dialogue with nature.
Hillman strongly suggests the daemonic is a taskmaster, "to do these things or say these things or produce these things," he explains. "It's the slave driver. You spend your life making it, then it tortures you: 'What are you doing now? We want more. You didn't finish that.' " Charisma is a trait of genius and psychopath.
Ultimately, though, the symbol-using mortal body, aware because of its symbols of both the apparent immortality of ideas and its own inevitable death, is not merely a system of cognition, a cultural construct, or an operator of rules. It is a fragile, embodied soul in need of understanding, and most in need just when it is asked to enter into transactions of consequence with other souls. http://trace.tennessee.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1059&context=jaepl
The Man Who Fell to Birth
The magical creature, duende or tener duende ("having duende") loosely means having soul, a heightened state of emotion, expression and authenticity. El duende is the spirit of evocation, from inside as a physical/emotional response to art. It is what gives you chills, makes you smile or cry as a bodily reaction to an artistic performance that is particularly expressive.
Duende embodies at least four elements: irrationality, earthiness, a heightened awareness of death, and a dash of the diabolical. ...The duende is an alternative to style, to mere virtuosity, to God-given grace and charm (what Spaniards call "angel"), and to the classical, artistic norms dictated by the muse. The artist must not surrender to the duende, but battle it skillfully.
Lorca writes: "The duende, then, is a power, not a work. It is a struggle, not a thought. I have heard an old maestro of the guitar say, 'The duende is not in the throat; the duende climbs up inside you, from the soles of the feet.' Meaning this: it is not a question of ability, but of true, living style, of blood, of the most ancient culture, of spontaneous creation.". He suggests, "everything that has black sounds in it, has duende. [i.e. emotional 'darkness'] "The duende's arrival always means a radical change in forms. It brings to old planes unknown feelings of freshness, with the quality of something newly created, like a miracle, and it produces an almost religious enthusiasm."
Hillman amplifies that view. "[T]he duende is the part that is connected to the earth, the blood, the party. It is this that Rilke refers to in his line that our role in life is to be decisively defeated by greater and greater beings. ...This is the struggle with the daimon .... While our culture has no words for this, other cultures have referred to it as "the ancestors" or "the spirits" that operate invisibly in our world. ... "the invisibles." What we do when we aren't aware of "the invisibles"? We buy insurance, and maybe even make a little money out of the catastrophe, instead of asking "Why did this happen now? What does is mean? What is my daimon's rag telling me?"" Hillman, Meade http://www.menweb.org/chardest.htm
"The "other" in us always seems alien and unacceptable; but if we let ourselves be aggrieved the feeling sinks in, and we are the richer for this little bit of self-knowledge." (Jung, "Psychological Aspects of the Kore" (1941). In CW 9, P. 918)
"This process of coming to terms with the Other in us is well worth while, because in this way we get to know aspects of our nature which we would not allow anybody else to show us and which we ourselves would never have admitted."
(Jung, Mysterium Coniunctionis (1955) CW 14: P. 706)
More Character; More Genius
In our genealogical work we call up the voices of the deep. There is no authoritative voice, only multiple readings. The ancient Greeks believed that our character or genius was an autonomous daimon who oversaw our experiences with mortality -- our fate -- our personal yet transcendent god.
"Whoever speaks in primordial images speaks with a thousand voices; he enthrals and overpowers, while at the same time he lifts the idea he is seeking to express out of the occasional and the transitory into the realm of the ever enduring. He transmutes our personal destiny into the destiny of mankind, and evokes in us all those beneficent forces that ever and anon have enabled humanity to find a refuge from every peril and to outlive the longest night." (Jung, "On the Relation of Analytical Psychology of Poetry" (1922). In CW 15: The Spirit in Man, Art and Literature. P.129)
Every person has their spirit or guardian angel that remains throughout life and into death. Hillman notes, “Character forms a life regardless of how obscurely that life is lived and how little light falls on it from the stars.”
“To the question, “Why am I old?” the usual answer is, “Because I am becoming dead.” But the facts show that I reveal more character as I age, not more death.” (Hillman)
Pliny called daimons 'the generating breath of the universe’ (XVI xxxix, 93). Plato called daimons envoys and interpreters between heaven and earth. They are the medium of the prophetic and esoteric arts, and mediators of the spirit world.
The daimon has a specific interest in the outcome of our lives. It is a driving force or spiritual energy leading to the creative formation of individuality. This is where we find hope in an inevitably doomed existence...and perhaps taste our immortality. It is a formidable image that our family tree is not only our ancestors as insubstantial shades, but a forest of thousands of daimons -- a forest of symbols and meaning watching and waiting for us.
Beyond Control
Jung referred to the daimon as something alien from the unconscious, an “archetype” or “numinous imperative." This force is as real as hunger and the fear of death, making demands of us and acting with authority. When we look for 'signs', we attend to our daimon, but it can also hide things from us in our blind spots.
Daemons, linked by Jung to anima/animus, are usually the opposite sex of their host. They share our feelings, thoughts and experiences. The daemon is an extension of the human but semi-independent, with praeternatural knowledge. When the human dies, the daimon fades away becoming part of everything.
Under its influence we can feel taken over. Intense and energetic feelings exceed normal human limits. In its “grip,” the daimon makes us feel swept up or carried by a force we don't understand. We seem possessed of an energy that transcends our conscious drives, needs and desires. It provokes by creating predicaments to solve and a sense of creative urgency.
Every person has their "seed-self", "guiding force", or acorn of character from birth. Our spirits grow from this seed that is our daimon. The inspirational spirit guides us toward the fulfillment of our potential and shows us our vulnerabilities and dream or imaginal life. The daimon holds the tension of opposites between good and bad aspects, but provokes internal conflict that leads to dialogue that promotes self-awareness. It is our voice of wisdom in the solitude.
Laws of Inheritance
Talent can be a childhood refuge from traumatic reality -- it takes us away from the awful place in a sort of creative dissociation. It can develop a superpowerful concentration and focus also seen in spiritual mystics. But it also exposes our wounds. Fear disguises genius with depression and anxiety. Lack of opportunity can be debilitating or degrading. Such genius needs recognition and nurturing for survival. Dispirited souls have lost their ‘daemons.’
All old trees had their daimon, and the World Tree -- mankind's most magnificent legend -- is no exception. The personified tree is the daimon at the same time because they are different categories of existence -- secular and sacred.
When we are 'called', we are called by our daimon, as Hillman notes: “Each life is formed by its unique image, an image that is the essence of that life and calls it to a destiny. As the force of fate, this image acts as a personal daimon, an accompanying guide who remembers your calling." If we ignore that call we may wither away or live half a life. The daimon helps us know ourselves. If we are fortunate the daimon informs our life and death with some nobility and poetry.
In Soul's Code, Hillman remind us, “Fatalism accounts for life as a whole. Whatever happens can be fit within the large generality of individuation, or my journey, or growth. Fatalism comforts, for it raises no questions. There's no need to examine just how events fit in.”
The tree articulates a psychophysical reality -- the life of the cosmos. Mind is rooted in the Unconscious much as a tree is rooted in the ground. Shaping matter as well as mind, it retains its character through endless variations. The psychoid is more fundamental than matter and psyche and the basis of synchronicity. This vital principle is an innate impulse that directs the behavior of an organism. The daemon tells us what to keep and where to keep it.
As Hillman summarizes: "The daimon motivates. It protects. It invents and persists with stubborn fidelity. It resists compromising reasonableness and often forces deviance and oddity upon its keeper, especially when neglected or opposed. It offers comfort and can pull you into its shell, but it cannot abide innocence. It can make the body ill. It is out of step with time, finding all sorts of faults, gaps, and knots in the flow of life - and it prefers them. It has affinities with myth, since it is itself a mythical being and thinks in mythical patterns."
The Acorn Doesn't Fall Far From the Tree
Meaning is essential to tree phenomenology. Again, its character is the personal or family daimon. The tree is the image and mirror of our condition. It is an ancient idea that if a tree is planted at our birth our fate is shared with it. Other families plant memorial trees for the deceased. This describes the character of the family tree and symbol of wholeness.
Hillman suggests it goes beyond meaning: “It seems, as one becomes older, / That the past has another pattern, and ceases to be a mere sequence,” wrote T. S. Eliot. Four Quartets, which meditates on time, age, and memory, goes on to say, “We had the experience but missed the meaning, / And approach to the meaning restores the experience / In a different form, beyond any meaning.”
Developmental Escalation
Hillman said the genius reveals both fears and talents in very young children. They may have a premature experience of the self [not-me] as an active factor in childhood development -- accelerated psychic growth. Prodigies are naturally endowed with exceptional abilities in youth.
The adult can remain burdened by the child prodigy routine, including self-expectations and drive. Drive can jump the tracks. The inner child fails to mature and may turn self-destructive, as the recovery movement showed. Escaping reason and reality can only be balanced by embracing the mystery in our unique way. If spirituality becomes a physical experience: meditation, or a drug/music-induced trip, doing psychogenealogy can restore spirituality as a relationship.
Some children fear identifying their genius for personal and social reasons. They don't want to 'pwn' it or feel or be perceived as different, even extraordinary. Hubris, exhibitionism, and competitiveness push us ahead of ourselves. The creative genius who peaks to early is a story trope. Some fight even harder to get their grief out of the basement. Nothing is going to hit as hard as life.
In a dysplasia of cognitive and affective development, cognitive stages outpace affective development which is stalled (Gowan). This block (the gulf between innate and actualized talents) is the cause of most absence of creativity in gifted adults and sometimes lead to non-actualizing or self-destructive tendencies. M.-L. von Franz said “the wounded healer IS the archetype of the Self [our wholeness, the God within] and is at the bottom of all genuine healing procedures." (Creativity & Giftedness)
But the pedigree doesn't illustrate the argument as much as embody it -- the genius and the wound are inherited and inherent. Certain wounds or deficits may come with genius and require challenges to release the gift and its new perspective. The wound lets in the energy that pushes or drags us to make us whole. Our symptoms are aspects of the wound and our genius, and this notion conforms with applying family therapies within the genealogical core generations. It frees the humane individual for self-actualization.
Like all archetypal symbols, the symbol of the tree has undergone a development of meaning in the course of the centuries. It is far removed from the original meaning of the shamanistic tree, even though certain basic features prove to be unalterable. The psychoid form underlying any archetypal image retains its character at all stages of development, though empirically it is capable of endless variations. The outward form of the tree may change in the course of time, but the richness and vitality of a symbol are expressed more in its change of meaning.
(Jung,CW13 ¶ 350)
This plant is an inner, spiritual growth, the development of a tree of life and knowledge which played a great role in alchemy....In general it is advisable to watch these inner developments and not let them slip back into the unconscious, lest they get stuck in the physiological sphere, or rather in the realm of the [psychoid] unconscious which merges with the body, where they give rise to pathological formations which a wise man carefully avoids. (Jung, Letters Vol. II, Pages 607-608)
The daimon is our spiritual guide or self, and our character -- a divine mediating power that impels our action and drives or mediates our destiny. Destiny is not something over which we can gain control. We can only learn to dance with it. It is what makes us unique in relation to the world. This inborn immortal factor embodies our innate talents, inherent gifts, and positive or negative natural tendencies.
Live to Tell
This supreme form of soul is our constant companion and source of inspiration -- like the Latin genii, our genius. This "genius" (from the Latin genere) means to generate, to beget, making the daimon the voice of the generative process in us. It can be a personification of the transcendent function, experienced in dreams and in our acts of doing and becoming.
The daimon is also our suffering, emotional disorders, and more, but could also heal, and promote health, happiness, resilience, perseverance, and harmony. The vitality of the inner universe is mobilized in happiness, misery, regret. The daimon can inform even a painful death with some poetry and grace.
Suffering can be produced by painful states of mind such as hatred, envy, alienation, scapegoating, cruelty, and loneliness. The daimon can also bring altruism, empathy, compassion, concern, care, consolation, and pity. It brings understanding of the beauty, compassion, and the foundation of wisdom. It is the psychobiological transformations of epigenetics, changing our responses to life experiences.
Regardless of the nature of the genes we inherit from our parents, dynamic change at this level allows us almost unlimited influence on our fate. Beyond "biology as destiny" is “self-directed biological transformation,” but under the daimon, not the ego. The disruptive and transformative reality of the individuation process manifests the uncanny otherness of the unconscious.
What images within us can we trace to our seminal beginnings but also relate to the actual events of the world? How are they connected? How does our individual and specific person belong to the collective identity? What does it take to dedicate ourselves to the service of the psyche, and how can we sustain such a challenge? Should we?
Interlocuteur
"If we became aware of the ancestral lives in us, we might disintegrate. An ancestor might take possession of us and ride us to death." ~Carl Jung, 1925 Seminar, Page 139
"[W]ithout relatedness individuation is hardly possible. Relatedness begins with conversation mostly. Therefore communication is indubitably important." --Jung, Letters Vol. II, Pages 609-610
On this basis the main body of the collective unconscious cannot be strictly said to be psychological but psychical. ~Carl Jung, 1925 Seminar, Page 140
We think we shape ourselves and try to act authentically. But our identity is malleable, and the unconscious plays a big role in that. To adapt with integrity, to be true to yourself, requires a clear sense of who you are, really, and it is still context dependent. Individual human consciousness is formed in the dynamic interrelation of self and other, and therefore is inherently intersubjective.
Deep memories guide our attention and inform our behavior. We are not the authors of our own narrative. Whatever enters our field of perception means something, large or small. Everything speaks to us, and in doing so changes who we are. Perhaps it is never more so than with our ancestors and daimon. Knowing our family tree helps us dream and remember in truth.
Psychological well-being is tied to a coherent sense of self identity, but is not its only source. Genealogy is an intangible asset which lacks physical substance but cannot be assessed or measured. Conscious and unconscious are two forces welded and embodied into one configuration. The later is a persistent inner voice. In the ancestral quest, 'the other' is no longer isolated but full of imaginative possibilities, mutual interaction, and influence without domination.
One cannot exist without the other. But this 'other' is not a parapsychological phenomena, nor a proper subject for a seance, ghostly tidings, a devil, ancient alien, nor a physical haunting, or any other supernatural literalism. But it is a dynamic psychoid reality -- a force majeure, also known as cas fortuit (French) or casus fortuitus (Latin) "chance occurrence, unavoidable accident."
It personifies in a variety of ways what the ancestors are 'dying to show you,' should you be 'dying to meet' them. Hence, we have so many idiomatic expressions that we are 'dying to hear, know, learn, or do,' -- 'dying to be me,' in which a radical transformation is implicit, 'dying to self.' How many ways are we dying to live, love, belong, to see, and to tell the story and to be heard? Or, 'dying to quit', 'dying to leave,' or 'dying to be free' and 'dying to be remembered.'
Mirror, Mirror
"Just remember to follow nature" are ancestral words of wisdom. As nature is the mirror of the psyche, our family tree is the mirror of our own nature, the instinct to reflect. The archaic, meaning more 'original' than 'ancient,' still lives in us buried beneath the persona. Genealogy is a self-creating artform -- the silver backing on our mirror of introspection and our connection with nature. The many ancestors are reflected in the one [descendant].
A reflective perspective "mediates events and makes differences between ourselves and everything that happens. Between us and events, between the doer and the deed, there is a reflective moment—and soul-making means differentiating this middle ground."
James Hillman continues, “...you find your genius by looking in the mirror of your life. Your visible image shows your inner truth, so when you're estimating others, what you see is what you get. It therefore becomes critically important to see generously, or you will get only what you see; to see sharply, so that you discern the mix of traits rather than a generalized lump; and to see deeply into dark shadows, or else you will be deceived.”
As Jung says in CW8, "If we do not fashion for ourselves a picture of the world, we do not see ourselves either, who are the faithful reflections of that world. Only when mirrored in our picture of the world can we see ourselves in the round. Only in our creative acts do we step forth into the light and see ourselves whole and complete. Never shall we put any face on the world other than our own, and we have to do this precisely in order to find ourselves. For higher than science or art as an end in itself stands man, the creator of his instruments." (Jung, "Analytical Psychology and Weltanschauung" (1928). P.737)
Hillman offers no recommendations; he doesn't try to fix things: "My suggestion is that there's no way out of the human condition," he says. "Sex, death, marriage, children, parents, illness. There's no way out. They're a misery, all of them. You can spend 10 years in therapy and it will still be sex, death, marriage . . . " http://www.nytimes.com/1995/04/23/magazine/how-the-soul-is-sold.html?pagewanted=all
We can also apply what depth psychology says about this to our ancestral search. Sure, it's a challenge that sets a high bar, but really just means bringing a certain sensibility and aesthetic to the disciple of ancestral search itself. In this sense, we are 'dead serious' much as in art -- summoning deceased relatives back to consciousness with their wisdom, and hunger, and sacrificial demands.
The Tenth Muse
The tenth muse is your daimon -- the strange attractor of our depths -- helpful awareness through the dark. We can call it a daemon, genius, or muse, guardian angel, death, nature, or any conventional element for the abyss of the transcendent imagination, which has infinite aspects. It is our true calling -- self-determination -- our fate -- soul's intimate connection with death.
When death finds us, it finds us alive. "The reality of the psyche is lived in the death of the literal," according to Gaston Bachelard. The muse connects with the mythic and can help or hinder the creative process. Death is a muse that inform us the darkness of the depths is haunted with loving souls. The essence of soul is the paradox of life/death, light/dark, male/female.
The muse supports imaginal life from the yawning darkness of the psychological depths, the soul of which is love itself -- eros/thanatos. The muse moves within us and the story comes up and out, conjuring images, deepening awareness -- a dialogue with nature.
Hillman strongly suggests the daemonic is a taskmaster, "to do these things or say these things or produce these things," he explains. "It's the slave driver. You spend your life making it, then it tortures you: 'What are you doing now? We want more. You didn't finish that.' " Charisma is a trait of genius and psychopath.
Ultimately, though, the symbol-using mortal body, aware because of its symbols of both the apparent immortality of ideas and its own inevitable death, is not merely a system of cognition, a cultural construct, or an operator of rules. It is a fragile, embodied soul in need of understanding, and most in need just when it is asked to enter into transactions of consequence with other souls. http://trace.tennessee.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1059&context=jaepl
The Man Who Fell to Birth
The magical creature, duende or tener duende ("having duende") loosely means having soul, a heightened state of emotion, expression and authenticity. El duende is the spirit of evocation, from inside as a physical/emotional response to art. It is what gives you chills, makes you smile or cry as a bodily reaction to an artistic performance that is particularly expressive.
