By Michael O'Callaghan
CHAPTER 2:
A CONVERSATION WITH
DR. JOHN WEIR PERRY
Saved from http://www.global-vision.org/dream/dreamch2.html
Revised by alex.sk [9. VII 2007].
"Our greatest blessings come
to us by way of madness, provided the madness is given us by divine gift.."
- Plato (Phaedrus)
"If the human race survives, future men will, I suspect, look back on
our enlightened epoch as a veritable Age of Darkness... They will see
that what was considered 'schizophrenic' was one of the forms in which,
often through quite ordinary people, the light began to break into our
all-too-closed minds."
- R.D. Laing
The idea that the inner Apocalypse might - for alienated people - be
the guardian of the gate to a sustainable civilisation has a metaphorical
ring of truth which I find appealing. To explore it further, I went to
California in the early 1980s to meet a man who was especially knowledgeable
on the subject. I had first met John Weir Perry a few years before in Boston
at the first conference of the International Transpersonal Association (ITA),
and was impressed by his compassion, wisdom, and humility.
John Perry was a Jungian psychiatrist who founded an experimental
residential facility called Diabasis, in San Francisco, California, during
the 1970s. This was designed as a comfortable home where young adults, who
were experiencing the initial days of their first "acute schizophrenic
break", could live in and be empowered to go through their Apocalypse on
the way to greater health and happiness. The results were amazing: without
any treatment by medication, electroshock or locked doors, full-blown
"schizophrenics" were able to go through their ego-death and emerge on
the other side, as Perry puts it, "weller than well." Instead of being
sent to the mental hospital and/or taking medication for the rest of their lives,
these certified "schizos" would live at the facility for the first three
months, spend the following three in a half-way house, and then return to the
outside world, never having any relapse of their "schizophrenia" again!
This corroborated the results of R. D. Laing's famous Kingsley Hall
experiment in London in the sixties, in which only nine out of sixty-five
"certified psychotics" who were tracked afterwards were re-admitted to
hospitals again. Those who insist that "schizophrenia" is a disease will
have to admit that it is curable! The principal differences between
Kingsley Hall and Diabasis were the deliberately anarchic organisation of
the former and its rather dismal location in a London slum, and the more
organised approach of the latter in a more pleasant location in Berkeley
on San Francisco Bay.
Dr. Perry met Carl G. Jung in Switzerland as a young medical student.
He then became a psychiatrist. As a conscientious objector during World War
II, he served for two years as a medic in the U.S. Army, attending to war
victims in China. Here he was impressed by the character of the people and
profoundly touched by their ancient philosophy of the Tao. He noticed the
similarity between the traditional Chinese view of the universe as a
self-organising system, and Jung's idea that schizophrenia is not a
disease which the psychiatrist should attempt to control, but rather a
spontaneous healing process which a subtle therapist might indeed
facilitate through a kind of psychological shiatsu. After
the war Perry returned to San Francisco, where he went into practice in
1949. The introduction to his first book "The Self in Psychotic
Process," published in 1952, was written by Carl G. Jung himself.
Perry then wrote "The Far Side" (about Diabasis), and "The
Heart of History," a trans-cultural study of mythological evolution. The
book is interesting, since individuation is normally thought of in the context
of a given mythology or world view. Here Perry explores the individuation
process not in the context of a given world view, but within the larger
macro-historical evolution of the world views themselves. He thus tracks
the individuation of the deepest dimensions of the Self, as reflected in
the symbolism of the metamorphosis of the world's great mythologies from
the power-preoccupied cosmologies of the first city-states to the more
compassionate world views which seem always to follow. Ironically, in the
1980s he found himself invited to teach psychiatry at the University of
Wuhan, in China - where official dogma had it that the unconscious does
not exist! His latest book, published not long after his death in October
1998, is "Trials of the Visionary Mind": Spiritual Emergency and
the Renewal Process.
