When Dreams Depict a Stage in the Alchemical Process
I have been going through profound changes for the last three years that have included a number of losses. I have glibly referred to my situation on occasion as "my dismantling." I'm coming out the other end, but managing my mood is still an effort. I don't know a lot about alchemy, but a dream I had a few days ago brought forth the image of the alchemical bath and seemed to speak to the magnitude of my transformation: I am seated in a black office chair on rollers in a large auditorium with…
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The concept of the objective psyche has intrigued me for a few years. The part that grabs me is that although Psyche is seen as autonomous and objective, it is assumed that it seeks to affirm and fulfill each person's individual "purpose" whether that is in some ultimate way (Calling) or in a particular moment (mindfulness?) or both. I like the positivism of that, something is striving even against us to get us to some higher/wholer/greater place. (Reminds me of Maslow and Rogers) But then, what about the collective unconscious, the Psyche. Is this entity interested in our individual progress or the progress of the species? Doesn't this begin to sound like the transcendent vs. immanent God debate? Of course, it could be said that what is completed in one adds to the completeness of the whole, but does that also mean Psyche will sacrifice the unconscious lifestyle to benefit the conscious awakening of others?
By the way, if Hermes saved you, you are Hermetically sealed to your path. :)
I like that too!!
Wow! This reminds me of a class I had in grad school- It's fascinating and stretching my brain! Thanks!!
I will throw a piece in here if I may. I went to a presentation by John Beebe last week. He started talking about the "objective psyche". I saw one more reference to it in an article by another Jungian. I had never heard of the concept before and would appreciate any references, info, etc. And, what place would that have in this discussion (or not). What does this part of Psyche do for us? It's purpose(s).
I have been saved/rescued from death twice in my life by Psyche...or maybe Hermes? To me, there is no question about Jung's proposal of Self and self, and the importance of the ego-Self axis in individuation.
Rats! Brahman's secretary tells me the big B. isn't accepting calls at the moment!! :) Don't work about the can of worms, they will return in a higher form just as this discussion has done!!
I'll read some of Radin's work when I can get to it along with awaiting your "reading list." In relation to your description of the dream and its interaction with your consciousness, I remember a prof of mine stating that whether the dream is analyzed, amplified, or even made conscious or not, it still has an effect on the totality of the dreamer (auto-pilot). He went on to say that analysis just helps "speed up" the process and make it more conscious (which I took to mean "understandable" in order to then make more congruent [between the conscious and unconscious] choices. (!) )
Okay, finally got a chance to read both Ed T and Lisa at the same time. Some thoughts:
Ed T, you state that we live essentially as a responder, or even a passive vessel, for the ingrained patterns and societal pressures. There is no self (small s, Lisa) to make any decisions and that what appears as decisions have already been prescribed by the confluence of ingrained patterns and societal patterns. In reality, we are only subjectivizing (a word?) what is really an objective process. I must say that such determinism sounds too much like behaviorism to me in its deterministic emphasis. (Ed T, I am interested in what "scientific facts" you refer to). You can tell I am not a supporter of the idea that we are just simply lucky instinctual beings.
Also, given, for the moment, that there is a psychological flow of which we are a part, can we choose to fight the flow or choose to get our self out of the way? And if we are doing such choosing, what is doing the reflective observation, the discernment, and the choosing to either fight or get out of the way? It would seem there is something doing the observing and making a choice.
And if a choice is not really being made, and the subjectivity is an afterthought, almost an illusion best rejected, then developmentally, and resting on evolutionary functionalism, why do we have such a means of subjectivity at all? It would seem to be counter-evolutionary, something nature (assuming this is where the flow comes from) would have jettisoned from our make-up long ago.
Most Jungians will take the stand that there is a self and a Self along with Lisa, much in line with the Hindu/Buddhist atman and Atman. But Ed T, you do seem to hold a similar stance related to dream work proposed by Hillman and the archetypal folks when they left the amplification aspect of Jungian dream interpretation and instricted us to just ask the image directly what it wants and then wait for the answer. (Over simplification, but so am I :) )
As to my response, have I just "knee-jerked" my response and all that led up to it, or did "I" make some decisions along the way?