Duende embodies at least four elements: irrationality, earthiness, a heightened awareness of death, and a dash of the diabolical. ...The duende is an alternative to style, to mere virtuosity, to God-given grace and charm (what Spaniards call "angel"), and to the classical, artistic norms dictated by the muse. The artist must not surrender to the duende, but battle it skillfully.
Lorca writes: "The duende, then, is a power, not a work. It is a struggle, not a thought. I have heard an old maestro of the guitar say, 'The duende is not in the throat; the duende climbs up inside you, from the soles of the feet.' Meaning this: it is not a question of ability, but of true, living style, of blood, of the most ancient culture, of spontaneous creation.". He suggests, "everything that has black sounds in it, has duende. [i.e. emotional 'darkness'] "The duende's arrival always means a radical change in forms. It brings to old planes unknown feelings of freshness, with the quality of something newly created, like a miracle, and it produces an almost religious enthusiasm."
Hillman amplifies that view. "[T]he duende is the part that is connected to the earth, the blood, the party. It is this that Rilke refers to in his line that our role in life is to be decisively defeated by greater and greater beings. ...This is the struggle with the daimon .... While our culture has no words for this, other cultures have referred to it as "the ancestors" or "the spirits" that operate invisibly in our world. ... "the invisibles." What we do when we aren't aware of "the invisibles"? We buy insurance, and maybe even make a little money out of the catastrophe, instead of asking "Why did this happen now? What does is mean? What is my daimon's rag telling me?"" Hillman, Meade http://www.menweb.org/chardest.htm
"The "other" in us always seems alien and unacceptable; but if we let ourselves be aggrieved the feeling sinks in, and we are the richer for this little bit of self-knowledge." (Jung, "Psychological Aspects of the Kore" (1941). In CW 9, P. 918)
"This process of coming to terms with the Other in us is well worth while, because in this way we get to know aspects of our nature which we would not allow anybody else to show us and which we ourselves would never have admitted."
(Jung, Mysterium Coniunctionis (1955) CW 14: P. 706)
More Character; More Genius
In our genealogical work we call up the voices of the deep. There is no authoritative voice, only multiple readings. The ancient Greeks believed that our character or genius was an autonomous daimon who oversaw our experiences with mortality -- our fate -- our personal yet transcendent god.
"Whoever speaks in primordial images speaks with a thousand voices; he enthrals and overpowers, while at the same time he lifts the idea he is seeking to express out of the occasional and the transitory into the realm of the ever enduring. He transmutes our personal destiny into the destiny of mankind, and evokes in us all those beneficent forces that ever and anon have enabled humanity to find a refuge from every peril and to outlive the longest night." (Jung, "On the Relation of Analytical Psychology of Poetry" (1922). In CW 15: The Spirit in Man, Art and Literature. P.129)
Every person has their spirit or guardian angel that remains throughout life and into death. Hillman notes, “Character forms a life regardless of how obscurely that life is lived and how little light falls on it from the stars.”
“To the question, “Why am I old?” the usual answer is, “Because I am becoming dead.” But the facts show that I reveal more character as I age, not more death.” (Hillman)
Pliny called daimons 'the generating breath of the universe’ (XVI xxxix, 93). Plato called daimons envoys and interpreters between heaven and earth. They are the medium of the prophetic and esoteric arts, and mediators of the spirit world.
The daimon has a specific interest in the outcome of our lives. It is a driving force or spiritual energy leading to the creative formation of individuality. This is where we find hope in an inevitably doomed existence...and perhaps taste our immortality. It is a formidable image that our family tree is not only our ancestors as insubstantial shades, but a forest of thousands of daimons -- a forest of symbols and meaning watching and waiting for us.
Beyond Control
Jung referred to the daimon as something alien from the unconscious, an “archetype” or “numinous imperative." This force is as real as hunger and the fear of death, making demands of us and acting with authority. When we look for 'signs', we attend to our daimon, but it can also hide things from us in our blind spots.
Daemons, linked by Jung to anima/animus, are usually the opposite sex of their host. They share our feelings, thoughts and experiences. The daemon is an extension of the human but semi-independent, with praeternatural knowledge. When the human dies, the daimon fades away becoming part of everything.
Under its influence we can feel taken over. Intense and energetic feelings exceed normal human limits. In its “grip,” the daimon makes us feel swept up or carried by a force we don't understand. We seem possessed of an energy that transcends our conscious drives, needs and desires. It provokes by creating predicaments to solve and a sense of creative urgency.
Every person has their "seed-self", "guiding force", or acorn of character from birth. Our spirits grow from this seed that is our daimon. The inspirational spirit guides us toward the fulfillment of our potential and shows us our vulnerabilities and dream or imaginal life. The daimon holds the tension of opposites between good and bad aspects, but provokes internal conflict that leads to dialogue that promotes self-awareness. It is our voice of wisdom in the solitude.
Laws of Inheritance
Talent can be a childhood refuge from traumatic reality -- it takes us away from the awful place in a sort of creative dissociation. It can develop a superpowerful concentration and focus also seen in spiritual mystics. But it also exposes our wounds. Fear disguises genius with depression and anxiety. Lack of opportunity can be debilitating or degrading. Such genius needs recognition and nurturing for survival. Dispirited souls have lost their ‘daemons.’
All old trees had their daimon, and the World Tree -- mankind's most magnificent legend -- is no exception. The personified tree is the daimon at the same time because they are different categories of existence -- secular and sacred.
When we are 'called', we are called by our daimon, as Hillman notes: “Each life is formed by its unique image, an image that is the essence of that life and calls it to a destiny. As the force of fate, this image acts as a personal daimon, an accompanying guide who remembers your calling." If we ignore that call we may wither away or live half a life. The daimon helps us know ourselves. If we are fortunate the daimon informs our life and death with some nobility and poetry.
In Soul's Code, Hillman remind us, “Fatalism accounts for life as a whole. Whatever happens can be fit within the large generality of individuation, or my journey, or growth. Fatalism comforts, for it raises no questions. There's no need to examine just how events fit in.”
The tree articulates a psychophysical reality -- the life of the cosmos. Mind is rooted in the Unconscious much as a tree is rooted in the ground. Shaping matter as well as mind, it retains its character through endless variations. The psychoid is more fundamental than matter and psyche and the basis of synchronicity. This vital principle is an innate impulse that directs the behavior of an organism. The daemon tells us what to keep and where to keep it.
As Hillman summarizes: "The daimon motivates. It protects. It invents and persists with stubborn fidelity. It resists compromising reasonableness and often forces deviance and oddity upon its keeper, especially when neglected or opposed. It offers comfort and can pull you into its shell, but it cannot abide innocence. It can make the body ill. It is out of step with time, finding all sorts of faults, gaps, and knots in the flow of life - and it prefers them. It has affinities with myth, since it is itself a mythical being and thinks in mythical patterns."
The Acorn Doesn't Fall Far From the Tree
Meaning is essential to tree phenomenology. Again, its character is the personal or family daimon. The tree is the image and mirror of our condition. It is an ancient idea that if a tree is planted at our birth our fate is shared with it. Other families plant memorial trees for the deceased. This describes the character of the family tree and symbol of wholeness.
Hillman suggests it goes beyond meaning: “It seems, as one becomes older, / That the past has another pattern, and ceases to be a mere sequence,” wrote T. S. Eliot. Four Quartets, which meditates on time, age, and memory, goes on to say, “We had the experience but missed the meaning, / And approach to the meaning restores the experience / In a different form, beyond any meaning.”
Developmental Escalation
Hillman said the genius reveals both fears and talents in very young children. They may have a premature experience of the self [not-me] as an active factor in childhood development -- accelerated psychic growth. Prodigies are naturally endowed with exceptional abilities in youth.
The adult can remain burdened by the child prodigy routine, including self-expectations and drive. Drive can jump the tracks. The inner child fails to mature and may turn self-destructive, as the recovery movement showed. Escaping reason and reality can only be balanced by embracing the mystery in our unique way. If spirituality becomes a physical experience: meditation, or a drug/music-induced trip, doing psychogenealogy can restore spirituality as a relationship.
Some children fear identifying their genius for personal and social reasons. They don't want to 'pwn' it or feel or be perceived as different, even extraordinary. Hubris, exhibitionism, and competitiveness push us ahead of ourselves. The creative genius who peaks to early is a story trope. Some fight even harder to get their grief out of the basement. Nothing is going to hit as hard as life.
In a dysplasia of cognitive and affective development, cognitive stages outpace affective development which is stalled (Gowan). This block (the gulf between innate and actualized talents) is the cause of most absence of creativity in gifted adults and sometimes lead to non-actualizing or self-destructive tendencies. M.-L. von Franz said “the wounded healer IS the archetype of the Self [our wholeness, the God within] and is at the bottom of all genuine healing procedures." (Creativity & Giftedness)
But the pedigree doesn't illustrate the argument as much as embody it -- the genius and the wound are inherited and inherent. Certain wounds or deficits may come with genius and require challenges to release the gift and its new perspective. The wound lets in the energy that pushes or drags us to make us whole. Our symptoms are aspects of the wound and our genius, and this notion conforms with applying family therapies within the genealogical core generations. It frees the humane individual for self-actualization.
Like all archetypal symbols, the symbol of the tree has undergone a development of meaning in the course of the centuries. It is far removed from the original meaning of the shamanistic tree, even though certain basic features prove to be unalterable. The psychoid form underlying any archetypal image retains its character at all stages of development, though empirically it is capable of endless variations. The outward form of the tree may change in the course of time, but the richness and vitality of a symbol are expressed more in its change of meaning.
(Jung,CW13 ¶ 350)
This plant is an inner, spiritual growth, the development of a tree of life and knowledge which played a great role in alchemy....In general it is advisable to watch these inner developments and not let them slip back into the unconscious, lest they get stuck in the physiological sphere, or rather in the realm of the [psychoid] unconscious which merges with the body, where they give rise to pathological formations which a wise man carefully avoids. (Jung, Letters Vol. II, Pages 607-608)
The daimon is our spiritual guide or self, and our character -- a divine mediating power that impels our action and drives or mediates our destiny. Destiny is not something over which we can gain control. We can only learn to dance with it. It is what makes us unique in relation to the world. This inborn immortal factor embodies our innate talents, inherent gifts, and positive or negative natural tendencies.
Live to Tell
This supreme form of soul is our constant companion and source of inspiration -- like the Latin genii, our genius. This "genius" (from the Latin genere) means to generate, to beget, making the daimon the voice of the generative process in us. It can be a personification of the transcendent function, experienced in dreams and in our acts of doing and becoming.
The daimon is also our suffering, emotional disorders, and more, but could also heal, and promote health, happiness, resilience, perseverance, and harmony. The vitality of the inner universe is mobilized in happiness, misery, regret. The daimon can inform even a painful death with some poetry and grace.
Suffering can be produced by painful states of mind such as hatred, envy, alienation, scapegoating, cruelty, and loneliness. The daimon can also bring altruism, empathy, compassion, concern, care, consolation, and pity. It brings understanding of the beauty, compassion, and the foundation of wisdom. It is the psychobiological transformations of epigenetics, changing our responses to life experiences.
Regardless of the nature of the genes we inherit from our parents, dynamic change at this level allows us almost unlimited influence on our fate. Beyond "biology as destiny" is “self-directed biological transformation,” but under the daimon, not the ego. The disruptive and transformative reality of the individuation process manifests the uncanny otherness of the unconscious.
The daimon of spirituality descends into our soul as the white bird...the serpent is an earthly soul, half daimonic, a spirit, and akin to the spirits of the dead.
--Jung, Red Book
Birds have an ambiguous symbolic significance across cultures throughout human history, universally relating to both life and death. Birds portend impending calamity and death. They bear or steal spirits of the dead, sometimes even embodying those very spirits themselves, and are also commonly associated with life, fertility, and longevity. They symbolize our deep-seated ambivalence to mortality -- the denial of death as finality through a desire for renewal, transformation, and rebirth.
--Jung, Red Book
Birds have an ambiguous symbolic significance across cultures throughout human history, universally relating to both life and death. Birds portend impending calamity and death. They bear or steal spirits of the dead, sometimes even embodying those very spirits themselves, and are also commonly associated with life, fertility, and longevity. They symbolize our deep-seated ambivalence to mortality -- the denial of death as finality through a desire for renewal, transformation, and rebirth.
GENEALOGICAL DRAMA
CONTEMPLATING EXISTENCE
Vision Tree
Our souls as well as our bodies are composed of individual elements
which were all already present in the ranks of our ancestors.
~Carl Jung, Memories Dreams and Reflections, Page 235.
In visions, on the one side we have the complex fact of the unconscious, but on the other side we have the conscious. The impact of the two, the clash of the two, brings about the fantasy. ~Carl Jung, The Visions Seminar, Page 248.
What Jungians call the “Collective Unconscious” and physicists call “matter” in alchemy were always one – the Psyche. ~Marie Louise Von Franz.
Bonding Our Souls
When we enter our family tree we give ourselves to something greater than we are in actively contemplating [and memorializing] our existence. We were originally arboreal creatures and the jungle remains within our unconscious.
The vast existential drama of genealogy is only one of many ways to satisfy a deep-seated yearning for truth, mystery, and the soul at the heart of the world -- the vital sense of meaning surrounding love and death.
However, the Family Tree is perhaps the most primordial way to connect with our roots. Our family tree is our soul history. It deepens and refines our thinking. Here comes death, ending our forever.
Our tree is not a choice but a biological given of our existence -- the living mystery of life and being -- the mystery of the eternity of life. Death is at the heart of the sacred and knowledge of it loads life with meaning.
James Hillman describes the nature of the soul in ways that support a therapeutic value in genealogy: the soul (1) makes all meaning possible, (2) turns events into experiences, (3) involves a deepening of experience, (4) is communicated in love, and (5) has a special relation with death (1977, p. xvi, Hillman, 1976, pp. 44-47).
The Tree of Souls is a fundamental mytheme, a metaphor of organic cohesion. In Jewish mythology, the Tree of Souls blossoms to produce new souls, which fall into the Treasury of Souls. Gabriel takes out the first soul that comes into his hand. Then Lailah, the Angel of Conception, watches over the embryo until it is born. The Tree of Souls produces all the souls that have ever existed, or will ever exist.
The Tree is arguably among the oldest shamanic practices and tropes, and therefore the foundation of magic. The conjoint heartbeats of the ancestors is the core rhythm, the drumbeat of time on the stretched canvas of flesh. The drum made from the World Tree calls the helping spirits. That song is our prayer.
Rumi tells us, "Your task is not to seek for love, but merely to seek and find all the barriers within yourself that you have built against it." To be satisfied in life we must combine inner and outer, the deep inner wisdom with focused activity in the world. Tracing our own genealogy, climbing up and down our Tree of Life, gives us potential for both.
Osiris is associated with one of the earliest versions of the Tree of Life. Our uncharted tree is like the dismembered Osiris, waiting for his limbs, the interlaced branches, to be put back together as the sacred tree grows around him. In the Mysteries an initiate discovered that their individual Daemon was actually the Universal Daemon, which they imagined was torn into fragments and distributed. Epictetus teaches: "You are a fragment torn from God. You have a portion of him within you."
Osiris-Dionysus represents this Universal Daemon, the Mind of God conscious in all living things. The goddess Isis collects together all of Osiris' limbs and reconstitutes him. In our genelaogical work, we may or may not collect all the limbs try as we might.
There is a Merlin tree, an Odin tree, and more trapped in or on a tree. They are all in the traditional genealogies where the mythic descents enter history. Myth enters our modern lives through the family tree. This is our inheritance.
"The Middle Plane, between the Upper & Lower World , that the Celts call the “Thin Place” is where the center of gravity shifts away from the Ego and its functions into an interim position...to attending to the hints of the self." (M.-L. von Franz, Psychotherapy). We live by extending our sensibilities into the world and understanding it in that way, and the same is true in the inner world.
History abhors a vacuum and fills it with a multitude of stories, both factual and imaginal. One secret of the tree is that we symbolically descend from gods, demigods, supermen of antiquity, and a variety of legendary creatures, allegedly our kith and kin. The god in the tree is immanent in the natural world and a source of inspiration and illumination.
Norse lore describes a spring at the root of the World Tree where water bubbles up from the underworld, carrying the dissolved memories of the dead. Odin drank from it once, costing him an eye. But, he was empowered to bestow inspiration on worthy poets. What are we to make of such statements in the traditional context of our descent?
Grasp Your Legacy
We must seek out our family tree to learn its hidden secrets, find its dead ends, and recast the contents of our personal and collective unconscious. Many stories run invisibly, concurrently in our unconscious, especially unresolved family issues. Like dreams, we can 'experience' our ancestors in their living, embodied reality.
Jung noted in his own process that, "The mystery showed me in images what I should afterward live. I did not possess any of those boons that the mystery showed me, for I still had to earn all of them." (Liber Novus, Page 254).
Your genealogy project can bring the past to life in ways you could not have imagined. In Jung's Red Book, the dead complain they are real not symbols. "You may call us symbols….But we are just as real as your fellow men. You invalidate nothing and solve nothing by calling us symbols." (Red Book, 249) Also, "This I learned in the Mysterium: to take seriously every unknown wanderer who personally inhabits the inner world, since they are real because they are effectual." (Red Book, 260)
Can a family tree give meaning to your life? Only if you infuse it with intention, value, and love. We invest in the message and are very involved and left with powerful residual impact. We may take the divine steps back for our own souls with corresponding results for our own well-being. But we may find in the process we become family stewards, bards, genwriters, or storytellers.
Well of Souls
Genealogy is a means of achieving empathy, of digging our own well of souls. Our undifferentiated 'well of souls' in the secret chambers of our hearts becomes more and more specific. We detect the current below, realizing the presence of something. The content is a resonance between the stimuli and the stored and storied material in our psychobiology.
Voices of the Transcendent
'The many voices of the psyche' is a transcendent ordering principle and aspirational or integrative position that may have a healing, pluralistic or unified agenda -- different ways to understand one's life within the chaos/order paradox.