John and I met three of four times for lunch at his delightful office
in a townhouse on San Francisco's Steiner Street, where Gregory Bateson
sometimes spent the night when he was up from Esalen, where he lived the
last years of his life down the coast at Big Sur. I pushed the half-open
wooden gate that leads to the back garden, walked past a trellis of
Heavenly Blue morning glory flowers, and found my friend again - a
soft-spoken, melodious, rosy-cheeked, smiling gentleman in his mid
seventies, smoking his pipe in the sun. The following interview was
recorded that afternoon.
The Persistence of Memory, Salvador
Dali, 1931 |
"It is justifiable to regard the term 'sickness'
as pertaining not to the acute turmoil but to the pre-psychotic personality,
standing as it does in need of profound reorganization. In this case, the
renewal process occuring in the acute psychotic episode may be considered
nature's way of setting things right."
- John Weir Perry |
MICHAEL O'CALLAGHAN: How does one define so-called
schizophrenia?
JOHN WEIR PERRY: Jung defined it most succinctly. He said
"Schizophrenia is a condition in which the dream takes the place of
reality." This means that the unconscious overwhelms the
ego-consciousness, overwhelms the field of awareness with contents from
the deepest unconscious, which take mythic, symbolic form. And the
emotions, unless they're hidden, are quite mythic too. To a careful
observer, they're quite appropriate to the situation at hand.
The way "schizophrenia" unfolds is that,
in a situation of personal crisis, all the psyche's energy is sucked back out of the
personal, conscious area, into what we call the archetypal area. Mythic contents
thus emerge from the deepest level of the psyche, in order to re-organise
the Self. In so doing, the person feels himself withdrawing from the
ordinary surroundings, and becomes quite isolated in this dream state.
MICHAEL O'CALLAGHAN: Did Jung really see this as a healing process?
JOHN WEIR PERRY: He did indeed! He believed that "schizophrenia"
is a self-healing process - one in which, specifically, the pathological
complexes dissolve themselves. The whole schizophrenic turmoil is really a
self-organising, healing experience. It's like a molten state. Everything
seems to be made of free energy, an inner free play of imagery through
which the alienated psyche spontaneously re-organises itself - in such a way that
the conscious ego is brought back into communication with the unconscious again.
MICHAEL O'CALLAGHAN: How long does the experience normally last?
JOHN WEIR PERRY: The acute hallucinatory phase, during which these
contents go through the re-ordering process, usually lasts about six weeks. This,
by the way, corresponds to the classical description of visionary experiences
in various religious texts, such as the proverbial "forty days in the
wilderness" often referred to in the Bible. Anyway, six weeks is roughly it.
MICHAEL O'CALLAGHAN: So are you saying that the reason we have so-called
"chronic schizophrenia" in our society, - where a person is medicated,
distressed or hospitalised for decades - is really cultural? A society which refuses
to understand the healing nature of the phenomenon?
JOHN WEIR PERRY: Yes, it seems so. Of course, there are some unusual
cases where the individual simply can't handle the impact of all this unconscious
content, or doesn't know what to do with it, and freaks out. But from my
experience at Diabasis, I've seen so many people go the other way that I
really do feel "chronic schizophrenia" is created by society's negative
response to what is actually a perfectly natural and healthy process. I
hate to think of what happens to people who go into the mental hospital...
MICHAEL O'CALLAGHAN: Who experiences a "schizophrenic break"?
JOHN WEIR PERRY: Well, there's a lot of controversy about this! There
is a constitutional element, which is often interpreted as a "genotype of
pathology", but this depends on how you see it. I see it as a genotype of
sensitivity! Among adolescent siblings in a family, for example, its
usually the most sensitive one who's going to catch it.
MICHAEL O'CALLAGHAN: How many people are "schizophrenic?"
JOHN WEIR PERRY: Approximately two percent of the world population -
that's over 110 million people! It's about one in five of all the hospital beds.
