Astrological Musings

Astrological Musings

The astrology of Carl Jung and his Red Book: Part Two

posted by Lynn Hayes | 5:58am Wednesday September 23, 2009

by Lynn Hayes

Catch up with Part I here.

According to the article in the New York Times last Sunday, the unraveling of Jung’s psyche began in 1913, a period of time that coincides with the transit of Uranus over Jung’s ascendant, the point of personal identity.
Uranus is strong in Jung’s chart, since it forms a tight square to his Taurus Moon.  The Moon in the birthchart represents our emotional security, and in the fixed signs the emotional nature can be quite rigid and resist change to the breaking point.  The challenging square from Uranus, planet of sudden change and shock, to the Moon suggests an early shock to Jung’s sense of emotional security and an unpredictable relationship with his mother.  In fact, Jung’s mother spent a great deal of time alone, disconnected (Uranus) from the family and in contact with a variety of spirits and apparitions.  He later said that his concept with women was one of “innate reliability,” something that is echoed here in the square of Uranus to the Moon.  He also likely felt abandoned by his mother with Pluto in conjunction to his Moon in the natal chart. 
Jung’s study of psychology brought him into contact with Sigmund Freud, and the two had a close association for several years that ended in 1912 as Uranus made the first pass over his ascendant and opposing his Sun.  The Sun in the chart can represent one’s relationship to the father, and Freud was a father figure of sorts to Jung.  Uranus transiting in opposition to the Sun likely created a rebellious (Uranus) desire to forge his own way and express his own ideas (Sun).
Jung’s perilous descent into the dark land that straddles the conscious and subconscious between 1912 and 1917 has been called a “creative illness” by his biographers.  He retreated from public view, studying Gnostic writers and psychic phenomena.  He write, “It would be no exaggeration to all it a state of disorientation.  I felt totally suspended in mid-air.”  (Memories, Carl Jung.)  This is a very apt description of the experience of a Uranus transit, in which everything we know and hold on to may be turned upside down as our soul and psyche attempts to reveal the truth that lies within us.  At this stage Jung, having rejected the paradigms of religion and psychoanalysis, was left without a theological leg to stand on and had to make his own way through the darkness.  
The transit of Uranus over Jung’s ascendant set of a rebellion within him against his own identity (ascendant/Sun) but also set off the square to Neptune in his chart.  It’s no wonder that his subconscious became filled with dreams and fantastic images as the collective subconscious (Neptune at the nadir of the chart) exploded under the Uranian influence.  
Jung’s descent into creative madness culminated in December of 1913,  He had visions of falling into a hole in the earth in a shamanic experience that he later postulated was a sacrifice for the greater good (natal Sun square Neptune is the martyr or Christ figure).  At the time, transiting Jupiter was in an exact square to Jupiter in his chart which as we now know opposed Chiron exactly.  An opposition of Jupiter to Chiron in the natal chart suggests that the shamanic experience that Chiron provides facilitates the development of the construct of meaning for the individual (Jupiter).  There is a powerful inner connection to a deeper reality, and this can sometimes overcome the experience of material reality.  When Jupiter transited over this sensitive point, at the height of the Uranus cycle, Jung was liberated (Jupiter) from the boundaries of physical reality and freed to travel into the mysteries.
When we are in the middle of a transformational experience it can be so uncomfortable that we don’t recognize its value.  Later on, we often look back and say “what an amazing time that was.”  This is powerfully true for this experience of Jung’s.  Jung’s biographers have debated this period in his life for what is now nearly a century.  Some said that Jung was clairvoyant and predicted World War I.  Some say that Jung experienced temporary insanity.  Some say that Jung had a Christ complex and believed he was sacrificing himself for the good of humanity (again, Sun/Neptune).  
The astrological symbolism reveals something much more magical: the opening up of a soul to the shamanic experience that revealed the depths not only of the personal subconscious, but the transpersonal subconscious as well.  Without this soul journey Jung would likely never have been able to connect so deeply with the archetypes and symbols that formed the foundation of his work that viewed psychology as an alchemical process.  
On a personal level we can also imagine that this experience, which took him on such an incredible transpersonal voyage, also provided him with a healing crisis of his own that accelerated his inner work so that he could later set aside his own personal issues to explore the transpersonality of the psyche.  
During this period he wrote very little of a professional nature, but instead poured his visions and thoughts into 1330 pages of notebooks.  He included paintings using pigments that he himself produced and wrote in the style of the fourteenth century (Source:  The Wounded Jung, Northwestern University Press).  He  later put together 600 pages of these writings into the Red Book which was then jealously guarded by Jung’s heirs after his death, as you can read in the Times article.  
Jung brilliantly utilized his descent into madness in order to transform the field of psychology forever.  This concept of the alchemy of personal transformation provides the foundation for the work that I and other transformational astrologers do in our client work.  Rather than look at an illness as a disease, whether mental or physical, we look to see what planetary dynamics are at work here and how they can be used for transformational purposes.  
We have Carl Jung, and his descent into the underworld of the subconscious and subsequent return, to thank for that. 
For more on Jung’s alchemical transformation and astrology, see my previous article here.  And read more on the Red Book from astrologer Amy Herring here