Both the regressive and progressive perspective have their own type of wholeness, even if the mytheme differs. As Jung notes, "We have no way of knowing whether the world is Cosmos or Chaos, for, as we know the world, all the order is put into it by ourselves." (1925 Seminar, Page 134)
Joseph Campbell said, "What is it we are questing for? It is the fulfillment of that which is potential in each of us. Questing for it is not an ego trip; it is an adventure to bring into fulfillment your gift to the world, which is yourself. There is nothing you can do that's more important than being fulfilled. You become a sign, you become a signal, transparent to transcendence; in this way you will find, live, become a realization of your own personal myth."
Existential Drama
Genealogy as a mythic image functions to connect the ego and the transcendent Other. Subjective images are powerful because they can be experienced symbolically and unlock ancestral mysteries.
We enter the cave below the rock of reality to the reality of psychic manifestations. "We are standing in between two worlds, a visible tangible world, and the other invisible world, which somehow has a peculiar quality of substantiality; but very subtle, a sort of matter that is not obvious and is not visible, that penetrates bodies and apparently exists outside of time and space.
"It is here and everywhere at the same time, and yet nowhere because it has no extension; it is a complete annihilation of space and time, which makes it a very different thing from our conception of an obvious world." (Jung, Visions Seminars, Vol. 1 Page 206)
As Meister Eckhart said, "When the soul wishes to experience something she throws an image of the experience out before her and enters into her own Image." We go internal but come out with new information based on our experience. Personality widens with unconscious supplementation. Resilience builds throughout life, and close relationships are key.
"We are standing in between two worlds, a visible tangible world, and the other invisible world, which somehow has a peculiar quality of substantiality; but very subtle, a sort of matter that is not obvious and is not visible, that penetrates bodies and apparently exists outside of time and space.
It is here and everywhere at the same time, and yet nowhere because it has no extension; it is a complete annihilation of space and time, which makes it a very different thing from our conception of an obvious world." (Jung, Visions Seminars, Vol. 1, Page 206)
We can reclaim this most ancient genealogical practice and non-visible environment that allows us to gaze at a thing without seeing it. With each generation we enter a new level of interaction. Some branches of our tree clearly announce themselves as living forces of myth, which shows the nature of our life journey. Figures of the gods carry the idea of immortality, the image of immortality.
Enhancing our self-awareness, genealogy makes alienation obsolete by retrieving lost unconscious energy. What has haunted us now informs us, activated both by initiating and responding to joint attention The mythic impulse is contained in allegory and symbolism that are clearly not literal.
The subtle but persistent feeling of being out of place diminishes. Instead of a single answer there are many tacit replies. As a structured metaphor and technology, genealogy amplifies or intensifies our faculties increasing the value and quality of our inner life. Are you willing to enter the Tree?
Passing Through
Genealogy opens an inner space, and can be an immersive experience, a virtual reality where we suspend certain disbeliefs and entertain other hypotheses. Jung implies that what is not material now is 'spiritual,' and we find those explicit spiritual roots in our family tree. "Experience of the inner world has for its object the phenomena of the psychic background, which in itself is so indefinite or so multifaceted that it can be expressed in an infinite variety of forms."
At the dawn of mankind the Dragon constellation Draco was at the northern center of the heavens, overhanging the stellar system of the zodiac and its vast Precession drama. Jung tells us how family images spontaneously come back to us: "[The] dragon comes into the category of the great animals in the background who seem to regulate the world. Hence the mainly theriomorphic symbols for the signs of the zodiac as dominants of the psychic process.
"Naturally the phenomena observed in the background are not always archetypes; they can also be personal complexes which have acquired excessive importance. Father and mother are not only personal entities but also have a suprapersonal meaning and are frequently used as symbols for the deity.
In this way the religious view of the world, thrown out at the front door, creeps in again by the back, albeit in strangely altered form-so altered that nobody has yet noticed it." (Letters Vol. II, Pages 604-605)
As we enliven our tree it enlivens our depths. Here the lands of the dead and the living intersect. Here, in a dimension of existential and psychological truths that underlie mythic process, we come to grips with perennial questions and mystery. Perhaps the most important way of connecting with the ancestors is the act of tracing the genesis oneself so that each part of the discovery process has a chance to work in us and on us imaginally over time.
Time means a past and a future, and so the individual is only complete when we add his actual structure as the result of past events, and at the same time the actual structure taken as the starting point of new tendencies. (Jung, 1925 Seminar, Page 137)
Jung links "the discontent of civilization" with distancing ourselves from our historical roots, and loss of connection with our past. He felt that crucial connection fostered individuality which counteracts mass-mindedness. Knowing the historical family via the collective unconscious [and genealogy] is crucial to psychological health and self-knowledge, in Jung's theory.
“The less we understand of what our fathers and forefathers sought,” he comments, “the less we understand ourselves, and thus we help with all our might to rob the individual of his roots and his guiding instincts, so that he becomes a particle in the mass [...]” (Jung, MDR).
It is in humanity’s best interest, then, to reconnect to this past, as the “ancestral psyches” within each of us can shed light on contemporary circumstances and situations (Jung, MDR, p.237). It is equally important, however, not to become lost in these past images, not to be “imprisoned in these memories” (MDR, p.320). http://jungiansociety.org/images/e-journal/Volume-8/Lu-2012.pdf
Representational Demands
The capacity for inner dialogue is a touchstone for outer objectivity. ~Carl Jung, CW 8, Para 187
The family tree is a nexus of historical and underlying mythological narratives which give birth to additional interconnecting narratives. Science offers some alternatives to supernatural appearances in dialogic inner speech. The brain's conversations with itself can now be mapped, but may be more than that.
Just because some people experience pathological auditory hallucinations doesn't mean all audialization is pathological.
We naturally can form a mental concept of a sound impression without 'external' agency. Some people can imagine whole symphonies. Information is made more comprehensible by perspective switching and rendering it as sound.
Trans-Sensual Imagery
Findings show that forms of inner speech exist which can be both phenomenologically and neurologically distinguished from the silent commentary of a single inner voice. Contributions of inner speech and forms of mental imagery create vivid inner dialogues. Even Genesis describes a creation of spoken words rather than acts. http://scan.oxfordjournals.org/content/11/1/110.full
"Inner speech has been implicated in important aspects of normal and atypical cognition, including the development of auditory hallucinations. neural activation for inner speech involves conversations (‘dialogic inner speech’) with single-speaker scenarios (‘monologic inner speech’). Generation of dialogic (compared with monologic) scenarios was associated with a widespread bilateral network including left and right superior temporal gyri, precuneus, posterior cingulate and left inferior and medial frontal gyri. Activation associated with cognitive and dialogic scenarios overlapped in areas of right posterior temporal cortex previously linked to mental state representation."
"Inner speech is a complex and varied phenomenon. In behavioral studies, everyday inner speech is often reported to be involved in self-awareness, past and future thinking and emotional reflection, while in cognitive research, inner speech appears to fulfill a variety of mnemonic and regulatory functions. Inner speech may reflect the endpoint of a developmental process in which social dialogues, mediated by language, are internalized as verbal thought. Following from this view, the subjective experience of inner speech will mirror the external experience of communication and often have a dialogic structure, involving the co-articulation of differing perspectives on reality and, in some cases, representation of others’ voices."
Time alters us and our perceptions. Many experience the bittersweet feeling of arriving in the future without being able to tell our past self how things turned out among the hypothetical conversations that play out in our heads. Perhaps all our ancestors are 'talking' but nobody is listening. And even if we do, we may be frustrated others are unable to relate to the experience.
Family Plots
On the other hand, the plot of our life, flaws, and anxieties may begin to make more sense with our relational roots. Awareness of our perspective enlarges, personally and historically. We realize each ancestor has a life as vivid and complex as our own, and that it takes a long time to forge a deep relationship.
Family Battlecry
Genealogy is a feeling and a challenge, a lost art of ancestors returning with a vengeance. The mottoes on heraldic arms are actually battlecries. Just as the Scots shouted their clan genealogies before battle, our family tree is a declaration of our intention to 'continue to be' and to continue in our traditional ways venerating our forebears. They recited their clan genealogies in Gaelic, shouted their war cries, then attacked.
Clans are family groups and their sept branches are all blood relatives. Highland families had a traditional seannachaidh, who could recite the descent of that particular family and state its relationship to other families in the larger clan.
Consanguinity
For 2000 years in Alba, the Senchai, Seannachaidh, or Sennachie [sen-uh-kee] have woven the clan's present members with the history, honor, deeds and lineage of those who have gone before them. These loyal and respected clansmen are appointed by the clan chief as professional storytellers of family genealogy, history, and legend.
Both a Pict and Gael tradition, this ancient position is a Genealogist, Historian, Bard, Orator, and tribal Herald.
The office of Ri-seannachie had supreme jurisdiction in matters of genealogy, and the duty of preserving the Royal pedigree. Each clan had its own Druid priests and judges under the chief Druid of the Pictish High King.
Disembodied Information
In the 'Cult of the Severed Head' in Provance, a head carved in stone was the repository of the soul and could live on and continue to speak to the living and make prophecies. Such heads represented a medium for communication with the Other World, hinting at an older Celtic mythos and tradition -- cult of relics, cult of the head.
Bran's severed head continued to speak to his followers who returned it to Britain. King Arthur dug up the head, declaring the country would be protected only by his great strength. Brân the Blessed was like the Arthurian Fisher King, the keeper of the Holy Grail. He has a mortal wound in the leg (Brân's wound was in his foot) but stays alive in his mystical castle due to the effects of the Grail, waiting to be healed by Percival. In the Welsh version of Perceval, Peredur son of Efrawg visits a mysterious castle, but finds only a severed human head, not the Grail. Some said the Grail had the power to restore the fallen, like Brân's cauldron.
In Norse myth, Mímir (Old Norse, "The rememberer, the wise one") is renowned for his knowledge and wisdom but is beheaded during the Æsir-Vanir War. Odin embalms the head of Mímir with herbs so that it would not rot, and spoke charms over it, which gave it the power to speak to him and reveal secrets to him. He keeps Mímir's head with him because it divulges information from other worlds. It recites secret knowledge and counsel to him.
But cults of Southern France may not correlate with those of Britain or the Neolithic era and elsewhere as a coherent practice. Skull relics are still worshiped there with candles. The medieval town Saint-Maximin-la-Sainte-Baume has a basilica and crypt dedicated to Mary Magdalene said to contain the blackened relic of her skull.
Neolithic Jericho practiced burial of loved ones under their houses. Sometimes the severed head was removed and the skull buried after defleshing. Faces were reconstructed with plaster to retain the identity of the family member. Individual facial features were made with red and black paint. Some eye orbits were inlaid with shells and the skulls were decorated with hair and mustaches.
The notion of a 'cult of the head' remains controversial, but it is a fact we imagine it was so. This powerful trope brings to mind cults of martyred saints who carry their immortalized heads. The Templars allegedly worshiped of the severed head of John the Baptist they called Baphomet, who talked to them and possessed “divine wisdom." Personifications of disembodied metaphysical entities are an ancient equivalent of media 'talking heads' as culture leaders.
Soul-Talk
What we can take from this practice is the primacy of the psyche for personification of the unconscious -- the multiple personifications or perspectives of psyche. We spontaneously personify psyche all the time, without effort since it is a psychological necessity. Personifying allows the image to work on us -- a potential way of knowing what is hidden in the heart. A grounded ego uses personification for growth.
To personify something from the unconscious is to treat it like a person with a sort of inherent autonomy motivated by purposes and intentions. We even lend it a voice and bond with it. Personifying in archetypal psychology is “the spontaneous experiencing, envisioning and speaking of the configurations of existence as psychic presences.” (Re-Visioning, 12)
Personifying is a way of making subjective experience, passionate identification, and indwelling images more tangible through conversation and relationship in symbolic form. Hillman (1975) called it "an epistemology of the heart, a thought-mode of feeling." It imagines what's inside, outside, and makes this content alive, personal, and even divine.
We personify that which we love. This is the natural expression of mythic consciousness to mythic consciousness. Illustrious ancestors aren't just statues of greatness. Through this spontaneous activity of psyche we enter myth "as if" it were real.
Such non-directive thinking or "soul-talk" is the key to understanding archetypes as both guides and different parts of ourselves. “Loving is a way of knowing, and for loving to know, it must personify. Personifying is thus a way of knowing, especially knowing what is invisible, hidden in the heart,” Hillman says in Re-Visioning.
"Personifying is a way of being in the world and experiencing the world as a psychological field, where persons are given with events, so that events are experiences that touch us, move us, appeal to us." "...all the figures and feelings of the psyche are wholly 'mine,' while at the same time recognizing that these figures and feelings are free of my control and identity, not 'mine' at all." (Hillman)
"By means of personifications my sense of person becomes more vivid for I carry with me at all times the protection of my daimones: the images of dead people who mattered to me, of ancestral figures of my stock, cultural and historical persons of renown and people of fable who provide exemplary images--a wealth of guardians. They guard my fate, guide it, probably are it. "Perhaps--who knows," writes Jung, "these eternal images are what men mean by fate." We need this help, for who can carry his fate alone?" (Hillman)
Hillman notes that personifying is a creative function. Whether it is done pathologically or intentionally, it functions to “save the diversity and autonomy of the psyche from domination by any single power, whether this domination be by a figure of archetypal awe in one’s surroundings or by one’s own egomania. ‘ (Re-Visioning, 32)
In the family tree we don't require the physical relic to honor the deceased, including the heads of the household. "To keep the light alive in the darkness, that's the point, and only there your candle makes sense." (Jung, Letters Vol. II, Pp. 133-138)
Jung stated, "It was as if my tools were activated by my libido. But there must be tools there to be activated, that is, animated images, images with libido in them; then the additional libido that one supplies brings them up to the surface.
If I had not given this additional libido with which to bring them to the surface, the activity would have gone on just the same, but would have sucked my energy down into the unconscious. By putting libido into it, one can increase the speaking power of the unconscious." (Jung, 1925 Seminar, Lecture 5, Pages 37-45).
The Big Tree
Doing one's own genealogy, even if it has been done before, is the best way to integrate and digest it. The ancestors do not really live today but are not fully dead either as living images. We can ensoul our growing branches best in the context in which they arise.
Relying on the work of others removes us a step from the core of the process; it might stimulate imagery, but it's more like reading about a journey than making it oneself. Much of the nuance and functional relations are lost -- the chaos, the struggle, the blind alleys. The healing work requires direct engagement for familiarity with the holistic image as well as the details of each family encountered.
Arguably, the family tree is the necessary foundation to psychological integration. We begin a long, slow circulation among the many branches of our tree. Jung says, "The circulation is not merely movement in a circle, but means on the one hand the marking off of the sacred precinct, and on the other, the fixation and concentration." (CW 13, Alchemical Studies, Pg 25).
The circulation of blood in the arteries mirrors the circulation of sap in the tree, and the circularity of cosmological or metaphysical thought -- analogical thinking that links the macrocosm and microcosm, above and below. The ancestral field has an immediate effect, both healing and challenging, on our whole lives.
Ouroboric Cycle
Repeating the circuit of all aspects of our being generates a transpersonal current that unites conflicting opposites. We repeat the distillation process, again and again, but always on another level -- a new and deeper level of understanding. Cycles of rising and falling echo the ascent and descent in our ancestral lines. This is no disembodied Ascensionism, but a fully embodied, fully grounded soul retrieval, without recourse to 'metaphysical certainties'.
We continually return with a cyclic pattern to our own beginning. This adventure never ends. We are each our own paths. Genealogy is a sacred narrative of origins that forever marks our place in time with a true quest for the fountain of life and retrieval of lost parts of the soul. Jung adds, "So when you relieve the unconscious of non-realized contents, you release it for its own special functioning, and it will go ahead like an animal." (1925 Seminar, Page 115)
Ancient shamanic stories describe a previous World Age in which a colossal tree dominated the celestial landscape, joining heaven to earth. This master-narrative is the origin of the World Tree, and the Family Tree. The sacred tree is the navel of the world, always potentially present everywhere.
Shamans journeyed through visions, climbing the World Tree, much like we climb through the branches of our family tree, tracing and retracing them. Jung's collective unconscious overlaps with shamanic experience of nonordinary reality.
They descended the trees roots to the land of the dead to retrieve the souls of the living who strayed there. They journeyed in vision to the upper world to consult with spiritual ancestors, for healing or wisdom. A mythic boon emerges from interaction with the archetypal tree where the physical and the sacred are united.
In this sense the family tree is a redemptive tree linking us back to source. In the Neolithic and Bronze ages the world tree was the world axis, a nexus where pairs of opposites come together. Originally, the tree was a universal whole: male and female, dark and light, knowledge and mystery, etc.
The Biblical version dissociates or deconstructs this unity. Eve eats the fruit and humanity was separated into dualities, male and female, good and evil. Humanity was thrown into time and space, aware of imminent mortality. The Precession functions as the great cosmic timekeeper, marking off the Ages.
That tree fails to unite heaven, earth, and underworld. The temporal end remains unfulfilled unless the disparity of the tree can be transcended in some manner in this particular mythos.
Only the universal archetype, the World Tree unites the world of temporal matter, death, and the paradise myth regained after the completion of life's journey. Not just a diagram, the spirit of the family tree is a reconciling and redemptive symbol linking us to the origin, but we have to pluck its fruit -- the links and loops of kinship.
Tree of Visions
The World Tree is an integral part of the shamanic cosmos and links the world of humanity with the world of the spirits. Spirits pass from one world to another on the Tree. There are Siberian stories of climbing the World Tree to attend a school for shamans run in heaven by the ancestors. Without living links to the spirit world, there is no longer a Tree.
Only mythic dissociation -- the split of sensibility of body and spirit, female and male -- separates the Tree of knowledge from the Tree of immortal life. The body and psyche both derive from the ancestors. In the unus mundus, they are one integrated tree -- the creative source of becoming. We unite them when we resume a dialogue with our souls. We recognize truths in the mysteries of myth.
This Tree of Life or mother-tree has its roots in heaven and its branches growing downward through genealogical descent, bringing life-giving function to the possibilities of life. It is an icon of the unus mundus, an underlying unified reality from which everything emerges and to which everything returns.
Branch Out
The family tree is a system of interactive complexity and emergence. We grow its branches, and sometimes merge with lines compiled by others. Our own tree is a canopy of growth that connects us all the way to the stars and our aspirations while grounding us in our roots.
