LOVE STREET LAMP POST 3rd Qtr 2006

Page 11

Women in the Rew c/Ije 3ilis 3redcrick Avatar’s Abodc, .Australia 1981 the cultural sense the West has been the leader in reason and sd ence, and the application of logic. That is probably why the role of women has to change in the West. Women’s role in the past has been sub-dominant. It has been impor tant but (we don’t have to belabor the point) has been considered as being on a much lower level. Women have been treated in a cer tam way in the male-dominated cultures of the West. That has, of course, roots in our Judeo-Christian background of God the Father: the male was always emphasized. The Bible portrays the role of women as submissive. Really, up until very recent times (and in different cul tures at a different rate of growth), the male has been the dominating figure—in the culture, in the arts, in the family structure where it all begins—”daddy knows best.” But that has to change. As Carl Jung explains: Wom an’s psychology is founded on the principle of Eros, the great binder and loosener, whereas from ancient times the ruling principle ascribed to man is Logos. The concept of Eros could be expressed in modern terms as psychic relatedness and that of Lo gos as objective interest. We have not only physically both male and female characteristics (one is more dom inant than the other) in each form, but also in our psyche we have, as Jung says, our inward “soul image. A woman has within her the male image, the animus, and of course it’s the reverse for the male—he outwardly has a male body but within him he has his feminine side, his anima or soul. The way you function is governed by the question, “Who am I?” as Meher Baba said. That’s the whole game. The whole push of evolution is to find out who you really are. In each incarnation, whichever sex you take, you’re looking for who you are, and you’re always trying to find that hidden part of yourself. So if you’re a man, you’re trying really to find your inner feminine self, however, you may not see it that way directly. In the same way a woman

I

where you get a little bit of growth, and growth is painful. That’s the truth about everything—growing pains in physical growth and psy chological growth to find out who you are. The submissive, cliched female patterns of the past, which had their [ place, are going to change in the [ New Age. The men are very upset by this change in the women’s role i because it upsets who they are as i males, but they have to go through it with the women. Accept women as your equal. They and you must go through this change. You’re both going to be more open to your oth er inner self. Instead of repressing this inner image, you will bring it out and balance it, as it should be, in the final divine androgyne that Meher Baba is In Himself He s perfect balance, perfect male and female. You can see that sometimes in the femininity of Meher Baba, it’s as if He has both. Eventually we have to find that balance, and to achieve that means growth. The more a woman feels her freedom and assertiveness (in the right way—remember there is a big difference between assertiveness and aggression) and feels that she has space to be creative in all directions, then also, the man responds. He shares the gain that she makes, and she shares the gain that he makes when he develops his feminine side. His part is to open up, to be more communicative, for example to show more of his emotions, to recognize he has feelings, to learn to share feelings with the people close to him. Eventually you both become more intuitive, and that’s where you both have to head. .

.

tries to balance her inner and outer selves. You’re always trying to balance—it’s just the whole game of sanskaras, of opposites. When you’re pushed way over here, the pendulum automatically tries to get over there, and this is why you swing back and forth between male and female incarnations. In each incarnation you are trying to find you inner self which, at the time of that incarnation, is the opposite of you. This creates the drive for human love, for wholeness, for union. Why do you fall in love? You only fall in love because you’re trying to find and unite with that other opposite within you. In the final spiritual journey, you’re not trying to find it in someone else; you are trying to balance it within yourself as your real identity. In this New Age, woman’s search is being speeded up. Her search is not only to have the balance brought out by a personal relationship, but also in the deeper sense of her own individuality and identity, and this is

,

Civilization in Transition, v. 10, p. 123, C. Jung, Collected Works, N.Y. Pantheon *

Books 1964 From The A wakener Volume XX, Num ber Two, Copyright 1983 by the Universal Spiritual League in America, Inc.

11


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
LOVE STREET LAMP POST 3rd Qtr 2006 by AMBCSC ARCHIVES PRINT LIBRARIES - Issuu