Anne Morrow Lindbergh’s
fascination with psychology was counterbalanced by her husband’s antipathy to
introspection.
So, when they vacationed in the
Swiss Alps in the summer of 1959, she was eager to meet their lakeside
neighbor, 75-year-old Carl Jung, the psychologist famed for his theories about
humanity’s collective unconscious.
Charles Lindbergh was surprised to
learn that Jung did not regard the many reports of “flying saucers” as psychological manifestations, but as factual. Jung waved away Lindbergh’s
recitation of findings from U.S. Air Force investigations.
Noting that he had discussed the
topic with Air Force Chief of Staff Carl Spaatz, Lindbergh said Spaatz told
him, “Slim, don’t you suppose that if there was anything true about this flying
saucer business, you and I would have heard about it by this time?”
Unimpressed, Jung replied, “There
are a great many things going on around this earth that you and Gen. Spaatz
don’t know about.”
Anne thought Jung resembled one of
his own archetypes, calling him “the old wizard.” Charles sensed “…elements of
mysticism and greatness about him — even though they may have been mixed, at
times, with elements of charlatanism.”
Lindbergh asked Jung why he chose
to live by down by the lake instead of high up in the mountains. Jung explained
that having the lake next to his house suggested the different levels of human
consciousness and the subconscious.
The Lindberghs’ friend Helen Wolff
found the question was as telling as the answer. “The eagle and the fish,” she
thought.
Source:
‘Lindbergh’ by A. Scott Berg
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