Download - Active Imagination - Rahima Spottiswood
ACTIVE IMAGINATION
Active imagination is a form of inner dialogue used and developed by the psychiatrist and
psychoanalyst Carl Gustav Jung as a way of establishing a deeper dialogue with the
unconscious. Jung saw active imagination as the most direct way of relating to the
unconscious, although it is not always an easy way of working, and has its own problems
and difficulties as opposed to the more usual and accepted way of working with the dream.
At the same time, active imagination can involve a consistent and continuing dialogue with
the unconscious, and can be seen as a living relationship with this part of ourselves that
does not have to come to an end when we are no longer in a therapy situation. At the same
time it is important to recognise that learning and thinking about active imagination is not at
all a kind of 'how to do it' course because any deep involvement with the unconscious may
always need the guidance of a therapist, work with dreams, and so on.
In the concept of analytical psychotherapy as developed by Jung and his associates, an
important therapeutic aim has been the establishment of a consistent dialogue with the
unconscious. This can be understood as an interaction between conscious and unconscious,
or what is less conscious and which does not have to come to an end when therapy has
ended. This remains essential to what Jung saw as the process of individuation. And this is
about becoming more aware of who and what we are at many different levels. Jung
saw this as also being about finding a deeper connection between ego and Self.
The term Self was used by Jung to designate the transpersonal centre and totality or
wholeness of the human psyche. It constitutes the greater objective personality, whereas
the ego describes the lesser subjective personality that is our everyday self. Like all other
archetypes the Self is never completely knowable and can be experienced and re-
experienced in differing ways over the course of a lifetime.
It is also important to remember that active imagination, expressed in some form or other,
is probably as old as the earliest efforts of humankind to relate to forces greater than
themselves. Indeed, what we could now see as a form of active imagination would be the
very early representations of animals in prehistoric cave art. They were not only drawings
and paintings of animals. but also of the power and magic they were felt to possess.
Many shamanic traditions use forms of active imagination to develop their own inner
process of creative visualisation. True imagination engages deep feelings and nurtures the
growth of consciousness as well as the creative awareness of both suffering and joy, so
enhancing the development of human personality. Active imagination has been described as
a waking dream, or dreamlike state, happening in the absence of sleep when we become
able to observe our conscious thoughts and action and have access to thoughts and feelings
not usually accessible to consciousness.
Relating to the unconscious as it becomes expressed through active imagination, is a
symbolic process for we are not working factually, but using images that can represent living
symbols. A living symbol expresses a part of us that is not fully conscious and can often be
felt rather than rationally understood. As soon as we are able to fully understand a symbol,
it loses its numinosity and becomes a sign.
The term symbol can never be explained once and for all as its very nature implies a
transition to a new level of understanding, a new depth of consciousness. A symbol has the
power to move and shift our consciousness because it connects us to a deeply unconscious
energy field. Incidentally I would also suggest that dreams themselves are symbols rather
than signs because a sign will always have an assigned or given meaning. Symbols are
autonomous products of the unconscious and, in Jung's view, real symbols are never
invented or made up, nor are they only a poetic or allegorical way of representing a known
fact. One could see them as expressions of the unconsciousness through archetypes and
archetypal patterns which have always exerted a powerful influence on the individual and
on society. So active imagination can also be seen as a dialogue with archetypes of the
collective unconscious. In this context it is always important to recognise that there is a
great deal that is personal and still more that is impersonal which we do not know, but
which continues to have its effect on us.
Jane Dahon, a Jungian analyst working in the United States, has written of how "the
collective unconscious constitutes all these aspects of the psyche that are basic to the
human condition; those psychological characteristics that belong to us by virtue of our
biological structure. It is part of being born with two legs, two arms, a cerebral cortex and
the capacity to walk upright. These and all other aspects of our biology have certain
psychological consequences and lead to typical modes of functioning and patterns of
behaviour." It is all too easy to make use of the term 'archetype' intellectually without any
sense of what it can mean when we are confronted by it at an imaginative level.
Marie von Franz, Jung's colleague over many years, has defined four stages or steps in the
process of active imagination:
1. Being alone by oneself and settling the thoughts of ego; consciousness having to give
space to the unconscious.
2. Starting to make contact with the unconscious, usually in the form of images, fantasies,
and emotions; these are then written down, drawn or painted to give them an external
form.
3. The ego reacts by confronting the emerging unconscious material that has come up.
4. Conclusions to be drawn and enacted in life.
In the first step of working with active imagination, it is important to let the conscious ego
stand aside in order to feel more free from its critical judgement. Let the ego observe
without criticising what comes up but not filtering anything out, a state that could be
described as being somewhat similar to the alpha state of unfocused attention.
