The Earth Has A Soul by Meredith Sabini
C G Jung on Nature, Technology and Life
Hi, I’m Sue and I write about the beauty and ingenuity of Nature, and how we can deepen our connection for our optimum health and wellbeing. Discover more Nature-inspired content on Spiral Leaf, Twitter and my video Nature Channel.
Growing up at the end of the nineteenth century, Carl Jung came to realise that the union of Nature and Spirit might offer to heal the disenchantment of the age. It was a time when philosophic connections were being broken apart by the new Darwinian science as 'religious belief systems were let loose from their moorings and drifted about in a sea of doubt.'
The consensus at the time was that science could take the place of divinity but Jung lamented this departure from reality, emphasising 'how important it is for us to remember what it is in the history of human kind we have lost.'
Jung's inclination to look at all sides of an issue became a life-long labour of love to discover the original unity of Nature with the spirits that reside within matter. His findings help us to understand the connection so that we can repair our wounded relationship with the natural world and challenge our limited conventional notions of what Nature is.
In this wonderful book, Earth Has A Soul, Meredith Sabini presents a rich selection of excerpts and quotes from Jung's publications, letters, interviews and speeches where he examines the natural mind informed by 'the accumulated wisdom of our species through our collective evolutionary experience.'
Jung was deeply concerned about the loss of our connection with Nature. He reminds us that Nature is not only matter but also spirit, and that by associating Nature with matter in a purely materialistic context, the profound emotional meaning of being human in this beautiful natural world is lost to us.
For Jung, the word 'matter' remains 'a dry, inhuman and purely intellectual concept' leading to a complete misunderstanding and depreciation of what it means to live a healthy, conscientious and fulfilling life on Earth.
Jung's appreciation for the Spirit of Nature started at a very young age. He remembers lying in a pram in the shadow of a tree with an 'indescribable feeling of wellbeing.' His mother's connection with 'animals, trees, mountains, meadows and running water' gave him 'a sense of security and the conviction that here was solid ground on which one could stand.'
Jung's profound connection with Nature continued throughout his life. He preferred to live in modest harmony on his land where he developed 'a feeling of kinship with all things.' He called his country place (the tower at Bollingen) his 'island of peace.' With no electricity or running water, Jung liked to light his lamps, pump water from the well, chop wood for the fire and cook his own food.
Jung travelled around the world to learn about native cultures. He found men 'still in full possession of their animal instincts with an ability to converse with their inner soul.' In contrast to the modern idea of man's psyche being the epitome of all that is subjective and subject to the will, native people saw it as something 'objective, self-subsistent and living it's own life.'
Jung observed that losing our spiritual values to one-sided rationalism resulted in a disintegration of moral tradition, and a worldwide disorientation and dissociation. We only have to look around us today to see how this forced disconnect from the hand that feeds us continues to have a devastating impact on our planet and our evolutionaory development in terms of human consciousness.
Without a relationship with Nature, our lives deteriorate into 'a pointless striving for material possessions' which reinforces a lack of individual responsibility. This disconnect between our spiritual selves and Natural Law is something that cannot be sustained in the long run.
The key message in this book is that if human lives are to account for anything, we need to 'realign human consciousness with the profound consciousness of Nature.' Only then will we achieve peace, health and fulfilment as we reconcile the conflict between our natural instincts and our cultural mind.
Jung proved that by living a more simple and natural life, we bring meaning and purpose into our lives. He shows us that when we allow Nature to affect us - to nourish and sustain us - we become whole again and we are healed.
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The Earth Has A Soul - C G Jung on Nature, Technology and Life by Meridith (British Isles)
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Thank you for reading and I look forward to seeing you again soon.
TYVM for sharing, Sue.
In 1959, Jung was asked by host John Freeman on the BBC interview program Face to Face whether he believed in God, to which Jung answered, "I do not need to believe. I know."
So many beautiful quotes from Jung on Nature I had not seen before.
I echo his thoughts completely. People think I'm joking when I say I grew up in a mimosa tree - but I'm not. Spent as much of my childhood in that tree that my parents would allow. And some of my closest friends are in fact trees.
We are in and of that same essence or spirit found in nature and the planet itself.
It's always the obvious we easily miss and of course we've been steered away from Nature intentionally. Thank you for this lovely post.