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The Monday Morning Memo

Life is a journey on water...
The scenery and sunlight of the conscious mind above.
A timeless and 
weightlessness world of symbols and shadows beneath.
 

Carl Jung’s primary disagreement with Sigmund Freud stemmed from their differing concepts of the unconscious. Jung saw Freud’s theory of the unconscious as incomplete and unnecessarily negative.

Jung proposed the existence of a second, far deeper form of the unconscious. This was the collective unconscious, where the archetypes themselves resided, represented in mythology by a lake or other body of water…

The “personal” unconscious is a reservoir of experience unique to each individual, while the collective unconscious collects and organizes those personal experiences in a similar way with each member of the species.

In his book, Archetypes and the Collective Unconscious (p. 43), Jung says, “My thesis then, is as follows: in addition to our immediate consciousness, which is of a thoroughly personal nature… there exists a second psychic system of a collective, universal, and impersonal nature which is identical in all individuals. This collective unconscious does not develop individually but is inherited. It consists of pre-existent forms, the archetypes, which can only become conscious secondarily and which give definite form to certain psychic contents.”

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Random Quote:

“When a blue-collar, average Joe hears the word ‘spiritual,’ he’ll frequently hee-haw and spit. It sounds sissy, elitist and heretical to him, a threat to his masculinity and a contamination of the patriotic and religious detergents with which his brain has been thoroughly washed. When cool urban cynics hear the word, they sneer. It’s an affront to their existential hipness.

For many others, it’s a reminder of the legions of charlatans, frauds, and self-deluded dilettantes who are making money by hawking various brands of ‘spiritual’ guidance. Then, too, are the innocent airheads who go about broadcasting embarrassing streams of woo-woo in their everyday lives (and who are frequently the victims of the con-artist gurus.)

These folks – some greedy, some ignorant, some just sweetly naive – have all contributed to the aura of suspicion that surrounds the word ‘spiritual’ in contemporary American society. That’s indeed unfortunate, because spirituality, when pure, connects us to the godhead with infinitely more efficacy and grace than does religiosity.”

- Tom Robbins, novelist, in an interview with Andrea Miller of the Shambhala Sun, July 1, 2008

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