The Jealous King.

There was once a king who would not allow his daughter to marry. He kept her shut up in his castle and turned all her suitors away. One fine day she asked him pretty please and since it was indeed such a fine day, if she could not walk briefly in the meadow below the castle walls? Eventually the King agreed but warned her not to go too far… lest some harm come to her.

The Princess walks out into the meadow and there she finds a young man who is sooo handsome she immediately falls in love. He is, of course, a Prince from a neighboring kingdom. Each return to their respective fathers saying they want to get married. The Jealous King flies into a rage, closes the castle gates and challenges the young Prince to lay siege to his walls if he wishes.. which is just what he does. After a while the Prince realizes the castle is empty, everyone has escaped through underground passages. Only the King and Princess remain. The King implores his daughter’s obedience but she refuses and in a fury he casts a terrible spell upon her which turns her into three animals; a rabbit, a lion and a dragon.

The Prince searches high and low for the Princess but to no avail. Nothing but pesky and somewhat dangerous creatures. In despair he sends his troops home, continuing to search alone. In a nearby wood he comes across an Ancient Crone who tells him the secret of the King’s curse. He must return to the castle and find the animals, kissing each one three times.

At their wedding feast the Old King is included on the guest list, though further down the table than he might have liked.

This subversion of the Princess by the Jealous King can be looked at a number of different ways. One way to view this story is at face value, as an allegory for current events, a good example being the recent claim of harassment, false imprisonment and illegal gagging orders made against American virologist Dr Mikovits at the bequest of King Fauci who had other ideas about what should become of her HIV research, all of which then escalated into spell casting tsunamis of propaganda against her, millions spent on silencing something…

which could not possibly be.

Er, I thought Fauci was the good guy?

It depends on who your standing next to on the podium, can we continue?

of course..

Another way of looking at this story is to imagine that all the characters and interactions are parts of oneself. Fairy tales and myths are public dreams which, like dreams, can be seen as both describing outer events in an allegorical way but also as an emerging outcrop of consciousness from within. The problem with approaching either dream or fairy story from this subjective point of view, where all the characters and events are given the slant of an entirely inner pageant, is that you are then denied the luxury of projection upon which so much interaction and internal cohesion depend. The symbols involved can no longer be regarded as some quaint matter simply for other folk’s consideration. They not only have to do with us but act upon us.

‘The individual is then faced with the task of putting down to his own account all the iniquity, devilry, etc. which he has blandly attributed to others and about which he has been indignant all his life.” CG Jung

Given the understandable resistances involved, what might it mean that the inner king has imprisoned fair maid and cast this divisive spell? Could the metaphors involved refer to some crucial psychological dynamic within the individuation process? If so, what might that be?

The problem with growth and change is that it shakes previously sturdy self-constructs and leaves behind the familiarity of old ways of being. You have to suck at something new, trade in your old strategies and values for others as yet untested. This is why initiatory thresholds and transformations of any kind are generally difficult and unpleasant, necessitating much merrymaking to compensate the dread. They often require ritual, observance and loads of relatives to contain the transition which involves a process dubbed ‘de-integration’ by analyst Michael Fordham; you get pulled apart but not to pieces.

Not everything in the psyche is going to be happy about this. The instinct for self preservation wants to prop up the old structure, even if it does not serve the impulse to growth with which it is then bound to clash. This is why support for Trump increased at the beginning of the Corona virus outbreak in America despite his utterly incompetent handling of the situation. The Devil you know is safer than the angel you do not.

..’and so I keep down my heart and swallow the call-note of depth dark sobbing.’ R.M Rilke

The Jealous King is the ‘old outmoded dispensation’ in the psyche, the dominant function for a particular stage of life which has served its part and become redundant as a way forward, the alchemical calcinatio where the soul feels dried out and dusty, where no more marrow can be sucked from your situation.

Such circumstances provoke crisis. The wheel of life has turned but not found new expression, the tools and strategies of yesteryear no longer adequate for today’s challenges. And yet despite this we all tend to drag our feet and hang on to old structures, sabotaging potential and silencing emerging consciousness.

‘Instinctive forces does not reason. They assume from the immense experience of Nature’s ways that it will serve best to be stabilized according to initial experience, most commonly [among] those whose strong need for a maternal figure has followed them into middle age.’ J Liedloff

Fortunately, love and life find a way. The new shoot eventually manages to squeeze past the psyche’s defenses, often by virtue of a chance encounter or some seemingly insignificant event which then catalyses change, though not without bitter conflict and feeling besieged by the very flood of energy you have been hoping for.

Finally, the threatened dominant function, walled in but without the usual resources at its disposal, resorts to dissociative tactics, a spell which divides and incapacitates. For a while the new form of life seems desperately imperiled or at least at sixes and sevens.

‘The integration of contents that were unconscious and projected involves a serious lesion of the ego… a decomposition of the elements indicating dissociation and collapse of existing ego structures,.. closely analogous to schizophrenia.’ C G Jung.

Not much fun. Our story seems to be suggesting that the process of becoming more conscious involves considerable inner conflict and suffering which can decommission ‘normal’ functioning.

‘The energies and attention of the individual are often so engrossed that the power of coping with normal life may be impaired.’ R. Assagioli.

There is a real risk that emerging consciousness cannot be integrated. Fortunately, the Ancient Crone makes an appearance just at the moment of despair and tells the Prince what to do. She is Old Mother Earth, the Principle of Co-operation and Relatedness, a power deeper and more potent than that of the King. She understands not only the malady but also the cure, the fragmented potential has to be loved back to wholeness, the scary lion and the terrifying dragon along with the sweet bunny. If the Princess can be loved in her totality, warts and all, there will be transformation. The Jealous King doesn’t have to be killed, just deposed. He can even go to the wedding feast so long as he accepts a lesser place at the table.

The Fern Flower.

Once there was a young hero whose prospective father-in-law threw him out of the house, threatening to beat him if he ever returned. The poor lad was entirely dejected. He didn’t know what to do.

One day, a strange little man in red clothes appeared to him as he walked aimlessly through the woods, promising him great wealth if only the lad would give him the amulet he wore around his neck, gifted to him by his Grandmother. The poor boy’s thoughts were so taken up by his current situation that he readily parted with the amulet, eager to find out more. The Devil, for ’twas He, then led him further into the woods saying that this very night the magical Fern Flower will come into bloom. If only he could find it, it would grant his greatest wish.

Once our hero finds the Flower, the Devil takes him to a ramshackle cottage in which lives an Old Crone… who is also her cat. When she leaps at them from the cottage doorway the Fern Flower sinks into the ground, bewitched. The Crone tells the hero he can have it back if he stabs to death the figure she presents him, shrouded in a cloth. He pulls back the covering to see…himself, aged ten, the amulet around his neck.

He strikes and kills the child.

After blacking out for a day or a week, he wakes in warm sunlight to find himself surrounded by bulging sacks of gold. Delighted, he runs back to his village and showers his prospective father-in-law with the coins who then duly consents to the marriage. When the day comes, our hero goes through the ceremony like a gollum, feeling nothing, expressing less. He is vacant, distracted, uninvolved. The food tastes bland, the music is jarring, his bride seems bloodless…

That night his new wife tries to embrace him but strange visions and ghastly apparitions appear between them, preventing their union. Our story ends with the hero weeping like a child into the lap of a wife he can no longer love.

At the beginning of this tale we find the protagonist being thrown out by his prospective father-in-law. He has nowhere to go and so we can assume this is not the first home he has been ejected from by some dread fate.. The rejected child cannot help but concur with the Universe’ seeming judgement on him. The forest begins to swallow him up. In order to keep step with the world he internalizes its condemnation and rejects himself with a steady stream of silent scorn running beneath entreaties for life to be otherwise. Branches close overhead.

