Moving into and beyond
fantasy
As can be soon from Rick’s description, the amount of
information arising from his active imagination far outstrips the
dream itself, and also ties in with his everyday life and
relationships. It is almost out of symbolism into direct statement.
This is, however, not typical of how many writers present active
imagination, and needs some explanation.
In describing active imagination, Robert Van de Castle, in his
excellent book Our Dreaming Mind, quotes from Norma
Churchill’s experience of using this technique, as follows:-
“Help me” I beg the serpent. He rears back, giving me a steely
look with his mysterious sky-blue eyes. Then, he swiftly strikes my
crippled foot and bites it with his powerful jaws. I nearly faint
at the pain of it, and both my feet and legs turn black and rotten.
I look at the serpent in astonishment.
One half of me glows with light, the other half is putrid and
black with rot. Then in a flash, my legs and feet turn to diamond
and light up my forehead.
This is typical of the traditional way of working with or
experiencing active imagination, a continuation of dream like
imagery, although now clearer and conscious. Often what emerges is
very much like a myth or fairy tale, the person using the technique
meeting dangers and triumphs as in a fairy story. So in continuing
the technique they may even create a sort of personal myth. One of
the early books - The Old Wise Woman by Rix Weaver -
describing a person using it, is just like such a personal myth,
and is rather like reading a story. This has the function of
clarifying and extending the dream. It also enables the dreamer to
work indirectly with important issues in their life via the
symbols. Thus the monstrous serpent in Norma Churchill’s early
sessions becomes something transformative.
For some commentators this is complete and sufficient. Indeed it
is a great deal and a wonderfully effective process. From working
with the technique over many years however, I believe there are
stages beyond the experience of the symbol and personal mythology.
If we look in detail at another dream and the work done on it, this
may become clearer. I have included this very long and full example
as it provides extraordinary insights into the nature of dreams and
dreaming, as well as techniques of working and the possible
results.
A full working example
Example: The dream took place in a large very old house or
building. Jessica, my step daughter’s daughter was with me, about
her present age, or a bit older, ten or twelve perhaps. We were in
a very big room that was dark and full of ancient things, objects,
maybe furniture. I think it was night time too, as I was holding a
very large candlestick with about six or seven candles in it. We
were being assaulted by the ‘forces of evil’. These had no
particular form, but seemed very real and capable of physical
damage, and overall had the stereotyped imagery of gremlins and
soul sucking creatures.
I was trying to hold back the attack, Jessica was slightly
behind me to my left. I was using the candlestick a bit like a
sword, and the light from the candles was important in my defence.
At one point I was lighting the candles from another candlestick.
But the main defence was my voice. I was singing a powerful rousing
song expressing positive life and being. But my voice was difficult
to express and faltering. So I started to push the sound out
forcefully, shouting out the song. I woke myself - or my wife woke
me - because I was shouting loudly the words ‘Higher. Higher’,
meaning I must make my voice higher and louder to push back the
assault. Leon F.
Leon’s first insights into the dream came about almost
immediately. As the dream had woken him, he went to the toilet.
Then describes the realisations he reached on getting back into
bed.
Back in bed I let myself sink back into the mood of the dream to
recapture it. At first I was still lost in the overwhelming feeling
of being submerged by the creatures and the ‘evil’. I couldn’t find
any sense of strength in myself to ward them off. In the past I
have often had a sense of something in myself that can never be
harmed by such creatures, but not this time. Then suddenly, as I
was wondering where the power of transformation lay, Jessica was
older, with sexual characteristics. Through this she related to me
differently, causing a wonderful flow of positive feeling energy to
move right through me from feet to head. This completely and
effortlessly dissolved all the evil. I then was led to understand
that the evil was the forces of life in myself, such as the clear
flow of sexual response I was feeling in connection with Jessica,
which had become dammed, and had stopped flowing. This caused them
to turn back upon myself in a negative way. The attempt to stop
myself ageing is one of the causes of such evil. I can see where
this arises from. In being with Jessica recently I find her direct
youthful sexuality delightful. She has no hesitations about
expressing not only her affection, but also her love of being able
to cling tightly physically, with her legs locked around my waist,
obviously with the early stages of her sexual pleasure flowering.
