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Personal development and the creative process: a virtual visit with Carl Jung April 17, 2007

Posted by Dennis Mellersh in Leaders in Personal Development, Personal Growth Books.
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Reading Gerhard Wehr’s  excellent illustrated biography of C.G. Jung is like being virtually present with Jung throughout the various stages of his life and participating in his intellectual development as one of the world’s seminal thinkers

We each have our own unique approaches to our personal development program; that’s one of the reasons the concept is called personal development instead of “people” development. It’s individual. This book provides insights into the mental, emotional, and spiritual development of one individual who was also of the world’s greatest writers on the subject of personal growth

To me one of the most interesting journeys in personal growth and the creative process that accompanies such growth is Carl Jung, one of the foundational figures of modern psychiatry.

If you are interested in influential personalities in your study of self-improvement, and also would like to witness a great example of the creative process in action, this is an insightful  biography.  Gerhard Wehr, also wrote a more lengthy and detailed e biography of Jung titled, Jung: A Biography.

For sheer interest however, I find the shorter illustrated version easier to access, both in getting to know Carl Jung a personality, but also I find the Illustrated Biography does an excellent job of getting down to the essence of Jung’s ideas and the processes he went through in developing his intellectual concepts of how the human mind works.

The book is copiously illustrated with photographs, drawings, and paintings relating to the various stages in the life of Carl Jung and the development of his ideas. It starts with his early childhood and education and ends with his final years, when he had a very high output in writing. We discover, for example, how a great portion of the period of Jung’s middle years was devoted to extensive research, which is one of the reasons he was able to be so productive in his later life.

Wehr’s book is smoothly written and translated, and is presented in terminology that the majority of us can easily understand. Through this book I found I really got a “feel” for what Carl Jung was about as a person, what factors were involved in the development of his creative process and how some of the controversies surrounding his career affected him. I had read other material on Jung, but this well-paced narrative of Wehr, coupled with the many photographs of various stages of Jung’s life, really brought the man to life.

Particularly fascinating is the amount of pages the writer devotes to Jung’s life at Bollingen, a lakeside retreat in Switzerland, consisting of some rustic land and a stone house resembling a small castle that Jung designed and built largely by himself. At Bollingen, which did not have electricity or running water, Jung said he felt truly himself.

Here he chopped wood for his fireplace and stove and did his own cooking. Here he also made numerous stone carvings to express his ideas of the subconscious and other psychological concepts. Of Bollingen, he said, “In Bollingen I am at home in a way that corresponds to my innermost nature.” Here he carved a large block of stone, and chiseled into it: “Vocatus atque non vocatus deus aderit” – “Called or not called, God is present.”

Jung spent years in the study of ancient texts about alchemy written in the original Latin and Greek – study which helped to form a number of his ideas, based on the alchemical concept of transmutation. A chapter in Wehr’s book is devoted to this period, titled “The Encounter with Alchemy.”

Structure of the book

Wehr does a nice job of structuring the book with a combination of the chronological events of Jung’s life mixed in with sections having a conceptual emphasis on the origins and evolution of Jung’s thinking.

Following are the main sections with the accompanying subsections:

The Early Years
Early life: The Psyche is not of the Present”
Preparation for a career
The young psychiatrist

First Experience in Depth Psychology
Meeting and break with Sigmund Freud
Personal crisis and the emergence of his work

Laying the Foundations of Analytical Psychology
A fresh burst of creativity
Investigation of psychological types
The psychologist goes travelling
Tower-building on Lake Zurich
The encounter with alchemy
Jung’s relationship with Eastern spirituality
Confrontation with National Socialism
Psychology and religion

Later Work and Further Perspectives
Maturation and later work
Last years
Jung’s influence on the intellectual life of today
Voices and testimonies

Some interesting comments from the sub-section on Tower-building on Lake Zurich:

Wehr:
“It could be said that this was a place he needed for his ongoing self-development.”

Wehr:
“It was…clear to him that he had to build the new house with his own hands…The construction of the house was for Jung expression of his self-development.”

Wehr:
“This need of his for contact with the primal level of things was understood by only a few people. One of them was the Africa expert Laurens van de Post.”

Jung:
“From the beginning I felt the Tower as a place of maturation—a maternal womb or maternal figure in which I could become what I was, what I am, and what I will be.”

