Speranza
He: Understanding Masculine Psychology (Perennial Library)
[Paperback]
Robert A. Johnson
He, by Robert A. Johnson
A
fascinating discussion of the male maturation process, using the story of
Parsifal and Jungian concepts.
“
The writer has a gift of explaining abstract concepts in lay language.
”
This small
book actually began with 10 lectures given by Robert Johnson at an Episcopal
Church.
Thus they are concise and do not offer a broad array of examples.
We found the book to be excellent and found it much more to the point that Emma
Jung's long study of the Holy Grail myth in all it permutations.
Of
course, as a Jungian, Johnson sees mythology as reflecting underlying
psychological and spiritual processes that take place in the human psyche.
These
myths are spontaneous images from the unconscious and contain both psychological
and spiritual truths.
Myths allow the interaction of archetypes, which are
patterns of life that are universally true for humans. Myths are to mankind as
dreams are to an individual.
Therefore a dream shows the dreamer a truth about
themselves whereas the myth shows mankind a truth that applies to all of
us.
Individuation is a process that Jung describes as a life long
movement toward wholeness and completion. It involves the life long expansion of
consciousness and the ability of the conscious ego or personality to reflect the
total self.
One interpretation of Jesus Christ is that of a man who has been
able to allow the unconscious to fill up the self and be always present in the
personality. Because God the Father moves through and emerges in the world
through the human unconsious, Christ may say that he and the Father are
one.
A primary first step in the individuation process is the
confrontation with the Shadow. Actually the confrontation with various aspects
of the Shadow continue throughout a lifetime, but the first encounter is usually
of great psychological power.
The negative repressed side of the personality,
that longs for acceptance and integration, continually follows the ego until the
strength is mustered to face the shadow, accept the shadow, and then integrate
the shadow into the personality which increases the energy and strength of the
personality/psyche because energy is no longer used to suppress the
shadow.
After the shadow is integrated, many people then may develop to
the point where they can integrate the anima/animus, which is the
characteristics of the opposite sex into their more complete psyche.
*****************************************
It is here
that Johnson points out the Parsifal and
his quest for the Holy Grail is in fact a
myth of the
male reconciliation with the anima who becomes a
guide and leads him
to the Grail.
*****************
Here Emma Jung and Robert Johnson would have slightly
different interpretations of the Holy Grail myth.
Whereas both see the anima as
being essential to reaching the Grail, Johnson believes the integration of the
feminine, the Anima, is a major and tricky task for young men.
Also, whereas
Emma Jung saw the grail as serving mankind as an expanded consciousness through
which much psychic material may now flow; Johnson sees that the grail serves
mankind through and expanded consciousness but also serves God because it is
through this expanded consciousness that God flows into human interactions and
becomes real and active in the world. This is a philosophical and theological
issue of great importance.
The first question is: Is God an active participant
in the world and in the lives of men? Johnson goes beyond Deism, which would
acknowledge God acting through nature, and would assert that God acts through
the unconscious of mankind and it is through expanded and integrated
consciousness that God becomes real in the world of men.
Thus the Grail, the
symbol of the accessible unconscious, serves man and God. This is the key to
both Emma Jung's and Robert Johnson's work. She would emphasize that the Grail
serves man and Johnson would emphasize that the Grail serves God, but both would
acknowledge that the Grail serves both.
This is the point of Johnson's book but
he takes you down many fruitful trails to reach this point.
We will point out
some of these paths:
The Fisher King (Amfortas) has wounds (in the testicles) so severe that he cannot
live, yet he is incapable of dying.
The kingdom is dependent on the virility and
power of its rule.
As an adolescent, the Fisher King is burned on the fingers
when he tries to eat hot broiled Salmon.
He touches the divine part of his own
unconscious but it is too hot for his consciousness to handle.
He touches his
individuation but can not hold it.
His life becomes barren, his wound in the testicle never
heals, and he can not cure himself even though he and the Grail are in the same
castle.
The fool must come to cure the king.
Parsifal is the holy fool,
the innocent, who emerges from the forrest nieve and full of creative
possibilities.
He is entraced by the knights and longs to become one.
He must
break with his poor heartbroken mother, Heartsorrow, on his journey to be a man.
All men must be somewhat disloyal to their mother on the path to manhood and
toward individuation.
His first quest is to fight the Red Knight and gain his
armour.
He kills the Red Knight and thus takes on masculine power,
courage and
virility.
However when he gets on the Red Knights' horse, he can't steer or stop
it but must let it run its course.
This is the symbol of a young man's first
forray into the world of power where forces can be let loose which no one can
control.