This first step is about noticing and becoming more aware of the activities of the psyche. It
can be helpful to have a notebook or tape recorder to catch images, or fragments of images,
that may impinge on our consciousness A ritual of some kind can also facilitate getting into a
state of active imagination as for instance, lighting a candle. A dream may be continued in
our imagination, or a particularly powerful dream image can be worked with. Using drawing,
painting, clay modelling rather than words, can help to reduce ego interference and
conscious control. In active imagination we always need to develop the attitude of the child
at play. This means taking play seriously which as adults we can find quite difficult.
Jung writes of how "the creative aspect of the imagination frees us from our knowledge of
the nothing but, and raises us to the state of one who plays." We need to reach that place
before active imagination can really begin.
The second step moves on further to giving expression to the inner voice of the
unconscious, either in writing or some other medium. It is always essential to give outer
form to whatever comes up, otherwise it gets lost and cannot be fully used.
Active imagination is defined by the relationship between ego and unconscious and not by
the particular medium employed. The unconscious can be expressed in so many different
ways, using poetry, story telling, dialogue, verbal or visual description of images, dance or
music to create both harmonies and disharmonies. Deciding what medium to use is a matter
of individual choice based on whatever feels comfortable at a particular time. However, if
someone is skilled in one medium, it is usually better to begin active imagination in a
different medium because skill relates more to ego control than expression of the
unconscious. One could also say that modelling in clay is very much an intuitive and feeling
activity, while writing facilitates a more cognitive understanding.
In the third step, once the voice from the unconscious has been given form, the ego can
relate to it. The ego needs to recognise that the inner event - whatever has come out of the
unconscious - is just as real as any outer event, even if it exists in a different space. Inner
events have real effects and need to be treated with care and respect. Sometimes one may
have to say 'no' to the demands of the unconscious in order not to be over-fascinated and
held too passively by it There has to be a creative confrontation and a relationship formed
between ego and unconscious, ego and Self. An important factor is not identifying with the
contents of the unconscious, yet also recognising that it can be more negative to remain
unconscious of them than to meet them in active imagination.
In the fourth step, once the ego has heard and listened to and confronted the voice of the
unconscious, we have to recognise that we can no longer live unconsciously as if we did not
know what has been learned from working with the unconscious images. It is important to
take what we have experienced into life in order to work towards having a deeper
understanding of who we really are and what we can become.
Resistance to doing active imagination should always be taken seriously, especially when
there is a feeling of real fear, such as the fear of acting out fantasies that have become
conscious. It may take a lot of work to become aware of the fact that admitting the
existence of a fantasy is not the same as doing what is imagined. Yet the power of the
unconscious has always to be recognised, and since the process of active imagination
encourages less ego control and takes place at a waking level rather than in a dream, it may
be less safe in the feelings it can bring up than when we are working with the images that
arise spontaneously through dreams. It is always important to recognise that there is a great
deal that is personal, and still more important that it is the impersonal which will always
exercise its effect on us.
Jung's work with active imagination was undoubtedly a source of much inspiration to
Assagioli and others who have developed the use of guided imagery, taking the process of
active imagination further and possibly in safer ways.
Active imagination, or Jung's definition of it and his work with it, is not the same as guided
imagery. Guided imagery offers particular images for the client and ways in which to
proceed. In guided imagery the images used by the therapist are connected to those of the
client, working with the ego and the unconscious, while in active imagination one may need
guidance from the therapist in relation to the process, but not as regards the content. The
client can be helped to open up to their own images and to respond to them in ways that
are consistent with their own view of reality.
At the same time the power of the unconscious has always to be recognised and since it
could be said that the process of active imagination is based on less ego control, and
because guided imagery remains to some extent an area shared by both therapist and
client, there is less likelihood of the client being overwhelmed by the unconscious as can
sometimes happen with active imagination. Working with dreams and the symbols arising
from them is to face being moved and influenced by symbolic structures that we do not
control as in the dream story and its happenings. And this can be even more evident when
using active imagination.
Active imagination could be seen to initiate a deeper and more intense process of
psychological transformation. Of course working with dreams also brings about change, but
for those who have worked with it, active imagination can sometimes bring about a more
profound understanding and change.
An important aspect of dreams, active imagination and guided imagery is the transcendent
function, an expression of the desire to reach to a higher level of personal interaction and
consciousness. It became Jung's term for the mutual influence taking place between ego
and Self in the course of personal development and individuation.
In his view the psyche possessed the capacity to heal itself through the compensatory
function of the unconscious. The unconscious can give rise to symbols capable of re-uniting
conflicting tendencies that are seemingly irreconcilable at a conscious level. We could see
growth and development in all its many forms including individuation and self-realisation as
a continuing process of growth and change initiated and regulated by the Self. In the end it
is less about the solving of problems than becoming able to transcend them.
Rahima Spottiswood
2001-02