Leon F.
Two days later Leon explored the dark haunted room using active
imagination. Here is his verbatim commentary.
As the room I feel I have always been
here. I have existed for a long long time. There is a way people
have reached me in the past. They have used magic or ritual to get
to me to find what treasures I might have. Many were unsuccessful.
They were lost. They wandered. I am surrounded by a dark land. I am
in a land of darkness. Many have wandered and been lost in the land
of darkness. Nevertheless some found their way to me and even then
they may not have succeeded in carrying away anything of value.
Even if they did nothing is lost, because I am a magic place. I am
an ancient and dangerous place. Leon does well to be afraid.
If I explain, if I tell you what I am - I am a palace. I was a
wondrous palace. I am only a ruin of what I was. This building.
This part of the building wasn’t a ballroom. It wasn’t an eating
place. It was a place where certain things happened. It was a place
where many people left things. They came here and they gathered and
they left. It was a place of exchange. If you could bring something
here, then you could take something away. Or you could take
something away if you gave something.
There is an old story that has to do with how humans sold their
souls. That is a degradation of what I am, what took place here. I
am a place of exchange, not a place of selling. You would give
something of yourself and gain something.
This is the story of the sleeping beauty. As I stand in the room
and hear its story I realise that I am ancient. In the past I lived
in a way that destroyed something that was a treasure. The treasure
has been put to sleep. What was once a palace is now a ruins and I
am ashamed. I was a prince and now I am like the prodigal son
living with the pigs. All my senses tell me of is the life of the
body, but what was put to sleep was my life in the spiritual world.
So I am facing the dark things I did in the past and finding my way
through them. Then my darkness and ruin will be made into light and
beauty again. Now suddenly it feels as if something is happening in
my forehead, as if my eyes are being transferred up onto my
forehead. Or the ability to see is being transferred to my
forehead. As if I need to learn to see again.
As can be seen, the mythology and the personal symbolism is very
strong. Such spontaneous fantasy in this form is probably an
archaic method the psyche uses in attempting to heal itself. This
may account for the fact that such stories are found worldwide and
have arisen in all ages. Not only are they healing - helping to
make whole - individually, but as they may be dealing with distress
or conflict that is experienced by many other humans, the stories
may also be healing in a much wider social sense. Thus the stories
of religion were told over and over with great effect. Today the
use of films may have a similar effect.
The level of symbolism and mythology is one many people tolerate
in meeting themselves. To turn the symbols into here and now
insight requires another step. Without it the psyche may be finding
a level of helpfulness, but there has been no true insight and
understanding into the real expereinces and situation which lie
beneath the dream.
Leon felt unclear about what had emerged so far. What he had
seen was fascinating, promising great wonders in his life, although
critical in saying he had lost something of the greatest value. But
having waited for such mythological promises in vain, he approached
the dream again. Here is a verbatim account of this next
approach.
I see that in the dream I am holding a young woman who is
potentially a sexual partner, and I am protecting her - my sexual
feelings - from anxiety. This leads me on to what is partly fantasy
in images and partly speculation. In it I am a young teenage boy at
a fair. There is a ghost ride nearby, and I know all the sounds are
fake. But I could take a girl in there and go along with it a bit
to get close to the girl. So as the teenage boy I am feeling my
newly emerged confidence and understanding of the world. But there
is another side to it which is the held back feelings that made it
difficult to shout in the dream. So I see an element of fear in
myself that I have not really acknowledged, so still causes me to
lack confidence in some degree. I wonder why I didn’t say all that
when I first worked on the dream.