MICHAEL O'CALLAGHAN: What does it feel like to go through a
"schizophrenic break"?
JOHN WEIR PERRY: The overall experience is described as falling into a
kind of abyss of isolation. This comes about because there is such a discrepancy
between the subjective inner world that one has been swept into, and the
mundane everyday world outside. There seems to be a total gulf between
these two. Of course, this is exactly what happens in our society: the
individuals around such a person are bewildered and frightened. They have
absolutely no trust in what is going on! So everything is set up
negatively, and this gives rise to fear - on both sides.
MICHAEL O'CALLAGHAN: So it starts with a feeling of isolation...
JOHN WEIR PERRY: Yes. Now the symbolic expression of this is falling into a
death - not only a death state, but also a death space - the "afterlife," the
"realm of the ancestors," the "land of the dead," the "spirit
world." The common experience here is for the person to look about and think
that half the people around him are dead too. While in this condition, it's very
hard for one to tell if one is really alive or not.
I've been told, by people looking back on the experience,
that one thing that stands out most of all, beyond the feeling of isolation, is the
perception that everything that comes up is divided into opposites: Good
and Bad, God and the Devil, Us and Them, or whatever. It's confusing, it's
bewildering, it causes tremendous indecision and a total arrest in
motivation in which everything is cancelled by its opposite.
So both these things are very distressing: the fear
that you have died and dropped away from the world of the living, and the fear of
conflicting powers, conflicting values and thoughts. It's a very aggravating feeling.
This experience of opposites very quickly takes on a rather paranoid form.
I think this is really what the paranoid content is
based on. It takes the form of experiencing the world as caught in the grip of
opposing forces, whether they be political, spiritual, cultural, ideological, or
even racial. In recent years I've noticed it's "those who might destroy
the planet" versus "those who are ecologically minded." The
prevailing idiom of the decade seems to shape the particular form in which
these opposites arise. The main thing here is a great clash of forces; and this
clash is usually of rather cosmic proportions, not just a local affair at all.
Right away at the beginning, the death experience is
accompanied by the feeling that you've gone back to the beginning of time. This
involves a regression, a return to the state of infancy in one's personal life
history. But hand in hand with this is the feeling of slipping back into
the world of the primordial parents, into a Garden of Eden. For example,
it's a very common experience to feel one is the child of Adam and Eve,
say, at the beginning of time. This is very symbolic, obviously. It's
pretty much a representation of the psyche at the start of one's
individual career after birth.
So these are the
outstanding features. All kinds of
imagery comes tumbling across the field of awareness. It's like the mythological
image in a perfect stained-glass window being smashed, and all the bits and
pieces being scattered. The effect is very colourful, but it's very hard
to discern how the pieces belong to each other. Any attempt to make sense
of it is an exercise in abstraction from the actual experience. The
important thing is to find the process running through it all.
The Apocalypse: Breaking of the
Sixth Seal, Albrecht Durer, 1496/98 (detail) |
The thing that I'm particularly interested in here
is the clash of opposites. The individual usually has a feeling of intense fear,
as he contemplates what seem to him to be the forces of disruption, of chaos,
of the Antichrist, of the Communists - whatever the ideology happens to
portray as "evil." In any case, these forces are seen as tending to
destroy the world, and the "good guys" are those who would try to
preserve it. This is the element I try in particular to explore, because it
connects to all kinds of other general cultural and political phenomena
that we could talk about! What makes this visionary state appear so very
psychotic, is that an individual with a paranoid ideology or ideation
tends to identify with everything that comes up from below, and one is
very apt to get confused. A woman who identifies with the Virgin Mary, for
example, may then believe she's about to give birth to a redeemer.
