Carl Jung’s Journey to Find His Soul

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Carl Jung’s Journey

Title: Carl Jung’s Amazing Diary Over Decades Chronicling His Journey to Find His Soul
Liber Novus (New Book) (The Red Book) C.G. Jung, introduced by Sonu Shamdasani

Half of this oversize red leather-bound Liber Novus (New Book) is devoted almost half to C.G. Jung’s Oil and Watercolor fantasy painting out of his awake conscious explorations.

Carl Jung's JourneyAlthough the first half of the book with the majority of the paintings is in German, the second half of the book is in English. I can tell you I was in heaven looking at these original Psyche Paintings of Jung for the first time.

I hope you will let me know what you think when you get hold of this book. If you are an artist, it is a must-buy!

Liber Novus, written before 1930 and never published until 2009 spans several years and provides an understanding of the foundational beginnings of personality analysis and other scholarly work, especially the individuation process.

If that were all that would be plenty. But Jung also speaks out loud of his own personal psychoanalysis process, his own hard-scrabble individuation process and shares wonderful paintings of his fantasies.

Take a walk inside the inquiring mind of Carl Jung. For me the same INTJ Myers-Briggs type as Jung and Jungian scholar, this proved so enlightening, took me inside my own mind in an eerily correct mirror.

So many people, known concepts and familiar understanding for me, like a walk on a pre-prepared path. Delicious, like St. Paul’s Philemon, somehow connected to Elijah from Jesus’ transfiguration.

Throughout Liber Novus you will see the emergence of Jung’s beginnings of his psychological types and archetypes. Jung came from a Christian family, father a pastor. So do you have to understand the Bible to read the book? It helps.

For example, in one Jung fantasy, he has Salome blind and with Elijah, when in reality Salome, who danced for Herod and requested the head of John the Baptist be brought to her on a plate when Herod told her she could ask for anything because he enjoyed her dancing so, was actually the daughter of Herodotus.

In Jung’s fantasy, a cross had Elijah at the top representing rational thinking and Salome at the bottom representing feeling. The left cross beam represented Superior the irrational interior and the right cross beam represented the Serpent thinking sensation (inferior).

Still, the dictionary, and I used it many times, especially words no longer in common usage, can enable you to read the book without worry, if you are willing to go the extra step of looking things up.

Imagine traveling with Jung as he actively tries to reconnect with his soul and gain wisdom stored in the unconscious.

Jung speaks of Logos, the spiritual principle and an old man who represents understanding, insight, foresight, legislation, and wisdom, and Eros as a maiden, the unspiritual principle of feeling.

Within this purposely unscholarly volume, you will find dialogs about Jung’s inner state/s. St. Ignatius of Loyola’s fifth spiritual exercise instructs one to see with the eyes of the imagination the length, depth, and breadth of hell. Instructions: empty the consciousness, go under it. Beneath the threshold of consciousness, everything is animated in what Jung eventually named the collective unconscious.

Want to do your own paintings?

Get into this huge Red Book bound in red leather, hence the nickname that stuck, and a first look at the interior disclosure paintings. These alone, especially for this artist, occupied hours. Jung, although he never seemed to consider himself such, was a wonderful artist, abstract images, for the most part, with phenomenal detail, pure originality, drawing and color skills—delightful to experience!

Let me call your attention to Jung’s artwork on pages 79, 88-89, 105, the mandala on page 107, pages 115, 119, the gemstone on page 121, the mandala of Christ on page 127, defiant snake on page 129, the mosaic head on page 133, the most amazing page 135….

Jung says next to the painting on page 154, The Bhagavad-Gita says: “whenever there is a decline of the laws and an increase of iniquity/then I put forth myself: for the resource of the powers and for the destruction of the evildoers/for the establishment of the law I am born in every age.” I see Jesus preaching on page 155. What will you see?

Jung’s painting shows highly developed technical skills and proficiency, painting in both oil and watercolor. These paintings represent Jung’s fantasies—the myth-creating function of the mind.

