Rites of Passage
Rites of Passage
Rites of Passage
In times of Change the soul's first activity is reflection, reawakening lost connections to the transformative processes that are continuously influencing all forms of life and shaping new mythologies that create change in our diverse world.
Rites of Passage
Using I Ching as an Entrance to the Symbolic Life
29:30 Ghost River and Bright Omens shows how the fundamental powers of Fire and Water establish the Inner Axis of Change, recharging our existence with meaning and energy by redeeming the Ancestral images.
Rites of Passage
Rites of Passage
The purpose of this Retreat/Workshop is to introduce you to a way to use I Ching, the Easts oldest and most sophisticated system of wisdom or healing divination, as an entrance to the Symbolic Life and the deep ecology of the psyche. It provides teaching, direct experience, ritual work, new incisive and image-rich translations and an online library and consultation service you can use to continue your learning process. You see, man is in need of a Symbolic Life badly in need. Only the Symbolic Life can express the need of the soul the daily need of the soul, mind you! And because people have no such thing, they can never step out of this mill this awful, grinding, banal life in which they are nothing but. We have no symbolic existence in which we are something else, in which we are fulfilling our role as one of the actors in the divine drama of life. That gives peace, when people feel that they are living the Symbolic Life, that they are actors in the divine drama. It expresses the desire of the soul, the actual facts of our unconscious life. For the Symbolic Life is one of the most essential manifestations of the human mind. It is an experience, not an opinion, an experience nothing can take it away from you. And it means more than the whole world, because it makes sense. C. G. Jung, from The Symbolic Life, CW 18 608- 696.
Phase I: Teaching about the Change gives you ideas and insights that help your mind cooperate in the work of transformation. A simple Water ritual empowers your ability to do a locating divination that situates you in the Matrix of Change that models the shape of the Symbolic Life. Phase II: A Water initiation ritual takes you into the process of working with the symbolic passages you must make. The Night Fires Ritual will let you locate and clear the basic thought patterns and embedded memories that keep you cut off from ancestral energies. Phase III: The Paper Horse ceremony takes your needs and prayers to the ancestors. A continuing online seminar will help you process and assimilate the healing dreams and images that grow out of the process.
Rites of Passage
Rites of Passage
Xiang/symbol means: to imagine, represent, figure, image, resemble, model, paint, depict, imitate, take something as a rule or model. It means interpreters, the act of interpreting or mediating and a special ritual site the Pheasant Gate dedicated to exposition of rites and rules. Xiang/symbol is used to describe all the various figures of I Ching as models for the possible modes of manifestation. Da xiang, the Great Symbol, is the Way or Dao itself; a xiang-lung or elephant-dragon is a Buddha or Bodhisattva. The character xiang (classical form above and old form below) literally refers to the elephant and the Elephant Mind as an inner thesaurus of all possible symbols and modes of symbolizing activity. A xiang/symbol is an emblem or metaphor, a bright omen or intermediary at the frontier between the visible and the invisible. It is the self-presentation or self display of all beings, a spontaneous expression of their inner form as a signifying evocation of the on-going process of the real or Way that constellates synchronistic fields as it enters psychic awareness. Jung felt that the symbols from I Ching, symbols that traced the course of the valley spirit, the tao, winding like a dragon or a river (CW14, 636n), were an answer to the West's spiritual needs and a sign that we are finally beginning to relate to the alien elements in ourselves (CW13, 72). Thus he insisted that "psychology in the stricter sense is bound up with the whole practical use of the I Ching (C.G. Jung, Briefe, Erste Band, 1906-1945, pp. 182-83). This passage from Dazhuan: the Great Treatise (my translation) describes how we can use the figures of Change and their power of storing and discharging spirit. It links the hidden power of the Great Symbols to transform awareness with the ability to respond to life spontaneously and joyously.
Rites of Passage
strong and supple transform each other. Rules cannot confine this, for it follows only Change. It issues forth and re-enters in a stately dance, teaching caution within and without, illuminating the causes of trouble. It is not an army to protect you but a beloved parent who draws near. First follow the words and feel their place in your heart. Then you will have charge of the omens and their symbols. If you are unwilling to do this, the Way cannot open to you.