Actually, there's many a pregnancy test that we do in these emergency
situations, you know, because you can never be sure! And the men are very
apt to feel they're specially elected to be the second coming of the
Messiah; or, if they're very paranoid, a great political of military
leader such as Napoleon or Hitler. The delusions of grandeur become very
evident, for as soon as one's identity gets hung up on such archetypal
identifications, there immediately arises the "enemy out there"
who is trying to undo what the supreme power has brought about. There is a
deeply-felt fear of being toppled, a feeling of immense danger. This again
has many cultural connotations... |
MICHAEL O'CALLAGHAN: So if the person experiences himself as God,
might he then also feel the Devil is out to get him?
JOHN WEIR PERRY: Yes, that's pretty much adequate. If one is
Christ, the Anti-Christ is around somewhere at work; and if one is in a supreme
position of political rule, then there is sure to be a disruptive
revolutionary political party on the other side of the planet which is
trying to topple you! It's rather scary, when you consider that the collective
unconscious projects such huge shadows upon whole nations or superpowers...
MICHAEL O'CALLAGHAN: What about the death / rebirth aspect?
JOHN WEIR PERRY: Well you see, the state of being in a realm of death
in the beginning is pretty soon accompanied by the idea of either being born, or
giving birth. This is really the fundamental ground of the whole experience.
So there are two or three transformative elements
that run through the phenomenon in a sort of overall direction. First, the feeling
of death and rebirth, which is really symbolic of the process of disorganisation
and reorganisation; second, the fact that this happens both on the world level
as well as on the personal level - the world is also going through a
disruption and a regeneration; and finally, the initial inflated notion
that one is a supreme power (a great spiritual force, a supreme being, a
supreme intelligence from outer space or whatever), gradually yields to a
deeper overall preoccupation with the issues of relationship. The feelings
and motivations tend toward love and affection in general. The sexual
element is stirred up quite a bit, but mostly it's on a symbolic level.
The process of psychological individuation required to achieve this
feeling of loving relationship is also what social evolution is all about.
In this regard, the concerns of the regression to infancy
are no more personal than one would expect. They are mostly concerned with the
interpersonal field, with the parents and siblings, and with the problems
of childhood and adolescence. The great surprise, during these weeks of
turmoil, is that even more of the concern is about cultural and societal
issues. I was totally unprepared for this: in the Freudian setting of
medical school, there was no mention of it at all. At first, when Jung
told me about it in Switzerland, I found it very hard to believe. I had to
see for myself if he was right. This then became one of my motives for
going my alternative way with these people.
Our
new understanding shows that the process of re-connection to the unconscious,
which these millions of people go through in a way that's usually so very hazardous,
isolated and uncreative, is nonetheless made up of the same stuff as seers, visionaries,
cultural reformers and prophets go through. They also experience much of the same
content, except that in their case it is specifically concerned, first and foremost,
with the culture itself. Any kind of personal subjective ideation is made to serve
and clarify that end.
When I started looking into these cultural parallels
of the "schizophrenic" process, I also began to find very clear similarities
in the rituals of almost every society. There are striking parallels in the
visionary states of reformers and prophets and Messiahs. Messiahs are
found all over the world, you know! Almost any culture that's going
through a profound upheaval of rapid turbulent change, produces seers and
visionaries who glimpse the new myth-form and express its guidelines - the
basic ideas and paradigms that give the people a new sense of direction.
This is particularly true, of course, at the tribal level - in almost
every part of the world. The shamanic visions are particularly close to
what we see in "psychosis," with all the ideation of death and rebirth,
and symbols of world destruction and regeneration.
MICHAEL O'CALLAGHAN: Are you saying, then, that the psychosymbolic
images, feelings and ideas which emerge into consciousness during the
"schizophrenic" process, also carry basic symbolic relevance - at the
level of the collective unconscious - to the alienation of Humankind as a whole?
