by Anne Baring
The Scientific & Medical Network
November 10, 2015
from
Collective-Evolution Website
Spanish version
Anne is a Jungian
analyst - co-author of 'The Myth of the Goddess, The
Mystic Vision and The Divine Feminine' and author of
'The Birds Who Flew Beyond Time' |
When the masculine and the feminine are in balance, there is
fluidity, relationship, a flow of energy, unity, totality.
This fluidity and balance is perhaps
best illustrated by the Taoist image of the indissoluble
relationship and complementarity of Yin and Yang.
In the broadest
terms,
-
the feminine is a containing
pattern of energy: receptive, connecting, holding things in
relationship to each other
-
the masculine is an expanding
pattern of energy: seeking extension, expansion towards what
is beyond
More specifically,
-
the feminine reflects
the instinctual matrix and the feeling (heart) values of
consciousness
-
the masculine reflects the questing, goal-defining,
ordering, discriminating qualities of consciousness, generally
associated with mind or intellect
For millennia women have lived closer to
the first pattern; men to the second.
But now, there is a deep impulse to
balance these within ourselves and in our culture. There is an
urgent need to temper the present over-emphasis on the masculine
value with a conscious effort to integrate the feminine one.
In the ancient world the
feminine principle in the image of the goddess,
-
Firstly, it stood for
relationship - the hidden connection of all things to each
other.
-
Secondly, it stood for justice,
wisdom and compassion.
-
Thirdly, and most importantly,
it was identified with the unseen dimension beyond the known
world - a dimension that may be imagined as a matrix
connecting invisible spirit with visible nature.
The word used then to name this matrix
was goddess; later it was soul.
The feminine principle offered an image
of the oneness, sacredness and inviolability of all life; the
phenomenal world (nature, matter, body) was regarded as sacred
because it was a theopany or manifestation of invisible spirit.
The greatest flaw in patriarchal civilization has been the
over-emphasis on the masculine archetype (identified with spirit)
and the devaluation of the feminine one (identified with nature).
This has been reflected in the fact that the god-head has no
feminine dimension, in the consistent neglect of feeling values and
in the misogyny responsible for the repression and suffering of
women.
The history of the last 4000 years has
been forged by men, determined by male perspectives and directed
towards goals defined by men - principally the goals of conquest and
control (this is no sense intended as a criticism; in the context of
prevailing belief systems and general level of consciousness, things
could not have been different).
However, religion and science - all our cultural ideas and patterns
of behavior - have developed from this unbalanced foundation.
Throughout this time, everything
designated as "feminine" (nature, body, woman) was devalued and
repressed, including the rich diversity of the Pagan legacy of the
ancient world. In the domain of religion, heretics were eliminated;
diverse ways of relating directly to the transcendent were lost.
Naturally, this has created a deep imbalance in the culture and in
the human psyche.
It has led finally to the tyrannies of
this century where the lives of some 200 million people have been
sacrificed to totalitarian regimes. We can see the brutal legacy of
this imbalance in Afghanistan, Bosnia, Russia and now Kosovo.
But we can also see it in the ethos that
dominates Western culture.
The modern tyrant is the extreme
reflection of a deeply-rooted pathology derived from a long-standing
cultural imbalance between the masculine and feminine archetypes
and, at the human level, between men and women.
I would like to read you this extract
from a recent article:
"This is a world of monstrous
tyranny.
Everywhere there are governments
which by design or neglect are starving people, wrecking their
livelihoods, breaking up their families. Everywhere there is the
oppression of women, of other races, of ways of life which are
dear to people.
Property is confiscated, villages
are set on fire, disease and malnutrition left to rage
unchecked.
And what all these victims, tens of
millions of them, have in common - what brings their suffering
to the forefront of my indignation - is this: they did not ask
for this; they cannot avoid this; there is nothing they can do
to change this; they have no choice."
Matthew Parris,
The Times, London 6/9/98
Where there is no relationship and
balance between the masculine and feminine principles, the masculine
principle becomes pathologically exaggerated, inflated; the feminine
pathologically diminished, inarticulate, ineffective.
The symptoms of a pathological masculine
are rigidity, dogmatic inflexibility, omnipotence, and an obsession
with or addiction to power and control. There will be a clear
definition of goals but no receptivity to ideas and values that
conflict with these goals.
The horizon of the human imagination
will be restricted by an overt or subtle censorship.