Rites of Passage
Rites of Passage
Jung remarked that the symbols that constitute the divine drama of our symbolic existence are religious ideas expressed in action as rites or ceremonies. The performance of these rites acts as a stepping-stone to new cultural activities; their aim is to make instinctive energy available for meaningful work and a productive life. In eastern terms, they help us accumulate de, the inner power and virtue to actualize the Way or Dao in and through our individual being and become who we are meant to be. Traditional cultures all over the world provided models of the various stages of life we pass through and, even more important, offered the rites or ceremonies that formally ended one stage and opened the gates to the new. We lack these Rites of Passage, the ritual experience of death, re-organization and re-birth that prepares us to enter a new path or way of life. Without this experience of death and contact with the land of the dead we cannot enter the new stage of life but remain fixed in past experiences and an outmoded, dysfunctional identity; we are not living up to what we are meant to be. In the system of the Decades the Change uses to model the course of the Symbolic Life (see Appendices) the stage of ritual education we are particularly concerned with is the crucial liminal zone between the Mission (7:8 position) of one Decade and the Gates of Change (1:2 position) that open the new stage of life. A healing divination enacted here shows you what passages and processes you must confront to re-enter the Symbolic Life on a higher level and be truly present in the situations you encounter. It lets you locate where you are held in a fixated past experience and what you can do to release the trapped energy.
Phase I: Separation
Rites of Passage
In the phase of separation, we are severed from the familiar and fall into the fertile darkness. This phase is opened by a Water Ritual that cleanses perception and opens the heart-mind, empowering the healing or locating divination.
Washing the Tokens portrays the opening of a secret place where the RiverMountain initiation begins and calling on its spirit forces. As the separation proceeds, the underworld forms of things present themselves. The symbols become strange attractors, inner whirlpools that draw our experience down into the turbulent and fertile chaos. Here hidden spirit operators begin to dissolve the old identity, releasing the numinous potential of the new.
Rites of Passage
The Ghost River, the dark river of fate that dissolves all structures carries the heroic identity that carried out the Mission of the stage of life that is ending to the threshold of the liminal zone.
The Queen Mother of the West, Lady of the Beasts and Queen of the Dead appears between the Twin Dragons that embody the Powers of Heaven and Earth.
The inner fire is kindled and the Loom of Change appears, presided over by the realizing power of Earth and the Dark Animal Goddess. This is where the locating divinations that reveal the steps of the passage take place.
Rites of Passage
The Lady of Fates who finds the hidden sickness and couples the beings with the new fate appears. The old identity is laid on the Earth Bed and dissolves, realizing the fixated forms of the past, the hidden drives, pain and rage.
As the dark dreams emerge, the penetrating power of the Lady of Fates releases the creative spirit energy trapped in each complex. New stories and images arise and circle, freeing the spirit from the old stories that have turned to prisons.
Rites of Passage
Entering the Water portrays the entrance to the River of Souls where we contact and open ourselves to the Ancestor spirits to ask for their blessings. We are deep in the subtle body here; the Mountain or Sacrificer stops the flow of time, focusing reflective power (moon rays) into the two energy channels, yang and yin, that run along the spine. This begins the process of stripping away the demons of the mind that trap us in past fixations.
The process is grounded in a Sacred Vessel that is the sign of a human sacrifice. Beneath it, the Rousing Thunder that will begin the new cycle links with the Mountain above to open the Tigers Mouth.
With the opening of the Tigers Mouth we are deep into the ritual education at the heart of Change. This is where the Ghost River, the dark stream of painful
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Rites of Passage
memories within each of us, our heritage of pain and rage, emerges from the depths and is purified. In the tradition of Change the inner corruption the Tiger eats away is represented by a particular hexagram.
U Let Corruption/Renovating show you ways to realize things. Confront the evil deeds done by parents that are manifested in their children. Search out the source of new growth within. Let the ongoing process of change release your hidden potential. It will turn the shock of inner enlightenment into an awareness of the patterns that mark real ends and beginnings.