JOHN WEIR PERRY: Yes! One thing that is quite significant in this
respect is that each decade shows a marked difference in the typical content of
the ideation. During the Fifties, for example, I used to see alot about
"Democracy" and "Communism." For many Americans at that
time, the coincidence of opposites was symbolically expressed in terms of America
versus Russia, and a big showdown between the forces of liberty and
oppression. A little later on that content tapered off, and the moral
values and the issues of war and peace that typified the Sixties came to
the fore. In the Seventies, I saw alot of concern with global concerns
like preserving the planet and paying attention to nature. The "bad guys"
in this case were cast in the role of those who had a disregard for the needs of Nature.
Now of course this is not too different from what
one finds in dreams. For dreams also tend to reflect cultural issues, and as soon as
one gets into any kind of therapy that deals with the psyche at this deeper level
of the collective unconscious, one comes to the inevitable realisation
that we are not going along in our psychic life, you know, just in a realm
of interpersonal relationships. A very powerful culture such as ours
projects huge patterns, huge conflicts and turmoils, and we all experience
them, although we may not be conscious of their inner meaning at all. In
this sense, Humankind is still enormously alienated; the point is, it
doesn't happen just in Washington and Moscow - it happens within the
psyche of the whole people. The political spokesmen are only giving voice
to what is going on in all the individuals...
This
brings up the question of myth-form. You see,
the big problems facing society are perceived in symbolic, mythic expression, and
for this reason their resolution takes place on the symbolic, mythic level as well.
If there's work going on in a culture to reorganise itself, then it's a
process that must occur on both levels simultaneously: individuals will go
through their personal visions, and collective spokesmen will express
collective visions, which get worked out and implemented on a cultural level.
The Tower of Babel, Pieter
Bruegel,1563 |
GRADUATE STUDENT IN CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY:
"Dr. Laing, I still don't understand the theoretical basis of your
therapeutic approach to schizophrenia. Could you please explain it?"
R.D. LAING: "Certainly. The basis is love. I
don't see how you or I can be of any help to our clients in a visionary
state unless we are capable of experiencing a feeling of love for them.
Therapy, as opposed to mere treatment, requires that we have a capacity
for loving kindness and compassion."
GRADUATE STUDENT (perplexed): "But Dr. Laing, what is your
clinical methodology for developing this approach?"
- Overheard at a talk given by R.D. Laing in New York |
MICHAEL O'CALLAGHAN: In your book The
Far Side of Madness, you describe how at Diabasis - the home for
"schizophrenic" individuals which you set up in Berkeley in the
1960's - they could comfortably get into their visionary process in a totally
supportive atmosphere. What are the necessary conditions to enable a
person to go through the experience of madness and be renewed by it when
they come through, as you put it, on the far side?
JOHN WEIR PERRY: That's a question with many facets! The first one,
which we touched on briefly toward the beginning of this conversation, was
about the conditions that are set up around such an individual. What we did at
Diabasis was specifically to set up what we hoped would be the most ideal,
least toxic (smile), least damaging environment for a person in the visionary state.
First off, this means a home. You need a place with friendly,
sympathetic individuals who live there. These people have to be
companions, have to be willing to listen and not be frightened and not be
judgmental about it, and not try to do anything to anybody.
One has to let the visionary process unfold itself
spontaneously. Under such conditions, to our surprise, we found that our clients got
into a clear space very quickly! We had started out with the notion that we would
surely be in for alot of bedlam with all this "madness" going on, but
actually the opposite was true! People would come in just a crazy as could
be on the first day or two, but they'd settle down very soon into a state
of coherency and clarity. Often, when I would come in for a consultation
at the end of the week, I would see someone who had been admitted in a
completely freaked-out state just a few days before, sitting at the
dinner-table indistinguishable from anybody else; sometimes I couldn't
tell if this was a new member of the staff, or one of our clients. The
calming effect of a supportive environment is truly amazing!