We can see this pathology reflected
today in the ruthless values that govern the media, politics, and
the technological drive of the modern world. We can see the
predatory impulse to acquire or to conquer new territory in the
drive for global control of world markets, in the ideology of
growth, in new technologies such as the genetic modification of
food.
We see exaggerated competitiveness - the
drive to go further, grow faster, achieve more, acquire more,
elevated to the status of a cult.
There is contempt for the feeling values
grounded in the experience of relationship with others and with the
environment. There is a predatory and compulsive sexuality in both
men and women who increasingly lose the capacity for relationship.
There is continuous expansion in a linear sense but no expansion in
depth, in insight. The pressure of things to do constantly
accelerates.
What is the result? Exhaustion, anxiety, depression, illness which
afflict more and more people.
There is no time or place for human
relationships. Above all, there is no time for relationship with the
dimension of spirit. The water of life no longer flows. Men and
women and, above all, children, become the victims of this harsh,
competitive, uncaring ethos:
women, in their disorientation, and
because the feminine value has no clear definition or recognition in
our culture, are drawn to copy the pathological image of the
masculine which itself incorporates fear of the feminine.
Because to a large extent, this whole situation arises
unconsciously, not much can be done about it until catastrophe
intervenes.
Reflecting on this, I remembered the following story:
Once, not long ago, there was a great drought in a province of
China. The situation was catastrophic. The Catholics made
processions, the Protestants made prayers, and the Chinese burned
joss-sticks and shot off guns to frighten away the demons of the
drought; but to no avail.
Finally the people said:
"We will fetch the rain-maker."
And from another province a dried up old
man appeared.
The only thing he asked for was a quiet
little house somewhere, and there he locked himself in for three
days. On the fourth day the clouds gathered and there was a great
snow-storm at the time of year when no snow was expected - an
unusual amount - and the town was filled with rumors about the
wonderful rain-maker.
Asked what he had been doing during the
three days that had caused the snow to fall on the fourth he said:
"I come from another country where
things are in order. Here they are out of order; they are not as
they should be by the ordinance of heaven.
Therefore the whole
country is not in Tao, and I also am not in the natural order of
things because I am in a disordered country. So I had to wait
three days until I was back in Tao and then naturally, the rain
came."
The rain-maker did not do anything. He
waited until he was in balance. Then, his quality of being rectified
the state of imbalance that existed around him. Perhaps we need to
become rain-makers…
I feel we are living in a time of
kairos - a mythic time of choice -
a time of stupendous scientific discoveries which are enlarging our
vision of the universe, shattering the vessel of our old concepts
about the nature of reality.
Yet the delicate organism of life on our
planet and the survival of our species are threatened as never
before by technologies driven by an ethos of the conquest and
control of nature, technologies which are applied with an utter
disregard of the perils of our interference with the complex web of
relationships upon which the life of our planet depends.
The choice is between clinging to an
outworn and unbalanced ethos and maturing beyond it towards a more
responsible and sensitive capacity for relationship. If we are
unable to develop this empathic capacity to relate, we will surely
destroy ourselves and the environment that sustains our life.
So, how could we help to redress the balance between the masculine
and feminine in ourselves and in our culture?
First of all,
-
Where are we, as individuals out
of balance?
-
Where are we driven by the
unbalanced cultural ethos of achieving power and control,
ignoring our feelings of depression, anxiety or symptoms of
the body’s distress?
-
Are we allowing ourselves enough
time for reflection, for relationships, for connection with
a deeper dimension of reality?
The priority as I see it is to make the
fact of this pathology a matter of public discussion. Shift the
emphasis from achieving power to achieving balance.
Secondly, here are some suggestions for
strengthening the feminine principle in our society.
-
Free the Imagination from the
stranglehold exercised by a controlling minority which
excludes the non-rational from inclusion in our
understanding of life.
-
Formulate a new image of spirit
as the totality of all that is - both seen and unseen.
Recover the lost and devalued feminine aspects of spirit:
restore nature, matter and the physical body (including
sexuality) to the realm of the sacred.
-
Imagine the Soul as a cosmic
internet. We belong to an immense field or matrix of
relationships. We could imagine the soul in this new way as
something we belong to and can develop a relationship with.