Jung:
“At Bollingen I am in the midst of my true life. I am most deeply myself.”

If you are interested in Jung, do yourself a favor and try to find a copy of this book. It’s a virtual visit to one man’s journey of personal, professional, and intellectual growth and development.

Gerhard Wehr, An Illustrated Biography of C.G. Jung, Translated by Michael H. Kohn, Shambhala Publications Inc., Boston Massachusetts, 1989.

Further Reading: Jung’s Autobiography

Considerable detail, in Carl Jung’s own words, on various aspects of the human personality, conscious awareness, the unconscious, and many more components of Jung’s personal growth and development, can be found in his autobiography, Memories, Dreams, Reflections. [for publishing information see bottom of this post] *

In the prologue to the book, Jung gets right to the central theme of this work:

“My life is a story of the self-realization of the unconscious. Everything in the unconscious seeks outward manifestation, and the personality too seeks to evolve out of its unconscious conditions and to experience itself as a whole…What we are to our inward vision, and what man appears to be sub specie aeternitatis, can only be expressed by way of myth…Thus it is that I have now undertaken in my eighty-third year, to tell my personal myth.”

The book reveals a lot about Jung’s views on the overall human condition as well as providing, in his own words, insights about the sources, inspirations, and evolution of his main ideas. Here are the titles of some of the chapters:

School Years

Student Years

Psychiatric Activities

Sigmund Freud

Confrontation with the Unconscious

The Work

The Tower

Travels

Visions On Life After death

* Memories, Dream, Reflections by C. G. Jung; recorded and edited by Aniela Jaffe, translated from the German by Richard and Clara Winston, Revised Edition, Vintage Books; a Division of Random House Inc., New York, 1989

 

The Law of Attraction, intention, manifestation, and their role in personal development January 10, 2007

Posted by Dennis Mellersh in Law of Attraction.
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The Law of Attraction, plus the intention and manifestation process, can be an important component in achieving the goals we set in our personal development program.

 “Seek and ye shall find”

“Ask and the door will be opened.”

The words above are just two of the many positive quotations you will encounter in writings explaining the concept of using the intentions and manifesting process in order to create a new reality for ourselves. The concept of synchronicity enters when what we desire to have happen as stated through our intentions to the universe begin to gradually appear in our lives. Synchronicity is sometimes described as simply a word for coincidences, with an emphasis on the coincidences being favorable to our well-being, or to the outcomes we are wanting to manifest through the intention process.

The Swiss psychiatrist Carl Jung wrote extensively on the concept of synchronicity. One, albeit perhaps over-simplified way of looking at his definition of synchronicity, is that coincidences are not simply random, but somehow meaningfully connected to specific circumstances, particularly personal circumstances. In what we might call “new age” writing on personal development, some writers present the concept of synchronicity as manifestation events that we may or may not recognize, resulting from our intention process, depending on our experience and receptivity.

My personal view is that the events or circumstances embodied in synchronicities appearing to me are opportunities that are either direct manifestations of my intentions or they are clues relating to the directions I have been wanting to head towards through my intentions.

I have been a “student” of personal development for most of my adult life, not in terms of formal education, but rather in being attracted to personal development literature and methods as a means of improving either my life situation or myself. This interest probably began through the influence of my mother who regularly read books on positive thinking, on the power of belief and various philosophies and theories related to the improvement of human behavior. These books were always in our home.

One of the main tenets of intention and manifestation is that we should not expect overnight transformation into the world we desire when we have just started the process. I believe we can create our own future through powerful intentions but our “new” future will not dramatically appear within a few days of starting the process. In fact, some experts say that we will probably not even recognize the initial manifestations unless we are very alert for their appearance.

For example, at one point in my life I entered a “realization state” that my financial situation was not good. Up until that point I had an unbridled emotional optimism that “everything would be fine” as I moved forward trying various new projects to make money. But one day I suddenly realized that I had burned through most of my savings, that I was in debt and that I had no real guarantee of an adequate income being forthcoming for the future. Panic and anxiety were the first reactions, but I gradually calmed down with the aid of a number of personal development tools and resources, which I hope to discuss in a future article.