This is not a very good place from which to be negotiating any deals with little men in red suits. Discrimination and reflection are all shot to pieces. You can’t focus very well from a thousand yard stare. So he doesn’t think too much about why the Devil might want his amulet. All he knows is that he’s been given the means to rectify his situation and get his agenda back on track.

Everything that ye entreat from the god-sun begetteth a deed of the devil.’ CG Jung

Of course the denouement of the story is his killing of the inner child, severance from authentic memory and experience, from an essential sense of self; paradoxically, a defense against overwhelming feelings of abandonment and loss. Yet the ground for this self murder is laid at the moment he parts with his seemingly insignificant amulet, given to him by his Grandmother.

What is this amulet? Why does its loss give rise to such catastrophe?

In Grimm’s story, ‘The Devil and his Grandmother’, we find out that ‘Grandma’ is able to outwit the Devil. She works on behalf of the hero to uncover the Devil’s secrets and help him get out in one piece. In Jack and the Beanstalk she is the Giant’s wife who helps Jack escape with the treasure hard to attain. This is because she is the Great Mother herself whose help and protection are essential to the heroic quest. Without Hera’s help the Argonauts would have been wrecked. Without Athena, Orestes wold have been pulled apart by the Furies.

Grandmother is Great Mother Earth. To lose her amulet is to lose all kinds of connections on all kinds of levels, from Nature in an outer sense but then also from the Ground of one’s own Being and then to the extent intimacy might be possible with a significant other.

The loss of these inner and outer connections is disastrous for our hero. The rejected Goddess assumes a demonic form and compels consciousness to split and attack itself…

The archetype of the Great Mother comes in through the back door and does something horrible, [the hero] has to sacrifice his children. When something in the unconscious is rejected, the disturbance goes around the corner and the rejected content attacks something else.” M.L. von Franz.

Without the connection to the Great Mother in her life giving aspect, not only is her protective connection lost but the Principle of Relatedness is turned on its head, manifesting as violent division. The Old Crone in our story is a manifestation of what Marion Woodman would call ‘The Death Mother’, who compels inner conflict and kills off spontaneity. It is these internal chasms opening up that consumer culture, compulsion and addiction, are all trying to fill, a compensation for the loss of Grandma’s lap and the creative wholeness of the murdered child. As we see from our story, the great piles of stuff promised to our hero do nothing for him. The gold has cost him the child-like capacity to enjoy it, to enjoy anything. Some variants of the story have the earth simply swallow him up at the end, consumed with loss and remorse.

The seemingly insignificant amulet from ‘Grandma’ has the power to avert this kind of disaster because it places relatedness at the heart of any value system, promoting traffic between I and me, between self and world, furnishing any venture into the unknown with sufficient internal cohesion necessary to suffer the hardships involved.

It seems our tale has a moral, desire for control leads to being controlled. The wish to posses leads to possession. Yet it conveys more than that, it points to the origins of all this suffering and invites us to reconsider our relationship with the Great Mother.

In Alex Hailey’s novel ‘Roots’, the ancestor Kunte Kinte is sold into slavery. His last act before being shipped away from his motherland is to take a handful of soil and wrap it into a banana leaf, smuggling this totem of belonging onto the slave ship. The amulet was passed on for seven generations, acting as a psychic anchor for the bearer, until it passed to Hailey who then told the whole story and journeyed back to the land of his ancestors.

We ourselves may not have such a dramatic story to tell and our journey may be less literal but it is also incumbent upon us to respond to life’s constraints with symbolic gestures and meaningful ritual. This connects us back to our own primordial roots so that we need not become divided against ourselves, nor kill off our own creative possibility in the search for quick fixes which rail impotently against circumstantial constraint..

The hero in our story suffers a fate worse than death on account of his desire to have control over events. The quick fix of Chlorox for Corona virus is likely to have a similar trajectory. It is not simply that people’s intelligence can be insulted only so much but that even the most ardent fan must surely suffer a chill at such a flagrant departure from reality, one which even bags of gold cannot comfort.

Giving the Devil his Due.

In the wildly phantasmagoric, ‘Essene Gospel of Peace’, an alchemical coagulatio of Gnostic wisdom and late neolithic enema rituals [great if you are handy with a calabash], there comes a bucolic moment when the Master berates his followers for going on at such great length about their suffering and how much they are tormented by Satan..

‘Satan torments you thus because you have already fasted many days and you do not pay to him his tribute. You do not feed him. You torment him with hunger.’

Psychologically,

‘You are over-identified with being good. You therefor deny, split off and project your shadow and pay for this with a good solid neurosis. The way out of this mess is by repairing the relationship with this disavowed self.’

Nietzsche echoes this a few centuries later, with added flowery bits, when he made the observation in ‘Birth of Tragedy’, that the brothers Apollo and Dionysus have become estranged from one another in our culture. We have come to worship at the altar of only one of them with our sunny dispositions and political correctness and have driven the invaluable other underground, causing a great rent in the collective psyche..

Every culture that has lost myth has lost, by the same token, its natural healthy creativity. Only a horizon ringed about with myths can unify a culture, can save the Apollonian dream from indiscriminate rambling. The images of myth must be the daemonic guardians, ubiquitous but unnoticed, presiding over the growth of the child’s mind.” F. Nietzsche

Any over-identification with a single story/storey, mono-anything, is going to have the effect of enervating the psyche, preventing development and generating schizoid, [indiscriminate rambling] characteristics in the personality. You begin to become unhinged and increasingly reliant on denial and projection to stay behind the picket fence of your preferred ism. Hence much of the paranoia of our age. Monochrome is a little threatened by red, yellow and blue, which it secretly wants to become.

Uncomplicated belief systems, produce split realities. If you won’t be complicated you will develop a complex instead, one that requires carefully choreographed conflicts in order to stay afloat. The cut and dried belief system in which all the questions are answered and there is no internal dissent is… well, cut and dried. It is severed from its roots with all the moisture sucked out of it. The cutting and the drying divides the self against itself, desiccates life, creating schizoid separation from self and world. In lieu of our daemonic guardians standing watch over us, they are suddenly co-opted into the kind of self care necessary to split realities. Preserving ‘our way of life’ becomes a divine mandate.

‘The transpersonal is placed in the service of defense’. D. Kalsched.

Instead of the transcendent function being used to create transitional space between self and other, the opposite happens. The psyche fractures to accommodate its denied multiplicity whilst the transcendent function is bused in to enforce social distancing and prevent the psyche from conferring with itself. I.e. reflecting. It becomes a sacred duty to hive oneself off from what is going on.

“The schizoid experience is split in two main ways: in the first place, there is a rent in his relation with his world and, in the second, there is a disruption of his relation with himself. Such a person is not able to experience himself ‘together with’ others or ‘at home in’ the world.R.D. Laing.

We pay dearly for any belief in our own exclusive rightness, in ‘first and only’. Despite convictions of privilege, rectitude and self-congratulation, the price is internal division and disconnection from others which is why spending any time with a true believer will always leave your head spinning.

At the schizoid end of narcissism the problem is not simply lack of empathy for others, but more an actual denial of others. Others become statistics and collateral damage. Bad numbers. I’m put in mind of a patient who left, never to return, with the words, ‘I just can’t see you as a human being’.

