Struggling to find meaning in the material world? Explore how Carl Jung used Gnostic myths and the Red Book to transform inner shadows into light.

Until you make the unconscious conscious, it will direct your life and you will call it fate. Gnosis is self-awareness: the more you understand the forces shaping you, the less power they have to push you around.
Creato da alumni della Columbia University a San Francisco
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Creato da alumni della Columbia University a San Francisco

Lena: I was looking at an old sketch of a serpent with a lion’s head and a golden halo recently, and it felt less like art and more like a hidden map of a very intense dream. It’s wild to think that Carl Jung was actually living out these ancient, "heretical" myths in his own house, hearing ghostly bells ring while spirits supposedly crowded his hallway.
Miles: Right, it’s like he stepped into a cosmic tapestry where the lines between psychology and magic just vanished. He didn't just study Gnosticism; he felt he’d found a "circle of friends" who finally understood his own descent into the unconscious—what he called his *Nekyia*.
Lena: It’s fascinating how he saw the "Luciferian" element not as a villain, but as a Promethean light-bringer, a spark of rebellion that actually wakes us up from the "material prison" of the everyday.
Miles: Exactly, he saw the figure of Abraxas as this terrifying, beautiful power that we shouldn't worship, but shouldn't flee from either. So let’s dive into how Jung’s secret *Red Book* revelations turned these ancient shadows into a modern path for finding the inner light.