
Imaginal Love


Jung believed that God, the living God, could be found only where we least want to look, the place we have the most resistance to exploring. This living God is entwined with our own darkness and shadow, woven in our wounds and complexes, laced with pathologies. On the other hand, the God of Belief, the God removed from creation and from everyday li
... See moreConnie Zweig • Meeting the Shadow
Moreover, the world is alive and vital, filled with magical possibilities and a numinous background that takes very little to activate. Individuals in such a state of being are present in the moment, and participate consciously in every situation. At the same time, however, the world of the unconscious is also present, and imaginal encounters close
... See moreJeffrey Raff • Jung and the Alchemical Imagination (Jung on the Hudson Book Series)
Inner Work: Using Dreams and Active Imagination for Personal Growth
Robert A. Johnson • 3 highlights
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imagination as another reality, and Wisdom as the animating force behind our dreams.
Toko-pa Turner • The Dreaming Way: Courting the Wisdom of Dreams
Man becomes what he imagines. He has a self-determined history. Imagination is the way, the truth, the life revealed. We cannot get hold of truth with the logical mind. Where the natural man of sense sees a bud, imagination sees a rose full-blown. Truth cannot be encompassed by facts. As we awaken to the imaginative life we discover that to imagine
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