”To feel potential and share with a beloved other is what the schizoid cannot do because their nascent longings were traumatically disappointed as children.’ Kalsched

Its a bit like saying that the way we collectively address when-Mother-is-missing, is to split off anxiety and bolster sudden fragility with life giving convictions and certitudes, whilst having to dumb down life’s complexities and infinite variety. This then drives the devil in us crazy… and vengeful, wanting his pound of flesh for the ongoing delusion that you are captain of your ship, and that there are no raptors aboard. Or at least if there are raptors, then its quite safe. And if its not safe then its not my responsibility. I wasn’t there. I don’t know nuffing about any raptors. I never met them.

The scary thing about Trump is that he really is a man of the people. Its not just that a hundred million people think this clearly ungodly man is blessed by Jesus. Its that he really does epitomize many of the values we all hold, including the right not to have to grow into long pants or go through life with any critical reflection.

‘Something in man is profoundly disinclined to give up his
beginnings, and something else believes it has long since got beyond all
that.” C G Jung CW9
.

What else should we expect of a collective which has lost its mother?

The collective loss of the divine feminine produces a cultural response no different to that of an individual toddler who is suddenly forced by neglect or bereavement to adopt a position of absolute certainty in life in order to compensate for chaotic feelings of loss. All Mono’s are likewise full of full of passionate intensity and always know what’s going on. The widespread belief that we somehow cannot help but evolve seems to be undercut by the fact that whatever ism we belong to, it shares with all the others the same blinkered prejudice of an exclusive and ‘right’ way of looking at things consistent with schizoid defense structures.

Mr Trump’s recent assertion that intravenous bleach, a known suicide method, might be the miracle cure for Coronavirus, seems to demonstrate the addling effect, the split realities and the psychic enervation which results from first and only, from failing to give the Devil his due.

Stone Soup.

There was once an old soldier trying to get home after the war. He walked from village to village, begging alms along the way, for he had no money and nothing to eat. Every place had barely enough to give him the strength to get to the next and he began to wonder if he could make it, even though he was now close to home.

Finally, faint with hunger, he came upon an impoverished hamlet. His legs barely carried him in on blistered feet. Sunken cheeks and eyes in dark shadow foretold his starvation. He went slowly from house to house begging pitifully for just a scrap of bread or a rotting turnip. Everyone turned him away.

The old soldier sat in the village square looking about him, much as a condemned man might before the gallows. His end had come. Suddenly, despite himself and as though seized by something, he jumped up, grabbing a large stone from nearby. He tucked the stone into his knapsack and went back to the first cottage he’d tried where a kind old lady had explained politely that she simply had nothing to give him.

She was surprised to see him again so soon and more surprised still when, his eyes all agleam, he produced the stone from his knapsack as though it were a great treasure.

‘Since you have nothing to give me, allow me to make you some hearty stone soup, a recipe given to me by my auntie from the old country.’

‘Oooh’, said the old lady, ‘what do you need?’

‘Just a pan and some water,’ said he and gently began to bring the stone to the boil, tasting it every now and then, whilst the old lady looked on expectantly.

‘ How is it?’ she asked.

‘Just dandy,’ replied the soldier, ‘though it could use a little salt …and perhaps a few onions.’ The old lady promptly produced the salt and two onions which the soldier added ceremoniously.

Pretty soon some of the old lady’s neighbors came to the fence, drawn by the delicious smell. They were rather impressed by the idea of stone soup and wondered if they could have some as well.

‘Sure’, said the soldier, ‘there will be plenty to go around. Its a shame there is no thyme though. Stone soup benefits from just a sprig of thyme…

‘I have some,’ volunteered someone and off they went.

..and maybe a few sausages…,’ added the soldier, tentatively.

off went another..

‘and some vegetables, too, but only if you have them.’

The villagers duly returned and soon the stone soup was ready. Everyone ate to their hearts content, amazed at the miracle that such a tasty soup could be made from a stone.

At the end of the meal the grateful villagers clubbed together and offered the soldier twenty florins for the stone which he graciously accepted and set back off on his way, replete, enriched and freed forever from the fear of hunger.

Many of Grimm’s stories begin with an Old Soldier as the protagonist, someone who has been in conflict. Perhaps the old soldiers are our own time worn responses which no longer adequately reflect life and are in need of transformation.

In many of these stories the protagonist must resolve his situation by service to some sprite or demon, in other words by virtue of some initiatory process. He must wear a Bearskin for seven years, or stoke the Devil’s furnaces or scale the Glass Mountain.

This story is different. Having tended more heroic crossings earlier in life he must now face this new threshold of consciousness [closer to home] with a very different attitude. He can use neither his heroic soldiering energy nor his skills in begging from others. Both valor and dependency, as ways of going-on-being, are frustrated. He is thrown back onto his own primal resources, instincts even deeper than those of self interest which then have the marvelous effect of creating collective abundance.

There is an old Yiddish proverb, ‘If you are hungry, throw a party.’ Redemption depends on everyone getting fed. At just the point where you might expect the soldier’s personal survival at the expense of others to be strongest. In fact you find the opposite, a taking care of the whole. This is the bodhisattva ideal of enlightenment being a collective event, the realization that your fate is tied to others.

This Principle of Relatedness gives rise to a kind of miracle, ex nihilo, something comes from nothing, born of the shift in perception from I, me and mine to ‘the between’ which is the philosopher’s stone. The soldier’s spontaneous and playful gesture is zen-like enlightened action. It is rooted in sharing and so it magically attracts both people and ingredients.

The mercurial inspiration of stone soup is its selflessness. Without it there is no soup but the stone itself does nothing. Yet something is done, insofar as the stone assumes a symbolic character, a third actor in the drama, something to stand for the life affirming quality of the shared experience, of being in relation to one another, of looking beyond personal interest to interdependence.

The stone, as a symbol of Self, has a unifying effect, which leaves everyone feeling the richer for it. The soldier’s identity has shifted, has had to shift, from beggar to leader. He morphs from ‘how can I survive?’ to ‘How can we survive?’ This opens up space for the intuitive, non-rational gesture. It almost seems inspired from without, as though some god had whispered in his ear the moment he renounced surviving at the expense of others.

The well-known ‘Parable of the Spoons’ has similar implications. A man asks God for a sneak preview of both Heaven and Hell to see what the real differences might be. He finds that all the folk in Hell are sat down a long table armed with even longer spoons which they can’t get to their mouths. Their efforts to feed themselves are torturous. They are surrounded by delicious morsels but no-one gets to eat. In Heaven the situation is exactly the same, the long table, the longer spoons.. but everyone is feeding each other.

Our current situation with Coronavirus requires a similar shift in values. Containing Covid-19 can only be done by means of radical co-operation. You can see daily how the attitude of ‘First and Only’ is rapidly translating into casualty figures. Whether we co-operate with one another really has become a matter of life and death.

The question remains, once Coronavirus has retreated to its lair, what then? Will you, ‘get back to normal’? Isn’t the old normal precisely the culture in which Covid-19 arose? There will be change. We can chose it or have it imposed on us by any one of the four Horsemen of the Apocalypse. Take your pick. Their name derives from the Greek, ‘Apo-kaluptein’, to uncover or reveal. Covid-19 is uncovering a great deal, our vulnerability, our dependence on one-another, the indolent corruption and deadly narcissism of First and Only.

Surviving is not enough. What are you learning from lock down? In what way has it quickened you? Can you remember how to make stone soup? If so, you will have crossed an inner threshold in yourself and been transformed by the ordeal. If not, Plague, or one of his mates, will return and give us all, once more, the opportunity to grow, just a little further down the orange brick road.

The Water Fairy.

Years ago and far away there lived a Miller and his wife who were famous for the fine flour made by their riverside Mill. Though they prospered, the Miller and his wife privately harbored a secret grief, they had no child.