Our family tree branches out each time we deviate from our direct Y-DNA or mtDNA lines of our father and mother. New family branches potentially enter the tree with each ancestral wife and her lineage, which in many cases is longer than that of the husband. Some royal descents come through the mothers; there is a legend that claims all the 'magic' in the family lines is through the distaff side.
Women are often the hidden half of the family because of old social and legal customs. Often we don't know and cannot find their maiden names, so they become dead ends in our search, until or unless new data is found.
Yet wives and natural partners form vital links in our chains of ascent back to well-known ancestors, even if little or nothing is known of them, beyond a name, or N.N. (invisible women). Elusive women can sometimes be found through naming patterns or in a census search, especially if there is a photo of the listing and its additional notations.
Other invisibles include missing fathers, and natural children. The phrase “natural son” in a will meant the testator acknowledged a child had been born out of wedlock. The only legal meaning in that context back then was “a bastard; a child born out of lawful wedlock.”
Finding a maiden name is almost always essential to further research on a particular line. Naturally, the best place to locate a maiden name is on a marriage record. If that is not available, other vital records may have the information, although this is usually the case only with more modern records, not those over 100 years old. These include birth certificates of her children, her death certificate, her husband's death certificate, or the marriage or death certificates of her children. This is by no means standard and is only a possibility. Baptismal records may also contain the mother's maiden name, even in older church records.Another possible source is her obituary, which might mention surviving brothers. Also look for obituaries of sisters or men you believe are her brothers. If you have found a person that you think might be one of her parents, it is worthwhile to check the death certificates because a family member, perhaps your ancestress, usually provided the information on the death certificate and sometimes her relationship was given. Also look for wills from likely candidates -- a woman may be mentioned in her father's or mother's will.
Without direct information, you sometimes have to resort to indirect clues. Look for the repetition of certain given names in the family. If she named her son Hezekiah, Rudyard or some other uncommon name and there was an older man of that same name in the vicinity, that may be her father. Look also for surnames being used as second names for her children. A woman often gave her child her own maiden name as a middle name. In the census, look for older people living in the same household or nearby. They may well be the woman's parents. http://www.genealogy.com/articles/research/50_donna.html
Searching for Female Ancestors
https://www.loc.gov/rr/genealogy/bib_guid/female.pdf
Dead Reckoning
Our family tree is our map of the undifferentiated unconscious -- maps of relationships in the Land of the Dead, the co-existent underworld of shades. In the beginning, it is like drawing a map of the world on a sheet of paper with as little concept of our ancestors as the unknown seas and continents where they lived. New maps help us navigate the terrain.
Over and over, we plot our course through the maternal and paternal lines of ascent that predispose our responses. The scintillae are soul-sparks of partial or emergent consciousness. Insight in the ancestral field stirs the imagination. What we don't deal with remains buried. The dormant, lifeless, and withered awaken, expanding consciousness and renewing psyche, from deadness to life-force energy.
Jung called these "scintilla, or soul sparks, the innermost divine essence of man…symbols which express a God image, namely the image of Deity unfolding in the world, in nature, and in man." (Jung, Archetypes of the Unconscious pp.389)
At least symbolically, God climbs down to mortality. Some tribes deified their ancestors. And these divine archetypes -- gods and goddesses -- are just what we find at the far reaches of our royal and legendary genealogical lines. Our mortal descent is a fractal reiteration of their divine essence, our own images and conflicts. Jung named this quintessence the Self, bridging from the physical and instinctual to the spiritually transcendent psyche.
Scintillae or sparks of light in the dark emerge through consistent interaction, our persistent interest, and curiosity. Metaphorically, we love them back to life. These points of light, iridescent eyes, mimic the starry heavens or reflective surface of the sea with spontaneous amplification.
Representing the multiple consciousness of the psyche, they connect us with the animated soul of the world. As we focus, their virtual presence, numinosity and luminosity draws us toward pervasive meaning. The noumen is healing. Philosophers say that solar consciousness must inseminate lunar unconscious. This act gives birth to a third aspect of consciousness in our being, the luminous subjective self as the inner divine child.
Our 'dead reckoning' navigation means charting a new course of relationship and conscious attachment through successive immersions. Native Americans say we are affected by the seven generations that came before us and affect the seven generations to follow. We may actually include all our emotionally-charged generations -- the redeemed and unredeemed Trees.
Milky Way; Mother's Milk
Once we embark on our mission, we find that like the heavenly constellations, we have family constellations to guide us toward innate healing. Hidden dynamics in a family can be worked with and healed through a process that has the power to shift generations of suffering and unhappiness. Our most pressing challenges are reflected in those of our ancestors and the genetic relationships and patterns among them.
This relatively brief therapy helps us develop intuition and insight while exhuming hidden solutions that restore the flow of love. As Rumi suggested, "Love is the bridge between you and everything." We conceive a new perspective and circumambulate a variety of associative and interpretive treatments, clearing the emotional body with the balm of tears.
Over and over we ask what does this feel like? How does it continue to feel, or how do the feelings change and amplify over time, and what is it asking of you? Redemption of the psychophysical body lies in this direction -- redeeming spirit and soul, conscience and consciousness. To do so, we have to metaphorically dig up graveyards and excavate cities.
The unconscious belongs to no time in particular, being seemingly eternal. We consciously realized that as a peculiar feeling of timelessness. The "time" in which the ancestors lived and still live is a "time when there was no time," -- an ancestral world of thought-forms, beyond which is the sense of indefiniteness, timelessness, oneness.
Inherited Issues
We gain a unique perspective to make new choices or follow unforeseen pathways. Emotional resolution of systemic entanglement can help overcome patterns of behavior repeated in related families for generations, by bringing up the family images held in the unconscious mind. Such work on where we are stuck or feel pain is built around inclusion: the reconciliation among all parts of the self, our family, and our history.
In time, the stream of ancestors comes forward in a flood of imagery -- prevailing, enduring, haunting, mapping out hidden truths. We cannot escape the spirit of the depths who forces us toward the mysteries. Jung described not only 'possession' by the ego, shadow and anima/animus but by the transgenerational family history. "If we became aware of the ancestral lives in us, we might disintegrate. An ancestor might take possession of us and ride us to death." (1925 Seminar, Page 139).
We can only find our right way with an eye fixed on the far horizon. Perhaps such 'dead reckoning' -- our own confrontation with the unconscious -- helps us navigate our imaginative journey. We calculate our current position from a previously unconscious position, to fix, and advance that position to the far horizons. Our attention flows toward an unforeseen destiny where meaning beckons beyond the bounds of consciousness.
Jung describes the horizon as a whole as the quaternity (four quarters of heaven)..."There are always four elements, four prime qualities, four colors, four castes, four ways of spiritual development, etc. So, too, there are four aspects of psychological orientation...The ideal of completeness is the circle or sphere, but its natural minimal division is a quaternity." (Psychology and Religion: West and East,)
Natural Order
We have unconsciously sacrificed our ancestors and disheartened ourselves. We've set them adrift in the unconscious without mooring to the living. Over time we integrate this imaginal world as we trace our family tree through the islands and continents of the unconscious. This reality is mediated by information patterns which in turn are constantly evolving.
The tree is the record of the multigenerational courses from the known starting point, and the known or estimated 'drift.' Along the way we find many lines -- grand dynasties that have gone extinct, “beginnings without continuations.” But, somehow, despite all odds our own line has passed through or culminated in ourselves and our own 'pioneering' work.
Digging for Ancestors
Paraphrasing Jung, we stumble through unknown regions, are lead astray by analogies, forever losing the Ariadne thread. We are overwhelmed by new impressions and new possibilities, and the worst disadvantage of all is that the pioneer only knows afterwards what he or she should have known before.
When we encounter the second and subsequent generations we may have the advantage of a clearer, if still incomplete, picture. Certain landmarks on the frontiers of the essential have grown familiar. We now know what must be known if we are to explore the newly discovered territory.
Does our attention 'condition' the ancestral field? We learn to spot the most distant connections. We can unravel problems and give a coherent account of the whole field of ancestors, whose full extent we can only survey and 'know' at the end of our life’s work.
Thin Red Line
The ancestral map is a beginning, a framework in which later discoveries can be placed. What is confusing at first is clarified in a later stage of the journey. The family tree helps us establish a connection between the natural and sacred figures and our own psyche. Or, as von Franz notes, "Only if you look from afar, from a certain objective distance, do you realize that there is a pattern of wholeness in it." (Interpretation of Fairy Tales, Pages 6-7)
Vision Tree
Our souls as well as our bodies are composed of individual elements
which were all already present in the ranks of our ancestors.
~Carl Jung, Memories Dreams and Reflections, Page 235.
In visions, on the one side we have the complex fact of the unconscious, but on the other side we have the conscious. The impact of the two, the clash of the two, brings about the fantasy. ~Carl Jung, The Visions Seminar, Page 248.
What Jungians call the “Collective Unconscious” and physicists call “matter” in alchemy were always one – the Psyche. ~Marie Louise Von Franz.
Bonding Our Souls
When we enter our family tree we give ourselves to something greater than we are in actively contemplating [and memorializing] our existence. We were originally arboreal creatures and the jungle remains within our unconscious.
The vast existential drama of genealogy is only one of many ways to satisfy a deep-seated yearning for truth, mystery, and the soul at the heart of the world -- the vital sense of meaning surrounding love and death.
However, the Family Tree is perhaps the most primordial way to connect with our roots. Our family tree is our soul history. It deepens and refines our thinking. Here comes death, ending our forever.
Our tree is not a choice but a biological given of our existence -- the living mystery of life and being -- the mystery of the eternity of life. Death is at the heart of the sacred and knowledge of it loads life with meaning.
James Hillman describes the nature of the soul in ways that support a therapeutic value in genealogy: the soul (1) makes all meaning possible, (2) turns events into experiences, (3) involves a deepening of experience, (4) is communicated in love, and (5) has a special relation with death (1977, p. xvi, Hillman, 1976, pp. 44-47).
The Tree of Souls is a fundamental mytheme, a metaphor of organic cohesion. In Jewish mythology, the Tree of Souls blossoms to produce new souls, which fall into the Treasury of Souls. Gabriel takes out the first soul that comes into his hand. Then Lailah, the Angel of Conception, watches over the embryo until it is born. The Tree of Souls produces all the souls that have ever existed, or will ever exist.
The Tree is arguably among the oldest shamanic practices and tropes, and therefore the foundation of magic. The conjoint heartbeats of the ancestors is the core rhythm, the drumbeat of time on the stretched canvas of flesh. The drum made from the World Tree calls the helping spirits. That song is our prayer.
Rumi tells us, "Your task is not to seek for love, but merely to seek and find all the barriers within yourself that you have built against it." To be satisfied in life we must combine inner and outer, the deep inner wisdom with focused activity in the world. Tracing our own genealogy, climbing up and down our Tree of Life, gives us potential for both.
Osiris is associated with one of the earliest versions of the Tree of Life. Our uncharted tree is like the dismembered Osiris, waiting for his limbs, the interlaced branches, to be put back together as the sacred tree grows around him. In the Mysteries an initiate discovered that their individual Daemon was actually the Universal Daemon, which they imagined was torn into fragments and distributed. Epictetus teaches: "You are a fragment torn from God. You have a portion of him within you."
Osiris-Dionysus represents this Universal Daemon, the Mind of God conscious in all living things. The goddess Isis collects together all of Osiris' limbs and reconstitutes him. In our genelaogical work, we may or may not collect all the limbs try as we might.
There is a Merlin tree, an Odin tree, and more trapped in or on a tree. They are all in the traditional genealogies where the mythic descents enter history. Myth enters our modern lives through the family tree. This is our inheritance.
"The Middle Plane, between the Upper & Lower World , that the Celts call the “Thin Place” is where the center of gravity shifts away from the Ego and its functions into an interim position...to attending to the hints of the self." (M.-L. von Franz, Psychotherapy). We live by extending our sensibilities into the world and understanding it in that way, and the same is true in the inner world.
History abhors a vacuum and fills it with a multitude of stories, both factual and imaginal. One secret of the tree is that we symbolically descend from gods, demigods, supermen of antiquity, and a variety of legendary creatures, allegedly our kith and kin. The god in the tree is immanent in the natural world and a source of inspiration and illumination.
Norse lore describes a spring at the root of the World Tree where water bubbles up from the underworld, carrying the dissolved memories of the dead. Odin drank from it once, costing him an eye. But, he was empowered to bestow inspiration on worthy poets. What are we to make of such statements in the traditional context of our descent?
Grasp Your Legacy
We must seek out our family tree to learn its hidden secrets, find its dead ends, and recast the contents of our personal and collective unconscious. Many stories run invisibly, concurrently in our unconscious, especially unresolved family issues. Like dreams, we can 'experience' our ancestors in their living, embodied reality.
Jung noted in his own process that, "The mystery showed me in images what I should afterward live. I did not possess any of those boons that the mystery showed me, for I still had to earn all of them." (Liber Novus, Page 254).
Your genealogy project can bring the past to life in ways you could not have imagined. In Jung's Red Book, the dead complain they are real not symbols. "You may call us symbols….But we are just as real as your fellow men. You invalidate nothing and solve nothing by calling us symbols." (Red Book, 249) Also, "This I learned in the Mysterium: to take seriously every unknown wanderer who personally inhabits the inner world, since they are real because they are effectual." (Red Book, 260)
Can a family tree give meaning to your life? Only if you infuse it with intention, value, and love. We invest in the message and are very involved and left with powerful residual impact. We may take the divine steps back for our own souls with corresponding results for our own well-being. But we may find in the process we become family stewards, bards, genwriters, or storytellers.
Well of Souls
Genealogy is a means of achieving empathy, of digging our own well of souls. Our undifferentiated 'well of souls' in the secret chambers of our hearts becomes more and more specific. We detect the current below, realizing the presence of something. The content is a resonance between the stimuli and the stored and storied material in our psychobiology.
Voices of the Transcendent
'The many voices of the psyche' is a transcendent ordering principle and aspirational or integrative position that may have a healing, pluralistic or unified agenda -- different ways to understand one's life within the chaos/order paradox.
Both the regressive and progressive perspective have their own type of wholeness, even if the mytheme differs. As Jung notes, "We have no way of knowing whether the world is Cosmos or Chaos, for, as we know the world, all the order is put into it by ourselves." (1925 Seminar, Page 134)
Joseph Campbell said, "What is it we are questing for? It is the fulfillment of that which is potential in each of us. Questing for it is not an ego trip; it is an adventure to bring into fulfillment your gift to the world, which is yourself. There is nothing you can do that's more important than being fulfilled. You become a sign, you become a signal, transparent to transcendence; in this way you will find, live, become a realization of your own personal myth."
Existential Drama
Genealogy as a mythic image functions to connect the ego and the transcendent Other. Subjective images are powerful because they can be experienced symbolically and unlock ancestral mysteries.
We enter the cave below the rock of reality to the reality of psychic manifestations. "We are standing in between two worlds, a visible tangible world, and the other invisible world, which somehow has a peculiar quality of substantiality; but very subtle, a sort of matter that is not obvious and is not visible, that penetrates bodies and apparently exists outside of time and space.
"It is here and everywhere at the same time, and yet nowhere because it has no extension; it is a complete annihilation of space and time, which makes it a very different thing from our conception of an obvious world." (Jung, Visions Seminars, Vol. 1 Page 206)
As Meister Eckhart said, "When the soul wishes to experience something she throws an image of the experience out before her and enters into her own Image." We go internal but come out with new information based on our experience. Personality widens with unconscious supplementation. Resilience builds throughout life, and close relationships are key.
"We are standing in between two worlds, a visible tangible world, and the other invisible world, which somehow has a peculiar quality of substantiality; but very subtle, a sort of matter that is not obvious and is not visible, that penetrates bodies and apparently exists outside of time and space.
It is here and everywhere at the same time, and yet nowhere because it has no extension; it is a complete annihilation of space and time, which makes it a very different thing from our conception of an obvious world." (Jung, Visions Seminars, Vol. 1, Page 206)
We can reclaim this most ancient genealogical practice and non-visible environment that allows us to gaze at a thing without seeing it. With each generation we enter a new level of interaction. Some branches of our tree clearly announce themselves as living forces of myth, which shows the nature of our life journey. Figures of the gods carry the idea of immortality, the image of immortality.
Enhancing our self-awareness, genealogy makes alienation obsolete by retrieving lost unconscious energy. What has haunted us now informs us, activated both by initiating and responding to joint attention The mythic impulse is contained in allegory and symbolism that are clearly not literal.
The subtle but persistent feeling of being out of place diminishes. Instead of a single answer there are many tacit replies. As a structured metaphor and technology, genealogy amplifies or intensifies our faculties increasing the value and quality of our inner life. Are you willing to enter the Tree?
Passing Through
Genealogy opens an inner space, and can be an immersive experience, a virtual reality where we suspend certain disbeliefs and entertain other hypotheses. Jung implies that what is not material now is 'spiritual,' and we find those explicit spiritual roots in our family tree. "Experience of the inner world has for its object the phenomena of the psychic background, which in itself is so indefinite or so multifaceted that it can be expressed in an infinite variety of forms."
At the dawn of mankind the Dragon constellation Draco was at the northern center of the heavens, overhanging the stellar system of the zodiac and its vast Precession drama. Jung tells us how family images spontaneously come back to us: "[The] dragon comes into the category of the great animals in the background who seem to regulate the world. Hence the mainly theriomorphic symbols for the signs of the zodiac as dominants of the psychic process.
"Naturally the phenomena observed in the background are not always archetypes; they can also be personal complexes which have acquired excessive importance. Father and mother are not only personal entities but also have a suprapersonal meaning and are frequently used as symbols for the deity.
In this way the religious view of the world, thrown out at the front door, creeps in again by the back, albeit in strangely altered form-so altered that nobody has yet noticed it." (Letters Vol. II, Pages 604-605)
As we enliven our tree it enlivens our depths. Here the lands of the dead and the living intersect. Here, in a dimension of existential and psychological truths that underlie mythic process, we come to grips with perennial questions and mystery. Perhaps the most important way of connecting with the ancestors is the act of tracing the genesis oneself so that each part of the discovery process has a chance to work in us and on us imaginally over time.
