- https://bit.ly/36Hj6qM
- https://bit.ly/3MjI5Rp
- https://bit.ly/35mxg09
- https://bit.ly/35mxgxb
- https://bit.ly/3KbZkly
- https://bit.ly/3trC3VU
- https://bit.ly/3C73Aju
- https://bit.ly/3MjIof1
- https://bit.ly/3Mt8HQ3
- https://bit.ly/3IFjIv1
- https://bit.ly/3IFjK67
- https://bit.ly/3vyaMEf
- And Peter lacked embracing both stereotypical and archetypal positive masculine energies overall, but it’s that Peter was archetypally un-masculine that is the real issue I think. He could have been made to be much more stereotypically male energy in what he did, but even if so, with his inner character being what it is, I suspect that sort of stereotypical masculinity in him still wouldn’t feel like anything “solid”. I think that that male energy would feel really hollow because that deeper archetypal male energy is so buried in him rather than embraced.
- And that’s why I saw the dwarves being so unlike Peter underneath---that even though they hadn’t manifested it all yet, deep down you could sense in them a desire to embrace their archetypal positive masculine energy. Manifestation is really important, but only from a deeper place like that---being just stereotypically rather than archetypally something, you could manifest it but I think it would still feel hollow.
- What you brought up at the end was interesting, I need to let it mull a bit, so more later.
- by Under His Wing on 2006 Feb 18 - 22:31 | reply to this comment
- the aliens are leaving
- The ancient Chinese philosophers were usually 'animists'; they believed that there were spirits in the trees and rocks and dragons over the mountains. They also believed that wood contained fire energy and water contained steam energy.
- From that point of view, it is understandable that they also believed people contained a specific type of energy and that the energy would be different between females and males. But if you tried to explain to a physicist that men and women have a different type of internal energy, I fear she would laugh at the whole idea.