I explained at this point to my wife B., that the fantasy at the
fairground had in it the sense of not being as good as other
blokes. I see this as arising out of the realisation that as a
teenager one has attained a new level of experiencing the world.
This is partly about the more implicit relationship with the
opposite sex, but it is also the development of a much more
rational, technical mind. One has understood more thoroughly many
of the previously ‘magic’ underlying principles of the modern
environment, such as electricity, amplifiers, recorded sound,
films, TV, etc. As a child there was no conceptual framework on
which to hang any idea of how those things functioned. In this
sense they were ‘magic’. So my sense of not being as good as other
blokes comes from an internal measuring gauge of what others at my
age had achieved in the area of my development. This is purely an
unconscious thing. It was never something I was aware of at the
time, only now as I explore the dream.
Something happened strongly then. I reacted against seeing that
my own fantasy had suggested that there was yet more of my past,
perhaps a hurt teenager, or a hesitant teenager, still to deal
with. I felt like saying, ‘Oh come on Leon, you’re not going to get
hung up with yet more childhood pains are you?’
I decided to go on despite my impatience, and was confronted by
what was the right approach to this teenager. I tried various
attitudes - ‘Ah, that’s the mother’ - or ‘Hi, what is it your
feeling at the moment?’
Now I am both the questioning adult and the youth. As the youth
I express fantasies of the young girl and have strong sexual
desire. The imagery quickly goes into plant like symbols of sex.
The vagina is seen as something wonderfully attractive to push
into. It appears very much like a matted, hairy flower, or
something covered in fibres. This is very attractive in a hairy,
musky way. It isn’t a hairless young vagina. Rather it is the fully
developed sexual organs of a fully grown female/plant that I want
to push into and burst open in. But then he/I imagine that if I get
near to this wonderful brown hairy vagina a spider comes out.
I paused at this point and thought about the dream, and how I
had wondered why, having broken through the fearful images in the
past, I had not done so again in this dream. It was also curious
that the day before I had brought a spider back from a trip out,
and B’s fascination for spiders, and R’s repulsion.
I met the hesitation again about looking at further personal
difficulties, but once more decided to take time with listening to
and allowing the feelings I was meeting. I realised there was
definitely something to deal with. I remembered from the car trip
out on Sunday the intense urge I had of looking at almost every
female. What struck me at the time was how strong it was, and how
some of the women actually looked around questioningly. I felt I
was, am, looking for something. I feel that some of the women pick
up something of my intensity. I even thought I could get myself
into a fight if their man caught me looking like that, but it
didn’t put me off at all. There is definitely a connection between
this looking and the dream, and of course what I am feeling as a
difficulty.
Clarifying important issues
Leon is not explaining some of the important issues here
regarding using the technique, and they are worth clarifying. Twice
Leon has met strong feelings that made him want to give up looking
at himself in this way and uncovering the insights. He looks at
these feelings objectively and decides to continue. One of the
reasons much active imagination remains completely at the symbol
level is because to go beyond symbols would produce powerful
feelings of resistance. These might be felt as fear, as
uncomfortable physical sensations such as sickness or headaches.
Sometimes in dreams, as in Leon’s, such resistances present
themselves as forces of evil, which if the person is frightened of,
manage to preserve their hidden treasure or territory. The castle,
full of the past, is thus kept inviolate. Most frequently however,
resistances are felt as powerful and difficult feelings such as
tremendous unease or emotional pain. As we have a natural tendency
to avoid anything painful or unpleasant - as we do when we
automatically pull our hand back from something hot - our painful
past is kept unconscious, or else only met in a symbolical or
intellectual way. See: Fourth example in car for
illustration of resistance felt physically.