As the years went by this secret sadness gnawed away at each of them such that all the things they prized seemed to wither away. The horse got thin and mangy. The roof had fallen in a bit, the flour had weevils and business had all but dried up.

One evening, the poor Miller, feeling cursed, went and sat down by the river, bemoaning his lot. All of a sudden came a voice from the Mill pond saying, ‘listen poor man, I will help you in your troubles. I will give you riches beyond your wildest dreams. All you have to do is give me the living creature that you haven’t got at home.’

The Miller scratched his head. Perhaps she meant a cat. Maybe one of the farmer’s cows had wandered in. So he agreed to the Water Fairy’s terms and strolled off home with a merry swagger. On the way he met the last of his servants running towards him. ‘Mr Miller, come quick! Your wife has given birth to a baby boy!’ Suddenly the Miller realizes what has happened and rushes back to the Mill Pond begging to have the deal rescinded but the Mill pond was still as.. well, a mill pond.

As the young lad grows up he is warned over and again not to go near the river, and especially the Mill Pond, lest the Water Fairy carry him away. Once he had become a man a local hunter took him into his service and liked him so much that when his daughter fell in love with the Miller’s son he happily consented to their marriage.

One day the hunter’s apprentice espied a magnificent stag and gave chase to it. He became so consumed with the hunt he didn’t notice the twists and turns they took and when he finally brought down the mighty stag he found himself by a stream in an unknown place. After he had butchered the stag he went to the stream to wash the blood from his hands, forgetting the lifelong warning he had been given. The moment he touched the water, the Water Fairy pulled him in.

Eventually, his new wife discovered his things by the stream and surmised what had happened. She pleaded with the Water Fairy to return her good husband go but to no avail. Finally, late at night and in despair, she lay down by the stream in the spot he had been taken and fell asleep. In her dream she saw a hut close by in the forest where there lived a very old lady who knew all kinds of things. So when she woke up she went in search of the lonely hut and there, sure enough, she found a very old lady whose eyes positively twinkled with secrets.

The young woman told the old lady what had happened. She mused a bit and then instructed her to return to the stream at full moon with a comb which she, the old lady, would give her. There she should comb her hair over the water. The young woman did as she was bid and to her delight her husband’s head appeared out of the water momentarily but then sank back into the depths. She told the old lady what had happened and was told that the next night she should take down a spinning wheel and spin by the stream. Again her husband appeared but only to the waist before retreating once more. On the third evening the old lady told her to take a flute and play sad music by the stream. This time the whole man appeared and his wife hauled him out of the water.

Fairies and fairy stories are as ubiquitous to human experience as language itself and nearly as old. Like dreams they find ways of representing the dilemmas and situations of the human condition and offer cryptic resolutions to collective issues constellated by the emergence of individual consciousness. From the soul-stones of the Australian Aboriginal to the Sioux Indian tradition of burying your heart before battle, leaving it in the keeping of the little people, our many different cultures have all symbolised our relationship with the unconscious the same way. Science likes to think it banished these denizens of the unconscious to the bottom of the garden forgetting that psychologically speaking that is exactly where they are from. They are boundary keepers to a world beyond the garden gate. As ‘kinsmen of the unconscious, they protect navigation I.e. the venture into darkness and uncertainty.’ CG Jung

Fairies live between worlds, they have both the attributes of complexes which are to do with individuality and archetypes which are the hall mark of the collective. So, power and attitude, both of which are expressed in direct measure to the stance of consciousness.

For example, a story with a similar beginning is ‘the Elves and the Shoemaker’. Here too we find a craftsman on the edge of bankruptcy. The Shoemaker is down to his last piece of leather and cries on his wife’s shoulder that he shall have nothing to feed their children. His wife comforts him, tells him to cut up the last piece of leather anyway and then come to bed. Over night the shoes are miraculously sewn together by Elves.

The Shoemaker and the Miller are very different men and so they elicit very different responses from the little people. The Shoemaker’s grief is not kept a secret. He shares his woes with his wife who is encouraging and comforting in return. The Principle of Relatedness in this couple is alive and well. Their authentic and shared despair creates the space for the unconscious to contribute in the form of the helpful elves, ‘the god’s of invention.’ ibid

In the beginning of our current story we find the impoverished Miller in a very different mind set. His despair is secret. He has become sufficiently estranged from his wife not to know she is pregnant and feels he has been cursed. He is in major ‘poor me’ and believes none of this should be happening. Such a personality is like blood in the water to the liminal world of complexes and their enactments. He is open to temptation and likely to make impulsive choices. The Water Fairy offers the Miller what you could call ‘the Devil’s Gambit’, ‘I will give you what you say you want but you will be my bitch.’ She approaches the Miller at his weak spot, the feeling he’s been hard done by, his pious isolation, offering him an easy way out. Almost immediately the Miller has a massive revelation which is perhaps the Water Fairy’s intent, showing that we often have to pay for what we think we want, with what we really want…. in order to find out what it is.

Meantime the child has to grow up bearing the sins of the parent, his fate tied from birth to the parent’s hidden incongruities which then mar the enjoyment of their child, their greatest wish.. Inevitably, there has to be some kind of denouement. The young man’s desire for his own self-hood symbolized by the stag, is going to throw up the issue of the unpaid debt to Nature still owed by his father, though its something he stumbles into without awareness and so he’s defenseless. Had he gone to the water’s edge in his best clothes, bearing gifts and called graciously upon the Water Fairy to grant him some kind of leeway on account of having to pay for someone else’s stupid lack of awareness it might have panned out differently.

Fortunately, the young wife is able to come to the rescue. Her relationship to the world is entirely different to her husband’s family. She immediately tries to negotiate with the Water Fairy and failing that falls asleep where she is, in dedication to her husband’s loss. This evokes a dream in which she is given an invaluable introduction to ‘the Old Lady’ who understands that possession by autonomous complexes gradually loosen their grip in the face of love and connection.

The combing of the hair is an intimate gesture. The spinning is also of home and hearth. The sad music laments and begs his return. All these gestures are relational counter magic to the short sighted bargain made by the Miller. The wife’s willingness to endure her situation for the sake of love invites the intervention of the Unconscious on her behalf in the form of a healing and instructive dream. Her co-operation with the Old Lady and the value she has placed upon relatedness sees them through.

The story has a curious ending. A great storm blows up so violent that the world is torn apart and upside down. Husband and wife are thrown to opposite shores of a great river, though one day, entirely by chance they cross the bridge which spans the river at the same time and recognize one another. This detail of the violent storm which tears the world apart and yet out of which the protagonists manage to find one another ‘by chance’ is very much like the conclusion of Rapunzel and seems to suggest that yearning for the beloved has real power in it, overcoming all blows of fate.

Our story doesn’t say how things end for the Miller. It’s difficult not to feel a bit sorry for him, just as you might for the Republican voter who has been similarly promised all the riches imaginable and no end of winning provided they sell out the next generation in a haze of confusion about the small print in the contract. Our story says that such a dark legacy cannot be avoided, but it can be redeemed by the Principle of Relatedness, by faithfullness to both the outer other, the husband, and the inner other, the mystical Old Lady, who appears of her own accord in response to grief and longing with the intuitive knowledge of how divisive wounds may be healed.

On Magical Thinking.

King Sisyphus was renowned for being a braggart. He had a reputation for being mean to travelers and way farers because it helped to promote the image of his iron-fisted rule in the popular imagination. This annoyed Zeus under whom travelers and strangers are protected. But mostly what pissed Zeus off was that Sisyphus betrayed secrets. He thought himself magically beyond the rules of confidence, once revealing the whereabouts of Asopus’ daughter Eagina, who was having it off with Zeus at the time, to her father in a Quid Pro Quo for causing a spring to flow on the Corinthian Acropolis.