Here is Jung’s way to move into active imagination, a far superior introspective tool than passive dreaming, a conscious way of entering the unconscious realms more purposefully, targeted and elucidating than dreams.

  • Empty the mind to produce a vacuum in the consciousness
  • Concentrate on a particular mood
  • Attempt to become as conscious as possible of all fantasies and associations that come up in connection with it
  • Allow whatever fantasy free play without departing from the initial effect in a free association process
  • Should lead to concrete or symbolic expression of the targeted mood nearer to consciousness, making it more understandable
  • Draw, paint or sculpt the fantasy
    a) Visuals will see the inner image
    b) Auditories will hear inner words
    c) Kinesthetics can access through automatic writing or with a planchette (used with or without a Ouija board) to facilitate automatic writing
  • Experience an inner dialog to widen consciousness

Clearly, these images take place outside of the rational, conscious mind. Soul gives rise to images that were assumed to be worthless from the rational perspective and there are five ways of using them—

  • Make use of them artistically if that is your gift
  • Make use of them in philosophical speculation
  • Make use of them in a quasi-religious way (this could lead to heresy and the founding of sects)
  • Empty the dynamics of these images and squander it in every form of licentiousness
  • Make use of them psychologically that distinguishes itself from art, philosophy, and religion

Of course, writing this book over nearly two decades, Jung also worked. For example, in1913-14, Jung saw about 5-7 clients a day, five days a week.

Certainly, the connection and disconnection with Freud were mentioned. Freud’s analytic reductive method was based on causality and Jung felt showed only half of the picture. Jung used the constructive method of the Zurich school which showed the whole of it. Life is lived new so cannot be understood merely retrospectively. KEY: How out of this present psyche, a bridge can be built into its own future.

Imagine, after the assassination on June 28th of Archduke Franz Ferdinand until the outbreak of war on August 1, 1914, Jung described having the feeling that he was an over-compensated psychosis—33 days!

There are personal dreams and what Jung called “big” dreams that relate to the world at large. Also, private fantasies and public event fantasies, which Jung called “active imagination.” Psychotics experience these but are unable to integrate them and get swallowed up by them.

Imagine also a being part God, part human, part animal land consider which one rules at any given time. (Appendix C of the Red Book) Below you serpent, within you man and above you God.

Jung says of the afterlife—to him for whom solitude is Heaven, he goes to Heaven; to him for whom it is Hell, he goes to Hell. (Appendix C)

Here, you get to look at the personal unconscious together with other conscious elements, the impersonal unconscious or collective psyche. So Jung presents people with three parts of knowing, the self, the conscious and personal unconscious acquired during a lifetime (the I) and the impersonal unconscious or the collective psyche inherited (the non-I).

This can explain twins separated at birth meeting decades later wearing similar clothes and liking similar foods, things, and preferences. We stand between two worlds-external perceptions (rational) and perception of the unconscious (irrational). Symbolic art can contain the rational and irrational.

One more part of our personal self is the persona or the person we create and choose to present to others, our mask or chosen role on the stage, or our life that somehow arises out of the collective psyche.

Individuation is achieved through a synthesis of the individual with the collective psyche to reveal the individual lifeline.

Jung called the anima (how the subject is seen by the collective unconscious) a counterpart to the persona. Anima-male’s female soul. Animus-female’s masculine soul.

Jung’s fantasies he claimed came out of his inherited collective psyche. I-center of the field of consciousness a complex among other complexes, different from the self. Self-subject of a person’s totality and includes the unconscious psyche, so the I is included in the self. Jung equated Hindu Brahman/Atman with the Self.

2 Comments
  1. Avatar of Jack Eason
    Jack Eason says

    It sounds positively fascinating Barbara. One question immediately springs to mind however, “Liber Novus, written before 1930 and never published until 2009”, why such a long time period between writing it an publishing? Was it perhaps a condition of his for some obscure reason?

    I’ll keep my eyes peeled for it.

    Thanks again,

    Jack 🙂

  2. Avatar of Joyce White
    Joyce White says

    Great job Barbara. Big fan. Joyce

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