What I want to talk about now is how I began to use the intention and manifestation process, particularly in the area of improving my financial situation. Overall, I had a number of areas in my life that I wanted to improve, so I wrote down about eight major intentions. I keyboarded them into my PC, printed them and then tried to read them every day, often modifying or making them more clear as I did so. The other thing I did was to include in the intention statement the recognition, or belief on my part that, the situation I was concerned with was, in fact, improvable.

I also began to write out by hand manifestation scenarios, mainly concerning my financial circumstances and the intentions I was “sending out” to improve those circumstances. To repeat, I did not input the manifestations on a computer, I wrote them out using pen and paper. I planned to read the intentions daily and write out the manifestations daily. And I concentrated mostly on my financial intentions. The manifestations I wrote were essentially positive statements written in such a way that I was stating them as if I was already in an improved financial situation. I did not invent this process; I did it based on the advice of a successful role model. This aspect could be the topic of a number of articles, so I will fast forward.

First off, I should caution that I discovered that the intention and manifestation process is something you have to be diligent with. As I moved from virtual panic into a more optimistic phase, I would sometimes forget to state my intentions and forget to write out my manifestations, or I simply didn’t take the time, when I was tired or busy, or perhaps just too lazy. Then the anxiety state would return and I would reactivate the intention and manifestation process. I soon realized however, that consistency is important and that I would have to keep “working” the process on a daily basis. It is not necessarily easy to do that when you are tired or swamped, but I think you have to.

Eventually I began to see some results, or small manifestations, or synchronicities in the financial area. At first I was not alert to them and even resisted some of them. It was not until later that I recognized they were in fact synchronous manifestations of my intentions. I am an independent writer, editor, and communications consultant — in other words, I work at home, for myself. So some of the manifestations occurred in that area. I knew the “why” of the need to improve my financial situation, but not the “how”. Here are some of the occurrences that I fortunately eventually recognized as being manifestations or synchronicities related to my financial intention efforts and hopefully also an introduction to the “how” of improving things.

(a)    I got a call from a colleague who had moved to Europe and that I had lost touch with. The call concerned whether I would be interested in writing a major article for a prestigious magazine

(b)   A small investment I had made in the stock market began to come alive and went up in value 25%

(c)    I was contacted by an editor I had not worked with for some time who wanted me to write for his publication and gave me four article assignments to start with

(d)   A couple of payment checks I was not expecting until a later date turned up in my mailbox just before Christmas

In addition there were other synchronicities or mini-manifestations, not directly related to financial improvement. I was discouraged about a small website I was building and was about to cancel it, but began to get some ideas, or at least an attitude, as to how to turn it around and a recognition that I needed to look for ways to rekindle my interest in it. I am a strong believer in the concept that if you are not doing what you like to do, it is a real chore, and is unlikely to result in your best work.

Another example: I had a particular book by Eric Hoffer called Working and Thinking on the Waterfront that I thought I had lost, and had been looking for it for years in used bookstores. Then one day my wife asked me if I could find a cookbook in the basement and while rummaging through a bunch of old books I found what she was looking for, and also my long-lost book. I needed the book at that time in particular for an article I wanted to write.

A further example. For along time, I had been trying to figure out my “life purpose” and I found three methods for doing so in the space of a couple of weeks — two methods were explained on self-improvement blogs and one was in a book on the topic of abundance, a book which I had never been able to understand, until I began to really study the concept of intention, manifestation, scarcity and abundance with some earnestness. There in the first few pages of the book was a method for determining a person’s life purpose that was very straightforward. I worked out my purpose I’m still working on refining it.

So essentially, while these were not earth-stopping events, they were indications to me that the intention and manifestation process was working for me and also a warning that I shouldn’t slack off or the process would lose its power. There were probably synchronicities or mini-manifestations embodying opportunities in various forms that I did not recognize, because while familiar with the principles of the process for some time, I had not earnestly tried to apply it to solve particular problems. My journey in personal development tended to be what I considered more on the practical side and I regarded some techniques as being somewhat “theoretical.” I had not dismissed them, but I had not taken the time to seriously apply them to my life.

There is much more to write about on intention, manifestation and synchronicity, but for now, I will close with a quotation from The Practical Dreamer’s Handbook, written by Paul and Sarah Edwards: “You can’t manifest a new future if you’re hooked on the past. Are their any attachments or unfinished business from the past that are keeping you from moving on?”