Under Saturn's Shadow: The Wounding and Healing of Men (STUDIES IN JUNGIAN PSYCHOLOGY BY JUNGIAN ANALYSTS)
C**Y
Awesome book
For a mid aged man... Great book
N**N
amazing
very valuable book highly recommend this..all men and women would benefit from reading this
D**N
Great Read!
I am loving James Hollis more and more with each book I read. Under Saturn's Shadow is definitely an eye opener for me. Not so much in knowing how men have "Mommy issues", but by naming why and where it comes from. Allowing me to also turn the tables and dive into my "daddy issues". Great Read!
B**Y
Genius
This guy is amazing. Delivery was perfect
A**T
Powerful
This is the first book I've read of Hollis' and it certainly won't be my last. I first purchased this book in my early 20's when I was still very hurt and confused about the pain that I had buried within me. I knew that it had something to do with my father leaving my family when I was 11 years old but I needed help sorting it out. Unfortunately, I didn't have the patience to finish reading the book nor the maturity required to internalize the words of wisdom that Hollis expounds in USS.Flash forward and now I am closer to 30 and I revisited this book at the time when it was most needed on my healing journey. It has helped to take me to a new level in the depth of my understanding on how to move forward on the path to self-realization. For growing up and to this day, I have struggled with the private burden which all men have to wrestle with, and that is the burden of the Saturnian legacy; the shadow of ideologies both conscious and unconscious that we inherit from family, ethnic group, national history, past culture and pop culture. This shadow is continually supplanted and/or reinforced by the men and women that we cross paths with.This Saturnian legacy carries with it the definition of "maleness", that is male roles and expectations, competition, animosity, and the shaming and exclusion of men's inherent feminine nature in the equation of what it is to be a man.There it has always been, along with my desire for my father's love and approval was the need for something much deeper, the archetypal wisdom of true masculinity. I unconsciously modeled my father in my early years and in his absence modeled many inadequate surrogates. This lead me down a rather painful path to the final realization a couple years after high school that no one was going to be able to "teach" me what it means to be a man.There were no elders I could turn to and without their wise counsel I suffered under Saturn's shadow, unconsciously seeking to validate my own masculinity through outer means. This included several things for me, some of which were liberating and some which proved to be destructive. For instance, being able to live by my own means; achieving goals that I set for myself; successfully juggling multiple responsibilities; attaining an ideal physique; pushing my limits with drugs, alcohol, sex, and any other reckless activity that proved to the world that I wasn't afraid, that I wasn't afraid of hurting myself or another.In my unconsciousness I acted out my wounds and inflicted them upon others. In fact, part of what lead me to where I stand today was the sense of having to atone for the violations against life that I committed in my ethical and spiritual destitution. I'm glad to say that this is no longer a driving force for me. I am now sustained on my path to encourage love and growth in all life as a result of my inner transformation, and not a sense of being in debt to life.Ultimately, I am still in the process of becoming whole and will be for a long time. I am deeply wounded and have no shame in admitting it. Either way I will continue to strive towards wholeness, which for me entails living in full alignment with my deepest held beliefs. It means always being fully conscious in the NOW and as a result I will strive to always be thinking, speaking, and acting from my heart. It means living authentically with no shred of hypocrisy or shadow of self-deception. Being whole means that I will one day be able to love without attachment, or at least I truly hope so.Most of all, it means that I am able to embody the principles of the Supreme Consciousness in this material world; those of love, truth, and peace, even in the face of fear, lies, or death.This is a profound and powerful book that I recommend to all men who would like to become more conscious of the many forces that may be at work within them, and the women who wish to understand men on a much deeper level."What the modern man suffers from, then, is the wounding without the transformation. He suffers the Saturnian burden of role definition that confines rather than liberates. He suffers the skewers in the soul without the godly vision. He is asked to be a man when no on can define it except in the most trivial of terms. He is asked to move from boyhood to manhood without any rites of passage, with no wise elders to receive and instruct him, and no positive sense of what such manhood might feel like. His wounds are not transformative; they do not bring deepened consciousness; they do not lead him to a richer life. They senselessly, repeatedly, stun him into a numbing of the soul before the body has had the good sense to die." - James Hollis
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