Circle of Meanings
Perversion, decay, plague, pestilence; rotten, poisonous, defiled; corruption in inner Parental and Ancestral images, negative effects of parents on children; sexual infatuation, rage, pain, hallucination, mania; renew, renovate; name of the first day of a ritual period when decay is removed to support new growth. The old character shows insects or worms in rotting meat or grain, a sacrificial vessel and the Sacred Meal within it spoiled. Gu suggests hallucination, loss of reality, sexual debauch, the insects that appear in rotting or fermenting grain, miasma, sorcery and, most of all, the curse of the Ancestors, the false dreams and delusions they send when they are neglected or offended. It is the poisonous acts done by fathers and mothers that become manifest in their children, the negative and destructive emotions that that cluster around our inner experience of whatever Father and Mother have been for us. This emotional corruption colors our experience of things and can flash out in poisonous bursts of anger and despair, tying us in nets of helplessness, inadequacy and confusion.
In this phase we become postulants, taking things in rather than acting them out in order to truly learn the lessons of the past. The Lady of Fates guides the creative spark trapped in each fixation into an ancestral image, activating the animal powers of the psyche. The Dream Fox moves among them, re-collecting the scattered parts of the soul. New stories and images emerge, carrying the numinous potential of the new.
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Rites of Passage
As the Tiger reaches the center of the subtle body symbolized as the sign for harmonizing spirit flows freely, beginning an inner re-balancing of the yang and yin energies that, like two long separated brothers, reach out to embrace each other.
Night Fires
Night Fires is a nocturnal ritual that occurs at the crucial point in the Transition stage of a Rite of Passage. The Night Fire arises from the early Chinese character hidden in the family of classical characters that mean harmony or harmonizing. It represents a way to pacify or make peace in the soul that opens us to the Bright Omen that Heaven gave us as we entered this world. The ritual does this by making us aware of the thought demons that haunt our mind, the hidden patterns of past pain, sorrow rage and need, and the psychophysical roots embedded in the body that power them, the gu or inner corruption in our inner images of Mother and Father. During the ritual these hidden roots coalesce into the experience of the wounded child within each of us and we see the network of frozen memories that spread out from it. These are the engines of our compulsive behavior. They offer image of what the spirit-workers call our Sacred Sickness.
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Rites of Passage
The Night Fire ritual was literally a lighting of fires in the night and a fire sacrifice on the threshing floor after the harvest. Its purpose is to release the spirit of our disease, the deeply embodied cause of our suffering, to make peace with what afflicts us and keeps us trapped in the experience of the wounded child within us. The ritual process releases images from the literalization of the flesh, freeing the Bright Omen imprisoned in our embodied memories of pain and suffering. This is the healing of an ancestral wound, releasing the bright spirit from the Ghost River of past pain and integrating it into the Dream Body. The process begins deep in the psyche, at the place where body and psyche intertwine. At the critical moment of the inner process, when the yin and the yang come into balance and the Tiger has cleared the pathways through which spirit flows in the body, the animal powers begin to drum up the inner fires. The creative and inspiring force of the Dragon activates the ancestor spirit that lies behind our suffering, the spirit at the core of the wound, who sets the process in motion. The wounded child and the bright omen it carries are released from the dark and murky prisons of the past.
Called by the night fires, the spirit held in the sufferings of the past emerges onto the threshing floor of earth and constellates its Great Protector.
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Rites of Passage
The mind demons the patterns of suffering that influence and corrupt or thinking and feeling emerge on this inner field. The power of the fire enters the inner field as the rousing power of the High Ancestor who subjugates the Demon Country by cutting of the heads, cutting the connection between the thought patterns and the embodied clusters of pain and suffering that powers them.