It's a well-known fact that people can and do clear up
in a benign setting. Actually, they can come down very quickly. But if some of our
cases had gone to the mental hospital, they would have been given a very
dire message: "You've had a mental breakdown. You're sick. You're into
this for decades, maybe for the rest of your life!" and told "You need
this medication to keep it all together." I am quite certain that if some
of our clients had been sent to the mental hospital, they would have had a
long, long fight with it. The outcome of their stay at Diabasis, however,
was that their life after the episode was substantially more satisfying
and fulfilling to them than it had been before!
MICHAEL O'CALLAGHAN: Would the determining factor then be the
person's realisation that she is in a non-ordinary state of consciousness - i.e.: a
state which, although very different from that of the people around her, is in fact
completely natural and good - and that the hallucinatory imagery carries a
symbolic meaning, which pertains primarily to the inner reality, rather
than to the outside world?
JOHN WEIR PERRY: You said it! The tendency, as you suggest, is to
concretise all the symbolic stuff and believe there are enemies out there, and
that the walls are wired, that there are people with guns at the window, and
subversive political parties trying to do things, or that one is being
watched because one is the head of some organisation and everybody knows
it. All of that is a mistaken, "concretistic" tendency to take too
literally things whose correct meaning is actually symbolic.
So yes, the therapeutic goal is to achieve that attitude
which perceives the symbolic nature of the ideation which belongs to the inner
reality. Now the inner reality is real! It's very important to grant it
that reality, but not to get the two realities mixed up. That's the trick!
Actually, for most people it's surprisingly easy. Certainly, the more
paranoid a person is, the more difficult. There is a certain paranoid
makeup, a style of personality which tends to focus on the objective world
around. It's what we call an attention style. It is difficult for such
people to see the inner meaning of their visions. On the other hand, the
average person tends to go along with the inner journey and to realise -
well, they do need to be reminded - but once they're reminded, they tend
to quickly perceive that it is a spiritual test, or a symbolic test, and
not the actual end of the actual world.
The
second condition needed for a successful outcome
of the "schizophrenic episode" is not just a benign surround, but also
some people who can relate to the visionary process in a sympathetic way. I
believe very strongly that it's not just enough to have a benign community
around such a person: the thing that really makes the process move and
reach its conclusion, is an intense relationship with one or two people.
Sometimes with a man and a woman, who may play a symbolic role like two
parents, or like the opposites, which can be taken care of in this way.
Bringing the whole supercharged process into a relationship
seems to make it bearable, containable, manageable. Of course, some people go
through it alone. They tell me this is highly painful, very frightening.
But if one has a therapist or counsellor to whom one can relate the
experience, one need not suffer a whole lot once the process gets
underway. There will always be some tough moments, nightmarish times,
bewilderment. One wonders what the dangers are, whether there are evil
forces out there. But through these weeks, somehow, the prevailing mood is
actually one of buoyancy. At Diabasis, there was a general atmosphere of
jocularity. People would be joking around, having fun, playing music and
dancing and humming tunes and painting...
MICHAEL O'CALLAGHAN: Yes, in fact wasn't that part of the design? You
had all sorts of ways for people to communicate their experience and externalise
in through various forms of art?
JOHN WEIR PERRY: The whole environment was organised into various
"spaces." One of these - a very important one - was called the rage room.
This was sound-proofed and padded, for the individual's own protection, and we put
things in there that they could whack to pieces like old cottons and
mattresses. But the door was not locked, it was not like the padded cell
in the mental hospital, where the person is isolated against his will...
We set it up so that if a client was having strong feelings of rage, he or
she could share it with a staff member, particularly the counsellor or
primary therapist, and thus deliver it. This was found meaningful. The
anger is a very important part of the growth of the ego, you see.
We also had the opposite: a room for quietness and
meditation. This was equally important, for integrative purposes. We had an art
room, but I must say, people didn't seem to spend much time there (chuckle). These
so-called "sensitive personalities" were all hanging around the dining
room table, doing water-colours or modelling in clay, and giving creative
expression to some of the imagery inside their head. We also had a sand
tray and figurines for sand play therapy. It works like a dream: you set
up a dramatic scene, move the figurines, tell a story. This avenue of
expression is easier than painting. It's very dreamlike, so it hits the
visionary state very well. We also had poetry...
