"Our soul, as our body, is composed of all elements that have
existed in the lineage of our ancestors.
The "new" in the individual soul is a recombination,
infinitely varied, of extremely old components "
- C. G. Jung
- C. G. Jung
Greetings, Toads, Toadettes and Garden aficionados,
hedgewitch here. Those who've paid attention to my various ramblings over the
years know I've had a certain resistance to working from word lists, so it
may seem odd to see me in charge today of our Get Listed challenge. Gradually,
however, the creative persistence of our various Garden dwellers and followers
has drawn me into an exercise I've come to find very productive and rewarding.
I hope you will find it the same.
Note: I do tend to go on and on, people, so if you'd like to skip all the verbiage and cut to the chase, feel free to scroll down at any time to the bold text below titled The Challenge, where all the nuts and bolts are located.
So today it's my turn to present a list, and my source material is the world of
dreams and symbols, the unconscious mind, and its role in our creative process and
indeed our lives, as explored in the works of analytical psychologist and spiritual explorer, Carl Gustav Jung.
C.G. Jung, frontispiece, 1964 edition, Man and His Symbols |
From wikipedia link above:
"Carl Gustav Jung (/26 July 1875 – 6 June 1961), often referred to as C. G. Jung, was a Swiss psychiatrist and psychotherapist who founded analytical psychology... the central concept of ...[which]...is individuation—the psychological process of integrating opposites, including the conscious with the unconscious, while still maintaining their relative autonomy.... Jung proposed and developed [among others,] the concepts of extraversion and introversion; archetypes, and the collective unconscious...
His work has been influential in psychiatry and in the study of religion, philosophy, archeology, anthropology, literature, and related fields. He was a prolific writer, many of whose works were not published until after his death." ~wikipedia
“Until you make the unconscious conscious, it will direct your life and you
will call it fate.”
― C.G. Jung
― C.G. Jung
Cover of 1964 edition The mandala is a frequently used spiritual symbol in many cultures. |
“One book opens another.”
― C.G. Jung
I've always been fond of picture books, books that tell
their narrative with illustrations as much as words, especially
those that deal with myth, magic and history, so it's no surprise that one of
my favorites is Jung's enormous word-and-picture book Man and His Symbols. Our word list today is drawn from the first chapter of this literary project Jung worked on shortly before his
death in 1961: a presentation of his theories of psychological analysis, dreams, and components of the unconscious mind using extensive imagery. It was intended for a general
audience rather than the psychoanalytic specialist, and I recommend it to all who'd like to take a
visual and verbal trip down below our mental floorboards, where so much of
the material for our poetry and for art is found.
Below you will find some pictures and concepts drawn from the book to get us going:
Below you will find some pictures and concepts drawn from the book to get us going:
Rock Garden After Rain, by ECP on Flick'r,Creative Commons |
The Challenge:
“Words are animals, alive with a will of their own”
―C.G. Jung
“Words are animals, alive with a will of their own”
―C.G. Jung
Now, without any further incursions into the world of psychoanalysis and its complexities and jargon on my part, I'd like us to attempt to dig into the world of mind and symbol, and write about something that comes from 'under the hood' of our conscious thought process. The piece should deal with the
world of dreams, the mind, symbols or
the unconscious. It may retell an archetypal myth. It may be about a
specific dream. It may be about sanity or madness, or it may explore and focus
on any one or more of the symbols shown in these pictures or on a personally meaningful one.
I have included thirty-two words (below) so that our poems may
take different directions. There is no maximum number limit, but also no requirement to use them
all, either.
However you must use at least five of the words from this list drawn from
Chapter One of Man & His Symbols,
in your choice of either a poem utilizing a
form, in a prose-poem, or in free verse.
So without further ado, here is the word list.
Have at it, pond dwellers, and show us what is hidden beneath those mental floorboards.
meaning
wheel
name
inkling
unconscious
perception
limit
amplification
faint
threshold
frail
dissociated
control
evasive
tender
oscillate
tension
impulse
penumbra
fetish
stiff
irrational
precise
trigger
primitive
cryptic
jump
boundaries
deflected
forgetting
collective
disguise
As always new work is preferred, but if by utilizing a significant
number of words (10 or more) from the list above, an older work can be given a
new voice that fits in with the theme, that is also welcome. If you choose to revamp an older work, feel free to include
both versions.