-
Religion: Relinquish the
dogmatic formulations of the past: Monotheism as
Mytheism (Ravi
Ravindra) recognize the negative effects of deeply
rooted beliefs - such as the belief in original sin - on our
interpretation of life and its meaning. Welcome the idea of
direct individual experience of the sacred and the numinous.
-
Science: Integrate the
principle of empathic relationship with what is studied in
scientific teaching and practice. In education give children
an empathic understanding of their own bodies and of nature
rather than the image of the body and the universe as a
machine. Help them to become aware of their environment as a
great chain of relationships in which their lives are
embedded. Nourish their sense of wonder.
-
The psyche: develop a greater
insight into predatory and psychopathic patterns of
behavior. Learn to recognize and transform patterns of
imbalance. Heal the split between mind and soul. Recognize
that feeling is a valid mode of perceiving reality and must
be integrated with thinking. The main problem in our society
is emotional immaturity.
-
Politics: develop a forum beyond
national and international politics where the true problems
of the planet can be articulated and addressed. Recognize
grandiosity, standardization, the drive for control, the
proliferation of bureaucracy as symptoms of the pathology of
an inflated and unrelated masculine principle.
-
Medicine: integrate alternative
(complementary) methods of healing with orthodox ones as a
deliberate policy. Focus on preventive medicine. The modern
GP has no time for an empathic relationship with his or her
patient. The pressure of numbers is simply too great.
However, in some surgeries and hospitals alternative
practices are being integrated with orthodox ones. This
integration could be expanded.
-
Agriculture: Focus on increasing
the production of organic food. Removal of pesticides,
antibiotics and toxins from our food and water.
-
Care of Children: A much higher
level of prenatal care. Compared with the rest of Europe, we
are way behind (Sweden is the most advanced). Attention to
quality of children’s’ diet and to nourishing the
imagination as well as the intellect.
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Educate Women to be aware of
their own specific value and the importance of their
contribution to the culture. Articulating feeling values
without fear or shame. The vital importance of choosing
partners with greater care; Value and prepare for the
responsibility of motherhood.
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Educate Adolescents in awareness
of the responsibilities of relationships and of the parent
towards the child. Teach them the psychology of the child;
its dependency; its sensitivity, its potential for emotional
growth. Teach them about the complexities of neuroscience so
they understand how their emotions affect their bodies and
vice-versa. Ask them to invent ways of caring for the
environment.
-
Control bulling by a deliberate
stated policy of making schools a sanctuary. Children could
help to make their own schools sanctuaries. Meditation in
schools from the beginning - positive effects on capacity to
learn and emotional balance. (Maharishi School in
Skelmersdale - report The Sunday Times 19/9/98).
-
Teaching Methods: integrate
right-hemispheric consciousness with the linear
consciousness of the left hemisphere - opening to the
creative power of the image - poetry, art, drama and music
(no exams for these). Balance in the curriculum between
developing the capacity for logical thought and creative
imagining and participation.
This poem by a 12 year old boy
at school in Southampton shows how a teacher can provide the
environment in which a child can dare to express his true
feelings:
I hear my inner voice
talking to me,
Explaining, encouraging,
Opening the part of me that I thought was lost.
In this world of cruelty and fear little lights are
burning.
Everyone has a flame inside their hearts,
If only they had the courage to find it.
The light can trickle out through a hole in your mind.
When the inside is out
You are transformed and revealed.
There is no need to be afraid,
But be curious
As you will probably never know
where the force is coming from.
Daniel Webster
Jonathan Schell wrote the
following words in his book, The Fate of the Earth,
"Because everything we do and
everything we are is in jeopardy, every person is the right
person to act and every moment is the right moment to begin."
Each of us is called to focus on
rebalancing the masculine and feminine in ourselves and in our
culture.
This could effect a profound alchemy in
our lives. Women and men could both participate in a process of
transformation which could bring into being a new cultural focus
whose emphasis is no longer on power and control but on
relationship, balance and connectedness.
The phrase "the conquest of nature"
could be replaced by the awareness that humanity and nature
participate in a deeper and still unknown reality that embraces them
both.
At the end of The Undiscovered Self, Jung asks,
"Does the individual know that he or
she is the makeweight that tips the scales that infinitesimal
unit on whom a world depends?"
Millions of people have no choice.
Those of us who do have a measure of
choice could rise to the immense challenge of defining and living a
new and responsible role in relation to each other and our planetary
home.
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