The Red Book and the Long Afternoon in the Madhouse of God.
Carl Jung spent the years between 1913 and 1916 voluntarily locked in a cage fight with the unconscious, and the unconscious showed up with brass knuckles made of archetypes.He called it his “confrontation with the unconscious,” but that’s Swiss for “I opened the basement door and the entire abyss threw a house party in my skull.” Visions came nightly: blood-red suns, serpents eating prophets, a bearded old man named Philemon who had owl wings and better one-liners than most
The Couple That Lives in Your Ribcage
there are two uninvited tenants squatting in the basement of your psyche, and they’ve been subletting from you since puberty. He shows up wearing whatever costume your culture told you a man must never take off: steel jaw, desert boots, a pilot’s license for reality itself. She arrives in whatever perfume your culture forbade you to want: red shoes, forbidden laughter, the exact curve of hip that makes priests write new commandments at 3 a.m. They call him the Animus. They ca