If using any of the images I've included, please include attribution, as always.
C.G. Jung quotes via Goodreads
If using any of the images I've included, please include attribution, as always.
C.G. Jung quotes via Goodreads
Thanks Hedge! In the way of underwordly synchonicities, a dream from two nights ago anticipated this challenge upside-downwise. Which is, I suppose, the way of the Otherworld Jung had spelunked down into for so long ...
ReplyDeleteA short one from me - thanks for the wonderful read & challenge HW ~
ReplyDeleteHappy Wednesday ~
Such a cool prompt. great pics. I see yours is up and started to read-- then got to spoke a wheel which was such a great phrase I realize d I had to stop reading till I finished mine, now there is a phrase I would like to have written. Sorry for no caps on mobile device. K.
ReplyDeleteThis is an amazing prompt, Hedge, and such a list to work from! I'm just back from work and must go out again for a parent-teacher conference, but I shall certainly allow my subconscious some time to mull over the challenge.
ReplyDeleteDefinitely an amazing prompt! I adore Jung, and
ReplyDelete“Until you make the unconscious conscious, it will direct your life and you will call it fate.”
is on my list of favorite quotes.
Thanks, everyone. I hope the words prompt something for you. I've been very impressed with what's emerged from the unconscious here so far.
ReplyDeleteI've never read Jung, but am always intrigued by statements attributed to him and have no doubt absorbed some Jungian ideas. My poem does not profess to say anything about Jung, but is me riffing on this great word list.
ReplyDeleteClever Hedge! I received the Spider today in my Medicine cards...so I must go tangle myself with my thoughts. I do think it represents the Wheel of Fortune. I am having lots of ups and downs-in regards to my moods and the internet.
ReplyDeletegah!
ReplyDeleteFantastic prompt..So looking forward to reading everyone's work!!
ReplyDeleteThanks to everyone who's participated. I will be checking back in periodically for the next few days, so feel free to keep linking through the rest of the week if something bubbles up.
ReplyDeleteHad a busy day today, but hope to be able to find time tomorrow!
ReplyDeleteI do not know whether I'll be able to type mine up tonight as still at work. Will see. But will get it up in next few days for sure. K.
ReplyDeleteps - says she, complaining bitterly--it's 8:05! k.
ReplyDeleteps - says she, complaining bitterly--it's 8:05! k.
ReplyDeleteWould I let you down, Hedge? Would I? No wayyyyyyyyyyyyy. :-)
ReplyDeleteThat was amazing, Shay! I think I may need therapy now, though.
ReplyDelete@karin--that's awfully late to be working! I hope you get overtime. ;_)
Again, no rush, people. This is about writing a piece you're happy with, not about meeting a deadline. I'll be checking back.
Shouldn't have attempted this, but I did find it too intriguing. Difficult without sufficient insight to translate it into a personal experience, imagined or real.But being out of our depth at times is not a bad thing. Thank you for stretching my mind.
ReplyDeleteThank you Hedge! I loved yours-I am struggling. I have been writing essays and now finding poetry a trance dance-
ReplyDeleteHa. Up. Now I can feel free to read others. K. (Manicddaily)
ReplyDelete…mine broke the rules a bit. But I do need a bit of comfort therapy after this post. Does that count?
ReplyDeleteThat was fun!! Thank you, Hedge!
ReplyDeleteah, a list... Sorry, Hedge, for not playing... moving, packing, etc., and just not feeling it much these last few weeks. Haven't been visiting either, except for Galen's last hurrahs. ~
ReplyDeleteI will be around tomorrow and Saturday to visit and comment. I was busy saying goodbye and commenting on Galen's Friday Flash 55's tonight.
ReplyDeleteBetter late than never, right? Sorry for the delay-huge grant due in a few days at work and I'm spent!
ReplyDeleteThanks to everyone who participated--some amazing poetry from you all.
ReplyDelete@DE your link is faulty De.I added a corrected one to your poem.Hope that was okay.
Thank you for allowing me to show my ignorance. You have a nice, interesting post and I like the pictures you used. I sneaked onto my blog your St. Michael and explanation.
ReplyDeletePerhaps next time my effort will produce something better, more appropriate for Toad quality. But here is my "Unfinished Nonsense" for what it is not.
..
Interesting post. Thanks
ReplyDelete