Another thing we provided was a variety of body
movement sessions, dance and martial arts, with skilled facilitators. And finally,
we had interviews at least three of four times a week, for an hour and a half to
two hours each, with the primary counsellor/therapist. But really all of
these creative outlets put together became part of the interview itself -
verbal expression combined with image expression in these various media.
Now throughout all this there was nothing scheduled,
nothing mandatory. It was all informal. We'd just respond to things as they came up. Our
only house rule really was "No violence to property or persons!" The clients
could dash out nude into the street if they had to; we didn't like it, but
they did! You see, we wanted them to be in this house of their own free
will. They had to realise their own desire to belong in the house, and they did.
So this whole approach is essentially one of releasing,
rather than suppression. We allowed everything and encouraged its expression - not
toward chaos, but toward communication! Communication tends to order. This
is a most important point in psychiatry, but the common opinion is that it
is very dangerous... When you actually do it, however, you find exactly
the opposite is true: people get over their preoccupations very quickly.
The whole point here is to deliver the visionary content to somebody and
to be able to appreciate its symbolic relevance to the inner process of
personal and social renewal. Once it's delivered, the process keeps moving
by itself. It's really unfortunate there is so much misunderstanding about
it all. The truth is really very simple.
"The gigantic catastrophes that threaten us are not elemental
happenings of a physical or biological kind, but are psychic events. We
are threatened in a fearful way by wars and revolutions that are nothing
else than psychic epidemics. At any moment a few million people may be
seized by a madness, and then our leaders may precipitate us into a
blood bath of war and radioactivity... Instead of being exposed to wild
beasts, tumbling rocks, and inundating waters, man is exposed today to
the elemental forces of his own psyche. Psychic life is a world power
that exceeds by many times all the powers of the Earth...
If one voluntarily takes the burden of completeness upon
oneself, one can avoid all the unhappy consequences of repressed individuation
- one need not find it 'happening' to one against one's will in a negative
form. This is as much as to say that anyone who is destined to descend
into a deep pit had better set about it with all the necessary
precautions, rather than risk falling into the hole backwards."
- Carl G. Jung
"The journey is there and it's an experience that we have at some
stage to go through... Every single one of us has got to go through it..
until we gradually build ourselves up into an acceptance of reality."
- Jesse Watkins
former "schizophrenic" client
of R.D. Laing
"The time will come when Humankind will have to make a choice between
suicide and adoration."
- Pierre Teilhard de Chardin
MICHAEL O'CALLAGHAN: Here's a broader question which I've been
thinking about for years. If nature's self-organising way of healing an alienated
individual is for one's psyche to go through a world view transformation
process involving a spontaneous temporary non-ordinary state of
consciousness, do you think it possible that an entire society, or perhaps
even the whole of Humankind - which is undoubtedly alienated and obviously
having a hard time adapting to its new global environment - could
conceivably have to pass through some kind of collective non-ordinary
state, on the way to greater wisdom? And if so, would not such a process also
take the form of either a horrible mass psychosis, if suppressed, or a creative
breakthrough, if we were culturally prepared to understand its inner meaning?
JOHN WEIR PERRY: Yes indeed! You know, there are many examples
of this in anthropological studies of societies going through periods of cultural
crisis. What you're referring to is right around the corner! You don't have to
look very far to see a culture deteriorate, to see individuals in deep distress...
