Jung said "The right way to wholeness is made up of fateful detours and wrong turnings."
This year, I wonder if I can be a little easier on myself and surrender to the process more in spite of my "targets" and "goals".
What do you think of making and keeping New Year's resolutions? Is it an activity that is aligned with surrendering to the Self and the process that is meant to unfold for each of us?
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Hi Ed, I've posted your dream on The Daily Dreamer. Please feel free to comment on what I've said about your dream--of course it is only a projection on my part.
Ed's dream on Daily Dreamer
According to D. Stephenson Bond in The Archetype of Renewal, 2003, our modern day New Years Day traditions are leftover remnants of old and forgotten traditions having their origin in ancient Babylon (circa 3500 BC).
In ancient Babylon (circa 3500 BC), their New Year’s festival, Akitu, was celebrated each year at the Vernal Equinox (the beginning of Spring). Their festival, Akitu, was an annual ritual renactment of a mythical battle fought between the new god Marduk and the old goddess Tiamat.
According to Bond, this battle between the new god and the old goddess was part of the Babylonian story of creation, and their yearly ritual renactment was for the purposes of bringing heaven and earth, macrocosm and microcosm, back into proper relationship and synchronization.
Putting it more simply, Akitu was a yearly ritual performed for the purposes of starting over anew with a clean slate. At the end of the Akitu festival, "oracles were cast... in order for the fate of each of the coming twelve months to be determined, predicting the prospects for the weal and woe of the city."
In modern times Old Man Time (Tiamat) gives way to Baby New Year (Marduk), and each year "the weal and woe" predictions of world events are given out and then read in our tabloids as we hope for our clean slate and make our resolutions with a chance for a fresh start.
Anthony: Thanks for providing your own knowledge and expertise to this topic. Though I posted it right at the new year, I'm still struck by how guilty I feel because I have not only NOT made New Year's resolutions, but I am starting to feel there's no longer a point.
This must be based on a complex around not wanting to fail! That, or perhaps, based on your insights, this is a far more archetypal and deepseated urge that is calling me to renewal and a literal and figurative "reset" of my ongoing habits and egoic thoughts and actions. The urge for renewal is apparently ancient and strong!
I think this year, now, I am leaning toward renewal in a profound and rooted way, applying something in the realm of ritual that can allow the renewal to symbolically be put in motion, rather than simply setting "traditional" goals that I am already feeling may be out of my reach! Thanks again for the insight!
Thanks for this background. I would add that we here in the US also have a strong renewal myth going on as well related to the arrival of the second sons of Europe and thw westward movement later in our history. Thanks again for your info. It enriches the conversations an images.