Jung’s life practice of paying attention to coincidence and symbolic
popups in the world around us is a model of how to navigate by
synchronicity.
In his work with patients, he paid close attention to the interplay
of dreams and signs from the world. He was encouraged to do this by his
celebrated breakthrough work with a female patient who had been
seriously blocked until she dreamed of a scarab, the dung beetle of the
Nile Valley. Despite its lowly origins, the scarab was one of the most
important Egyptian symbols of rebirth and transformation; it had been
deified as Khepri and was placed over the heart of the soul traveler to
guide journeys beyond the body and beyond death.
As the woman discussed her dream with Jung, a flying beetle known as a rose chafer appeared at the window. It was the nearest match for the Egyptian scarab you could hope to find in Europe, and as the patient’s eyes widened in recognition, she experienced a sense of confirmation of her dream and the work she was doing with Jung that carried her to deep healing.
When he saw patients in his house at Küsnacht, on Lake Zurich,, he
liked to sit so that they both faced the garden, the poplars at the edge
of the lake, and the water beyond, noticing what the world was saying.
He found significance in every shift in the environment — a sudden wind
whipping up the lake water, the shape of a cloud, the cry of a bird.
He was especially intrigued by how animals or birds sometimes
seemed to participate in a human exchange. On one occasion, he walked
in his garden with a woman patient. As they wandered beyond the garden
into light woods, she was talking about the first dream of her life that
had major impact on her; she said it made an “everlasting” impression.
“I am in my childhood home,” she recalled, “and a spectral fox is coming
down the stairs.” She paused and put her hand on Jung’s arm, because at
this moment a real fox trotted out of the trees, less than forty yards
in front of them. The fox padded softly along the path in front of them
for several minutes. Jung noted that "the animal behaved as if it were a
partner in the human situation.”
Jung’s willingness to trust an unexpected incident — and accept it
immediately as guidance for action — was evident in a meeting he had
with Henry Fierz, who visited him in hopes of persuading him to support
the publication of a manuscript by a recently deceased scientist. Jung
had reservations about the book and opposed publication. The
conversation became increasingly strained, and Jung looked at his watch,
evidently getting ready to tell his guest he was out of time. Jung
frowned when he saw the time.
“What time did you come?” he demanded of his visitor.
“At five o’clock, as agreed.”
Jung’s frown deepened. He explained that his watch had just been
repaired, and should be keeping impeccable time. But it showed 5:05, and
surely Fierz had been with him for much longer. “What time do you
have?”
“Five thirty-five,” his visitor told him.
“Since you have the right time and I have the wrong time,” Jung allowed, “I must think again.”
He then changed his mind and supported publication of the book.
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