The itinerant early 20th century British author
Algernon Blackwood became famous for writing short stories about the
supernatural, but his primary interest was in finding a way for humanity to
reunite with nature despite the ravages of the industrial age.
His thoughts led him to certain conclusions that are
familiar to me — that the path to a more complete human being may be found in
the alignment of our conscious and unconscious minds.
‘I think, honestly, the deepest interest in my life is to
find any knowledge, in book or practice, that may widen the field of
consciousness and waken powers which, I feel convinced, lie dormant in our
greater self — the subconscious so-called,” Blackwood wrote. “I still believe
we have latent powers which could bring us nearer, if only a little nearer, to
Reality. This is the insatiable quest in my blood and compared with it other
things, money least of all, do not count.”
“I have long since reached a stage where I feel that there
can be little progress until the subconscious powers become developed and
accessible,” Blackwood wrote on another occasion. “Without these we can become
better, but not greater.”
Drawn to Georgei Ivanovich Gurdjieff’s ideas about ways to
“bring a scientific rationale to mysticism,” Blackwood remarked, “The
preliminary training in yoga convinced me that it was genuine and helpful for
any serious student. The methods of changing one’s type of consciousness, rather than merely extending what was
already possesses, seemed to me true and practical.”
One effective method I’ve found for doing this is Jungian
Active Imagination, which I also call Hypnagogic Active Imagination — a means
discovered by the psychologist Carl Jung for developing direct communication
between the unconscious and conscious aspects of the human mind.
Source: “Algernon
Blackwood: An Extraordinary Life” by Mike Ashley
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