by Paul Levy from AwakenInTheDream Website
We are collectively living in a bardo - a
Tibetan word meaning a gap, an in-between state -
where in this case we are not only between worlds, but our
consciousness is between two fundamentally different states of
being.
If we cut open a butterfly pupa at a certain stage, all will we find is a milky liquid, a biotic goo, but the whole gestalt of the butterfly is already functionally contained within the liquid:
Just like the potentiality of an oak tree is invisibly hidden within the acorn, the wholeness of the Self - what Jung calls the God within - is encoded in a state of potentiality within our current state of being.
The literal process of what happens,
A certain percentage of humanity - many of them in positions of power - have become pathologically stuck in and identified with being a caterpillar-like species, having fallen into and become fixated on a state of endless and insatiable consumption.
At a certain point, however, evolutionary forces compel the caterpillar to cease its obsessive consumption and cocoon itself into isolation, during which it forms a protective chrysalis around itself which shelters it from its environment:
This chrysalis can be conceived of as the caterpillar's hermetic vessel, which in alchemy is considered to be an absolutely essential component of the alchemical opus, as it is the very container in which the alchemical transformation takes place.
Within the safe confines of the chrysalis, the
caterpillar literally digests itself as its heretofore known form -
and identity - disintegrates and dissolves into a soupy goo.
This state of being in a bardo between two connected but radically different states of existence is not unique to caterpillars and butterflies, but is found throughout nature.
To use another example, when an egg is turning into a chicken, there is a moment when it is both egg and chicken and neither egg nor chicken.
Interestingly, in quantum physics, one of the areas of the most exciting research is,
The world of the quantum and ordinary reality
could not appear to be more different and yet, at the same time, are
mysteriously deeply interconnected and not separate from each other
at all.
To bring this into the human realm,
Not just individually, but collectively, as a mostly larval species, we - in true quantum style, potentially - are in the process of,
Hidden within this suicidal urge, however, is a profound and deep-seated longing for transformation.
I find myself imagining that every cell in the caterpillar's being is yearning for transformation.
Speaking about modern-day humanity, Jung writes,
As the caterpillar approaches death, a small number of what are known as "imaginal cells (discs)" wake up and become enlivened within its soupy goo.
The role of these imaginal cells is to catalyze the caterpillar's metamorphosis so that it will fulfill its butterfly destiny.
These imaginal cells contain within themselves the evolutionary program which can literally recreate the dying caterpillar into its new, but-as-yet-unrealized identity.
Initially seen as a viral invader or alien threat
attacked by the dying caterpillar's immune system, this attack only
makes the imaginal cells stronger, more resilient and
catalyzes their replication, ultimately serving the caterpillar's
evolution.
Interestingly, Jung points out that,
Jung felt that the (higher) Self is, ultimately
speaking, the sponsor of our internal conflicts.
It is as if the archetypal image of the butterfly, though existing in a seemingly abstract dimension outside of time, is guiding the evolution of the caterpillar in order to actualize itself within third-dimensional time and space.
Once the butterfly emerges, from its point of view as butterfly, the caterpillar seems like a past life, as if the butterfly's previous identity as a caterpillar was a past dream that the butterfly has now awakened from.
We could say that the image of the soon-to-be butterfly - which exists in the caterpillar's unconscious - is dreaming about fulfilling its potential and becoming a fully incarnate butterfly.
We can also say that the caterpillar is unconsciously dreaming of its butterfly destiny.
Once the metamorphosis is complete,
the butterfly, unlike its caterpillar predecessor (who was an
endless consumer) becomes a pollinator who fertilizes life.
Just like there is no way around the caterpillar going through a symbolic death experience in order to re-emerge in its transfigured form - dying as caterpillar but being reborn as butterfly - we, who are all being cooked in the soup together, are similarly going through an archetypal death-rebirth experience.
To the extent that any one of us are identified with existing as a separate self - which is the primordial illusion - in which we conceive of and identify ourselves as existing in a way that we do not, we will be fated to go through a symbolic death experience of our own.
There is an evolutionary imperative for us to go
through this death-rebirth process within ourselves with as much
consciousness as we can muster - the continuing existence of our
species depends on it.
This process needs to come full circle by us consciously realizing who we are.
Stepping out of thinking of ourselves as being a separate self - a larval state of consciousness - we can realize that we are interconnected not only with other people, but with the whole sentient web of life itself.
Just like the archetypal image of the butterfly, imprinted within the caterpillar's unconscious, is guiding the caterpillar to actualize its deeper butterfly nature, the archetypal image of the Self that is imprinted within our unconscious - if we get into conscious relationship with it - can guide us to actualize the deeper nature of the Self.
Once we consciously realize the Self -
who
we actually are - it is as if we become a
categorically different species than who we were before this
realization.
To quote the great psychologist William James, our situation is,
When we start to consciously realize
the Self, it is like
discovering that there is a vast multi-dimensional body attached to
the little finger that we thought we were.
It is the most awake, the most visionary and the most courageous among us who are being called to play the role of the imaginal cells for humanity.
May the nonlocal force be with us...!
|