TER General Board

The reason I've been leading mountain climbs for over 20 years is to help people with what Jung
jackvance 2582 reads
posted

calls "individuation".  I think that the goal of life is to gain true self-knowledge, and to fully become the person you were meant to be.  Most people go through life without ever truly and fully understanding themselves.

Mountain climbing is a path to true self-knowledge, the kind of true self-knowledge that we cannot get from an ordinary kind of day-to-day existence.  I'm sure it is not the only path, but I know from personal experience that it is a path that works.  

Stacy Allison, the first American woman to climb Everest, put it well when she said "There are no facades in the mountains.  In the mountains, you come face to face with yourself".  It's like peeling off the layers of an onion and finding out what's really inside.  For many people, the prospect of doing this seems daunting, because they are worried about what they will find inside.  But for many, many people who I have led on climbs, it has been a very positive and life-changing experience, because they have liked what they found inside.
These women and men have come back to me years later after the climb to tell me that this happened with them.

Life at its best is a journey toward Jungian "individuation".



-- Modified on 10/4/2004 7:49:36 PM

santana3409 reads

If you will -

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"The most terrifying thing is to accept oneself completely"

Carl Jung

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Why do we do what we do here?



[If this question bothers you, go back to Monday Night Football]


(see url for general psychobabble clap trap)

jackvance2583 reads

calls "individuation".  I think that the goal of life is to gain true self-knowledge, and to fully become the person you were meant to be.  Most people go through life without ever truly and fully understanding themselves.

Mountain climbing is a path to true self-knowledge, the kind of true self-knowledge that we cannot get from an ordinary kind of day-to-day existence.  I'm sure it is not the only path, but I know from personal experience that it is a path that works.  

Stacy Allison, the first American woman to climb Everest, put it well when she said "There are no facades in the mountains.  In the mountains, you come face to face with yourself".  It's like peeling off the layers of an onion and finding out what's really inside.  For many people, the prospect of doing this seems daunting, because they are worried about what they will find inside.  But for many, many people who I have led on climbs, it has been a very positive and life-changing experience, because they have liked what they found inside.
These women and men have come back to me years later after the climb to tell me that this happened with them.

Life at its best is a journey toward Jungian "individuation".



-- Modified on 10/4/2004 7:49:36 PM

A little more of Carl:

"If you are unhappy, you are too high up in your mind."

"The word "happiness" would lose its meaning if it were not balanced by sadness."

"What if I should discover that the poorest of the beggars and the most impudent of offenders are all within me, and that I stand in need of the alms of my own kindness; that I myself am the enemy who must be loved - what then?"

If you really want to look inward and find your true self try some Lao-Tzu and some Epictetus. If what you are seeking is not found within these, read Krishnamurti which is a lesser traveled road for most due to the amount of thought necessary.

crease attackman2933 reads

"The only Zen you find on the tops of mountains is the Zen you bring up there"

Robert M. Pirsig  - author

"Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance"

[entire text online at url]



    courtesy of the Crease Attackman  [STX Rules!]

        (aka santana the merryprankster)

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