by Gary 'Z' McGee
October 04, 2024
from
Self-InflictedPhilosophy Website
Gary 'Z' McGee,
a
former Navy Intelligence Specialist turned philosopher,
is the author of
Birthday Suit of God
and
The Looking Glass Man.
His
works are inspired by the great philosophers of the ages
and his wide-awake view of the modern world. |
Transcend
by Jacky Gerritsen
"The road to heaven feels like hell.
The road to hell feels like
heaven."
Unknown
The labyrinth is a metaphor for navigating change...
It stands as a
monolithic structure that represents both the unknown and the subtle
art of transforming the unknown into wisdom.
More importantly, it is
a mythopoetic symbol for finding oneself...
The labyrinth,
is the place you go to shed your cultural
conditioning.
It's where you stretch your comfort zone into
discomfort.
In fact, anything outside your comfort zone could be
considered Labyrinth.
The conflicting/connecting cosmos that
outflanks you even as it binds you - Labyrinth.
The horizon disguised
as a boundary - Labyrinth.
The infinite universe juxtaposing both your
inner-verse and outer-verse - Labyrinth.
The labyrinth is adventure,
Hero's Journey, Truth Quest.
It's a
Turing Test for how to play the Infinite Game.
Are you just a "robot" conditioned to play finite games or are you
"alive!"
reconditioned to play the Infinite Game of life?
In the labyrinth one does not lose oneself; one finds oneself.
It's
in the comfort zone where you lose yourself.
It's the comfort zone
that kills.
It's only outside the comfort zone where you truly come
alive.
And it's the only place where you can experience Rebirth.
This is not to say that the comfort zone is not necessary. Not at
all.
The comfort zone is vital as a sojourn, as a temporary resting
place, as a sacred space to lick one's wounds and unpackage heavy
shadows, reassociate disassociated states, unscramble madness back
into magic.
It's a place to mix the ingredients you found on the
path of heroism.
But first the heroism.
First the hunt.
First the
sacrifice.
First the surrender.
First the leap of courage into the
labyrinth to find those vital ingredients.
So as not to get lost in the labyrinth, you must prepare your return
before your departure.
You must leave yourself outs. Litter the path
with breadcrumbs. Tie
Ariadne's Thread to the center of your comfort
zone before your leap into the unknown.
Ariadne's thread is both a
metaphor for following one's own path and
for strategically staying ahead of the curve.
It's Symbolic of
outflanking
the ego (cultural conditioning/comfort zone) and
surrendering to
the Soul (adventure/quest).
In Jungian terms
Ariadne
is the guiding power of the anima/animus who helps the hero in
his/her katabasis.
A Katabasis is a descent into the underworld, or a literary account
of such a journey to the land of the dead, constituting a temporary
visit followed by an Anabasis (ascent).
But without the preparation,
without the Thread, the lifeline, the umbilical connection to
health, there may not be an ascent.
As Sun Tzu said,
"Sweat more during peace; bleed less during war."
You can't have a testimony without having a test.
But there's no
reason why you shouldn't be prepared for the test.
Just don't allow
your "preparing" to become an excuse for not executing.
Don't rest
on your laurels.
Don't allow the comfort zone to cripple you.
Don't
become a status quo junkie hooked on safety, security, and comfort.
Grab Ariadne's thread and take a leap!
Take the risk.
Do it despite the tiny-hearted.
Do it despite
authority.
Do it despite the status quo.
Be unapologetic.
Just be
strategic about it.
Be fluid, flexible, and smart.
And Ariadne will
guide you.
In the labyrinth you meet your thousand-and-one selves.
Every
twisting turn reveals a new layer.
Each mirrored passageway unveils
a deeper mask.
You begin to see, really see, how you are
masks all
the way down perceiving delusions all the way up.
You begin to feel,
truly feel, the legion of yourself.
And the deeper you travel the
more your individuality crumbles into a multitude.
As Friedrich Nietzsche poetically explained,
"You lie in wait for yourself in caverns and
forests. Lonely one, you are going the way to yourself! And your
way goes past yourself, and past your seven devils!
You will be a heretic to yourself and witch
and soothsayer and fool and doubter and unholy one and villain."
And as
Joseph Campbell more poignantly put it,
"All the gods, all the heavens, all the hells
are within you."
Indeed...!
All the heroes, all the villains, all the light and all the
darkness are within you.
You are the fountainhead, and the cosmos is
the fountain.
You are a vehicle that the universe maneuvers to
perceive itself.
Nothing reveals this more than a journey through
the labyrinth.
And nothing is more frightening than the actualization of your own
darkness...
Above all, the labyrinth teaches this:
You are a multitude.
You are
Legion.
You are death and darkness and evil and madness.
You are
devil and demon and Minotaur.
Your shadow is your most "alive"
aspect.
It's your fierceness, your cunning, your audacity, your
primal lust.
And it will devour you if you don't incorporate it.
It
will lay you low if you don't integrate it.
It will control you
subconsciously if you don't associate it with consciousness.
Fortunately, you are Multitude.
You are Legion.
You are also life
and light and goodness and sanity.
You are angel and Overman and
God.
Thus, understanding that you are whole, you don't renounce the
shadow, but return to it with full engagement by making a double
movement, a connecting dance:
from dark to light and back again to
darkness, so that at every step, you are making the movement of
infinity and the sign of the Yin Yang.
Like Kierkegaard's Knight of Faith practicing the
Principle of
Correspondence, you bring the material to the spiritual and the
spiritual back again to the material, imbuing your life with divine
significance.
When it comes down to it, this is what navigating the labyrinth is
all about:
dancing between the smoke and mirrors, between life and
death, between love and loss, between deadly darkness and healing
light, between blinding light and courageous dark, between finitude
and infinity.
With your darkness made conscious, the labyrinth doesn't stand a
chance.
You navigate the changing landscape like a whirling ninja
dervish. Crisscrossing crossroads. Balancing on tripwires. Tiptoeing
through mine fields. Cutting with curiosity like a razor-sharp
question mark in the dark.
Striking like a cobra, sinking your fangs
into the "forbidden" fruit of the primal truth that has been
forsaken for too long. Transforming like a Phoenix, cultivating
rebirth, practicing resurrection. Traversing Self...
All the while, Ariadne's Thread dangles behind you
- vital, primal,
umbilical - connecting you to the Homeland, to the womb, to the
"ordinary world," to the safety net of the comfort zone.
Where you
will eventually return and reorient disorientation, unlock mystery,
rediscover the magic in the madness, and concoct your magic elixir
for the tribe.
But only in hindsight will you realize - the ingredients
are your
soul...!
About the Author:
Gary Z McGee, a former Navy Intelligence Specialist turned
philosopher, is the author of Birthday Suit of God and The Looking
Glass Man. His works are inspired by the great philosophers of the
ages and his wide-awake view of the modern world.
|