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Alden Josey, November 2000 |
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Adapted from a talk given to the Round Table Associates, September 27, 1998.
Copyright © 1998 by Alden Josey. All rights reserved. Used by permission of the author.
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| What is Jung About and What Does it Mean to Me? |
For more than 70 years the unconscious has been a basic scientific concept that is indispensable to any serious psychological investigation. [C.G. Jung, Written in 1960 in Man and His Symbols, p. 102]When I first considered this topic, I was a little bit intimidated by it, and very much aware of the hubris in presuming an answer to the questions. The more I thought about it, the more I became greatly interested in it and the prospect of talking about Jung in a different way. What I have to tell you is, therefore, a meditation; it is ruminative, circular and even a bit repetitive. In fact, as I began to think about this, I saw it as having the possibility of being a kind of Apologia for my own ideas and responses to Jung, the ways that Jungian psychology has affected my thinking and my life. That would have made this very personal, and I wasn't sure that I wanted to do that. I thought we had other business to attend to in asking the very deceptive question, "What is Jung about?" He wrote eighteen very substantial volumes of Collected Works trying to say what he was about, and lots of other people have written and spoken about what he is about for half a century or more. In trying to imagine something unusual, something personal, yet something cogent and still be able to address the demanding question, What is he about?, I realized that you have, over the course of the years, heard a number of lectures about familiar ideas from the Jungian lexicon. People have spoken and written about persona, shadow, anima/us; you've been instructed about archetypes and images and a whole range of symbolism and the role that it plays in psychic life. So, I knew this was not an occasion when we would come again and flip the familiar pages of that library of Jungian concepts and ideas. We'll have time to do that again sometime, just as you've done it before, but now I think we want to do something a bit different. What is it all about? And the more I thought about that question, the more I realized the answer had to be personal. I can't tell you what Jungian psychology is about in any final or concrete way. The discovery of the answer to that question is a process that will go on for a very long time. I have to tell you what Jung is about insofar as the whole thing has come into my life, so this is, in fact, an Apologia pro Vita Sua in the ancient way of defending one's own standpoint and ideas and thoughts. I could even formulate a certain kind of answer at once and say that I think Jung and his psychology, depth psychology, analytical psychology, are about the creation of consciousness. That whole body of thought is about the process imbedded in life by which consciousness grows from the field and the abyss of unconscious biological life. If we let our imagination play over the nature of Nature in the eons before the appearance of a specifically human creature, we see that there was a very long time during which the entire planetary process seems to have been suspended and motionless. Nothing seems to have disturbed the intactness, the wholeness of the slowly gathering life process. Creatures in incredible variety, each seeming to be perfect expressions of its type, came and went. Then, in some way even yet not clear, human consciousness appeared, and in this new animal, the original unity of Nature was split in two. From then until now, we bear in each one of us that deep split between the experience of individual consciousness and the deep well of the unconscious. Because of this primeval psychic splitting into opposing worlds and values, it is the fate of every person to experience the world through oppositions, through the pairs of phenomenal opposites. Jung and his psychology are about that process, its dynamics and its consequences. A large part of my life work has revolved around the study of the problem of opposites and especially their alchemical symbolism... C. G. Jung, Memories, Dreams, Reflections, p. 233They are also about learning how to develop the psychological instrument to live in the space, the gap, between the rational and the not-rational, and in a more general way to live in the turbulent space of the pairs of opposites, that psychic space that Jung called the complexio oppositorum. That's kind of a second answer, and I will have more to say about that. Jung is about learning the psychological skills and developing the instruments to live with courage and grace in the complex field of the play of opposites. This personal task is full of the flavor of opposition and contradiction. It is important to say here that Jung's psychology, despite its very deep engagement with the problem of opposites in psychic life, is not for that reason a dualistic psychology. Quite the contrary. The pairs of opposites are seen to be phenomenal expressions of a unitary reality, and the process of psychological development is seen to be a movement toward the experience of that reality in a union of the opposites, the unio oppositorum. In its most central form, the unio means that the original split in the psyche is healed in a synthesis of mind at a new level in Nature. This union is the work of the individual personality as well as of the social collective. No where is this more apparent than in Jung's treatment of the problem of good and evil. That is, perhaps, the subject for another time. If we look again at this pair of opposites, the rational and the not-rational that I now want to call Reason and Faith, I've already said that Jung and his psychology are about learning how to live in the gap between them, so this will imply that an understanding of what Jung was trying to write and speak and teach about, and to discover himself, was to learn the skills of living somehow as adult men and women in that space between the garden of reason and the garden of faith. That would be a task that Jung himself would think a very appropriate one to speak about from a psychological point of view. So, I'm going to talk for a little bit about how this notion of a certain pair of opposites I've called reason and faith and