Eventually Zeus had enough and sent Thanatos, God of Death, to have a quiet word with Sisyphus and escort him out of play but Sisyphus claimed he was a fake messenger and tricked Thanatos into demonstrating how the chains for his journey would work, thus escaping his divine impeachment. This ticked Zeus off even more. He sent Ares, the God of War, to free Thanatos and in the process Sisyphus was accidentally, well, collateral damage. But the trickster king had thought ahead, making sure that his wife left his body un-buried so that when he met Persephone, Queen of the Underworld en route to Hades, he managed to persuade her to send him back to ensure he was buried with the proper rites, as was indeed required by the Gods before anyone could enter the land of the Dead. Needless to say he skipped bail and did not return, magically returning to life.

Eventually Zeus has to send Hermes, part messenger/part bailiff, to drag Sisyphus back to Hades after which he is punished by having to carry his famous rock up the hill only to have it tumble down of its own enchantment. The Gods’ punishments are invariably a poetic form of justice. Sisyphus thought he could evade and defy the gods. He behaved as though he was magical…

”One day it will just disappear. It will be like a miracle.’ D J Trump

and so he had to be on the receiving end of magical actions, experiencing the Gods’ frustration as his own. Both Sisyphus and his apprentice Trump have self constructs rooted in magically circumventing the law, turning night into day, having lies be truth. Their identity is derived from magical exemption, the proof of which is behaving as you please and being locked in combat with anyone who says otherwise because their disagreement means annihilation. Identity could be lost along with the argument, which is why the magical always seem to be fighting for oxygen no matter what the content of the conversation.

The following, from a Corona virus briefing and in a robust push back to reporters, is noteworthy, not simply because it is a bare faced lie delivered seamlessly and without a flicker of conscience but because in the space of a single sentence, a fantasy future is magically transformed into factual history, ”When you have fifteen people and the fifteen within a couple of days will be down to zero, that’s a good job we have done.” Trump Jan 30th.

Narcissistic supply goes way beyond folk using others to puff up their ego. It goes way beyond him wanting to slurp his beak in a sacrificial dish of your essence. There is a kind of magic in inverting reality all the time and having your words make things so. It fascinates as much as it confuses, like any stream of magical thinking, tinkling uphill. Originally, magic was the power to transform ideas into reality, the word made flesh. The meaning of the ancient invocation, ‘Abracadabra’, is “I will create as I speak”

Such magic is hard work…

“If there’s a single lesson that life teaches us, it’s that wishing doesn’t make it so.” Lev GrossmanThe Magicians.

So magical thinking has to have backup, generously provided by the noble art of sadistic with-holding. Being magical and keeping everything to yourself go together, which you’ll know if you’ve ever had to take a toy off a two year old. The cadenza it produces is like Sisyphus being dragged of to Hades.

This with-holding is clearly evidenced in Trump’s handling of the Corona virus crisis. He’s not just incompetent and its not just that he doesn’t care about you. Perhaps a clue to the underlying and more fundamental dynamic is in the one campaign promise he has kept, to run the country like he ran his businesses, namely, as his to trash; or as a magical penis extension, his to fondle till his hands get furry.

The President’s choreographed in-action is a strategy which works hand in glove with the magical thinking. Life shouldn’t be like this and so it is not. Such an attitude has huge voter appeal and seems to be a significant part of what got him elected, perhaps as much as political affiliation or cultural prejudice. You no longer have to reflect. Willing can make it so. The reefs of life can be negotiated representationally. For example, the recent fetishistic hoarding of toilet paper in the face of the pandemic. You have to admit its a bit strange. The rush for the luxury of Charmin has been far more fierce than the one for more essential needs like foodstuffs which you’d think might have greater priority in the apocalyptic imagination.

Perhaps it is the concretisation of fear, an expression of crapping oneself. Or is it deeper still, the eternal loo roll standing for the stable preservation of a known way of life, symbolically imposing a sense of order and regularity on the inconvenient shittiness of plague, as though anything can be defended against, even death itself, provided you’ve got clean knickers and polished your nipsy. It would be much better to beat a drum and sing magical songs. At least you would be clear about what you were involved in…

Trump is a loathsome, soulless monster but he is not the problem. He represents a certain spirit of our age, fixated at the developmental stage of pull-up Huggies. Whilst it is truly scary that suited toddlers have nuclear codes, perhaps there’s also some comfort in the notion that we might still, having avoided the attention of Thanatos, yet grow into short pants.

Sacrifice and the Snake-Handler.

In the wake of the Civil War in America a curious movement sprang up across the South, Pentecostal snake-handling. Putting the dramatic and often deadly details of these rituals aside for a moment, a most fascinating aspect of this evangelical burlesque, one in which no member of the congregation could guarantee they’d make it through to tea and biscuits, is that it arose by what Rupert Sheldrake would call ‘morphic resonance’.

The beginnings of Pentecostal snake handling rituals cannot be ascribed to a single person. The observance arose independently on multiple occasions.’ Wiki

In other words, the snake handling pastors didn’t get the idea a box of copper heads might liven up the service from each other. Like blue tits across the land figuring out how to take the tops off milk bottles faster than blue tits can communicate the news, the snake handlers all came up with the same original idea to take a clutch of rattlesnakes to church on Sunday at the same time and for the same reason.

Now, waddafug is that all about?

At what point did worship and the prospect of sudden death get conflated in the collective imagination?

Way, waay back when some bright spark decided that he wanted to be a king rather than a chief, when he developed a taste for status superfluous to his already being the boss by way of also being the incarnate deity, perhaps that was the moment when there arose in humanity the wish to remain identified with the Gods. It might not even have been his own idea, after all…

“No one man can terrorize a whole nation unless we are all his accomplices.” – Edward R. Murrow

In what way, you might wonder, might it serve the people to have this now divine and deadly figure in their midst? The prospect of protection from the regal right hand palls, given the likely activities of the left. It seems as though the need for kings, like the need for rattlers on Sunday, has some deeper significance.

Over the millennia, as individual consciousness has been slowly emerging out of the fogbank of collective identity, it has been faced with the problem of developing a relationship with that out of which it seeks to be differentiated. Some kind of diplomatic process has to be set up between ego and self, something that both connects and separates.

We managed this collective scam by designating the ruler a god, which is what the transition from chief to king entails. Having the ruler be a god is a kind of intermediate state between the extremes of being entirely identified with the collective to the detriment of individuality or pursuing it at the expense of communion.

The king gets to be God and through him you get to be God too, whilst also enjoying the new fangled development of individual consciousness and the lark of personal destiny without having to be separated from or rejected by the Gods, as the doleful story of Adam and Eve’s banishment from Eden so fearfully portrays.

Such divine truculence on the behalf of God necessitates the advent of kings, rulers beyond the law, both as a safe conduit to the Gods and as figure to blame when the Gods are unforthcoming. Paradoxically, it serves the people for another to have such power over them. We get to have our cake and eat it, sufficiently differentiated from the Gods to be able to say ‘I’ and ‘me’, whilst maintaining connection to the divine by being the king’s subject. He will do all the fancy officiating stuff on your behalf, leaving you free to go fishing, write poetry, make love.

There is, however, a teensy wee problem.

This arrangement has some unfortunate small print in the contract, namely that it gives rise to a rather particular form of paranoia. The conflation of king and God required to pull off this Brexit from collective consciousness is an act of inflation which has to be appeased, traditionally in blood. So there is something to be paranoid about. The kings are bound to sacrifice their people to this end, just as the people are bound to sacrifice their kings.

