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I'd like to invite others to share responses and experiences as we delve together into Jung's Red Book. We'll begin at the start of Liber Primus and work through the Red Book ten pages a week sharing personal responses to Jung's grand experiment.
Comments
Coming to the end of week one, I hope some of you will share responses to the first 10 pages of the Red Book. Thought I'd share a short quote from each chapter in the hopes of inciting some conversation.
“The spirit of the time would like to hear of use and value . . . but I did not consider that the spirit of the depths possesses a greater power . . . ”
“It is wise to nourish the soul, otherwise you will breed dragons and devils in your heart.”
“Dreams are guiding words of the soul.”
“If you marry the ordered to the chaos, you produce the divine child, the supreme meaning beyond meaning and meaninglessness.”
“No culture of the mind is enough to make a garden out of your soul.”
“Should everything fall into your lap ripe and finished?”
“Depths and surface should mix so that new life can develop.”
A couple nights ago, I dreamed I was a crippled woman in a hospital bed telling my roommate about the time I won a swimming race. I wrote of the dream in my journal feeling anxious and uneasy, wondering what my crippled body in the dream might be calling my attention to. Later that day, I read in Red Book (231) “Be patient with the crippledness of the world and do not overvalue its consummate beauty.” This bit of advice helped me explore the dream image in a different state of mind. Wondering if anyone else has had a dream they'd like to share while reading Red Book . . .
Bonnie,
I'm honored you've joined the group! I think the Red Book conversation is, indeed, an important and extremely valuable one right now. I'm excited about embarking on a group exploration and am hoping others will agree and join in!
I know that I often catch myself deferring to "the spirit of the times" as my justification to avoid swallowing “the bitterest of all draughts”. This spirit lets me spin off into thoughts and theories and avoid what might be needed for true healing. Jung's open admission of his own deep inner contradictions bolsters my strength to face my own depths, even when distasteful. I'd love to hear your thoughts on the spirit of the depths and the spirit of the times or whatever else grabs you in the first chapter or two of the Red Book.