THE ARCHETYPE OF THE
CHILD: LORANE, FUTURE TENSE
Today, as
part of our promotion of “Youth Tube”, the Plum Tree’s newest and most exciting
page, I give you, as well as I can recall, my thoughts, feelings and hopes for
the future, as I knew them through the eyes and ears of the five year old named
Lorraine. (Her name change would present
in adolescence, turbulent years, to L-O-R-A-N-E.)
One of the
arrows in the quiver used by Dr. Carl Jung in the early parts of the 20th
century - while he was hard at work healing the mentally ill – was the
“archetype”. (His work was hard because,
unlike his contemporaries who believed in repressing unpleasant thoughts, Jung’s philosophy was expressed,
“if you want to understand the jungle, you can’t be content just to sail back
and forth near the shore. You’ve got to
get into it, no matter how strange and frightening it may seem.” Thus the
ARCHETYPE was in essence part of the arsenal he used in his ongoing battle with
the ghosts that haunted his patients.)
An ‘archetype’
has no form of its own, but acts as an “organizing principle” on the things we
see or do. It’s like a black hole in
space: you only know its there by how it draws matter in life to itself. In deference to YouthTube, I selected the
archetype of the Child as the engine that will drive this recollected olio of childhood
experience. Additionally, as the Child ARCHETYPE usually works in
concert with other archetypes, blending with them to form a ‘child-god’, I
shall include my relevant partner archetypes.
The cohorts that seemed best to ‘hang with’ my childhood as archetypal
‘pals’ were the Persona and the Hero.
CAST OF CHARACTERS
Persona represents public image. The word is related to the words ‘person’ and
‘personality’, coming from the Latin word for mask. (Worked deliciously
well for this kid - schooled in ‘Latin-esque Catholicism’ and branded
“masque-and-bauble” from the first
read-through of‘This is Your Life’.) My persona was the mask I donned before
showing myself to the world.
Although it began as an archetype, by the time I’d finished ‘realizing’ it, it
was the part of me most distant from the
spiritual level of consciousness.
At its best, it was just the ‘public
impression’ I wished to present as I filled the roles society required of me. At its worst, as it can be mistaken even by
its owner for our true nature: at
times, I believed I really was what I
pretended to be! What price ‘mistakes’?
And now, the
archetypal star in my show – the Child. In mythology and art the child is represented as children, infants most
especially, as well as other small creatures.
The Christ child celebrated at Christmas is a manifestation of the Child
Archetype, and represents the future, becoming, rebirth, and salvation. Curiously, Christmas falls during the winter
solstice, which in northern primitive cultures also represents the future and
rebirth. People used to light bonfires
and perform ceremonies to encourage the sun’s return to them. My childhood in Brooklyn
seemed one long winter solstice. I
daresay, although we annually burned Casey Stengel in effigy, bonfires were
discouraged in the city. Ceremonies, on
the other hand, were part and parcel of my fantasy life. This is not to say I was a ritualistic
child. Rather, I embraced any occasion
that I could bless or celebrate with dramatic, ceremonial flair.
SETTING
Jung placed ‘the child (including
the child hero)’ in a list of archetypes incorporating the ‘chief among them .
. .’. (Color me like Sara Bernhard,
squandering preciously-tossed/blown kisses to the now-standing masses in the
dark, regally executing a third curtain call.)
Jungians exploring the hero myth have repeatedly noted that ‘over and
over again one hears a tale describing hero’s miraculous but humble birth’. What need, you may ask, masks the
‘stage-struck’? What compelling force of
nature marks special humans, setting them apart for life?
THEMATIC SUB-PLOT BY LORANE
I’d always
had imaginary companions – Gene Autry a strange bedfellow among them – and even
imaginary parents. This last was in no
way a transparent rejection of my God-given set. Rather, I was ever intrigued by the Gypsies
that, as a matter of course, inhabited sundry storefronts on our neighborhood’s
main avenues. Whereas, friends I was to
make later in life spoke of ‘window shopping’ on Main Street or Fifth Ave,
admiring/lusting after the latest season’s offerings in fashion and toys, I
would regale them with enactments of ‘window-peering’, that is, straining, nose
pressed against windows last washed during “the Big One”, to get a better
gander at the even darker, shadowy outlines of the women and children of this
or that ‘Gypsy Family’.