Time means a past and a future, and so the individual is only complete when we add his actual structure as the result of past events, and at the same time the actual structure taken as the starting point of new tendencies. (Jung, 1925 Seminar, Page 137)
Jung links "the discontent of civilization" with distancing ourselves from our historical roots, and loss of connection with our past. He felt that crucial connection fostered individuality which counteracts mass-mindedness. Knowing the historical family via the collective unconscious [and genealogy] is crucial to psychological health and self-knowledge, in Jung's theory.
“The less we understand of what our fathers and forefathers sought,” he comments, “the less we understand ourselves, and thus we help with all our might to rob the individual of his roots and his guiding instincts, so that he becomes a particle in the mass [...]” (Jung, MDR).
It is in humanity’s best interest, then, to reconnect to this past, as the “ancestral psyches” within each of us can shed light on contemporary circumstances and situations (Jung, MDR, p.237). It is equally important, however, not to become lost in these past images, not to be “imprisoned in these memories” (MDR, p.320). http://jungiansociety.org/images/e-journal/Volume-8/Lu-2012.pdf
Representational Demands
The capacity for inner dialogue is a touchstone for outer objectivity. ~Carl Jung, CW 8, Para 187
The family tree is a nexus of historical and underlying mythological narratives which give birth to additional interconnecting narratives. Science offers some alternatives to supernatural appearances in dialogic inner speech. The brain's conversations with itself can now be mapped, but may be more than that.
Just because some people experience pathological auditory hallucinations doesn't mean all audialization is pathological.
We naturally can form a mental concept of a sound impression without 'external' agency. Some people can imagine whole symphonies. Information is made more comprehensible by perspective switching and rendering it as sound.
Trans-Sensual Imagery
Findings show that forms of inner speech exist which can be both phenomenologically and neurologically distinguished from the silent commentary of a single inner voice. Contributions of inner speech and forms of mental imagery create vivid inner dialogues. Even Genesis describes a creation of spoken words rather than acts. http://scan.oxfordjournals.org/content/11/1/110.full
"Inner speech has been implicated in important aspects of normal and atypical cognition, including the development of auditory hallucinations. neural activation for inner speech involves conversations (‘dialogic inner speech’) with single-speaker scenarios (‘monologic inner speech’). Generation of dialogic (compared with monologic) scenarios was associated with a widespread bilateral network including left and right superior temporal gyri, precuneus, posterior cingulate and left inferior and medial frontal gyri. Activation associated with cognitive and dialogic scenarios overlapped in areas of right posterior temporal cortex previously linked to mental state representation."
"Inner speech is a complex and varied phenomenon. In behavioral studies, everyday inner speech is often reported to be involved in self-awareness, past and future thinking and emotional reflection, while in cognitive research, inner speech appears to fulfill a variety of mnemonic and regulatory functions. Inner speech may reflect the endpoint of a developmental process in which social dialogues, mediated by language, are internalized as verbal thought. Following from this view, the subjective experience of inner speech will mirror the external experience of communication and often have a dialogic structure, involving the co-articulation of differing perspectives on reality and, in some cases, representation of others’ voices."
Time alters us and our perceptions. Many experience the bittersweet feeling of arriving in the future without being able to tell our past self how things turned out among the hypothetical conversations that play out in our heads. Perhaps all our ancestors are 'talking' but nobody is listening. And even if we do, we may be frustrated others are unable to relate to the experience.
Family Plots
On the other hand, the plot of our life, flaws, and anxieties may begin to make more sense with our relational roots. Awareness of our perspective enlarges, personally and historically. We realize each ancestor has a life as vivid and complex as our own, and that it takes a long time to forge a deep relationship.
Family Battlecry
Genealogy is a feeling and a challenge, a lost art of ancestors returning with a vengeance. The mottoes on heraldic arms are actually battlecries. Just as the Scots shouted their clan genealogies before battle, our family tree is a declaration of our intention to 'continue to be' and to continue in our traditional ways venerating our forebears. They recited their clan genealogies in Gaelic, shouted their war cries, then attacked.
Clans are family groups and their sept branches are all blood relatives. Highland families had a traditional seannachaidh, who could recite the descent of that particular family and state its relationship to other families in the larger clan.
Consanguinity
For 2000 years in Alba, the Senchai, Seannachaidh, or Sennachie [sen-uh-kee] have woven the clan's present members with the history, honor, deeds and lineage of those who have gone before them. These loyal and respected clansmen are appointed by the clan chief as professional storytellers of family genealogy, history, and legend.
Both a Pict and Gael tradition, this ancient position is a Genealogist, Historian, Bard, Orator, and tribal Herald.
The office of Ri-seannachie had supreme jurisdiction in matters of genealogy, and the duty of preserving the Royal pedigree. Each clan had its own Druid priests and judges under the chief Druid of the Pictish High King.
Disembodied Information
In the 'Cult of the Severed Head' in Provance, a head carved in stone was the repository of the soul and could live on and continue to speak to the living and make prophecies. Such heads represented a medium for communication with the Other World, hinting at an older Celtic mythos and tradition -- cult of relics, cult of the head.
Bran's severed head continued to speak to his followers who returned it to Britain. King Arthur dug up the head, declaring the country would be protected only by his great strength. Brân the Blessed was like the Arthurian Fisher King, the keeper of the Holy Grail. He has a mortal wound in the leg (Brân's wound was in his foot) but stays alive in his mystical castle due to the effects of the Grail, waiting to be healed by Percival. In the Welsh version of Perceval, Peredur son of Efrawg visits a mysterious castle, but finds only a severed human head, not the Grail. Some said the Grail had the power to restore the fallen, like Brân's cauldron.
In Norse myth, Mímir (Old Norse, "The rememberer, the wise one") is renowned for his knowledge and wisdom but is beheaded during the Æsir-Vanir War. Odin embalms the head of Mímir with herbs so that it would not rot, and spoke charms over it, which gave it the power to speak to him and reveal secrets to him. He keeps Mímir's head with him because it divulges information from other worlds. It recites secret knowledge and counsel to him.
But cults of Southern France may not correlate with those of Britain or the Neolithic era and elsewhere as a coherent practice. Skull relics are still worshiped there with candles. The medieval town Saint-Maximin-la-Sainte-Baume has a basilica and crypt dedicated to Mary Magdalene said to contain the blackened relic of her skull.
Neolithic Jericho practiced burial of loved ones under their houses. Sometimes the severed head was removed and the skull buried after defleshing. Faces were reconstructed with plaster to retain the identity of the family member. Individual facial features were made with red and black paint. Some eye orbits were inlaid with shells and the skulls were decorated with hair and mustaches.
The notion of a 'cult of the head' remains controversial, but it is a fact we imagine it was so. This powerful trope brings to mind cults of martyred saints who carry their immortalized heads. The Templars allegedly worshiped of the severed head of John the Baptist they called Baphomet, who talked to them and possessed “divine wisdom." Personifications of disembodied metaphysical entities are an ancient equivalent of media 'talking heads' as culture leaders.
Soul-Talk
What we can take from this practice is the primacy of the psyche for personification of the unconscious -- the multiple personifications or perspectives of psyche. We spontaneously personify psyche all the time, without effort since it is a psychological necessity. Personifying allows the image to work on us -- a potential way of knowing what is hidden in the heart. A grounded ego uses personification for growth.
To personify something from the unconscious is to treat it like a person with a sort of inherent autonomy motivated by purposes and intentions. We even lend it a voice and bond with it. Personifying in archetypal psychology is “the spontaneous experiencing, envisioning and speaking of the configurations of existence as psychic presences.” (Re-Visioning, 12)
Personifying is a way of making subjective experience, passionate identification, and indwelling images more tangible through conversation and relationship in symbolic form. Hillman (1975) called it "an epistemology of the heart, a thought-mode of feeling." It imagines what's inside, outside, and makes this content alive, personal, and even divine.
We personify that which we love. This is the natural expression of mythic consciousness to mythic consciousness. Illustrious ancestors aren't just statues of greatness. Through this spontaneous activity of psyche we enter myth "as if" it were real.
Such non-directive thinking or "soul-talk" is the key to understanding archetypes as both guides and different parts of ourselves. “Loving is a way of knowing, and for loving to know, it must personify. Personifying is thus a way of knowing, especially knowing what is invisible, hidden in the heart,” Hillman says in Re-Visioning.
"Personifying is a way of being in the world and experiencing the world as a psychological field, where persons are given with events, so that events are experiences that touch us, move us, appeal to us." "...all the figures and feelings of the psyche are wholly 'mine,' while at the same time recognizing that these figures and feelings are free of my control and identity, not 'mine' at all." (Hillman)
"By means of personifications my sense of person becomes more vivid for I carry with me at all times the protection of my daimones: the images of dead people who mattered to me, of ancestral figures of my stock, cultural and historical persons of renown and people of fable who provide exemplary images--a wealth of guardians. They guard my fate, guide it, probably are it. "Perhaps--who knows," writes Jung, "these eternal images are what men mean by fate." We need this help, for who can carry his fate alone?" (Hillman)
Hillman notes that personifying is a creative function. Whether it is done pathologically or intentionally, it functions to “save the diversity and autonomy of the psyche from domination by any single power, whether this domination be by a figure of archetypal awe in one’s surroundings or by one’s own egomania. ‘ (Re-Visioning, 32)
In the family tree we don't require the physical relic to honor the deceased, including the heads of the household. "To keep the light alive in the darkness, that's the point, and only there your candle makes sense." (Jung, Letters Vol. II, Pp. 133-138)
Jung stated, "It was as if my tools were activated by my libido. But there must be tools there to be activated, that is, animated images, images with libido in them; then the additional libido that one supplies brings them up to the surface.
If I had not given this additional libido with which to bring them to the surface, the activity would have gone on just the same, but would have sucked my energy down into the unconscious. By putting libido into it, one can increase the speaking power of the unconscious." (Jung, 1925 Seminar, Lecture 5, Pages 37-45).
The Big Tree
Doing one's own genealogy, even if it has been done before, is the best way to integrate and digest it. The ancestors do not really live today but are not fully dead either as living images. We can ensoul our growing branches best in the context in which they arise.
Relying on the work of others removes us a step from the core of the process; it might stimulate imagery, but it's more like reading about a journey than making it oneself. Much of the nuance and functional relations are lost -- the chaos, the struggle, the blind alleys. The healing work requires direct engagement for familiarity with the holistic image as well as the details of each family encountered.
Arguably, the family tree is the necessary foundation to psychological integration. We begin a long, slow circulation among the many branches of our tree. Jung says, "The circulation is not merely movement in a circle, but means on the one hand the marking off of the sacred precinct, and on the other, the fixation and concentration." (CW 13, Alchemical Studies, Pg 25).
The circulation of blood in the arteries mirrors the circulation of sap in the tree, and the circularity of cosmological or metaphysical thought -- analogical thinking that links the macrocosm and microcosm, above and below. The ancestral field has an immediate effect, both healing and challenging, on our whole lives.
Ouroboric Cycle
Repeating the circuit of all aspects of our being generates a transpersonal current that unites conflicting opposites. We repeat the distillation process, again and again, but always on another level -- a new and deeper level of understanding. Cycles of rising and falling echo the ascent and descent in our ancestral lines. This is no disembodied Ascensionism, but a fully embodied, fully grounded soul retrieval, without recourse to 'metaphysical certainties'.
We continually return with a cyclic pattern to our own beginning. This adventure never ends. We are each our own paths. Genealogy is a sacred narrative of origins that forever marks our place in time with a true quest for the fountain of life and retrieval of lost parts of the soul. Jung adds, "So when you relieve the unconscious of non-realized contents, you release it for its own special functioning, and it will go ahead like an animal." (1925 Seminar, Page 115)
Ancient shamanic stories describe a previous World Age in which a colossal tree dominated the celestial landscape, joining heaven to earth. This master-narrative is the origin of the World Tree, and the Family Tree. The sacred tree is the navel of the world, always potentially present everywhere.
Shamans journeyed through visions, climbing the World Tree, much like we climb through the branches of our family tree, tracing and retracing them. Jung's collective unconscious overlaps with shamanic experience of nonordinary reality.
They descended the trees roots to the land of the dead to retrieve the souls of the living who strayed there. They journeyed in vision to the upper world to consult with spiritual ancestors, for healing or wisdom. A mythic boon emerges from interaction with the archetypal tree where the physical and the sacred are united.
In this sense the family tree is a redemptive tree linking us back to source. In the Neolithic and Bronze ages the world tree was the world axis, a nexus where pairs of opposites come together. Originally, the tree was a universal whole: male and female, dark and light, knowledge and mystery, etc.
The Biblical version dissociates or deconstructs this unity. Eve eats the fruit and humanity was separated into dualities, male and female, good and evil. Humanity was thrown into time and space, aware of imminent mortality. The Precession functions as the great cosmic timekeeper, marking off the Ages.
That tree fails to unite heaven, earth, and underworld. The temporal end remains unfulfilled unless the disparity of the tree can be transcended in some manner in this particular mythos.
Only the universal archetype, the World Tree unites the world of temporal matter, death, and the paradise myth regained after the completion of life's journey. Not just a diagram, the spirit of the family tree is a reconciling and redemptive symbol linking us to the origin, but we have to pluck its fruit -- the links and loops of kinship.
Tree of Visions
The World Tree is an integral part of the shamanic cosmos and links the world of humanity with the world of the spirits. Spirits pass from one world to another on the Tree. There are Siberian stories of climbing the World Tree to attend a school for shamans run in heaven by the ancestors. Without living links to the spirit world, there is no longer a Tree.
Only mythic dissociation -- the split of sensibility of body and spirit, female and male -- separates the Tree of knowledge from the Tree of immortal life. The body and psyche both derive from the ancestors. In the unus mundus, they are one integrated tree -- the creative source of becoming. We unite them when we resume a dialogue with our souls. We recognize truths in the mysteries of myth.
This Tree of Life or mother-tree has its roots in heaven and its branches growing downward through genealogical descent, bringing life-giving function to the possibilities of life. It is an icon of the unus mundus, an underlying unified reality from which everything emerges and to which everything returns.
Branch Out
The family tree is a system of interactive complexity and emergence. We grow its branches, and sometimes merge with lines compiled by others. Our own tree is a canopy of growth that connects us all the way to the stars and our aspirations while grounding us in our roots.
Our family tree branches out each time we deviate from our direct Y-DNA or mtDNA lines of our father and mother. New family branches potentially enter the tree with each ancestral wife and her lineage, which in many cases is longer than that of the husband. Some royal descents come through the mothers; there is a legend that claims all the 'magic' in the family lines is through the distaff side.
Women are often the hidden half of the family because of old social and legal customs. Often we don't know and cannot find their maiden names, so they become dead ends in our search, until or unless new data is found.
Yet wives and natural partners form vital links in our chains of ascent back to well-known ancestors, even if little or nothing is known of them, beyond a name, or N.N. (invisible women). Elusive women can sometimes be found through naming patterns or in a census search, especially if there is a photo of the listing and its additional notations.
Other invisibles include missing fathers, and natural children. The phrase “natural son” in a will meant the testator acknowledged a child had been born out of wedlock. The only legal meaning in that context back then was “a bastard; a child born out of lawful wedlock.”
Finding a maiden name is almost always essential to further research on a particular line. Naturally, the best place to locate a maiden name is on a marriage record. If that is not available, other vital records may have the information, although this is usually the case only with more modern records, not those over 100 years old. These include birth certificates of her children, her death certificate, her husband's death certificate, or the marriage or death certificates of her children. This is by no means standard and is only a possibility. Baptismal records may also contain the mother's maiden name, even in older church records.Another possible source is her obituary, which might mention surviving brothers. Also look for obituaries of sisters or men you believe are her brothers. If you have found a person that you think might be one of her parents, it is worthwhile to check the death certificates because a family member, perhaps your ancestress, usually provided the information on the death certificate and sometimes her relationship was given. Also look for wills from likely candidates -- a woman may be mentioned in her father's or mother's will.
Without direct information, you sometimes have to resort to indirect clues. Look for the repetition of certain given names in the family. If she named her son Hezekiah, Rudyard or some other uncommon name and there was an older man of that same name in the vicinity, that may be her father. Look also for surnames being used as second names for her children. A woman often gave her child her own maiden name as a middle name. In the census, look for older people living in the same household or nearby. They may well be the woman's parents. http://www.genealogy.com/articles/research/50_donna.html
Searching for Female Ancestors
https://www.loc.gov/rr/genealogy/bib_guid/female.pdf
Dead Reckoning
Our family tree is our map of the undifferentiated unconscious -- maps of relationships in the Land of the Dead, the co-existent underworld of shades. In the beginning, it is like drawing a map of the world on a sheet of paper with as little concept of our ancestors as the unknown seas and continents where they lived. New maps help us navigate the terrain.
Over and over, we plot our course through the maternal and paternal lines of ascent that predispose our responses. The scintillae are soul-sparks of partial or emergent consciousness. Insight in the ancestral field stirs the imagination. What we don't deal with remains buried. The dormant, lifeless, and withered awaken, expanding consciousness and renewing psyche, from deadness to life-force energy.
Jung called these "scintilla, or soul sparks, the innermost divine essence of man…symbols which express a God image, namely the image of Deity unfolding in the world, in nature, and in man." (Jung, Archetypes of the Unconscious pp.389)
At least symbolically, God climbs down to mortality. Some tribes deified their ancestors. And these divine archetypes -- gods and goddesses -- are just what we find at the far reaches of our royal and legendary genealogical lines. Our mortal descent is a fractal reiteration of their divine essence, our own images and conflicts. Jung named this quintessence the Self, bridging from the physical and instinctual to the spiritually transcendent psyche.
Scintillae or sparks of light in the dark emerge through consistent interaction, our persistent interest, and curiosity. Metaphorically, we love them back to life. These points of light, iridescent eyes, mimic the starry heavens or reflective surface of the sea with spontaneous amplification.
Representing the multiple consciousness of the psyche, they connect us with the animated soul of the world. As we focus, their virtual presence, numinosity and luminosity draws us toward pervasive meaning. The noumen is healing. Philosophers say that solar consciousness must inseminate lunar unconscious. This act gives birth to a third aspect of consciousness in our being, the luminous subjective self as the inner divine child.
