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How do I confront my unconscious like Jung did in the "Red Book"? Was it the unconscious or was it demons and spirits, or is there no difference between the two? Was he just insane?
>>40630079 (OP)I think putting it all under umbrella of "unconscious" is reductionism, very jewish. It's used as a tactic to sweep inconvenient truths of our reality/world under the rug, like how there are demons/entities manipulating our thoughts, our world, our reality, its hierarchies and so on. This entire field was invented as a means of propaganda, since it spawned TVs (also a tool for propaganda, i.e. mind control)
>How do I confront my unconscious like Jung?
Start small. Active imagination needs discipline; meditate, journal, or visualize a figure from a dream and talk to it. Don’t expect instant Gandalf-tier visions. It’s a slow burn, and you need to stay grounded to avoid getting lost in the sauce. Therapy or a guide helps, too.
>Unconscious, demons, spirits, or no difference?
There’s a difference if you’re a Jungian. The unconscious is the source; demons and spirits are cultural projections onto it. Jung saw them as metaphors for psychic forces, not literal ghosts.
>>40630079 (OP)Stare at a mirror inside of a lucid dream
Dude, Jung was a prophet of the unconscious. He was born to speak about it to us. Jung's journey and purpose is unlike anyone's. His life was devoted to this shit since he was a kid. Countless hours of study, analysis. The Red Book is not something to get into. Just find a Jungian analyst and give them thousands of dollars a month for multiple weekly sessions for the rest of your life and be dedicated to connecting with the unconscious.
Jung was an infp or infj, mystic healer archetype