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.