The cultural historian Anthony Wallace is very lucid
about this. He did a study of periods of turmoil in various cultures, and formulated
a ground-plan for the process of sudden culture-change. It goes like this:
first, under the new conditions, the old answers don't work, the old
methods no longer hold, the old ways prevail no more, and the old values
are no longer held in esteem. This leads to a demoralisation, which
results very quickly in psychosomatic distress, and the abuse of alcohol
or other drugs. From out of all this, some sort of restitution may then
emerge through the activation of visionary states within certain people in
the society. The gifted ones are those whose visions reach beyond the
personal sphere, into the realm of the collective unconscious, out of
which the new myth comes forth.
Now the
crucial point here is whether that myth is
then received. You see, in a psychosis, part of the problem, as we were saying, is
that the vision is not received. When the individual, and his family and friends
and society regard the vision as unacceptable and they reject it, that is
the experience of going crazy!
On the other hand,
a prophet is given alot of esteem. If his vision happens to coincide with what the
people need to hear, he will eventually be held in great reverence and his message
will be received. If his myth-making capacity is working well, he may deliver the
new myth that is going to be accepted for the next phase of that culture's evolution.
That then leads to a whole cultural renewal, which Wallace calls a revitalisation movement.
So what's particularly interesting about this collective,
cultural dimension of the visionary experience, is that the historical evolution of
culture recapitulates the same process that happens within the individual.
It begins in fear of death, lust for power and supremacy, but soon leads
over into this concern with relationship and Eros, intimacy, caring. In
history, the myth original that parallels this process is one that was
first conceived during the urban revolution: that's about 3000 BCE in
Egypt and Mesopotamia, 2000 BCE in China, and about 1000 BCE in Israel.
With this first growth of cities, a vast psychological transformation took
place in society, and new myths emerged which served a guiding function
for the motivations within. Now these first urban societies were
preoccupied with power. Power and dominance were held in high esteem and
sacralised. Some centuries went by, and you had prophetic movements,
philosophical movements that arose in opposition to that.
These later myths redefined the cohesive power in
society. They asserted that the thing that binds the people together into a working
whole is not power and dominance but caring, brotherhood, and love. If you
check out the ancient literature, you will find that this idea of the
overarching importance of love or compassion is simply not mentioned in
any urban texts up to a certain point.... The function of social
leadership was first projected exclusively onto the persona of the Pharaoh
or King. All the people had to do was to follow orders and do what they
were told. The mythologies of the early urban phase were all in the power
idiom at first: the King is the embodiment of the whole people. Only he
can care for them. He is the one who is compassionate. He is the one who
is loving, as a father is toward his children.
So
what took place over the following centuries was
a complete transformation of that type of myth. The first time in recorded literature
that there is any mention of the Kingship belonging not only to the
elected king, but also to the people, was around the middle of the 1st
millennium BCE, in China. They affirmed that every individual has within
himself the potentiality to be sage-king or sacral king. It was
specifically expressed in these terms: "Every man shall become a
sage-king!"
MICHAEL O'CALLAGHAN: Very interesting! Who said it?
JOHN WEIR PERRY: Interestingly enough, it was Confucius who
expressed it first - you wouldn't expect it really! He was a great promoter of the
idea of the inner kingship, democracy, self-rule, and social caring. He had the
Golden Rule - the idea of returning good for evil and responding to violence
with non-violence - quite clearly expressed long before Christianity. The same
thing happened in India, with the Buddha. In Israel, it didn't arrive
until much later on. The Old Testament prophets, projecting their image of
God as the vengeful Yahveh, did not talk of this kind of brotherhood or
compassion; you don't find that really until the Christian era. The point
is that the central importance of love and social caring was just not
mentioned in any of these cultures before their initial perception - in
visionary states - by sensitive individuals.
Now
regarding the second part of your question, regarding
the current cultural upheaval in the world today, I think we must be prepared, as you
were mentioning earlier, for a change in world outlook, that is, a new
world view or mandala. The original mandalas were conceived and
designed as world-images, meaning that they are condensed compact
versions, in symbol form, of a way of perceiving the world.
Simply put, the new world view will become explicit
when its symbol moves into consciousness.
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