Our 'dead reckoning' navigation means charting a new course of relationship and conscious attachment through successive immersions. Native Americans say we are affected by the seven generations that came before us and affect the seven generations to follow. We may actually include all our emotionally-charged generations -- the redeemed and unredeemed Trees.
Milky Way; Mother's Milk
Once we embark on our mission, we find that like the heavenly constellations, we have family constellations to guide us toward innate healing. Hidden dynamics in a family can be worked with and healed through a process that has the power to shift generations of suffering and unhappiness. Our most pressing challenges are reflected in those of our ancestors and the genetic relationships and patterns among them.
This relatively brief therapy helps us develop intuition and insight while exhuming hidden solutions that restore the flow of love. As Rumi suggested, "Love is the bridge between you and everything." We conceive a new perspective and circumambulate a variety of associative and interpretive treatments, clearing the emotional body with the balm of tears.
Over and over we ask what does this feel like? How does it continue to feel, or how do the feelings change and amplify over time, and what is it asking of you? Redemption of the psychophysical body lies in this direction -- redeeming spirit and soul, conscience and consciousness. To do so, we have to metaphorically dig up graveyards and excavate cities.
The unconscious belongs to no time in particular, being seemingly eternal. We consciously realized that as a peculiar feeling of timelessness. The "time" in which the ancestors lived and still live is a "time when there was no time," -- an ancestral world of thought-forms, beyond which is the sense of indefiniteness, timelessness, oneness.
Inherited Issues
We gain a unique perspective to make new choices or follow unforeseen pathways. Emotional resolution of systemic entanglement can help overcome patterns of behavior repeated in related families for generations, by bringing up the family images held in the unconscious mind. Such work on where we are stuck or feel pain is built around inclusion: the reconciliation among all parts of the self, our family, and our history.
In time, the stream of ancestors comes forward in a flood of imagery -- prevailing, enduring, haunting, mapping out hidden truths. We cannot escape the spirit of the depths who forces us toward the mysteries. Jung described not only 'possession' by the ego, shadow and anima/animus but by the transgenerational family history. "If we became aware of the ancestral lives in us, we might disintegrate. An ancestor might take possession of us and ride us to death." (1925 Seminar, Page 139).
We can only find our right way with an eye fixed on the far horizon. Perhaps such 'dead reckoning' -- our own confrontation with the unconscious -- helps us navigate our imaginative journey. We calculate our current position from a previously unconscious position, to fix, and advance that position to the far horizons. Our attention flows toward an unforeseen destiny where meaning beckons beyond the bounds of consciousness.
Jung describes the horizon as a whole as the quaternity (four quarters of heaven)..."There are always four elements, four prime qualities, four colors, four castes, four ways of spiritual development, etc. So, too, there are four aspects of psychological orientation...The ideal of completeness is the circle or sphere, but its natural minimal division is a quaternity." (Psychology and Religion: West and East,)
Natural Order
We have unconsciously sacrificed our ancestors and disheartened ourselves. We've set them adrift in the unconscious without mooring to the living. Over time we integrate this imaginal world as we trace our family tree through the islands and continents of the unconscious. This reality is mediated by information patterns which in turn are constantly evolving.
The tree is the record of the multigenerational courses from the known starting point, and the known or estimated 'drift.' Along the way we find many lines -- grand dynasties that have gone extinct, “beginnings without continuations.” But, somehow, despite all odds our own line has passed through or culminated in ourselves and our own 'pioneering' work.
Digging for Ancestors
Paraphrasing Jung, we stumble through unknown regions, are lead astray by analogies, forever losing the Ariadne thread. We are overwhelmed by new impressions and new possibilities, and the worst disadvantage of all is that the pioneer only knows afterwards what he or she should have known before.
When we encounter the second and subsequent generations we may have the advantage of a clearer, if still incomplete, picture. Certain landmarks on the frontiers of the essential have grown familiar. We now know what must be known if we are to explore the newly discovered territory.
Does our attention 'condition' the ancestral field? We learn to spot the most distant connections. We can unravel problems and give a coherent account of the whole field of ancestors, whose full extent we can only survey and 'know' at the end of our life’s work.
Thin Red Line
The ancestral map is a beginning, a framework in which later discoveries can be placed. What is confusing at first is clarified in a later stage of the journey. The family tree helps us establish a connection between the natural and sacred figures and our own psyche. Or, as von Franz notes, "Only if you look from afar, from a certain objective distance, do you realize that there is a pattern of wholeness in it." (Interpretation of Fairy Tales, Pages 6-7)
Family Dynamics
This special perspective or psychic viewpoint is a revelation of the soul, nothing short of the Holy Grail, whether as myth, bloodline, relic, or spiritual quest. We acquire depth in our attempts to heal ourselves. In 1949, Jung said, "Ultimate truth, if there be such a thing, demands the concert of many voices."
Family dynamics appear in individual therapy as well as in engagement with the family tree. They include repetitive patterns of interactions and significant events in the family history. Some suggest unconscious loyalties to previous generations leads to synchronistic repetition and unwitting reenactments of ancestral events and dates. The group functions ritualistically. Plurality becomes mimetic flow not just dissociative rupture. Intergenerational family identity is positively related to well-being.
Genealogy Gives & Genealogy Takes Away
We may find that our research uncovers more than we could ever imagine. We may break through persistent research blocks after years of trying, yet we may also be faced with grave errors in our charts we must correct, discarding certain figures from our droplines we may have warmly embraced. We come to crossroads where we must choose by instinct to merge or not to merge. Eminent lines may be cut unceremoniously or replaced by others we must now integrate.
Thus, the genealogical environment remains somewhat fluid. In some sense, "not knowing" can be as important as knowing. Some people might tentatively add ancestors to a line, realizing there is little or no documented evidence, but they know where the 'potholes' in their tree are.
Professional genealogy sites are constantly correcting errors and updating. On public trees, incorrect entries are repeatedly re-added, as people repeat the mistakes of others they find, over and over. Paths to the illustrious can evaporate over night. Adopting the wrong wife for an unknown can create an entirely fictional line of her relatives, but not our own. Another common error is making a sister or cousin of the same name into a spouse.
Thus, we may have a felt-sense of 'losing' ancestors or lines of descent we never actually 'had.' Everyone makes mistakes in genealogy, so it is part of the practice. Joys, sorrows, and confusions go with that territory.
The family tree operates as an alembic, a sacred vessel or temple of transparent walls that contains our pain, suffering, and confusion without judgment or analysis. Instead it offers us a rich array of stories. We can act out, play with, identify with and allow ourselves to be carried away by these ancestral stories – within a contained, ritual setting.
All of shamanism comes from one root -- the unseen world of gods, demons, and ancestral spirits, responsive only to shamans. The ancestors and the pathos of their epic restore our soul. "The sin to be repented, of course, is unconsciousness." (Jung, Aion, Pp. 191-192.) We construct a unique history of the evolution of our own consciousness with the bodies of our ancestors and the body of myths as the phenomenology of this same evolution.
Our Tree returns us to the lived experience of events, imaginal connections, and metaphorical reality. Primarily through afflictions, symptoms, and phenomenology, imaginal mythology seeks the movement of the soul to a fuller awareness of itself. We return to the origins, through memory, of our life story that goes beyond simple succession and co-existence. In our narrative arc, we may lie even to ourselves to reveal a more profound truth.
Without hypostatizing the idea to some otherworldly plane, Jung suggested our primordial behavior is informed by archetypal images. This is the difference between a psychological and a metaphysical, "spiritual," or religious approach and worldview.
Jung implied "Sooner or later all the dead become what we also are," but that we know little or nothing about that mode of being, and "what shall we still know of this earth after death?" Still, he felt, "The dissolution of our time-bound form in eternity brings no loss of meaning."
Reification, concretism, or hypostatization is the fallacy of ambiguity or misplaced concreteness. Abstraction (abstract belief, metaphysical or hypothetical construct) is treated as if it were a concrete, real event, or physical entity. The issues of reification are usually philosophical or ideological. This is the error of treating something which is not concrete, such as an idea, as a concrete thing. Reification confuses a model with reality: "the map is not the territory." Reification can also be an "as if" figure of speech, and actually understood as such, rather than literalized.
Even a genuine and original inner life has a tendency to succumb again and again to the sensualism and rationalism of consciousness, i.e., to literal-mindedness.
The result is that one tries to repeat a spontaneous, irrational event by a deliberate, imitative arrangement of the analogous circumstances which had apparently led to the original event.
The immense hope, the liberating ekstasis of the primordial experience, soon turns into the pertinacity of an intellectual pursuit which tries, through the application of a method, to attain the effect of the primordial experience, namely, a kind of spiritual transformation.
The depth and intensity of the original emotion become a passionate longing, an enduring effort that may last for hundreds of years, to restore the original situation.
Curiously enough, one does not realize that this was a state of spontaneous, natural emotion or ekstasis, and thus the complete opposite of a methodically construed imitation. (Jung, Letters Vol. II, Pages 600-603)
Jung saw consciousness as "essentially the psyche's organ of perception, it is the eye and ear of the psyche." Even the scientific view is still infused with unconscious myths and symbols, as "all that comes into our heads proceeds from the unconscious." (ETH Lecture II, April 27, 1934, pg. 98). Jung identified 'Psyche' as the unknown that we simply name 'Psyche,' therefore ambiguity has to be enough for us.
We can't concretize our ancestors into mythical metaphors, metaphysical statements or entities, etiologies, causal explanations, cookie-cutter archetypes, or name tags. But we can free them of unconscious 'dead weight' that affects our lives profoundly.
Peronified ancestors speak through the masks of image and symbol. Our felt experiences of them are real events but they are perspectives toward events which shift our attitudes and experience of events."The unconscious can move in every possible direction, even in time it can go forward and backward, because it knows no space."
(Jung, Visions Seminar, Vol. I.)
We also discover ourselves as imaginal beings through rich intuitive resonances, metaphor, and personification, without over-identification with our subject ancestors, without insisting the subjective must be objective, without egoic, foolish, idiosyncratic, or superstitious interpretations. The irrepresentable has an immediate, subjective power of conviction because it demonstrates its own existence.
"For the understanding of the unconscious we must see our thoughts as events, as phenomena. We must have perfect objectivity." (Jung, 1925 Seminar, Page 103) Otherwise, "One can even come to clairvoyance; but when such a gift as the latter is developed, it makes the person permeable to all sorts of atmospheric conditions that may result in his misery." (Jung, 1925 Seminar, Page 115)
Our ancestors may make what happens intelligible, but they don't 'happen' themselves. They reveal archetypal themes in history and the myth in the mess of ordinary lives. The mythic stories we embody in our own wounds are informed by all the figures in our Tree, not only the ones we believe most represent us.
Life is Short; Death is Sure
In the last analysis every life is the realization of a whole, that is, of a self, for which reason this realization can also be called "individuation." All life is bound to individual carriers who realize it, and it is simply inconceivable without them.
But every carrier is charged with an individual destiny and destination, and the realization of these alone makes sense of life. (Jung, Psychology and Alchemy, Page 222)
It is the mourning of the dead in me, which precedes burial and rebirth. The rain is the fructifying of the earth, it begets the new wheat, the young, germinating God. (Jung, Liber Novus, Page 243.)
Our poetic approach is echoed by Csikszentmihalyi: “the poet’s responsibility to be a witness, a recorder of experience, is part of the broader responsibility we all have for keeping the universe ordered through our consciousness.”
“Poetry leads us to the unstructured sources of our beings, to the unknown, and returns us to our rational, structured selves refreshed. Having once experienced the mystery, plenitude, contradiction, and composure of a work of art, we afterward have a built-in resistance to the slogans and propaganda of oversimplification that have often contributed to the destruction of human life. Poetry is a verbal means to a nonverbal source. It is a motion to no-motion, to the still point of contemplation and deep realization.” ―A.R. Ammons
This is the burden everybody has to carry:
to live the life we have got to live.
~Carl Jung, Letters Vol. II, Pages 515-516
This special perspective or psychic viewpoint is a revelation of the soul, nothing short of the Holy Grail, whether as myth, bloodline, relic, or spiritual quest. We acquire depth in our attempts to heal ourselves. In 1949, Jung said, "Ultimate truth, if there be such a thing, demands the concert of many voices."
Family dynamics appear in individual therapy as well as in engagement with the family tree. They include repetitive patterns of interactions and significant events in the family history. Some suggest unconscious loyalties to previous generations leads to synchronistic repetition and unwitting reenactments of ancestral events and dates. The group functions ritualistically. Plurality becomes mimetic flow not just dissociative rupture. Intergenerational family identity is positively related to well-being.
Genealogy Gives & Genealogy Takes Away
We may find that our research uncovers more than we could ever imagine. We may break through persistent research blocks after years of trying, yet we may also be faced with grave errors in our charts we must correct, discarding certain figures from our droplines we may have warmly embraced. We come to crossroads where we must choose by instinct to merge or not to merge. Eminent lines may be cut unceremoniously or replaced by others we must now integrate.
Thus, the genealogical environment remains somewhat fluid. In some sense, "not knowing" can be as important as knowing. Some people might tentatively add ancestors to a line, realizing there is little or no documented evidence, but they know where the 'potholes' in their tree are.
Professional genealogy sites are constantly correcting errors and updating. On public trees, incorrect entries are repeatedly re-added, as people repeat the mistakes of others they find, over and over. Paths to the illustrious can evaporate over night. Adopting the wrong wife for an unknown can create an entirely fictional line of her relatives, but not our own. Another common error is making a sister or cousin of the same name into a spouse.
Thus, we may have a felt-sense of 'losing' ancestors or lines of descent we never actually 'had.' Everyone makes mistakes in genealogy, so it is part of the practice. Joys, sorrows, and confusions go with that territory.
The family tree operates as an alembic, a sacred vessel or temple of transparent walls that contains our pain, suffering, and confusion without judgment or analysis. Instead it offers us a rich array of stories. We can act out, play with, identify with and allow ourselves to be carried away by these ancestral stories – within a contained, ritual setting.
All of shamanism comes from one root -- the unseen world of gods, demons, and ancestral spirits, responsive only to shamans. The ancestors and the pathos of their epic restore our soul. "The sin to be repented, of course, is unconsciousness." (Jung, Aion, Pp. 191-192.) We construct a unique history of the evolution of our own consciousness with the bodies of our ancestors and the body of myths as the phenomenology of this same evolution.
Our Tree returns us to the lived experience of events, imaginal connections, and metaphorical reality. Primarily through afflictions, symptoms, and phenomenology, imaginal mythology seeks the movement of the soul to a fuller awareness of itself. We return to the origins, through memory, of our life story that goes beyond simple succession and co-existence. In our narrative arc, we may lie even to ourselves to reveal a more profound truth.
Without hypostatizing the idea to some otherworldly plane, Jung suggested our primordial behavior is informed by archetypal images. This is the difference between a psychological and a metaphysical, "spiritual," or religious approach and worldview.
Jung implied "Sooner or later all the dead become what we also are," but that we know little or nothing about that mode of being, and "what shall we still know of this earth after death?" Still, he felt, "The dissolution of our time-bound form in eternity brings no loss of meaning."
Reification, concretism, or hypostatization is the fallacy of ambiguity or misplaced concreteness. Abstraction (abstract belief, metaphysical or hypothetical construct) is treated as if it were a concrete, real event, or physical entity. The issues of reification are usually philosophical or ideological. This is the error of treating something which is not concrete, such as an idea, as a concrete thing. Reification confuses a model with reality: "the map is not the territory." Reification can also be an "as if" figure of speech, and actually understood as such, rather than literalized.
Even a genuine and original inner life has a tendency to succumb again and again to the sensualism and rationalism of consciousness, i.e., to literal-mindedness.
The result is that one tries to repeat a spontaneous, irrational event by a deliberate, imitative arrangement of the analogous circumstances which had apparently led to the original event.
The immense hope, the liberating ekstasis of the primordial experience, soon turns into the pertinacity of an intellectual pursuit which tries, through the application of a method, to attain the effect of the primordial experience, namely, a kind of spiritual transformation.
The depth and intensity of the original emotion become a passionate longing, an enduring effort that may last for hundreds of years, to restore the original situation.
Curiously enough, one does not realize that this was a state of spontaneous, natural emotion or ekstasis, and thus the complete opposite of a methodically construed imitation. (Jung, Letters Vol. II, Pages 600-603)
Jung saw consciousness as "essentially the psyche's organ of perception, it is the eye and ear of the psyche." Even the scientific view is still infused with unconscious myths and symbols, as "all that comes into our heads proceeds from the unconscious." (ETH Lecture II, April 27, 1934, pg. 98). Jung identified 'Psyche' as the unknown that we simply name 'Psyche,' therefore ambiguity has to be enough for us.
We can't concretize our ancestors into mythical metaphors, metaphysical statements or entities, etiologies, causal explanations, cookie-cutter archetypes, or name tags. But we can free them of unconscious 'dead weight' that affects our lives profoundly.
Peronified ancestors speak through the masks of image and symbol. Our felt experiences of them are real events but they are perspectives toward events which shift our attitudes and experience of events."The unconscious can move in every possible direction, even in time it can go forward and backward, because it knows no space."
(Jung, Visions Seminar, Vol. I.)
We also discover ourselves as imaginal beings through rich intuitive resonances, metaphor, and personification, without over-identification with our subject ancestors, without insisting the subjective must be objective, without egoic, foolish, idiosyncratic, or superstitious interpretations. The irrepresentable has an immediate, subjective power of conviction because it demonstrates its own existence.
"For the understanding of the unconscious we must see our thoughts as events, as phenomena. We must have perfect objectivity." (Jung, 1925 Seminar, Page 103) Otherwise, "One can even come to clairvoyance; but when such a gift as the latter is developed, it makes the person permeable to all sorts of atmospheric conditions that may result in his misery." (Jung, 1925 Seminar, Page 115)
Our ancestors may make what happens intelligible, but they don't 'happen' themselves. They reveal archetypal themes in history and the myth in the mess of ordinary lives. The mythic stories we embody in our own wounds are informed by all the figures in our Tree, not only the ones we believe most represent us.
Life is Short; Death is Sure
In the last analysis every life is the realization of a whole, that is, of a self, for which reason this realization can also be called "individuation." All life is bound to individual carriers who realize it, and it is simply inconceivable without them.