Their eyes
had a piercing/arrogant yet enticing glow – with festively-‘painted’ sloe-shaped
scrims and exaggerated black, elongated lashes sending ‘Morse-messages’ with
their languidly open/shut activity.
Mysteriously back-lit vivid colors would break the lighting barrier,
enhanced/aided by the glittering, reflective metallics of large hoop earrings
and chain belting – sporting an occasional bell or a menacing talisman – now
draping, now cinching the exotic materials that, sans under-trappings, swayed
and spun, Salome-eat-your-heart-out. And
I recalled, during one of these ‘peerings’, posing a question to myself. I was moved to wonder, “What if I’m not me?”
Who might I
have been yesterday? Will I be a family
member in France ,
during the Renaissance, tomorrow? How long
might this have been going on? Will it
always be thus? To label these thoughts
‘odd’ is to trivialize what came to be my ‘way of being in the world’. It was therefore a natural transition to
amble from these musings into The Great Cattle Call – sung loudly by The
Seasoned Sirens that changed courses of lives from time immortal. I would
become of ‘the people of the theater’, that race of fanatics, the
lost/dedicated tribe known as ‘actors’.
I would assume heroic or villainous guises, loving the love of a
formerly bland, if not hostile world.
I innately
KNEW my goal was attainable: TO BE MYSELF AND YET BE SOMEBODY ELSE – all the
while loved for living this duality.
Relieved of any sense of guilt or confusion, I launched my thespian
life. If the essence of acting was the
Art of being somebody else, I could/would be the consummate artist. In keeping with the other attributes of the
Archetype of the Child – my humble birth, fierce survival instincts, child-like
longing for the innocent (regardless of age) – Jungians exploring this
archetype have considered that ‘it represents our efforts to deal with the
problem of growing up, aided by the illusion of an eternal fiction.
Thus, for
Jung, “the child is potential future”, with the archetype symbolizing the whole
personality in its development from primordial unconsciousness to ego
consciousness to self. Moreover, the
child Archetype has a central part to play in assuaging the fear of the loss of
connection with the past. Jung taught
that, in its retrospective aspect, ‘one of the functions of the child archetype
is to recall the experiences and emotions of childhood to the adult mind.
And it can
get better. Jung also allows as how in
its prospective role, ‘for Jung the child archetype was a living symbol of
future potentialities that bring balance, unity, and vitality to the conscious
personality’ – such that the ‘mythic’ child symbolizes the lifelong process of
psychological maturation. I’ll take it. Indeed, to even have ‘process’, there must be
some tension – in the form of
energy. From a negative purview, tension
– as in anxiety – leads to discomfiture, impedes progress. Thus far, most of my negative tension has
been contained in my personal unconscious, in dreams. It’s always a version of the same dream: Curtain going up, “Places!” and I either do
not have a script or have forgotten ALL of my lines.
I’ll take
that, too. My interpretation yields not
failure but the need for further development/growth. I’m simply not yet ready. We’ll call that: “Lorane, Present
Tense”. You’ve just heard – from Child
Lorane – “Lorane, Past Tense”. Don’t
know about you, but I wait in exhilarating anticipation for two VERY important
‘Child’ debuts – YouthTube on May 31, 2012 and Lorane, Future Tense”, TBA.
PS:
There
is always more to share. Rather like the
opportunity kids will have on YouTube: http://www.wix.com/niamhclune/youth-tube1#!home/mainPage/
I hope you enjoy my sharing of this anonymous find as much
as I did.
4 comments:
Wonderful post Lorane...a superb mix of informative material about Jung and his concepts, introducing them simply in terms understandable to those new to Jung and blending such with your personal journey. Thank you for this and for your support.
Oh, that child. I have one that refuses to be quiet. Thanks for the archetype discussion, Lorane!
I'm part of the blog hop, and I'm finally hopping over this way. Jung interests me a great deal. One day I hope to put my hands on a real life copy of his Red Book. The art looks amazing.
Your story reminded me of several things and felt a bit like a dream during a heavy afternoon nap. That's a good thing, by the way.
Glad you're part of the hop. Write on.
I've been caught...red-handed!
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