Through a Jungian Lens

Blending Jungian Psychology and Photography

Crossing the River

with 6 comments

dsc05724Walking down a dirt trail heading out from the south-western edge of the small village about three kilometres from my villa, I went in search of birds.  The trail is rough and follows along the shore of the estuary or laguna.  This day I decided to go further west past the narrow highway that leads to Mérida, down the dirt road that used to be the route to Sisal further west down the Yucatan coast.  I knew that I was going to come across the bridge that was damaged during one of the last hurricanes in this area and I assumed that it would prevent me from linking to the west shore.  Well, as you can see in this photo, vehicles could never make it across.  This was the best part of the remains.  In two different spots I was reduced to using broken pieces of the bridge as stepping stones in order to make it across.  And, I did make it across the river that joins the sea with the estuary that covers most of the coastal area of the Yucatan.

Crossing a river.  In Jungian psychology, crossing the river is symbolic of transformation.

By crossing the river the hero achieves the critical degree of consciousness necessary to confront and assimilate the power of the unconscious … Jung also recognized a danger in not “fording the stream of unconsciousness … (Women and Sacrifice, William Beers)

Now, this explains the need to take this photo and to bring it here.  The alchemical work that is in progress while I am in Mexico is being flooded with so many images that it makes sense to me that it is all about change.  I don’t know if that is good or bad in terms of where I have been and where I am going.  Looking at this image I get a feeling that the transformation is not necessarily going to be gentle.  The journey looks to be rough and solitary.  But then again, the journey of individuation is precisely that, rough and solitary.  It can’t be any other way.  So I wait and wonder what when will the hurricane strike opening up a singular route for me to follow.

6 Responses to 'Crossing the River'

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  1. La photo est belle et je crois moi aussi que l’on franchit des rivières plus ou moins tumultueuses et que c’est ainsi, de rives en rives que la lente transmutation s’opère. Amitiés.

    ariaga

    25 Mar 09 at 9:35 AM

  2. Merci, Ariaga, pour tes pensées si bien exprimé. Bises.

    retiredeagle

    25 Mar 09 at 9:39 AM

  3. anything but stagnation!

    viv66

    26 Mar 09 at 4:09 AM

  4. From the photo the road to follow looks quite clear. It’s just the ‘obstacles’ on the road – The wet slippery surface, the rocky uneven surface, the vast expanses of water on either side. Perhaps the direction is obvious, but needs careful yet surefootedness,(is that a word?) awareness and observation.

    writeandcreate

    26 Mar 09 at 4:53 AM

  5. It doesn’t appear that stagnation is a choice. If it ever was a choice, the path away from it was chosen long ago.

    retiredeagle

    26 Mar 09 at 8:10 AM

  6. The road is clear in a sense. There are boundaries to one’s journey, forks in the road where choice needs to be made whether consciously or unconsciously.

    retiredeagle

    26 Mar 09 at 8:13 AM

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