But every carrier is charged with an individual destiny and destination, and the realization of these alone makes sense of life. (Jung, Psychology and Alchemy, Page 222)
It is the mourning of the dead in me, which precedes burial and rebirth. The rain is the fructifying of the earth, it begets the new wheat, the young, germinating God. (Jung, Liber Novus, Page 243.)
Our poetic approach is echoed by Csikszentmihalyi: “the poet’s responsibility to be a witness, a recorder of experience, is part of the broader responsibility we all have for keeping the universe ordered through our consciousness.”
“Poetry leads us to the unstructured sources of our beings, to the unknown, and returns us to our rational, structured selves refreshed. Having once experienced the mystery, plenitude, contradiction, and composure of a work of art, we afterward have a built-in resistance to the slogans and propaganda of oversimplification that have often contributed to the destruction of human life. Poetry is a verbal means to a nonverbal source. It is a motion to no-motion, to the still point of contemplation and deep realization.” ―A.R. Ammons
This is the burden everybody has to carry:
to live the life we have got to live.
~Carl Jung, Letters Vol. II, Pages 515-516
An Egyptian example of the common “trinity” of sacred tree-goddess-serpent also appearing in the Eden story. Here Nut as tree goddess nourishes the deceased and the deceased’s ba. The serpent is in its common guardian role, in an erect posture. From Nils Billing, Nut: The Goddess of Life in Text and Iconography, fig. F.3.
Like all archetypal symbols, the symbol of the tree has undergone a development of meaning in the course of the centuries. It is far removed from the original meaning of the shamanistic tree, even though certain basic features prove to be unalterable. The psychoid form underlying any archetypal image retains its character at all stages of development, though empirically it is capable of endless variations. The outward form of the tree may change in the course of time, but the richness and vitality of a symbol are expressed more in its change of meaning.
(Jung, CW13 ¶ 350)
Like all archetypal symbols, the symbol of the tree has undergone a development of meaning in the course of the centuries. It is far removed from the original meaning of the shamanistic tree, even though certain basic features prove to be unalterable. The psychoid form underlying any archetypal image retains its character at all stages of development, though empirically it is capable of endless variations. The outward form of the tree may change in the course of time, but the richness and vitality of a symbol are expressed more in its change of meaning.
(Jung, CW13 ¶ 350)
Painting by Cornelis van Haarlem, 1592.
"O sweet clean earth, from whom the green blade cometh!
When we are dead, my blest beloved and I,
Embrace us well, that we may rest forever,
Sending up grass and blossoms to the sky."
"O sweet clean earth, from whom the green blade cometh!
When we are dead, my blest beloved and I,
Embrace us well, that we may rest forever,
Sending up grass and blossoms to the sky."
DEPTH GENEALOGY
The Bridge of Spirits
Answer the Call - Cross the Threshold
Open the Gateways of Ancestors
by Iona Miller, (c)2015-2016
*
Begin Your Journey Through Time
1) Who am I?
2) Where do I come from?
3) Where am I going?
The Bridge of Spirits
Answer the Call - Cross the Threshold
Open the Gateways of Ancestors
by Iona Miller, (c)2015-2016
*
Begin Your Journey Through Time
1) Who am I?
2) Where do I come from?
3) Where am I going?
THE BOOK OF GENERATIONS
Here is the Book of thy Descent,
Here begins the Book of the Sangreal,
Here begin the terrors,
Here begin the miracles.
Hear now age-old tales as if they were new,
that they may teach you to speak true.
--Trevrizent in Wolfram's Parzival
"...there is an Unknown Country, lying between the places that we know, and appearing only in moments of revelation." --Hilaire Belloc
"Do not grieve. Misfortunes will happen to the wisest and best of men. Death will come, always out of season. It is the command of the Great Spirit, and all nations and people must obey. What is past is past and what cannot be prevented should not be grieved for..." ~Chief Big Elk, Omaha
Once you get to the root...Don't worry about the branches.
~Hsuan Chueh
Here is the Book of thy Descent,
Here begins the Book of the Sangreal,
Here begin the terrors,
Here begin the miracles.
Hear now age-old tales as if they were new,
that they may teach you to speak true.
--Trevrizent in Wolfram's Parzival
"...there is an Unknown Country, lying between the places that we know, and appearing only in moments of revelation." --Hilaire Belloc
"Do not grieve. Misfortunes will happen to the wisest and best of men. Death will come, always out of season. It is the command of the Great Spirit, and all nations and people must obey. What is past is past and what cannot be prevented should not be grieved for..." ~Chief Big Elk, Omaha
Once you get to the root...Don't worry about the branches.
~Hsuan Chueh
THESE ARE THE PEOPLE I COME FROM
"I Seek Dead People"
"I Seek Dead People"
http://qz.com/557639/everyone-on-earth-is-actually-your-cousin/
“DNA – the invisible, eternal, and fundamental basis of human identity – has acquired many of the powers once granted to the immortal soul. Like the sacred texts of revealed religion, DNA explains our place in the world: our history, our social relations, our behavior, our morality, and our fate.” “DNA in popular culture functions, in many respects, as a secular equivalent of the Christian soul.”
http://ejop.psychopen.eu/article/view/370/html
Suppose that you wanted a written record of your every ancestor…with the Ancestral Pyramid, a doubling of ancestors each generation back, by the 12th generation back you have 2048, and 60,000 direct ancestors going back to the Crusades. By Generation 40, you have more than one trillion ancestors.
Genetic Genealogy
DNA without history and genealogy is incomplete. The psyche dervies from the ancestors as much as the body does. You don't have DNA from all or even most of your ancestors. At about 360 years, or just short of 15 generations mtDNA peters out. At 15 generations, an individual living today would carry only three thousands of 1% (00.003052%) of the DNA of an ancestor who was “pure” anything 15 generations ago.
So even if one ancestor was Mediterranean 15 generations ago, unless they continuously intermarried within a pure Mediterranean population, the amount would drop by 50% with each generation to the miniscule amount that would be found in today’s current generation. With today’s technology, this is simply untraceable in autosomal DNA. An autosomal DNA test only goes back 6-8 generations.
We don’t really know how DNA is passed, but we know it isn’t passed in even amounts from each generation. In 4 generations, each ancestor only contributes, on the
average, 6.25% of our genetic makeup, so less than the
amount of statistical noise.
We have about 43 genetic ancestors out of 1024 genealogical ancestors after 10 generations. Because of shuffling, the probability of having DNA from all of your genealogical ancestors at a particular generation becomes vanishingly small very rapidly. There is a 99.6% chance that you will have DNA from all of your 16 great-great grandparents, only a 54% of sharing DNA with all 32 of your G-G-G grandparents, and a 0.01% chance for your 64 G-G-G-G grandparents. You only have to go back 5 generations for genealogical relatives to start dropping off your DNA tree. For a Caucasian, one minority ancestor in the third generation contributes 12.5% of the gene pool but in the 4th only 6.25%.
We also care about how many genetic ancestors we have after a certain number of generations: The number of genetic ancestors starts off growing exponentially, but eventually flattens out to around 125 (at 10 generations, 120 of your 1024 genealogical ancestors are genetic ancestors).
Direct Line paths of inheritance for both the Y-line, blue, and the mitochondrial DNA, red, are shown below. Contributions from the white genealogical lines may be small to nil, and dwindle quickly. Only men have the Y chromosome which is passed from father to son, usally along with the surname. Males carry their mother’s mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) but they don’t pass it on. Mitochondrial DNA testing gives a haplogroup which defines deep ancestry, such as European, African, Asian or Native American, and percentages of ethnicity. Humans have 22 pairs of autosomes and one pair of sex chromosomes (the X and Y chromosomes).
Fifty percent of our autosomal DNA (atDNA) comes from our mother and 50% comes from our father. Since our parents each received 50% of their atDNA from each of their parents, we inherited about 25% of our atDNA from each of our grandparents. This percentage is cut in half with each generation as we go further up our family tree. We inherit about 12.5% of our atDNA from each great grandparent and about 6.25% from each of our 2nd great grandparents.
Autosomal DNA (not the 23rd chromosomal gender pair) tends to be transferred in groupings, which ultimately give us positive and negative family traits. Autosomal DNA is inherited from the autosomal chromosomes -- any of the numbered chromosomes, as opposed to the sex chromosomes. Only Autosomal DNA tests the rest of the DNA provided by both parents on the 23 chromosomes, not just two direct lines, as with Y-line and mitochondrial DNA. Autosomal inheritance paths include all of the various ancestral lines, including the lines that contribute the Y-line and mitochondrial line.
http://dna-explained.com/2012/10/01/4-kinds-of-dna-for-genetic-genealogy/
“DNA – the invisible, eternal, and fundamental basis of human identity – has acquired many of the powers once granted to the immortal soul. Like the sacred texts of revealed religion, DNA explains our place in the world: our history, our social relations, our behavior, our morality, and our fate.” “DNA in popular culture functions, in many respects, as a secular equivalent of the Christian soul.”
http://ejop.psychopen.eu/article/view/370/html
Suppose that you wanted a written record of your every ancestor…with the Ancestral Pyramid, a doubling of ancestors each generation back, by the 12th generation back you have 2048, and 60,000 direct ancestors going back to the Crusades. By Generation 40, you have more than one trillion ancestors.
Genetic Genealogy
DNA without history and genealogy is incomplete. The psyche dervies from the ancestors as much as the body does. You don't have DNA from all or even most of your ancestors. At about 360 years, or just short of 15 generations mtDNA peters out. At 15 generations, an individual living today would carry only three thousands of 1% (00.003052%) of the DNA of an ancestor who was “pure” anything 15 generations ago.
So even if one ancestor was Mediterranean 15 generations ago, unless they continuously intermarried within a pure Mediterranean population, the amount would drop by 50% with each generation to the miniscule amount that would be found in today’s current generation. With today’s technology, this is simply untraceable in autosomal DNA. An autosomal DNA test only goes back 6-8 generations.
We don’t really know how DNA is passed, but we know it isn’t passed in even amounts from each generation. In 4 generations, each ancestor only contributes, on the
average, 6.25% of our genetic makeup, so less than the
amount of statistical noise.
We have about 43 genetic ancestors out of 1024 genealogical ancestors after 10 generations. Because of shuffling, the probability of having DNA from all of your genealogical ancestors at a particular generation becomes vanishingly small very rapidly. There is a 99.6% chance that you will have DNA from all of your 16 great-great grandparents, only a 54% of sharing DNA with all 32 of your G-G-G grandparents, and a 0.01% chance for your 64 G-G-G-G grandparents. You only have to go back 5 generations for genealogical relatives to start dropping off your DNA tree. For a Caucasian, one minority ancestor in the third generation contributes 12.5% of the gene pool but in the 4th only 6.25%.
We also care about how many genetic ancestors we have after a certain number of generations: The number of genetic ancestors starts off growing exponentially, but eventually flattens out to around 125 (at 10 generations, 120 of your 1024 genealogical ancestors are genetic ancestors).
Direct Line paths of inheritance for both the Y-line, blue, and the mitochondrial DNA, red, are shown below. Contributions from the white genealogical lines may be small to nil, and dwindle quickly. Only men have the Y chromosome which is passed from father to son, usally along with the surname. Males carry their mother’s mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) but they don’t pass it on. Mitochondrial DNA testing gives a haplogroup which defines deep ancestry, such as European, African, Asian or Native American, and percentages of ethnicity. Humans have 22 pairs of autosomes and one pair of sex chromosomes (the X and Y chromosomes).
Fifty percent of our autosomal DNA (atDNA) comes from our mother and 50% comes from our father. Since our parents each received 50% of their atDNA from each of their parents, we inherited about 25% of our atDNA from each of our grandparents. This percentage is cut in half with each generation as we go further up our family tree. We inherit about 12.5% of our atDNA from each great grandparent and about 6.25% from each of our 2nd great grandparents.
Autosomal DNA (not the 23rd chromosomal gender pair) tends to be transferred in groupings, which ultimately give us positive and negative family traits. Autosomal DNA is inherited from the autosomal chromosomes -- any of the numbered chromosomes, as opposed to the sex chromosomes. Only Autosomal DNA tests the rest of the DNA provided by both parents on the 23 chromosomes, not just two direct lines, as with Y-line and mitochondrial DNA. Autosomal inheritance paths include all of the various ancestral lines, including the lines that contribute the Y-line and mitochondrial line.
http://dna-explained.com/2012/10/01/4-kinds-of-dna-for-genetic-genealogy/
Garth Knight, The Last Honey Bee, 2010. Type C digital print, 125.3 x 125.3cm.
Courtesy: the artist and M Contemporary, Sydney
TIES THAT BIND US
"We are the bees of the invisible.
We collect tirelessly the honey of visible
To collect in the great hive of gold of invisibìle."
R.M.Rilke
"The beehive is found in Masonry as a reminder that in diligence and labor for a common good true happiness and prosperity are found. The bee is a symbol of wisdom, for as this tiny insect collects pollen from the flowers, so men may extract wisdom from the experiences of daily life. ...The fact that bees are ruled by queens is one reason why this insect is considered a sacred feminine symbol. In India the god Prana--the personification of the universal life force--is sometimes shown surrounded by a circle of bees. Because of its importance in pollenizing flowers, the bee is the accepted symbol of the generative power. --MPH
At one time the bee was the emblem of the French kings. The bee or beehive and fleur-de-lis is an ancient symbol of the Merovingian bloodline. Unconscious wisdom is contained in the beehive — the hive is in reality permeated by love, which relates to the human experiences of health, civilization, and the cosmos. Rudolf Steiner lecture series entitled, The Functioning of Spirit in Nature and in Man. The Being of Bees. http://wn.rsarchive.org/Lectures/GA351/English/SGP1975/NinBee_index.html
Courtesy: the artist and M Contemporary, Sydney
TIES THAT BIND US
"We are the bees of the invisible.
We collect tirelessly the honey of visible
To collect in the great hive of gold of invisibìle."
R.M.Rilke
"The beehive is found in Masonry as a reminder that in diligence and labor for a common good true happiness and prosperity are found. The bee is a symbol of wisdom, for as this tiny insect collects pollen from the flowers, so men may extract wisdom from the experiences of daily life. ...The fact that bees are ruled by queens is one reason why this insect is considered a sacred feminine symbol. In India the god Prana--the personification of the universal life force--is sometimes shown surrounded by a circle of bees. Because of its importance in pollenizing flowers, the bee is the accepted symbol of the generative power. --MPH
At one time the bee was the emblem of the French kings. The bee or beehive and fleur-de-lis is an ancient symbol of the Merovingian bloodline. Unconscious wisdom is contained in the beehive — the hive is in reality permeated by love, which relates to the human experiences of health, civilization, and the cosmos. Rudolf Steiner lecture series entitled, The Functioning of Spirit in Nature and in Man. The Being of Bees. http://wn.rsarchive.org/Lectures/GA351/English/SGP1975/NinBee_index.html
Like the oroboros serpent we recursively turn back toward our origins.
“The alchemists, who in their own way knew more about the nature of the individuation process than we moderns do, expressed this paradox through the symbol of the Ouroboros, the snake that eats its own tail.
The Ouroboros has been said to have a meaning of infinity or wholeness. In the age-old image of the Ouroboros lies the thought of devouring oneself and turning oneself into a circulatory process, for it was clear to the more astute alchemists that the prima materia of the art was man himself.
The Ouroboros is a dramatic symbol for the integration and assimilation of the opposite, i.e. of the shadow. This ‘feed-back’ process is at the same time a symbol of immortality, since it is said of the Ouroboros that he slays himself and brings himself to life, fertilizes himself and gives birth to himself.
He symbolizes the One, who proceeds from the clash of opposites, and he therefore constitutes the secret of the prima materia which […] unquestionably stems from man’s unconscious.” --Carl G. Jung
“The alchemists, who in their own way knew more about the nature of the individuation process than we moderns do, expressed this paradox through the symbol of the Ouroboros, the snake that eats its own tail.
The Ouroboros has been said to have a meaning of infinity or wholeness. In the age-old image of the Ouroboros lies the thought of devouring oneself and turning oneself into a circulatory process, for it was clear to the more astute alchemists that the prima materia of the art was man himself.
The Ouroboros is a dramatic symbol for the integration and assimilation of the opposite, i.e. of the shadow. This ‘feed-back’ process is at the same time a symbol of immortality, since it is said of the Ouroboros that he slays himself and brings himself to life, fertilizes himself and gives birth to himself.
He symbolizes the One, who proceeds from the clash of opposites, and he therefore constitutes the secret of the prima materia which […] unquestionably stems from man’s unconscious.” --Carl G. Jung
Adam & Eve
vs. Zombies, Fairies, & Dead Ends
vs. Zombies, Fairies, & Dead Ends
All These Phenomena Are Connected
Your genealogy is like Facebook for dead people
Some use their real names, and others are concocted
Your genealogy is like Facebook for dead people
Some use their real names, and others are concocted
If pleasure is united with forethinking, the serpent lies before them.
~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 249, Footnote 190.
~Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 249, Footnote 190.
OUR INVISIBLE FAMILY
PREMIS
It's All Relative
Carl Jung recounts his own imaginal quest to confront the unconscious in his Red Book (Liber Novus). He claims the dead report that their questions are not answered by those already dead. They appear to be disappointed, and have no recourse but to turn to the living. When we answer the call of our ancestors with psychogenealogy, we must ask along with Jung, "who are the dead, and what does it mean to answer them?"
If we seek wisdom from them, they would also like to expect it of us. Jung marveled that the dead posed questions, since we usually assume greater knowledge for the dead than ourselves, presumably because they are closer to the "ground" of all human knowledge -- as if they could "remember" or access the collective unconscious -- the numinous everything, absolute undifferentiated, ungoverned space. He noticed the dead only knew what they knew when they died, so they continue to intrude into our lives..
Jung regarded death as the fulfillment of life's meaning: "only those remain living who are willing to die with life. Since what happens in the secret hour of the midday of life is the reversal of the parabola, the birth of death."
"We have to learn with effort the negations of our positions, and to grasp the fact that life is a process that takes place between two poles, being only complete when surrounded by death." --Carl Jung, 1925 Seminar, Page 86
Spiritual Quantum Field?
The new meme of the afterlife is some sort of quantum or subquantal consciousness that persists after discorporation much like the soul. But when our models match current science, we can be sure we are dealing with metaphor and projection, not ontology. There is much conjecture on the subject of some kind of spiritual quantum field where our information lives on. Some of this research is rooted in reports of the Near Death Experience (NDE).
