Puer Jungian psychology - The one thing dreaded by such a PERSON is to be bound to anything whatever
Puer Jungian psychology
The one thing dreaded by such a PERSON is to be bound to anything whatever
"For
the time being one is doing this or that... it is not yet what is
really wanted, and there is always the fantasy that sometime in the
future the real thing will come about.... The one thing dreaded
throughout by such a type of PERSON is to be bound to anything whatever."
"Common
symptoms of puer psychology are dreams of an imprisonment and similar
imagery: chains, bars, cages, entrapment, bondage. Life itself...is
experienced as a prison."
Swiss psychiatrist Carl Gustav Jung developed a school of thought called analytical psychology, distinguishing it from the psychoanalysis of Sigmund Freud (1856–1939). In analytical psychology (often called "Jungian psychology") the puer aeternus is an example of what Jung called an archetype, one of the "primordial, structural elements of the human psyche".
The shadow of the puer is the senex (Latin for "old man"), associated with the god Cronus—disciplined, controlled, responsible, rational, ordered. Conversely, the shadow of the senex is the puer, related to Hermes or Dionysus—unbounded instinct, disorder, intoxication, whimsy.
Like all archetypes, the puer is bi-polar, exhibiting both a "positive" and a "negative" aspect. The "positive" side of the puer
appears as the Divine Child who symbolizes newness, potential for
growth, hope for the future. He also foreshadows the hero that he
sometimes becomes (e.g. Heracles).
The "negative" side is the child-man who refuses to grow up and meet
the challenges of life face on, waiting instead for his ship to come in
and solve all his problems.
When the subject is a female the Latin term is puella aeterna, imaged in mythology as the Kore (Greek for "maiden").[6] One might also speak of a puer animus when describing the masculine side of the female psyche, or a puella anima when speaking of a man's inner feminine component.