I was given paregoric as a child. This caused the manifestation of many of the psychic events I was subjected to in my childhood, not necessarily from my parents as Jung states but from an archetype…
I have not read this far into this book, but I did have it marked on page 130 regarding the projection, from this I based some of a writing I posted on my blog about projection.
From Psychology of the Transference, Carl G. Jung, Return of the Soul, pg. 129, ¶ 500 and pg.130.
What Jung talks about here is what gives the illusion of incestuous relationships, such as an only child marrying someone who possesses the soul of one of the parents. While they are of two different families they are of one soul. In the case of a man marrying his cousin, it would be the soul of a man and wife embodied by the two cousins making the soul whole again.
Update 3: This all falls under the Biblical saying, “Your body is Gods temple”. This is where I have much conflict as I wanted to save my body for my husband, not God.
Update 4: In Rizzoli and Isles, Rizzoli was held hostage by a maniacal Doctor who had her pinned to the ground with surgical knives. This scene was also dramatized in The General’s Daughter which symbolized the union of detective work with the Armed Forces. In Rizzoli and Isles, they symbolize the marriage of detective work with forensic medicine, Rizzoli is united with Isles and throughout the episodes you see them Trading Places, with each other like Murphy and Akroyd’s characters in that film. One becomes the other in their thinking and this is swapped back and forth as their thoughts enter each others’ brains and minds. This of course happens more often in personal relationships rather than on the TV or movie screen as they use techniques to abate this. If a couple understands the nature of projection they can use it to help each other rather than have it become a problem. In the film Stigmata, we see a similar but far more dramatic depiction of the union of detective work in a priest with a hairdresser beset with stigmata with no clue as to how to free herself from the bondage.
Update 5: Talking to one’s self was once thought to be the manifestation of mental illness but I see it as being rather therapeutic, being the oldest in my family and having to cope with a dual personality, of course I could project this onto someone like Rizzoli and Isles which they then act out, but I see them as the traumatic dissociation of a female soul, being two women, although Rizzoli plays a more masculine role than Isles in that episode. I see it this way because I have viewed programs of both types, while in reality they may be dramatizing aspects of two separate souls.
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