the task of learning to live in the paradoxical ground between, is at the heart of what Jung is about -- for me. D. W. Winnicott points to a right attitude in the face of paradox and contradiction. [It is vital] for a paradox to be accepted and tolerated and respected, and for it not to be resolved. By flight to split-off intellectual functioning, it is possible to resolve the paradox, but the price of this is the loss of the value of the paradox itself. ...D. W. Winnicott, Playing and Reality, xii.But, what does it mean in practical terms to live at the paradoxical intersection of reason and faith, to accept and tolerate the contradiction, as Winnicott suggests? It means resisting the ego-driven impulse to swing to one extreme finding there a final solution to life's uncomfortable complexity. It means embracing the brilliant achievements and possibilities of the rational mind while opening oneself at the same time to the mystery and beauty of what the Sufis name "the world beyond the world beyond this world". It means being a partisan of Mme. Curie, Einstein, and Watson and Crick while walking in the company of Dame Julian of Norwich, the Dalai Lama and Hildegarde von Bingen, and all of this at the same time! Finally, it means accepting the possibility of a life lived not in the half-world of a one-sided vision but in the mysterious unity of the whole contradictory world. That's all it means! In trying to understand the psychology of this process as Jung taught about it, we will discover the various concepts of persona, shadow, anima/us, archetype as well as the beginnings of a theory of personality types; it is very important to talk about and study and try to understand and express in ever deeper ways what those ideas mean. But, we are here, I think, talking about the work, the opus, from another point of view; what the essential task might be, what the point of all this effort of understanding might be in the end. Our attention shifts from the leaf and branch to the root of the tree. Remember that Jung spoke of the psyche as "the perennial rhizome beneath the earth" and said "the root matter is the mother of all things". CW 5, xxiv. So, lets go on a little about opposites. We understand from our own experience how difficult it is for consciousness to apprehend a paradoxical pair of opposites at the same time. Its a very difficult thing to hold both ends of that continuum in consciousness simultaneously. It takes a lot of energy, a big libido investment, to do that. Something in the unconscious structure of ego life screams out against that kind of effort, finds it wearying, exhausting, too difficult. It takes just too much! As a result, we find it is something we can't do with very much consistency. It is very difficult, e.g., to be a devoted worker in the garden of reason and have a stake and an interest in what is growing in the garden of faith. That's not an easy thing to accomplish. As a result, the ego throws up its hands and chooses the easier thing, which is to slide toward one end of this continuum and choose to be identified with one or the other poles of the pair predominantly, if not exclusively. This is a much more comfortable position with the way the ego functions in the world. It's comfortable because one has by an inner act of choice, by an unconscious action, split up and gotten rid of a large portion of this pair of opposites and all of the constant sense of exertion and use of energy that one feels, and one has cleared up, seemingly, those damnable contradictions. But we know very well that what has dropped out of consciousness because it is inconvenient, or undesirable, or contradictory falls straightaway into the unconscious--it doesn't go any further than that. From that point in psyche, all of that split off material remains active, of serious consequence in psychic life . We also know that the things we choose to identify with and take into our image of who we are are the things that we become relatively good at, we become relatively muscular at that end of the spectrum and in that particular pole of opposites. This instrument of living is daily honed and practiced and can become formidable. But the opposite is true of all of that potential, that other portion of reality that has been dumped into the unconscious. Those potentialities of life do not get practiced or used, those muscles of psyche do not develop, they remain somewhat childlike, even infantile, in their character. You wouldn't expect your child to hear a dissertation on, say, the mechanism of cloud formation and a little later rise and give the same speech. That doesn't happen. The same is true in the unconscious psyche. All of those neglected parts are used so infrequently because they don't get honed and strengthened because those muscles don't get toned and enlarged, have not learned how to operate in waking life. The whole picture that forms around this unconscious material is that of awkwardness, inappropriateness, infantility, and it's no wonder that we are ashamed of that part of ourselves. When consciousness is so limited that it has angelic standards, the rejected creative power becomes a devil. The psyche compensates any extreme with its opposite. E.G. Whitmont, The Symbolic Quest, p. 48We have begun to talk about shadow and persona, haven't we? You see how inevitable it is that we come eventually to the various ideas that are so familiar from Jung's writings. But we won't stay with those very long, because I wanted to suggest as a first principle of Jungian thinking that no matter which aspect of a pair of opposites that one chooses to be predominantly identified with, the other end remains as a latent part of the personality but not anything that does us a whole lot of credit or a whole lot of good. It turns out to be a very awkward instrument indeed. Those people who tend to identify with reason as a predominant mode for organizing conscious life tend to be people who are interested in, say, the sciences. Let's be a bit stereotypical and not try to be subtle or too detailed in our analysis, but let's say that on that end of the spectrum we are probably dealing with those who are devoted to science, and to the power of human rationality and intellectual functioning to create a reasonable and complete picture of the world through experimentation, observation, calculation and logical thought. For those persons, everything having to do with faith and mystery, with the non-rational side of