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Comments read comments(9)
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Joe

posted September 23, 2009 at 7:51 am


Fascinating. It helps me enormously that you indicate the planet associated with the event, i.e., disconnected (Uranus) because it helps me connect qualities or rulerships with each planet or luminary. For example I didn’t know Uranus rules disconnection so I will look for this characteristic in my chart and transits.
As an aside, as a mental health worker, I often wish I could get my hands on my clients’ charts and see if there is a transit or a natal configuration that has caused (or is causing) a difficulty!



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M.W.F

posted September 23, 2009 at 10:12 am


Great!! Thank You



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Julie Leon

posted September 23, 2009 at 10:40 am


Hi Lynn,
Have you read Jung’s book, “Man and His Symbols”? I believe (it says in the book) he had a dream when he was older that he should write a book for the average person instead of his more intellectual books. I have the illustrated version- it’s phenomenal and written by additional authors.



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Laurel

posted September 23, 2009 at 11:02 am


Did you you “innate UNreliability” ??
Love your posts Lynn..intelligent, meaningful and well written…thanks so much for all your good work!



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Michele

posted September 23, 2009 at 2:11 pm


Collectively aren’t we all “in the middle of a transformational experience [one] so uncomfortable that we don’t recognize its value.” Jung’s Red book speaks to this time…that one can go through hell and survive?
I love reading your insights, and certainly great to see another astrologer’s post on Jung’s Red Book. With the Dan Brown’s DaVinci Code and now the Lost Symbol being so popular…I feel the Red Book is going to Brown another novel. LOL. Thanks!



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matahari

posted September 23, 2009 at 4:01 pm


Lynn, thanks again for what you do. The release of this book is extraordinarily timely, no? I remember reading that that there was work he felt it irresponsible to publish in his own lifetime. I am drawn to him as much as ever, maybe because i have that sun square Neptune. x



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Jan Hughes

posted September 23, 2009 at 7:46 pm


I just finished reading Jung: A Biography, by Diedre Bair. Excellent book with detailed footnotes based on extensive access to family and other close sources. She believes that Jung’s level of psychological impairment during this period was exaggerated by Aneila Jaffe, who co-authored (shaping his input)his “autobiography” Memories. Bair notes a great deal of professional activity, and believes Jung, at 80, pumped up the story a bit. I can’t wait to see The Red Book!
This takes nothing away from your comments. I love your blog and radio show. Keep up the wonderful work!
Jan



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Lynn Hayes

posted September 24, 2009 at 6:11 pm


Hi – sorry I’ve been AWOL! Thanks for all of your comments, this has been such an interesting story.
Joe – one of my dreams for years has been to work with psychologists. I’ve even offered to review charts for free and not one has taken me up on it. I should probably be a little more serious and do some marketing in that area.
Matahari – funny about that Sun square Neptune in this particular situation. The combination of planets is so interesting here.
Anyway – thanks for taking the time to share your views!



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MarAli

posted September 24, 2009 at 8:25 pm


Really enjoyed it. My reading list just grew a bunch!



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