Johnson points out that a boy gets his red Knight armour by taking it
from someone else.
This is the way of young male competetion.
But a man must not
carry the young male competitiveness throughout life, he must move beyond the
Red Knight.
A young male moves beyond the red Knight when he learns to master
his own aggression.
So every young man must defeat the Red Knight, take on the
armour of power, aggression, virility, strength, courage, but must also not let
these attributes consume the entire psyche.
Parsifal gets a mentor
-- Gournamond -- who teaches him chivalry and the skills of knighthood.
He also tell Parsifal
that he must seek the Holy Grail, the ture vocation of all knights, that he must
not seduce or be seduced by a woman, and that he must ask "Whom does the Grail
serve?" at the right moment in the castle of the Fisher King.
There are
many women in the story who play various aspects of the Anima, but it is White
Flower and the Ugly Hag (whose veil Perceval pierces) who play critical roles as the positive and negative
anima, each with a part to play.
The book ends with a really good
explanation of why the Holy Grail serves the Grail King (God) and also serves
Parsifal. Parsifal asks the question and the Fisher King is healed immediately,
he becomes whole.
But God now has a path, a window, into the world of Man and
thus the Grail ultimately served God's purposes.
Even though this interpretation
of the Holy Grail story is more Christian in interpretation than that of Emma
Jung, both are fantastic and insightful reading.
A very pleasant and
quite interesting little book analyzing the story of parsifal and the castle of
the grail through the lens of male psychology.
Though it's treatment of the
mythological story seems quite conscise it seems to fail to really bind this and
it's psychological interpretations to any tangible real world experience of my
male psyche. In a way it is to abstract, not tying things back to reality.
Thus it offered so far (finished it a few hours ago) no real insights or
answers.
How many questions and different ways to look at things and approaches
to take as well as those experiences of catching your inner world tricking you
it will induce will have to be seen.
All in all at 80 pages and it's small
format a very pleasant and worthwile read.
A note about another reviewer's
complaint about it being heavy on preachy christianism. I am normally quite
allergic to christian preachyness in 'unrelated' books like these. And though I
have noticed slight hints thereof, it is by no way as bad as the reviewer makes
it look like.
Robert Johnson
is a life changer. I have read everything he has done several times. HE and SHE
should be a required read for everyone.
I recommend you read the book on your
own sex first so that you become familiar with Johnson's style before prying
into the opposite sex's mind. :)
If you find some of the other self help books
too trite and not very thought provoking, Robert Johnson is for you!
an
eye opener for those who are willing to look deep inside, could not put down the
book. Very thought provoking.
You know the saying that the best gifts come in
small packages? Well this is very true about this book. In fact many of his
books. Read more
Myths and legends form powerful expressions of our
humanity. It would seem that the most enduring of them are likely so powerful
because they tap into some elemental truth of our... Read more
The mythic adventure of
the hero
I have enjoyed Robert A Johnson's other books -- She: Understanding
Feminine Psychology; Inner work: Using active imagination; and Owning your own
shadow. Read more
Published 16 months ago by Cammy P
5.0 out of 5 stars
Insightful
As a 30 year old male this is one of the simplest and best
self-help books I've read.
Not that its a problem but a lot of other self
help is steeped within the... Read more
3.0 out of 5 stars Understanding happiness muddled by occasional
religious blather
I found the basic teaching of this book about happiness
enlightening. Understanding we cannot find or pursue happiness. We simply choose
happiness by living in the "happening. Read more
Published 19 months ago by
anon
5.0 out of 5 stars He - Understanding Masculine Psychology
Robert
Johnson's review of masculinity in this book is critical to any person pursuing
a transformation of their masculinity.
Published 20 months ago by
San Francisco Therapy
4.0 out of 5 stars Short but Provocative Read
I
found this very brief book quite provocative.
Some of the myth's metaphors are
well-explained while others are only mentioned in passing. Read more
Published on January 10, 2011 by T. R. Corcoran
2.0 out of 5 stars At
least it's short
This book doesn't speak to me at all. I agree with Robert A.
Johnson that legends and myths, as well as great works of literature, correspond
to the human condition--after all,... Read more
Published on September 19,
2010 by David Bonesteel
4.0 out of 5 stars Illuminating
The Arthurian
legend, the quest for the Holy Grail, and particularly that of the Knight
Parsifal, illustrate the patterns of male psychology, the journey we go through,
the twists... Read more
Published on July 18, 2009 by L. Power
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Customer Reviews
Wednesday, February 27, 2013
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