Also Leon has built into his everyday life the ability to
observe his own behaviour in a questioning way. He really does want
to find out why he feels and behaves in the way he does. So he
doesn’t explain away his intense interest for women on his trip
out. Rather he looks at it and wonders what it means, what it
connects with. So this detective like attitude and the gradual
putting together of clues through observation is important. But so
is the desire to break through the symbols. In terms of the story
of the Sleeping Beauty, Leon has taken on the role of the daring
prince who cuts through the dangerous briars that so many others
have been lost, torn, and died in. Only the daring and strong can
get through. In a sense this is a part of the way the psyche
manages to regulate itself. Unless consciousness, the daring hero
or heroine, has the strength to meet itself more directly, the
person cannot get through the defences, the resistances.
In fact just prior to exploring the dream more directly Leon had
this following dream, showing graphically the changing relationship
with fear. As can be seen, it illustrates not only his traditional
fears of the unconscious, which he now identifies with as his own
and therefore not as something attacking him externally, but his
new rational and investigative observations are shown as the modern
group.
I was a vampire or werewolf - actually the word lycanthrope was
one I was using in the dream - and I was also a group of people who
were going to catch or deal with this werewolf. As the werewolf I
was very traditional and bent on bringing gloom and terror into
people’s lives, injecting them with my ‘venom’. But as the group of
people I was completely opposite, very modern and technological. We
had no fear of the ‘lycanthrope’ at all. We surrounded it and
despite it trying to do its evil thing with us, we paralysed it
with electronic gadgets that affected its nervous system. We
weren’t bent on destroying it, just catching it.
Now back to being the werewolf. When these people didn’t flee in
terror at my evil posturing and snarling I was really upset. I wept
as I recalled my thousand years of creating havoc in communities
and in the lives of individuals. My tears were because it was sad
to see the passing of such wonderful superstition and its attendant
fears and terrors. I had loved the dark ages. I guess I was/am a
traditionalist.
As the group of people we wanted to use the ‘venom’ of the
lycanthrope. It was as if it had some genetic effect upon people.
So we injected some of it into adults and children. The result of
this was mostly seen in children in the dream. Small children were
now safe to allow to roam the streets of violent cities at night -
after all, who is going to attack a vampire or werewolf, even if
it’s a nipper? So the one-sidedness of the werewolf was now
balanced by human qualities, and vice versa.
In a humorous way the dream gives a graphic picture of Leon’s
changing relationship with his own unconscious. The last part about
the children being injected is very important in that it suggests
the vulnerable aspects of Leon’s inner life are now strong enough
to go into the dark without being hurt. So Leon is ready to expose
vulnerable parts of himself that before might well have been
unready to be revealed. To continue with his narrative of
exploration:-
I realise there is something I am looking for, and I don’t find
it in my wife, or at least I don’t sense it in her. It is a
frightening thing and partly exciting. This leads me on to
fantasising a struggle with a young woman. It is about wanting to
have sex, but seems to be some sort of power struggle. The image
was of a smart very confident and aggressive young woman. She was
attractive and attracted, but her approach was one of attack, so to
have a relationship I needed to fight her. What I appear to be
facing is that I have the sex drive, but what I am facing is a
monster. In fact I had the image of a huge spider that could come
out from hiding and drag me helpless into its lair, its many eyes
shining. I’m afraid.
It’s not that my sex drive abates, but within this fantasy you
have to time it just right. One must wait for the ‘beast’ to become
passive then dash in and plunge into the wonderful hairy cavity.
Otherwise the ‘beast’ will rip you apart. It is exactly like the
horror films one sees of the monster that drags men or women back
to its lair. It is actually all about my fear based on past
pain.
Leon is now facing his fear and is partly recognising this has
to do with childhood, and certainly connected with his relationship
with women. But as can be seen, although the feelings are strong
and real, it is still couched in powerful symbols. He presses on
and his fear switches to aggression. This is an incredibly
important swing. Unless the aggression emerges the fear often
remains a paralysing force, and the person remains in symbols. In a
real sense, the fear hides the aggression. When the aggression is
released the person can move into the next level of experience.
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