their personality, will be dumped into the unconscious, will be an embarrassment at times to the developed side of the personality and will generally be kept in the dusty and un-visited attic of Psyche. On the other hand, those persons identifying predominantly with the faith end of that spectrum will tend to have a powerful interest in things spiritual, things mysterious, things for which reason and rationality are very inadequate instruments. Those persons might be the philosophical or religious pioneers who break new ground of spiritual thought, but whoever they are and however they practice these strengths in the realm of the spiritual or religious life, it is very likely that powers of rational thought and interest and concern in approaching life through reason will not be of primary interest to them. In fact, that whole side or possibility for them will be to some extent split off and lost to conscious life. Consider that around 1530 A.D., when the new theories of Copernicus about the heliocentric universe were becoming known, a famous man of the church said the following: "People give ear to an upstart astrologer who strove to show that the earth revolves, not the heavens or the firmament, the sun and the moon....This fool wishes to reverse the entire scheme of astronomy; but sacred Scripture tells us that Joshua commanded the sun to stand still, not the earth." That was the voice of Martin Luther. From Geneva came another voice quoting the 93rd Psalm: "The world also is stabilized, that it cannot be moved" and saying, "Who will venture to place the authority of Copernicus above that of the Holy Spirit?" Calvin and Luther represented so powerful an attitude that a discouraged Copernicus withheld his completed work from publication for a time. In the contemporary scientific community that is unraveling the structural details of the human genome, there is a prevailing feeling that when that work is done, the mysteries of the human organism will be spread out like a book for us to read. Periodically, there are enthusiastic claims that this or that complex piece of human behavior has been traced to a particular location on a certain gene. Those claims have often been quietly retracted as the profound depths of cause and effect in the psyche-soma become more appreciated. In the physics community, there is a search of almost monastic intensity for the TOE, the Theory of Everything, which will finally unite all of physical reality under the tent of a single over-arching system. In our admiration for the stupendous intellectual achievements of Western science (an invention, by the way, of an historically and geographically limited psychological apparatus), can we see a difference between the limited task of pushing back the curtain of ignorance that clouds the intellect and, on the other hand, the wish to remove all mystery from the peculiarly human experience of life? Now, we know that in historical reality there are individuals who are great scientists with profound spiritual bent. We know also that there are people of great spiritual genius who have no difficulty with the rational intellect and have used it to great advantage. We are not here talking about geniuses or those who have managed in some way to live in some kind of conjoined sense of the contemporaneous reality and value of this pair of opposites. However, it is just this achievement that Jung suggests is possible in some measure for all of us. As these two very differently organized individuals look at each other across that field between their prevailing system of value in life, they will often see in the other an image of their own worst parts. In fact, we can say that each has become the shadow of the other. Each person who stands on his own pole of that pair of opposites, and looks across to the other pole looks at his own shadow. Each of these parties, and they are numerous in the world--the party of rationalists and the party of faith--will look at the other and see all of the neglected parts of themselves that do not work very well. And each will have an emotional reaction toward the other of dislike, disdain, aversion and even a murderous hatred. This fact alone is responsible for a great deal of the agony and suffering that the world holds. If we enlarge our discussion to talk about other pairs of opposites, body/spirit, black/white, rich/poor, we would have the same kind of analysis. Jung is speaking, in his essential voice, about this predicament. His discourse is also about a way out of it. This is what makes him so important to each of us, and that is why the second question of today is such an important adjunct to our discussion. How are we going to represent pictorially the continuum between the two poles of reason and faith? We can draw a straight line and say that on that line lie all possible states of psychic life in the field of these two opposites and also represent some degree of integration of them, some degree of capacity of living in the paradoxical reality of their opposition and containing that contradiction in consciousness. For example, we can say that the parties I have described somewhat stereotypically live very close to the ends of the line with an intense local sense of the value that prevails in their neighborhood. Each person who lives at the pole has a sense that the local reality is the total reality. The poor, struggling, undeveloped, needy ego lives very much in a local psychological situation that it construes as the total, as the whole. Jung is about the discovery that this is a false perception, and an individual who lives in a local reality exclusively is living in a very one-sided state. If one moves toward the center of the line, the implication is that from a condition of extreme identification with a polar opposite, one moves in a variety of ways toward an awareness of the greater complexity of the reality in which one is living. It is characteristic of persons who undertake the work of analysis or therapy, that very soon into the matter, it becomes obvious that things have to change. Things cannot remain the way they were, because they way they were is responsible for the way a person has felt in life, the depression, anxiety, phobias, all those ailments to which the mind is prone. In moving toward the center of the line, there is a growing perception of something else that has to be added in. Sometimes, an individual can reach something like a saturation point of individuation