Freed from the compulsive entanglements, intelligence trapped in the old patterns, rise presiding over the ritual the Queen Mother of Lady of the Beasts who has power over both activation of the animal powers of the psyche.
the scintillae, the sparks of and cluster around the figure the West, queen of the dead and the realm of the dead and the
They coalesce into a Bright Omen, sign of the radiance and clarity of our mind when it is cleared from the ghosts of the past. This Bright Omen reveals the hidden voice and image of our sickness, the being we are meant to be. It is the healing of the ancestral wound.
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Rites of Passage
This healing of the heart-mind releases a flow of invigorating strength into the psyche as a whole. It represents fully adult male power, a clearing and focusing of both thinking and feeling.
At the culmination of the Night Fires ritual we make a divination that can give this liberated spirit a voice. The question is: What does the voice of my sickness have to say to me now? This is an example of an answer given at this culminating point.
39 Limping/Difficulties JIAN
You confront many obstacles and feel afflicted by them. You are limping along and your circulation is impeded. See through the situation in a new way. Dont magnify your problems. Attack, lonely efforts and dwelling on the past wont help at all. Let go of being a hero. Join with others in view of future gains. See those who can help you realize what is Great in yourself. Let Limping be your inner guide. It will turn your struggle to manage events into an inner containment of fear and impulse.
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Rites of Passage
Circle of Meanings
Obstacles, afflictions; feeling hampered, overcome, exhausted, mentally oppressed; weak, crooked, unfortunate; let go of lonely striving, join with others, overcome difficulties by re-imagining the situation; honest, frank, strong, resistant; initiation, the goings and comings (wang lai) that prepare deliverance. The old character shows a person with an injured foot in a hut packed with grass or straw, the sealing of the houses in winter. Jian, limping invokes the culture hero Yu the Great, the Limping God who tamed the flood, created writing cast the first sacred vessels and opened the channels of the Water Way. It combines the meanings lame, limping, hobbled, difficulties, poverty and suffering with the meanings straight, honest and frank. The advice is progress not possible, stop and change your ideas. This is all imaged in the person of Yu, who established the divinatory Vessels, the Nine Ding, clearing communication with the spirit world, founding the Noble Houses and redeeming his father, the disgraced and executed Gun. The figure of Yu limps on through great difficulties, flowing like water, a sign of selfless toil and an enduring connection with the underworld reflected in the term that runs through this figure, wang lai, going and coming. It represents the Great Stream or river of time that flows through us, the past, the dead and the waters of the dead and the seed-symbols (shen and xiang) that flow towards us from Heaven. The shuffling movement backwards and forwards on the stream of time is the step of Yu used in many rituals. It represents the dynamic of Limping: bad influence going; seeds of good are coming. This change in our sense of time occurs through a shift in awareness represented by the change from northeast, which suggests the past and lonely striving, to the southwest, common effort and future good. This is the message of Yu the Great. It sets the stage for the deliverance to follow. This is an Inspiring Figure and a Nuclear or Core Theme of Change. It acts as a Transition from our struggle to found an individual dwelling, family and career to the stage of the Symbolic Life that confers higher levels of empowerment in culture and a new ritual status on the fully individualized being.
This balancing and re-connection activates the underworld power of an animal power called the Great Grey Rat who creates hidden channels through which the animal powers of the soul the Dream Animals- can emerge into awareness.
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Rites of Passage
The hidden creative spirit or Dragon power that has been released from the dark dreams and connected to ancestral images follows these Dream Animals as they emerge from the still center of the Mountain.
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Rites of Passage
Here in the Elephant Mind we contact the Source, the point where thought emerges, and experience the direct perception of the heart-mind. The Two Powers, Dragon and Dark Animal Goddess join in the mystery that Jung called synchronicity. We enter the Symbolic Life.
This is the place where all points in space-time are in touch with all other points. It links us to an invisible community and a line of Ancestors stretching back to the primal images.
This inner center gives symbolic ground to the endless round dance of the Dream Animals. It points at the change of heart that can occur as we entertain them and let them begin to educate us.
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Rites of Passage
As we circle around the ancestral center the joyous anima or soul connection to the new life is released.
We enter the new stage of life mounted and revitalized by the perception of the heart, led to the Gates of the new Decade or stage of life by the Joyous Dancer and her capacity to give the spirit a voice in the human community.
