carl jung

If you’ve read Carl Gustav Jung with but a pinch of receptivity, you’ll know what it feels like to be in the presence of someone with a truly original mind. Jung ‘found his voice’ when he wrote. Which is to say, what he said, was as if it was being said from a place of trans-human intelligence.

Truly reading Jung, which is to say, reading in a way that digests the meaning of what he says rather than simply consuming information, is a deeply transformative experience. This process is the true meaning of ‘education’.

How fortunate then are we that Jung wrote as much as he did! His collected works consists of nineteen deliciously bulky volumes. How unfortunate are we that what is known as ‘the Jungians’ are generally seen as representative of Jung. Unfortunate, because many have judged Jung negatively after having encountered a Jungian. This is not to deny that there are many Jungians who have done and still do good work and whose writing too is illuminating.

Yet, Jung is reported to have said, ‘Thank goodness I am Jung and not a Jungian.’ And anyone who has truly read Jung will know that he was not a dry intellectual, but alive with vibrant ideas, touching into the raw heart of what is real and forever journeying into uncharted territories of the soul.