A Fool Such As I

“For the foolishness of God is wiser than man’s wisdom, and the weakness of God is stronger than man’s strength.”  (1 Cor. 1:25) Two years ago, at just about this time of year, I was preparing to take the Propaedeuticum — or Stage 1 exams — at the Jung Institute of Boston. This set of exams […]

“We Are The Great Danger”

This quote showed up several times in my Twitter feed recently: “The only thing we have to fear on this planet is man.” ~ C.G. Jung This was a frequent theme for Jung later in his life, particularly after having witnessed the horrors of the first and second world wars. Here is a clip of […]

An Empty Stillness: The Challenge of Creative Work

A friend posted a very nice video on Facebook recently of Ira Glass discussing the challenges of the creative process. The point Glass makes is that when someone is developing their creative gift, the work that is first produced is generally not very good. That is, it doesn't live up to the vision the creator sees in his or her mind. According to Glass, this is a normal stage of creative development that is overcome by doing as much work as possible. As Rodin once said, "Travailler, travailler, travailler." Work, work, work.

Here is the video:

On the surface, this looks like very simple advice about the value of practice. A more encouraging and supportive version of "practice makes perfect." However, I think there is more going on here.

Marie-Louise von Franz in her book, Creation Myths, discusses the creative process in language very similar to Glass, albeit in a much less supportive and more sarcastic tone. 

"People in a pre-creative stage are inflated; they are identical with their inner conception and filled with its glory and beauty and its load of energy. But generally when the work is finished, instead of being happy they feel a bit deflated and sad...It is one reason why some people never get down to do something creative, especially men of the puer eternus type, also women of the puella eterna type. They never step down to do something creative because they feel vaguely, or foresee intuitively, that if they produce the thing they have in mind it will be much less good than what they conceive inwardly. They do not want to go through this process of creative deflation but prefer to remain all their lifetime would-be artists, or would-be geniuses, on a very great scale rather than the producer of a humble product on a very much lower scale."

The valuable point here, I believe, is the equation of  the "pre-creative stage" -- Glass' beginners -- with inflation, and that of humility and deflation with true creation.  This makes sense from the standpoint of Jungian psychology, as the true source of creativity is understood to be the unconscious, just that part of the psyche least accessible to ego.

The ego's need to be the "would-be artist" must be relinquished so that the creative unconscious can bring forth it's gifts. For Jung, creativity involves a lowering of consciousness, which he describes as "an empty stillness which produces creative work."

My own experience is that sitting down to write or engage in some other kind of creative work always starts with a struggle to get my thoughts and desires--that is, myself--out of the way. Sometimes this can be a real battle as I keep trying to force the issue, trying to come up with some clever line to begin with, each one more embarrassing than the last.

Almost inevitably I feel like quitting. Sometimes I do. Sometimes, however, if I stick with it, I enter into what I can only describe as a state of alert listening. I am tempted to call it an almost Satori-like state, though perhaps that's a bit inflated. Out this listening a few words emerge on the periphery of my awareness and if I can follow this faint trace, something good appears. It is a challenging process, but it can be an exhilarating experience.

Allowing the deflation, allowing the lowering of consciousness--the empty stillness--is hard work. I am often surprised at what resistance I put up again and again to the creative process. The ego doesn't like to cede its place.

Ira Glass' advice to "do a huge volume of work" is as much about affecting a transformation in the individual as it is about improving one's work. This makes a lot of intuitive sense to me. It is an alchemical process: The transformation of the material being worked upon produces a transformation in the one performing the work. Perhaps in this way, we become what we do.  

"Throw yourself like seed," says the poet Miguel de Unamuno. This is his image for the creative deflation, which is really a deflation of the ego. It is both a call to throw one's self-centeredness away as well as to throw oneself into creative work. He reminds us, in words very similar at times to Glass, that:

to live is to work, and the only thing which lasts 
is the work; start then, turn to the work.

Healing for de Unamuno is to move forward into creative work, to become your work. Healing does not come from looking back and you should  "not let the past weigh down your motion."

From this point of view, our life task is not to figure out who we were or who we are, but to actively participate in our own becoming. And the path to this becoming is work, for

from your work you will be able one day to gather yourself.

Don’t Hide Inside Anger

A video of James Hillman reading this poem from Rumi:

The light you give off did not come from a pelvis.
You're features did not begin in semen.
Don't try to hide inside anger,
radiance that cannot be hidden.

Hillman's take away quote from this clip for me is "It's easier to be angry than to think."

Here is the video:

The Path of Therapy

The Goal of Analysis

On The Path I saw a post on the PsychCentral website this morning titled: Is There a Goal to the Psychoanalytic Process? In it the author, Leigh Pretnar Cousins, describes her original image of Psychoanaylsis as the endless “rehashing of every real or imagined detail of childhood, in a fruitless internal quest for The Answer to one’s […]

The Invisible Within The Visible

Here is a video of James Hollis speaking at Andover Newton Theological School and giving an overview of his understanding of Depth Psychology.  According to Hollis, Depth Psychology is a means of addressing the question, "What is it that moves the soul?" It is a dialogue with the invisible world that "courses through the visible" and an effort to open ourselves to, and come to terms with, the "other," both within  and without--an other that is ultimately mysterious.

Here is the video:

Woman in Grief

Caring For The Soul In Grief

I read a recent post on the PsychCentral website titled, 8 Tips to Help Console a Grieving Friend. I believe this is a very important topic because our contemporary culture tends to repress and deny the fact of suffering and death, such that when they (inevitably) occur, we have no idea how to handle it. Consequently, we […]

Approaching The Numinous

One aspect that differentiates Jungian Depth Psychology from other forms of therapy, is the importance that is placed on religious or numinous experiences.


For Jung, the experience of the numinous is the essential element of psychotherapy. In one of his letters he wrote: 

"You are quite right, the main interest of my work is not concerned with the treatment of neurosis but rather with the approach to the numinous. But the fact is that the approach to the numinous is the real therapy and inasmuch as you attain to the numinous experiences you are released from the curse of pathology. Even the very disease takes on a numinous character." 

Here is a video of Jungian Analyst Lionel Corbett, discussing the importance of such numinous experiences: