Archetypes
The Hedonist
The hedonist represents the love of the good life and what we are willing to do to get to the good life.
The Destroyer
A destroyer can wipe out relationships, self-destruct, destroy the world around them, and at the same time, construct it anew.
The Narcissist
A narcissist has an unreasonably high sense of self importance and requires constant excessive admiration.
Reptiles and Empowerment
Along the path of empowerment, everybody encounters inner reptiles. But action destroys reptiles; positive action always destroys reptiles.
The Rebel
What triggers the rebel is freedom, the need to experience the freedom that doesn’t exist. The rebel is moving from a state of restriction to something more liberating.
The Magician
The Magician can learn the laws of the universe and maneuver them to act on their behalf. They have access to secret knowledge with authority over the world of matter.
The Hermit
The hermit is associated with the need to seek solitude. Even among the monastics, hermits would seek out space to be within themselves for spiritual reasons or personal reasons of creativity.
Why Archetypes Are So Significant
In our first session, I want to take you into the larger frame of what’s in the universe, and what part archetypal patterns play within the universe, so that you have an idea of why it’s so significant to truly understand your archetypal patterns.
The Damsel
The Damsel is associated with being a young, beautiful, helpless maiden waiting for rescue. Eventually, we’re supposed to rescue ourselves and emerge queens in our own psychic field.
The Bully
A bully is someone who has no sense of personal power. Bullying is a way of diminishing the power of another human being so that you feel safer.
Conversations with Our Archetypes
Get to know the keepers of your darkest fears and your highest potential.
The Indentured Servant
The Indentured Servant includes the idea of serving, but it is forced service. Indentured means I am contracted here, and so I must stay.
The Curmudgeon
A curmudgeon uses tactics to stop the flow of harmonious energy. Nothing pleases this person—absolutely nothing.
The Outlaw
Outlaws are heroes of sorts, people who live outside conventional controls. They want to outrun or outwit the very mechanism of life.
The Mystic
Mysticism is the experiential nature of the sacred. And, through the centuries and certainly, now, that experience of mysticism has adapted itself to modernity.
The Wounded Child
The Wounded Child has experiences in their childhood that can form them and cause suffering that is not measurable and can hardly be articulated. And even when they don’t want that pain to control them, it has authority.
The Martyr
Oftentimes people with the martyr archetype find themselves in circumstances where they do a lot for people, but never get acknowledgement for what they’re doing.
The Addict – The Power of Archetypes
The addict confronts the mystical awareness that the most precious thing you have is the power of your spirit.
The Addict
The addict confronts the mystical awareness that the most precious thing you have is the power of your spirit.
The Alchemist
The difference between someone who’s a good cook, and someone who’s a chef, is the alchemist archetype
The Rescuer
The rescuer archetype requires refinement. Rescuing is not a lifestyle. It is an act of empowerment that we are blessed with when we need it.
The Prostitute
The prostitute archetype requires us to ask ourselves, through what means will I survive?
The Starving Artist
The starving artist archetype requires confronting fear, entitlement, and expectations.
The Vampire
The vampire is one of those archetypes that has made its way into the social energy of society.