Many cultures in ancient times sacrificed their kings to the Gods after fixed terms, to make the crops grow and give someone else a turn. During their lifetimes these same royals waged war upon each other whose singular purpose was to obtain captives for sacrifice to impatient God.. The Aztecs had a special name for it, ‘the Flower Wars’, whose purpose was not rape or pillage but capture and sacrifice.

Only recently have we given making war the glaze of righteous indignation. The Trobriand Islanders of the Pacific made ritualized war on each other without any personal animus. In mid April you went off and fought the Blue Parrot tribe. Not because you disliked them but because the gods required it. When the first man died, but mostly before then, someone would call a halt, the Gods having been mollified by all the hollering and cool gear everyone is wearing for the occasion. So then, it being apparent just how everyone gave the day their best effort, all participants would slope off to easier tasks like feasting on wild pig and drinking coconut wine.

We, more civilized, cannot bear the idea that in our meek souls there lies anything resembling blood debt to ambivalent gods and so we fondly imagine wars to be about other things, booty, land, slighted honor. Having missed the point, thousands perish were a few bruises would do.

The waste of numberless dead notwithstanding, how shall we propitiate the Gods when peace breaks out? Well, we seem to have found all kinds of interesting ways to deal with the ego/self paradox. The snake handlers of Appalachia, Tennessee and Carolina found a uniquely homegrown solution to appeasing the Gods whilst continuing to identify with them.

This ecumenical two step confers salvation on the snake handler for not getting bitten without condemning him if he does. Every once in a while someone gets sacrificed. The others pray over him, their collective sin momentarily expiated to live and sin another day. If the pastor lives he is filled with the living faith and all is well. If he dies, then his sacrifice cleanses the community and all is well. You can see how it might appeal, how people might even fight for the constitutional right to put themselves in harms way.

In 2013, a Mr. Coots published an op-ed in The Wall Street Journal making an argument for U.S. Constitutional protection regarding religious freedom, especially freedom to practice the unique variety of religion found in snake-handling churches. Unfortunately, Mr. Coots died on 15 February 2014 from a snakebite before having the chance to further represent his cause.

It’s easy to dismiss such folk as fools though maybe we’d be given pause for the thought by the idea that they are the visible and flamboyant end of a dynamic in which we have all been participating for several thousand years, a cycle of kings sacrificing subjects and subjects sacrificing kings to propitiate un-named Gods for taking such chummy liberties with them.

The bedecked warriors of the Flower Wars or the ecstatic Snake-Handler may seem to belong to another time and place. Yet isn’t the news entirely filled with stories of people baying for the leader’s blood? And hasn’t said leader sacrificed his people with inaction, denial and obstruction?

The historian Jon Meecham notes that there is a growing correlation between covid cases and whether a county in the USA is red or blue, with Trumpeters claiming they’d rather die than [omnipotently] ‘kill the economy’.

So you might blanche at the barbarism of the Aztecs or scratch your head at the Snake-Handlers but we aren’t so different. We too have found creative ways to propitiate the Gods, though less directly, through catastrophe, incompetence, refrigeration trucks of the dead.

The Snake Handler’s belief that he can avert disaster by faith is no different from Trump’s belief that Corona virus would disappear by a miracle. Or that a laying on of hands might make him a half decent person. We should expect, when he gets bitten, as he will, that it wasn’t his fault. We must also expect him to pass the snakes around before he succumbs, knowing that not all of us will make it through to the end of the hymn sheet from which we are all so faithfully singing..

Mama’s Angry.

There is a cautionary tale from Ireland which tells the story of a foolish man who refused to listen to the promptings of his inner world. He lived way up on the moor in a ramshackle croft. It was so run down it had no lintel above the door. The winter wind swept in and the man shivered by his low peat fire wondering what to do. Then he had a brilliant idea. At the top of the moor was an ancient standing stone which had been there since memory began. Perhaps it had been erected by his ancestors, unknown forebears honoring unknown gods. Anyhoo, it was just what he needed for a lintel and so next day he set out with his hand cart and a spade to dig it up.

As he began to dig at the base of the stone his imagination was suddenly filled with the fantasy that his house was burning down. He ran all the way home, relieved to find it still in one piece. After another cold night he became determined to fetch the stone and next day he set off once more. Again, as he began to dig, the vision of his croft aflame leapt into his imagination so strongly that he was compelled to throw down his tools and run all the way back to discover that all was as he had left it. On the third day, the crofter had had enough and made his way up to the lonely stone with a hardened heart. He took his mattock and dug the ground all about the ancient sigil. He took ropes and bound it, wrenching it from the cold earth, bundled it into the cart and dragged it home to find his croft in ashes, burnt to the ground.

Since time immemorial disasters from out of the blue have been considered as the commentary of the Gods on earthly hubris. The more circumspect you become the more you understand that there’s some kind of connection between inner attitudes and outer events. In the story of the Fisher King from the Grail legends we find that a plague is sweeping through Logres, ‘the proud land’ on account of the king’s failure to take up the Grail quest. In the story of Oedipus a plague sweeps through Thebes on account of a crime committed by the king who is so inflated and out of touch that he considers the plague to be fake news…

‘What is the meaning of this supplication? These branches and these garlands, the incense filling the city, these lamentations? Some fear?’ Sophocles ‘Oedipus Rex’.

Oedipus inevitably pays the price for his arrogance. The blind seer Tiresias, who has oracular foresight, makes the observation..

‘Pride breeds the tyrant, swollen with ill-found booty. From castled height Pride tumbles to the pit. Who falsely wins, all sacred things profaning, shall he escape his punishment?’

It’s curiously co-incidental that the Corona virus is sweeping through America hard on the heels of Trump’s triumphant impeachment acquittal. It’s as though the Universe just couldn’t bear to see him get away with it, even preparing the ground for his own demise by the folly of dismantling pandemic response teams.

From the New Yorker…

The costs of the Senate’s impeachment decision have been cast in sharp relief. It will be a long time before we can reckon with the full damage done by an Administration whose incompetence, disinformation, and sheer bungling in the early stages of the crisis have been at once predictable and breathtaking. Susan Glasser

Conspiracy theories about the origins of Corona virus abound. Yet even the idea that covid-19 might have been manufactured by the Deep State set upon culling its population still manages to keep the explanation for what is happening at the human level and therefor within the realms of control. After all, villains can be foiled. It is less easy to digest, wherever it came from, a weapons facility, a wet market, from bats or monkeys, a bolt of cloth from Ouagadougou,none of these precludes the possibility that behind whatever-it-is, you find Nature’s angry face.

How would it be to think of Covid-19 as Nature’s response to our consumption of the planet, our carelessness and greed? I will see your crippled EPA and raise you a holocaust.

Perhaps we are the disease, or have become so, infected with what the aboriginal world calls ‘Wetiko’, the soulless and devouring yet insatiable ghost of self interest. Perhaps we have created Corona virus, not in the labs of evil geniuses but in the boardrooms of heartless corporations, on the red carpet of glitz and celebrity. Perhaps our incessant gorging has necessitated an auto immune response from Gaia herself which not only kills off some of her infestation but also brings all the itching to a halt.

How co-incidental can it be that all this has happened, is happening, in precisely the moment humanity collectively fails to come together on climate change. It’s as though Mother Nature has said, ‘Right, if you won’t do something, I will.’.. then sent us to our rooms to make us think about what we have done.

In ancient times, plague was believed to be a putrefactive poison carried in the air which went to the heart and destroyed it.

The contagion was seen as being generated by poisonous fumes coming from sources of corruption and putrefaction, such as marshes, cesspits, the open sewers of towns, rubbish dumps, from the putrefying animal remains in butchers’ shops, and from the blood dumped outside of the premises of barber-surgeons. The poor and their surroundings were also often identified as sources of plague. The Lancet.