and growth and development. It will not be possible for every person in actual fact, although it certainly is in the theory, to move to the center of the line. That will not happen. Psyches are different with different capacities and aptitudes. It seems to be true that certain individuals move to a point and find that the standpoint they have reached becomes a platform for a satisfying life, so different that it feels like an endpoint. For them perhaps it is an endpoint. No one can say where this point is for any person, but the population on this hypothetical line very likely follows laws of probability. In thinking of the line so far, it seems like a flat horizontal line stretching between two points. We can improve this image and add another piece of meaning to what Jung says about this situation. He makes it very clear that moving from onesided polarized organization of personality to a more integrated, whole one in which the opposites find in some degree an integrated resting place, is a development very much to be wished. There is a great value in this movement. Anytime a person makes a leap of development, what this really means is that this individual has included within the scope and field of his/her life a far greater range of things than were there before, things of meaning, things that become part of the nexus of conscious life, that vastly, or perhaps just significantly, increase the range of experience of oneself, and inevitably of the world and of others. I'm reminded of some line of Ortega y Gassett: So many things fail to interest us, simply because they don't find in us enough surfaces on which to live, and what we have to do then is to increase the number of planes in our mind, so that a much larger number of themes can find a place in it at the same time.That whole process is one of increase, enlargement, growing complexity of psychic life. Jung pointed to this process constantly and consistently, and it is, I believe, primarily what he is about. He made it clear that there is a great value to be attached to that kind of integration. We need to revise our image of the line as the field between the opposites that tries to take into account the notion of "value" of position on the line. I want to draw something showing the line rising toward the middle. It might take on the shape of the familiar bell curve that you may remenber from your courses in statistics. It might look like the roof of a house rising to a peak in the middle.
![]() I want to suggest that the midpoint is the place of maximum value and integration, the place of maximum realization of the possibilities of a personality. Once again, I don't think it is in the cards for every one of us in fact to reach the peak point. What that point really means is that there has been a psychic development of such a magnitude that life no longer consists to that individual of separated, isolated, contradictory aspects. Life feels like a totality, a wholeness, a unity. My sense is that there are persons in the human story who have actually experienced that. Some of those individuals are the familiar pioneers of human experience. I dont need to name them. I want to make the point that I think this is not the exclusive list of those who "have attained", as the Sufis would have it. My sense is that there is attainment everywhere in life, in places and persons one would not imagine. It reminds me of the last paragraph of the great novel Middlemarch by George Eliot in which the author, after telling the wonderful weaving of stories that unite many lives, says of the heroine Dorothea that Her full nature ... spent itself in channels which had no great name on the earth. But the effect of her being on those around her was incalculably diffusive; for the growing good of the world is partly dependent on unhistoric acts; and that things are not so ill with you and me as they might have been, is half owing to the number who lived faithfully a hidden life, and rest in unvisited tombs.This is also true of the panorama of psychological development. It is, to say the least, not entirely administered through institutes and asssociations and analytical endeavors. Development, growth and realization is an archetypal reality, a pressure in Nature that struggles to happen, and it does happen. What we do with all of our efforts at developing and understanding and practicing psychologies and undertaking the difficult task of analysis, is to help that process along. But it is a profoundly rooted archetypal energy in the soul, and it goes on everywhere and at all times. That is why it is important to hold oneself open in the whole matter of human relationship and encounter. You never know when you will meet someone who has attained, or attained a good deal more than you have. Now we have created a symbol: something that points to the character of the continuum between the opposites in a psychological and developmental point of view. We have added the notion of value to what we can express. We can say with this picture that there is a value to be obtained by moving from the ends of the spectrum toward the center. What are the consequences of not doing so? Jung was very much about this also. What I am describing is nothing less than a revolution in patterns of thought and judgment and way of being in the world, a kind of metanoia which is a Greek word that combines the notion of "repentance", that is, a feeling of contrition and regret, with that of a "new mindedness", that is, a revised understanding about life. If we can let this be an end to my reflections for now, it brings us to a story from the account in the Book of Luke, Chapter 13 (RSV). Jesus is talking with a group of followers:
In regard to metanoia, Paul wrote to the Corinthians about repentance using two expressions: "I rejoice not that ye were made sorry, but that ye sorrowed unto repentance" (eis metanoian = 'unto repentance', meaning "to the point that you made a change"); in writing, "I do not repent..." he used the word metamelomai, which is equivalent to Latin poenitet me = I am sorry. The two Greek expressions are often translated by exactly the same word, i.e. "repentance" in English. (Taken from M. Nicoll, The Mark, Shambhala, 1981, pp. 89-112] What was true then is true today as you read this. The psychological wisdom in this story is resonant with the deepest instruction I have found in Jung's psychology: We are all invited to nothing less than a metanoia, a new mindedness. |