the passion flower

 

 

The passion flower, in Latin: Passiflora incarnata, is a beautiful flower to photograph on a sunny Sunday afternoon. Passio whose name Passiflora is derived means suffering, Flos flower. The missionaries from Spain, arriving in South America, see in the flower the symbolism of Christ's suffering. His agony is also called "the Passion" . The ten green leaves, on the back of the stalk towards the three pedigrees, would symbolize the ten apostles. The missionaries had already written off Judas and Peter for convenience. The three dark, wine-red pistils represent the three nails with which their Messiah was nailed to the cross. It is and of course remains a very beautiful flower that has been blooming on my balcony for years at the beginning of the summer.

the watchman

 

 

The moon, the watcher over the submanic mirror of sunlight in the dark night in an earthly hemisphere. Here she looks through the clouds, like an eye between the eyelids. The clouds are the veils that conceal the truth. In this picture she can be seen in her form as a supermoon, a full moon, which is brighter than usual. Her influence here is greatest. So it activates your yin powers, your female creativity, while here your yang energy is in its all or nothing phase. The moon symbolizes the cyclical change, renewal and rebirth, as a necessary and natural given in our spiritual path. The full moon makes emotions stronger, it's a moment for inner maneuvering and clearing, letting go. It is time to be forgiven and grateful, with what is there.

Birds

As you've probably seen, there are some photos of birds on the different pages of this blog. It seems nice to me today to tell a little more about the symbolism and spiritual significance of birds. Birds often fly and migrate, in other words they travel. Travel is to look around and discover and record what you experience. New, other incentives often come in clearer.

Of course, the symbolism and spiritual significance of birds varies by age and area, so by culture. In ancient Egypt, for example, the bird symbolized the soul. In general, the birds symbolize messengers and enlightenment, by flying in the sky, along the sky. They are also a symbol of freedom and transcendence. Freedom and thus being able to let go of earthly worries. They remind us of letting go and having faith in the natural course of life. After all, they rely on hard long journeys in bird migration to arrive in one piece at the destination.

In many places and in all kinds of times people believed that the birds act as mediators between the higher powers and themselves. Birds therefore represent communicating with your higher self, your spiritual consciousness. Not rarely birds are seen as spiritual guides. For example, the sea eagle with its white head and black body, is a spiritual guide and also represents rebirth and transformation. The sea eagle appears to those who are struggling and at the uncertain beginning of their spiritual path to give their courage and inspiration. Rebirth or transformation is like an egg that hatches, a new beginning or a new life.

For the spiritual significance of some birds in particular, I would like to refer you to the texts under the photos on the other page.

archetype II

Last time I wrote that the experiences in my relationship to the three most important women in my life, at least it has long looked like they were, actually a product and a result of a archetype And that there may be a lot of men with similar experiences. The word archetype originates from the ancient Greek, where "arche" means "old" or "original" or "type" of "s" or "model" or "model" is an old pattern. What exactly is an archetype and how could it be so powerful?

Especially pioneer, founder and scientist in contemporary psychology Carl Gustaf Jung has studied and tried to describe this, based among other things on experiences with many patients in his forty-year analytical practice in Switzerland. According to Jung who has also compiled a huge private library with all kinds of manuscripts and portfolios, an archetype is part of a structure, also called the collective unconscious, an a priori, so to speak, within which it facilitates the possibility of an image. Think of Plato's cave. That image can bring and evoke intense emotions. Often this happens as a compensation for a unilateral psychological activity with the aim of correcting it. This happens regardless of the human will, as long as the latter already has a chance.

In dreams, myths and fairy tales, old patterns occur independently of time, place, culture and race. There is evidence that there have been developments throughout the world in different times and continents, which could not have taken place apart from each other, as there was no Internet linking the whole world 2000 years ago. There was something else, the collective unconscious, that has developed and expanded over the years and centuries. It's our psychic legacy as humanity. The archetypes, which are part of the same subconscious, are empty molds, which can be filled with an image and then live and are usually projected outside of their own psyche. A good example is the anima, the female soul of the man (animus with the woman) that he projects young on his mother and later often on other women around him. This can get quite out of hand when this leads to the idealization of a woman, for example, who has provoked an intense interest in her, also called being in love. She consequently gets an enchanting, attractive, fascinating, but at the same time terrifying greatness, as if she were a queen, a goddess, which, however, often turns into the opposite. The mould then flows full of images related to the idea, resulting in emotions and experiences and for true experiences, which can reinforce each other. An obsession is born, but with it also a dependence and an addiction.

In dreams, myths and fairy tales, old patterns occur independently of time, place, culture and race. There is evidence that there have been developments throughout the world in different times and continents, which could not have taken place apart from each other, as there was no Internet linking the whole world 2000 years ago. There was something else, the collective unconscious, that has developed and expanded over the years and centuries. It's our psychic legacy as humanity. The archetypes, which are part of the same subconscious, are empty molds, which can be filled with an image and then live and are usually projected outside of their own psyche. A good example is the anima, the female soul of the man (animus with the woman) that he projects young on his mother and later often on other women around him. This can get quite out of hand when this leads to the idealization of a woman, for example, who has provoked an intense interest in her, also called being in love. She consequently gets an enchanting, attractive, fascinating, but at the same time terrifying greatness, as if she were a queen, a goddess, which, however, often turns into the opposite. The mould then flows full of images related to the idea, resulting in emotions and experiences and for true experiences, which can reinforce each other. An obsession is born, but with it also a dependence and an addiction.