These diverse ideas about the origins of disease have symbolic value. They are all instances of people being out of kilter with themselves, lack of connection, not taking care of your shit, letting the heart become poisoned.

What has happened is what the ancient Greeks called, ‘Enantiodromia,’ its the principle that everything turns into its opposite if pushed too far. ‘Inflation beckons the Raven’s claw,’ as an old saying goes. Enantiodromias are often sudden changes of fortune brought on your own fool head. The plagues of Egypt in the story of Moses is a good example. The plagues are Nature’s response to a leader drastically out of synch with the people and with the land.

It doesn’t take much to make a link to Trump and climate change denial. His staggering inflation, the Quizotic tilting at windmills, his insistence that the cure should not be worse than the disease, as though he were closing a deal, as though he could negotiate with covid-19 personally.

‘Corona virus, if you’re listening..’

The Chinese ‘Book of Five Rings’, warns the general not to underestimate the enemy. Always assume your opponent is at least as smart as you. In the movie, ‘Waterloo’ there’s a lovely moment where Napoleon is deep in thought and suddenly asks himself ,’ what am I not understanding?’

Perhaps what we are still in the process of understanding is that this experience is an opportunity as well as an affliction. UN environment chief Inger Anderson calls the pandemic ‘Nature’s shot across our bows….’

which might have the effect of bringing about much needed initiatory change of our collective mind set.

To prevent further outbreaks both global heating and the destruction of the natural world for farming, mining and housing have to end.’ ibid

Such urgent change requires a transformation of collective values. Perhaps our collective consciousness evolves by the same sudden changes which often seem to govern individual development. Crossing a developmental threshold always seems to involve a brush with death, the seeming theft of all protection, the disorientation and seclusion of liminal space.

When the psyche becomes dis-eased it’s because it’s out of balance somehow. When the world is dis-eased it’s for the same reason. Balance has to be restored and what a good job Pestilence does. Centuries of the Dark Ages were no match for the Black Death back in the Fourteenth century. It restructured society, enriched the peasants, created the middle classes and triggered the Renaissance. It changed consciousness itself.

So maybe this too, is the beginning of something new. Since the virus hit I hear again and again the fresh re-appraisal which folk are making of their relationships with one another, of their connection to the Earth, and of their relationship with the Gods. It seems to be generating a resurgence of the human spirit, the desire to repair and renew, the wish to connect in place of the compulsion to control, an unshackling of the Principle of Relatedness.

The Shepherd and the Snake.

Carl Jung identifies two distinct kinds kinds of thinking. The first is rational, problem solving and rooted in language. He calls it directed or reality thinking which originates in,

‘the first stirrings of a cry to our companions that water has been found, or the bear been killed, or that a storm is approaching, or that wolves are prowling round the camp.’ Jung

The second kind of thinking is very different and way older, fantasy thinking. This kind of mental activity is not rooted in language but in feelings, images and daydreams.

The former operates with speech elements for the purpose of communication, and is difficult and exhausting; the latter is effortless, working as it were spontaneously.’ ibid

Jung agreed with Freud that fantasy thinking is archaic, but stopped short of labeling it infantile and even less, as pathological. We moderns have become so identified with rationality and consider ourselves so emancipated from our forebears that we regard the products of fantasy thinking as a problem to be solved, as something to be grown out of. Ach! Stop daydreaming! Instead of using the two different types of thinking together, the one is pitted against the other. And we wonder why we are so split…

..having failed to delineate what Hiedegger calls the difference between ‘what I want to think about and what wants to be thought.’

That which is primitive is not the same as that which is mad. Far from being material that rational thinking must either dismiss or reductively interpret, fantasy thinking often serves to compensate the lopsidedness of the overly rational mind, a wellspring of wisdom it would profit from re-discovering. Unfortunately, our modern education values the one over the other, treating fantasy thinking as a poor relation hardly worth bothering with rather than the poemagogic font out of which rational thinking has itself only so recently emerged. Fortunately, not all thinkers are so prejudiced..

‘I am enough of an artist to draw freely upon my imagination. Imagination is more important than knowledge. Knowledge is limited. Imagination encircles the world.” Einstein

Curiously, this tendency of the rational mind to deny and degrade the instinctual wisdoms of fantasy thinking, with its concomitant erosion of meaning, is something that clearly troubles the deeper reaches of the Psyche which then produces compensatory images and dreams to try and rectify the balance, its newly impoverished status notwithstanding.

The following story, ‘The Shepherd and the Snake’, from Hungarian folklore, represents the efforts of fantasy thinking to have its contribution re-evaluated.

Once there was a Shepherd Boy who spent all day long in the mountains with his flock. When he was not protecting the sheep from wolves, he spent his time racking his brains with thoughts of how to become rich. It seemed so unfair to him that some were rich and others poor.

He sat thinking and thinking..

when he suddenly became aware of the sounds of crying. ‘ Help, help!’

He went to investigate and saw a fiery pit in which a Yellow Bellied Snake was writhing.’ Help me Shepherd Boy! Help me and I will repay your kindness!’

So he helped the snake out of the pit, which immediately instructed him to follow and wriggled off, soon coming to a large forest in the center of which was a flat stone. The snake slithered under the stone commanding the shepherd to follow. He lifted the stone and saw steps leading down and down.

Eventually they arrived in a field made of diamonds in which stood a palace made of gold and precious stones. ‘This is my father’s palace,’ said the snake and led him inside, through a great arch of writhing snakes, where they found the Snake King sat on his throne. The Yellow Bellied Snake explained to his father that the Shepherd Boy had saved him and so the Snake King offered him the choice of two rewards..’You can be given the gift of understanding the language of animals, or you can have a large bag of gold.’

The Shepherd Boy considered his options. He really, really wanted to be rich… but he also thought he would never again be given the chance to learn the language of animals so that is what he chose. When he re-emerged into his own world he sat reflecting upon everything which had happened. Above him, two birds conversed in the branches of a tree. ‘If only that poor Shepherd Boy knew what lay beneath the roots of the tree he would be poor no longer!’

That night the Shepherd Boy returned with a spade and dug up the tree to find nestled in its roots a great treasure of gold and jewels..

Many heroes of myth and legend are heroic by nature of their brave deeds, by defeating dragons or giants. Less glorious but just as important are the heroes who are receptive, kind and make counter-intuitive decisions in favor of the irrational.

Their heroism resides in that they have drawn their goals and their vocation not only from the calmly ordered course of events which the reigning system has consecrated but also from an underground source in the inner spirit whose content is hidden and which has not yet broken through the surface of actual existence.” Merleau-Ponty

The Shepherd Boy is heroic because he makes a decision against rational thinking which must have been screaming at him to take the gold. You can imagine the pressure..’What, are you crazy? How can you make your way in the world learning the language of animals? Of what practical use is that? Do you want to be poor and herd sheep for ever? TAKE THE GOLD.

Yet something has already begun to stir in the Shepherd Boy’s soul. He’s had a whole morning of talking snakes and underground kingdoms, things he could barely imagine and so he goes with the flow and makes the irrational choice against his own ego. In doing so he aligns himself with a deeper sense of self which in turn produces the synchronicity of the talking birds who just happen to know where the earthly treasure is to be found.

”Synchronicity is like a collaboration with fate, its when the ego is no longer the driving force in your life.” Wayne W. Dyer.

Our story seems to be pointing to more than the necessity of fantasy thinking. It seems to suggest that allowing dream/reverie, affording it with value and, following where it goes not only yields a new connection with the instinctual basis of life but also brings about the earthly agendas renounced in the process. In deciding against the gold, he gains both the language of animals and the gold as well.