All that it proves is that we still enjoy our belief in an afterlife but want it described in contemporary or even mathematical terms -- a peculiar consideration for such an irrational concept. It actually shows that death remains the creative edge of our knowledge and so we project our hopes and dreams for immortality into the great beyond. Even scientists are not immune to this conjecture.
Physicist Professor Robert Jahn of Princeton University concluded that if consciousness can exchange information in both directions with the physical environment, then it can be attributed with the same "molecular binding potential" as physical objects, meaning that it must also follow the tenets of quantum mechanics. Quantum physicist David Bohm, a student and friend of Albert Einstein, was of a similar opinion. He stated, "The results of modern natural sciences only make sense if we assume an inner, uniform, transcendent reality that is based on all external data and facts. The very depth of human consciousness is one of them."
http://www.outerplaces.com/science/item/4518-physicists-claim-that-consciousness-lives-in-quantum-state-after-death
But such speculation is beyond our genealogical approach here. The only math we are concerned with is 'multiplication' and 'subtraction.'
Humans have been burying and preparing their dead for the "Great Beyond" for over 100,000 years. For example, archaic H. sapiens and "early moderns" were carefully buried in Qafzeh, near Nazareth and in the Mt. Carmel, Mugharetes-Skhul caves on the Israeli coast over 90,000 to 98,000 years ago (McCown 1937; Smirnov 1989; Trinkaus 1986). This includes a Qafzeh mother and child who were buried together, and an infant who was buried holding the antlers of a fallow deer across his chest. In a nearby site equally as old (i.e. Skhul), yet another was buried with the mandible of a boar held in his hands, whereas an adult had stone tools placed by his side (Belfer-Cohen and Hovers 1992; McCown 1937). It is thus quite clear that humans have been burying and presumably weeping over their dead, and preparing them for a journey to the Hereafter, for over 100,000 years. Thousands of ivory beads and fox teeth covered the bodies of a girl and a boy buried at Sunghir, Russia, around 28,000 years ago. This was some serious bling, representing years of accumulated work.
These behaviors and beliefs are related to activation of the amygdala, hippocampus, and temporal lobe, which are responsible for religious, spiritual, and mystical trance-like states, dreaming, astral projection, near death and out-of-body experience, and the "hallucination" of ghosts, demons, angels, and gods. Case studies and the evolutionary neurological foundations are presented and it is postulated that these structures evolved in order to make spiritual experience possible, and account for the sexual and violent aspects of religious behavior. Abraham, Moses, Mohammed, and Jesus Christ, and others who've communed with angels or "gods," display limbic system hyperactivity. Patients report religious "hallucinations" or out-of-body experiences when limbic structures are stimulated. As over 96% of human DNA is dormant, whereas 50% of activated DNA is devoted to the brain, these capacities may continue to evolve. (Joseph) http://brainmind.com/BrainReligion.html
Together the patient and I address ourselves to the 2,000,000-year-old man that is in all of us. In the last analysis, most of our difficulties come from losing contact with our instincts, with the age-old unforgotten wisdom stored up in us. ~Carl Jung, NY Times, Oct. 4, 1936.
The libido of man contains the two opposite urges or instincts:
the instinct to live and the instinct to die.
~Carl Jung, 1925 Seminar, Page 77
"It is not death that a man should fear, but he should fear never beginning to live according to nature."
--Marcus Aurelius [my 61st great grandfather]
"It is only possible to live as we should
if we live according to our own nature."
~Carl Jung, ETH Lecture, 7 June 1935.
“...put it my way, what we are really , and the reality we live, is our psychic reality, which is nothing but ...the poetic imagination going on day and night.” --James Hillman, We’ve Had a Hundred Years of Psychotherapy and the World Is Getting Worse, p. 62
"...by “soul” I mean the imaginative possibility in our natures, the experiencing through reflective speculation, dream, image and fantasy—that mode which recognizes all realities as primarily symbolic or metaphorical,...that unknown component, which makes meaning possible, turns events into experiences, is communicated in love, has religious concern [deriving from its special relation with death] (Hillman, Re-Visioning Psychology, p. xvi).
The symbol is the word that goes out of the mouth, that one that does not simply speak, but that rises out of the depths of the self as a word of power and great need and places itself unexpectedly on the tongue. It is an astonishing and perhaps seemingly irrational word, but one recognizes it as a symbol since it is alien to the conscious mind.
If one accepts the symbol, it is as if a door opens leading into a new room whose existence one previously did not know.
But if one does not accept the symbol, it is as if one carelessly went past this door; and since this was the only door leading to the inner chambers, one must pass outside into the streets again, exposed to everything external. But the soul suffers great need, since outer freedom is of no use to it.
Salvation is a long road that leads through many gates.
These gates are symbols. Each new gate is at first invisible; indeed it seems at first that it must be created, for it exists only if one has dug up the spring’s root, the symbol. --Jung, Red Book, Page 311.
I wait, secretly anxious.
I see a tree arise from the sea.
Its crown reaches to Heaven and its roots reach down into Hell.
--Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 300.
PREMIS
It's All Relative
Carl Jung recounts his own imaginal quest to confront the unconscious in his Red Book (Liber Novus). He claims the dead report that their questions are not answered by those already dead. They appear to be disappointed, and have no recourse but to turn to the living. When we answer the call of our ancestors with psychogenealogy, we must ask along with Jung, "who are the dead, and what does it mean to answer them?"
If we seek wisdom from them, they would also like to expect it of us. Jung marveled that the dead posed questions, since we usually assume greater knowledge for the dead than ourselves, presumably because they are closer to the "ground" of all human knowledge -- as if they could "remember" or access the collective unconscious -- the numinous everything, absolute undifferentiated, ungoverned space. He noticed the dead only knew what they knew when they died, so they continue to intrude into our lives..
Jung regarded death as the fulfillment of life's meaning: "only those remain living who are willing to die with life. Since what happens in the secret hour of the midday of life is the reversal of the parabola, the birth of death."
"We have to learn with effort the negations of our positions, and to grasp the fact that life is a process that takes place between two poles, being only complete when surrounded by death." --Carl Jung, 1925 Seminar, Page 86
Spiritual Quantum Field?
The new meme of the afterlife is some sort of quantum or subquantal consciousness that persists after discorporation much like the soul. But when our models match current science, we can be sure we are dealing with metaphor and projection, not ontology. There is much conjecture on the subject of some kind of spiritual quantum field where our information lives on. Some of this research is rooted in reports of the Near Death Experience (NDE).
All that it proves is that we still enjoy our belief in an afterlife but want it described in contemporary or even mathematical terms -- a peculiar consideration for such an irrational concept. It actually shows that death remains the creative edge of our knowledge and so we project our hopes and dreams for immortality into the great beyond. Even scientists are not immune to this conjecture.
Physicist Professor Robert Jahn of Princeton University concluded that if consciousness can exchange information in both directions with the physical environment, then it can be attributed with the same "molecular binding potential" as physical objects, meaning that it must also follow the tenets of quantum mechanics. Quantum physicist David Bohm, a student and friend of Albert Einstein, was of a similar opinion. He stated, "The results of modern natural sciences only make sense if we assume an inner, uniform, transcendent reality that is based on all external data and facts. The very depth of human consciousness is one of them."
http://www.outerplaces.com/science/item/4518-physicists-claim-that-consciousness-lives-in-quantum-state-after-death
But such speculation is beyond our genealogical approach here. The only math we are concerned with is 'multiplication' and 'subtraction.'
Humans have been burying and preparing their dead for the "Great Beyond" for over 100,000 years. For example, archaic H. sapiens and "early moderns" were carefully buried in Qafzeh, near Nazareth and in the Mt. Carmel, Mugharetes-Skhul caves on the Israeli coast over 90,000 to 98,000 years ago (McCown 1937; Smirnov 1989; Trinkaus 1986). This includes a Qafzeh mother and child who were buried together, and an infant who was buried holding the antlers of a fallow deer across his chest. In a nearby site equally as old (i.e. Skhul), yet another was buried with the mandible of a boar held in his hands, whereas an adult had stone tools placed by his side (Belfer-Cohen and Hovers 1992; McCown 1937). It is thus quite clear that humans have been burying and presumably weeping over their dead, and preparing them for a journey to the Hereafter, for over 100,000 years. Thousands of ivory beads and fox teeth covered the bodies of a girl and a boy buried at Sunghir, Russia, around 28,000 years ago. This was some serious bling, representing years of accumulated work.
These behaviors and beliefs are related to activation of the amygdala, hippocampus, and temporal lobe, which are responsible for religious, spiritual, and mystical trance-like states, dreaming, astral projection, near death and out-of-body experience, and the "hallucination" of ghosts, demons, angels, and gods. Case studies and the evolutionary neurological foundations are presented and it is postulated that these structures evolved in order to make spiritual experience possible, and account for the sexual and violent aspects of religious behavior. Abraham, Moses, Mohammed, and Jesus Christ, and others who've communed with angels or "gods," display limbic system hyperactivity. Patients report religious "hallucinations" or out-of-body experiences when limbic structures are stimulated. As over 96% of human DNA is dormant, whereas 50% of activated DNA is devoted to the brain, these capacities may continue to evolve. (Joseph) http://brainmind.com/BrainReligion.html
Together the patient and I address ourselves to the 2,000,000-year-old man that is in all of us. In the last analysis, most of our difficulties come from losing contact with our instincts, with the age-old unforgotten wisdom stored up in us. ~Carl Jung, NY Times, Oct. 4, 1936.
The libido of man contains the two opposite urges or instincts:
the instinct to live and the instinct to die.
~Carl Jung, 1925 Seminar, Page 77
"It is not death that a man should fear, but he should fear never beginning to live according to nature."
--Marcus Aurelius [my 61st great grandfather]
"It is only possible to live as we should
if we live according to our own nature."
~Carl Jung, ETH Lecture, 7 June 1935.
“...put it my way, what we are really , and the reality we live, is our psychic reality, which is nothing but ...the poetic imagination going on day and night.” --James Hillman, We’ve Had a Hundred Years of Psychotherapy and the World Is Getting Worse, p. 62
"...by “soul” I mean the imaginative possibility in our natures, the experiencing through reflective speculation, dream, image and fantasy—that mode which recognizes all realities as primarily symbolic or metaphorical,...that unknown component, which makes meaning possible, turns events into experiences, is communicated in love, has religious concern [deriving from its special relation with death] (Hillman, Re-Visioning Psychology, p. xvi).
The symbol is the word that goes out of the mouth, that one that does not simply speak, but that rises out of the depths of the self as a word of power and great need and places itself unexpectedly on the tongue. It is an astonishing and perhaps seemingly irrational word, but one recognizes it as a symbol since it is alien to the conscious mind.
If one accepts the symbol, it is as if a door opens leading into a new room whose existence one previously did not know.
But if one does not accept the symbol, it is as if one carelessly went past this door; and since this was the only door leading to the inner chambers, one must pass outside into the streets again, exposed to everything external. But the soul suffers great need, since outer freedom is of no use to it.
Salvation is a long road that leads through many gates.
These gates are symbols. Each new gate is at first invisible; indeed it seems at first that it must be created, for it exists only if one has dug up the spring’s root, the symbol. --Jung, Red Book, Page 311.
I wait, secretly anxious.
I see a tree arise from the sea.
Its crown reaches to Heaven and its roots reach down into Hell.
--Carl Jung, Liber Novus, Page 300.
The starry vault of heaven is in truth the open book of cosmic projection,
in which are reflected the mythologems, i.e., the archetypes.
~Jung, CW 8, Page 195, Para 392.
in which are reflected the mythologems, i.e., the archetypes.
~Jung, CW 8, Page 195, Para 392.
Archai (Greek, noun, plural)
Universal principles, original forms; the fundamental essences and primordial forces that animate the cosmos. Archai derives from the Greek word, arkhe, meaning beginning. In archetypal psychology, the root metaphors of psychological function.
We, each and all of us, contain within us the entire history of the world, and just as our body records Man's genealogy as far back as the fish and then some, so our soul encompasses everything that has ever existed in human souls. All gods and devils that have ever existed are within us as possibilities, as desires, as solutions.
--Hermann Hesse, Reflections
ROOTS & BRANCHES
YOUR CREATION STORY
Genealogy Facts & Fictions
But no matter how much parents and grandparents may have sinned against the child, the man who is really adult will accept these sins as his own condition which has to be reckoned with. ~Carl Jung, Psychology and Alchemy, Page 117.
Most people are nothing special, except perhaps to those close to them. Descent is one of the Mysteries of everyday life. What 'matters' about our past is more than only the biology of our descent, though this is the premise of genealogy. We are not only related to each other in family and in social relationships, but are related to all nature -- that inccludes all human or prehuman animal ancestors.
Among genealogists the battle still rages, whether to cut off once and for all disputed, fictitious, and legendary lineage, or to allow its traditional use to remain, even though some may be misled in their own minds by mythological material. Their issue, on shared trees, is having to repeat the same corrections over and again, especially in the medieval era. Fake lines to royalty that arose in the 1800's are also common, so they get re-added as often as they are removed. The same mistakes are copied over and over.
Who's Genealogy Is It?
In the medieval and ancient lines the whole research landscape changes. Monks in the early Christian era invented genealogies taking the lines of kings back to Adam. If the kings were no longer descended from the indigenous gods, then they needed to descend from figures from the Bible, Troy, and Rome.
Then, starting in the 1200s and reaching a peak in the 1600s, royal propagandists were competing to collect every old tradition and invent new ones if necessary to enhance the prestige of royal and noble families.
The French kings, for example, produced the Grandes Chroniques de France that claimed to show they were the heirs of a small band of Trojan refugees who established the Frankish people. Not to be outdone, Habsburgs followed a conscious policy for centuries of creating propaganda to show they were the heirs of the Trojan hero Aeneas through Julius Caesar. The idea that Julius Caesar was descended from Aeneas is just a much earlier, Roman example of the same kind of propaganda.
Still, radical amputation is a non-issue in Jungian work, which always approaches mythic material with an "as if." No one in transpersonal therapies is confused about the imaginal nature or depictions of mythic material and narrative. In many genealogy sites, such lines questioned by 'realists' are clearly marked as such. Also, there will always be fantasy-prone individuals who will believe what they wish to believe about such subjects.
Know It By Being It
Genealogy is a systems concept of emergence -- our emergence. It is a creative process within a formal system -- an ecology of ancestors we curate, foster and conserve, not merely a causal chain of linear descent. Family systems theory suggests that individuals cannot be understood in isolation from one another, but rather as a part of their family -- an emotional unit. Families are systems of interconnected and interdependent individuals, none of whom can be understood in isolation from the system.
Each member had a role to play and rules to respect. Members of the system are expected to respond to each other in a certain way according to their role, which is determined by relationship agreements and established patterns which may lead to balance in the family system, but also to dysfunction.
We create most of what we think of as reality through the stories we tell. Even profiles that contain only names and dates are still story telling. The names matter, but moreso the co
Universal principles, original forms; the fundamental essences and primordial forces that animate the cosmos. Archai derives from the Greek word, arkhe, meaning beginning. In archetypal psychology, the root metaphors of psychological function.
We, each and all of us, contain within us the entire history of the world, and just as our body records Man's genealogy as far back as the fish and then some, so our soul encompasses everything that has ever existed in human souls. All gods and devils that have ever existed are within us as possibilities, as desires, as solutions.
--Hermann Hesse, Reflections
ROOTS & BRANCHES
YOUR CREATION STORY
Genealogy Facts & Fictions
But no matter how much parents and grandparents may have sinned against the child, the man who is really adult will accept these sins as his own condition which has to be reckoned with. ~Carl Jung, Psychology and Alchemy, Page 117.
Most people are nothing special, except perhaps to those close to them. Descent is one of the Mysteries of everyday life. What 'matters' about our past is more than only the biology of our descent, though this is the premise of genealogy. We are not only related to each other in family and in social relationships, but are related to all nature -- that inccludes all human or prehuman animal ancestors.
Among genealogists the battle still rages, whether to cut off once and for all disputed, fictitious, and legendary lineage, or to allow its traditional use to remain, even though some may be misled in their own minds by mythological material. Their issue, on shared trees, is having to repeat the same corrections over and again, especially in the medieval era. Fake lines to royalty that arose in the 1800's are also common, so they get re-added as often as they are removed. The same mistakes are copied over and over.
Who's Genealogy Is It?
In the medieval and ancient lines the whole research landscape changes. Monks in the early Christian era invented genealogies taking the lines of kings back to Adam. If the kings were no longer descended from the indigenous gods, then they needed to descend from figures from the Bible, Troy, and Rome.
Then, starting in the 1200s and reaching a peak in the 1600s, royal propagandists were competing to collect every old tradition and invent new ones if necessary to enhance the prestige of royal and noble families.
The French kings, for example, produced the Grandes Chroniques de France that claimed to show they were the heirs of a small band of Trojan refugees who established the Frankish people. Not to be outdone, Habsburgs followed a conscious policy for centuries of creating propaganda to show they were the heirs of the Trojan hero Aeneas through Julius Caesar. The idea that Julius Caesar was descended from Aeneas is just a much earlier, Roman example of the same kind of propaganda.
Still, radical amputation is a non-issue in Jungian work, which always approaches mythic material with an "as if." No one in transpersonal therapies is confused about the imaginal nature or depictions of mythic material and narrative. In many genealogy sites, such lines questioned by 'realists' are clearly marked as such. Also, there will always be fantasy-prone individuals who will believe what they wish to believe about such subjects.
Know It By Being It
Genealogy is a systems concept of emergence -- our emergence. It is a creative process within a formal system -- an ecology of ancestors we curate, foster and conserve, not merely a causal chain of linear descent. Family systems theory suggests that individuals cannot be understood in isolation from one another, but rather as a part of their family -- an emotional unit. Families are systems of interconnected and interdependent individuals, none of whom can be understood in isolation from the system.
Each member had a role to play and rules to respect. Members of the system are expected to respond to each other in a certain way according to their role, which is determined by relationship agreements and established patterns which may lead to balance in the family system, but also to dysfunction.
We create most of what we think of as reality through the stories we tell. Even profiles that contain only names and dates are still story telling. The names matter, but moreso the co