The Incorporation phase culminates in a Fire Ritual where our prepared spiritpapers are sent into the Fire to carry our prayers, wishes and offerings to the Ancestors who dwell at the heart of the Sacred Mountain.
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Rites of Passage
Fire Horses is a messenger that carries our prayers and our wish for Ancestral Blessings into the transforming fire. We gather into a new community of being where bright omens can emerge for all.
13:14 The Gathering and the Great Omen portrays the festivals that bring people together to meet incoming spirits and the Great Being that emerges from them through whom blessings will flow. It is the time when the power of the Dragon releases Bright Omens to guide peoples lives.
U Let Providing for give you ways to realize things. Accumulate resources so you can respond joyously and spontaneously to life when the real call comes. Let go of lonely striving and prepare the decisive new move. It will turn self restraint into a liberating awareness of the whole.
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Rites of Passage
Circle of Meanings
Arrange for, make ready, collect what you need to meet the future; enthusiasm, a spontaneous and direct response to a call; enjoy, take pleasure in; connection to the Elephant, an Animal Ancestor that opens the mind of the Great Symbols that shape and transform our experience. The name of this figure, yu/providing, evokes the culture founder Yu the Great. It centers on building up the ability to respond directly, joyously, spontaneously and effectively to any situation, gathering reserves of energy and grace into a store of power and virtue (de) from which you can respond without thought. This sort of training is used in the martial arts and many performing arts, a kind of sub-cortical patterning whereby a corrected or straightened response becomes simultaneous with stimulus, bypassing cerebral systems of rational choice. This ability to respond directly and correctly allows you to enjoy the moment, to take pleasure in life. It suggests the sets of great bronze bells that were used to wake the earth in spring and harmonize the reviving forces. The process is imaged as a child riding on an Elephant, combining spontaneity with great power and grace in an emblem of the paradise state prior to the restrictions of culture. The elephant was an omen animal used to mean symbol (xiang). As an emblem of the Shang Dynasty, it also shows how we can make use of the past, turning it into a symbol. The figure is part of the Secret Sickness pathways that link personal and cultural disorders, circulating our suffering through a long term healing process.
The character yu/providing-for is made up of the graph for elephant (right) with a child riding on top and the graph for the spindle/shuttle of a loom (left) whose endless going and coming (wanglai) evokes and weaves together the passages between life and death, dark and light, male and female. The spindle graph is in turn made up of the sign for wood, thus spring, the east and rousing new growth and a sign for a frontier place where things are exchanged between the center and all that is outside, foreign, barbarian or excluded. It is a place or rite of passage.
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The endless shuttling of the spindle, the mind moving back and forth between the polarized opposites of our usual lives, accumulates symbolic awareness, drawing it out of normal experience and feeding it to the hidden creative spirit of the Elephant Mind. This is a surrender or deconstruction of the drive toward rational meaning and heroic striving. It opens a space where the heart meanings of the symbols and their transformative energy can arise freely and spontaneously. In the words of Dazhuan: The Great Treatise: By using the symbols Sage People saw all the spirit forces in the world we live in. The symbols determine form and appearances and connect all things. That is why they are called symbols. One yin, one yang, this is the Way. These words call out to you. The underlying mysteries, the numinous situations that run through everything in the world we live in are completely presented in these symbols. One yin, one yang, this is the Way. To follow this tells you what is good. To identify with it shows you what is essential. If you want to be benevolent, call it benevolence. If you want to be wise, call it wisdom. People use this every day without knowing it. Using it to realize yourself is what is rare. It is the gift of life. One yin, one yang, this is the Way. As the birth of all births, this Way is called Change. Change is made of symbols. The light of the spirits exists in the Sage People
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who set out the Change and in the Change they used to silently complete the Way of Heaven. One yin, one yang, this is the Way. This unspoken trust carries and supports us As we strive for the power and virtue To become who we are meant to be. Dazhuan: the Great Treatise, 1.5, 1.12 (my translation)
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