‘If, against all your own wishes and plans, you obey that voice which deep in your soul is subject to no rational control, then roads open up of their own accord which lead to the preservation of what you thought you have given up.’ Weatherall

This means taking fantasies and daydreams seriously. It means wondering about the significance of bothersome intrusions which interrupt the more noble sentiments of coherent reasoning. It means giving space to musing and reverie, paint and mud. It means being curious about the ear-worm going around and around in your head, the doodles you make in the margin of more ‘serious’ work, the embarrassing slips of the tongue which draw attention to there being more under consideration than the ego’s rational intent. Moreover, as our story seems to suggest, when we pay attention to these counter-intuitive impulses nagging at the fringes of consciousness, many of our more immediate concerns resolve themselves.

“If you want your children to be intelligent, read them fairy tales. If you want them to be more intelligent, read them more fairy tales.”
― Albert Einstein

The Hedgehog Prince.

Once upon a time there was a Poor Man, a Merchant and a King. One day the Merchant was out hunting in the forest and became lost. For three days he tried to find his way out. Eventually he exclaimed, ‘if only someone could show me the way out of this terrible forest I would give him three sacks of gold and the hand in marriage of the most beautiful of my three daughters. Immediately, a small hedgehog appeared and said, ‘come with me, for three sacks of gold and the hand in marriage of your most beautiful daughter I will show you the way.” The Merchant agrees in a flash and in no time he was sat back at home in his comfy chair recounting tales of his brave adventures.

The next day the King went hunting in the forest, He too became hopelessly lost and could not find the way out.’ Oh, if only someone would help me, I would give them three carts of gold and the hand in marriage of my most beautiful daughter,’ whereupon the Hedgehog once more appeared and promised to show the King the way out. The King agrees but only after he’s really thought about it.

Then the Poor Man went out hunting and like the others soon became lost. ‘Oh’. he exclaimed, ‘I have nothing to give but if someone were to help me out I would make them my own dear child.’ Once more the hedgehog appeared and led the Poor Man to the edge of the forest.

Time passed. The King, the Merchant and the Poor Man had all but forgotten the Hedgehog. One wintry night when the Poor Man was tucked up in his bed he heard a plaintive tapping at the window. ‘Father, father, let me in, it is I your son.’ The Poor Man was puzzled and went to the door to find the Hedgehog all covered in snow. ‘My son! How happy I am to see you!’ He let the creature in and made up a bed for him. In the morning the Hedgehog asked, ‘Father if you have two pennies, would you go into the village and buy me a black cockerel and an old saddle?’ The Poor Man agreed and when he returned the Hedgehog saddled up the cockerel and rode away like the wind, soon arriving at the house of the Merchant who was shocked and not a little put out to see him. He grudgingly called his daughters forward and the Hedgehog chose the one he liked best but she cried and threw herself to the ground wailing and beating the floor with her fists.

On the way back the Merchant’s daughter continued her refrain. ‘Are you still crying?’ asked the Hedgehog. ‘Yes,’ she replied, ‘and I will continue to cry to my dying day!’ ‘Oh dear,’ said the Hedgehog, ‘well, you’d better go home then.’ So he sent her home…but kept the gold.

Once he had dropped off the gold with the Poor Man, the Hedgehog rode away on the black cockerel to the King’s castle. ‘Do you remember me?’ he asked. ‘I wish I did not but I do,’ sighed the king and called for his daughters, the most beautiful of which was chosen by the Hedgehog who was only too happy to repay the favor shown to her father. The king was glad he had such a kind-hearted daughter but was also sad to lose his only kind-hearted daughter.

The King loaded up a coach full of gold and diamonds. Then the Princess got in as well and, with the Hedgehog riding alongside, they set off. After a few hours the Hedgehog put his head in the window and was pleased to see the Princess was not crying. ‘Why do you ride when you could be sitting here with me?’ she asked. ‘Aren’t you afraid of me?’ he replied, ‘and don’t you find me ugly?’ ‘Of course not,’ she said, ‘I know you will do me no harm..’ and with that a great miracle occurred. The Hedgehog was transformed into a shining Prince and the Black Cockerel into a prancing stallion. A great palace appeared and celebrations prepared. Invitations were sent out to everyone in the land and all attended the great feast except the Merchant and his daughter… who were too busy crying.

The Merchant, the King and the Poor Man represent three distinct attitudes to life, identified in the Gnostic tradition as Hylic, Psychic, and Pneumatic. They symbolize stages of psycho-spiritual development.

The simplest and least developed of these is the hylic Merchant and by extension his daughter who only have a single point of view. Events can only have one inevitable outcome. Everything is preordained.

“The range of choice open to the individual is not the decisive factor in determining the degree of human freedom, but what can be chosen and what is chosen by the individual.’ H. Marcuse.

You can only chose a path if you have tried the others and know where they go. Those who have only one ‘take’ on life have not chosen. They are compelled, by the partisan interests of persona which creates self affirming realities. These realities then justify knee jerk responses which create in turn a kind of negative feed back loop or self fulfilling prophecy. Everything is always awful or hopeless whether the daughter is being carried off or returned, whether they get invited to the wedding or not.

The problem for the hylic Merchant and his daughter is that they have not evolved sufficiently out of narcissistic self pre-occupation. They can’t take in or relate to the Other and so real meaning and purpose is denied them, hence the true origin of all those tears.

Where there is no “other”, or it does not yet exist, all possibility of consciousness ceases’ Jung (1950: 193).

Instead of consciousness the Merchant has only reason. He reasons that he should pay the Hedgehog’s price for giving him safe passage out of the forest, then he reason’s once he’s safe that he has made a bad investment, followed by reasoning that they have been robbed of an opportunity once the truth of the Prince comes out.

“Reason has insight only into that which it produces after a plan of its own … constraining nature to give answer to questions of reason’s own determining. In short, reason can only find what it is looking for; it may, however, not be what really matters.” ibid

The King is what the Gnostics identify as psychic and represents a more evolved kind of consciousness, one that is complicated, full of moral problems and ambivalent attitudes precisely because he acknowledges the Other and is no longer constrained by black and white thinking. This is most poetically expressed by his happiness and sadness about the same thing, that he has a kind-hearted daughter. He can walk and chew gum at the same time, though it’s because of his complexity that he suffers and prevaricates and dithers.

The Poor Man represents pneumatic or spiritual consciousness. The Greek word ‘pneuma’ means ‘breath’ which was held to be identical with a person’s essence or life force. He is poor in that life’s complexity has collapsed into the tolerance of paradox. His strange new son is something he accepts without being troubled by its irrationality. He doesn’t understand what’s happening and he doesn’t need to. He can go with the flow and accept what life brings. He knows life’s treasure is a matter of heart.

The ‘hidden’ fourth in this triad is the Hedgehog himself, the Spirit of Nature who becomes humanized by the trust and gratitude of the kind-hearted daughter. The alchemists used to describe the difficulty of transforming base material into the precious philosopher’s stone as ‘the problem of three and four’. Why? Because three into four won’t go. Consciousness and the Unconscious have a way of flying off from each other like magnetic opposites. They are tenaciously irreconcilable.

‘Even the enlightened person remains what he is, and is never more than his own limited ego before the One who dwells within him, whose form has no knowable boundaries, who encompasses him on all sides, fathomless as the abysms of the earth and vast as the sky. Jung CW11

Yet, despite all this and perhaps because of this, these opposites can be bridged once a feeling of loving kinship can be established between the Poor Man and the Hedgehog, a necessary precursor to marriage with the blithe and trusting spirit of the kind-hearted daughter.