Albatross
Thanks for your comments an insight.
Individuals with well-developed egos will easily find the adult within and are more likely to be able to release their defenses enough eventually to surrender the ego and reach transformational healing.
Indeed, according to Jung, the ego, full of distortions and projections, needs to be dissolved before the Self can emerge. The Self, however, which is the totality of the psyche, includes the ego. In the process of individuation one does not destroy the ego, rather one places it in subordinate relation to the Self.
The ego is no longer the center of the personality; the Self, the mandala, which unites all opposites, is its center. What is dissolved is the inflated, concrete ego, pursuing its exclusive selfish purposes, just following its own impulses.
If “the disappearance of egohood is the only criterion of change,” how do we recognize it when we see it? What does the disappearance of egohood look like? Following are what we can expect when we make these transformational changes permanent in our lives and in our relationships.
1. Fully present in every moment, refraining from ego dissociation or distraction.
When the ego is no longer fettered by childhood wounds of abuse, shame and abandonment,
addictive behavior and dissociation are unneeded. The individual has extinguished the deep underlying fear of nonbeing, and feels existentially complete and chooses to remain present in each moment.
This allows the process of reclaiming the real self to unfold. It means that the individual has permission to feel and express the deepest emotions and thus to release the patterns of dissociation.
Here we refer to ego activity, as contrasted with ego passivity.
2. Daily choices based on intuitive knowledge, wisdom and love rather than on ego-state fear, fabrication and rationalization.
When the person’s deepest motivation changes from fear or avoiding
anticipated pain to an intuitive inner knowing, decisions will always serve the highest good of everyone involved.
3. Identify and manage positive energy and not “take on” negative energy.
As the person becomes free of internal ego preoccupation, he/she becomes aware of the impact of subtle energy and the importance of managing it, able to identify healthy and unhealthy energy patterns in every interaction in oneself, individuals as well as in groups.
4. Live in integrity.
Integrity is the natural result of full cooperation between congruent ego states, with the “private self” and the “public self” transparently one in the same: the real self. Living as an integrated person eliminates self- consciousness, anxiety about approval, defensiveness, and secrets, resulting in honesty, keeping commitments and being trustworthy.
5. Spiritual manifestation of what we say we want.
A measure of ego surrender is manifestation of the goals the individual is clear about wanting.
He/she has eliminated the causes of any inability to manifest what he/she wants: deep unconscious feelings of unworthiness, or unconscious beliefs that are contrary to what is desired (for example, the person may be asking to manifest money, but the unconscious belief may be that money is evil).
6. Acceptance of ourselves for who we are, acknowledging the continued growth we desire.
The life path of transformational work replaces the ego’s tendency tojudge by performance and conditional love, instead accepting oneself as a “work in progress.”
Ego surrendering is a continuing lifelong process, not a single event. Here we refer to internal locus of control, as contrasted with external locus of control, and the importance of playfulness.
Ego maturity is not a static state; indeed, it is one of constant dynamic growth.
7. Healing and resolving unhealthy relationships, and attracting healthy ones.
Healing any “victim consciousness” pattern imprints in the unconscious mind releases the repetition
compulsion to repeat those imprinted unhealthy relationships. Every relationship in our lives reflects the deepest belief system in our minds. The surrendering ego is full of compassion.
8. We freely express our emotions spontaneously through healthy release.
In transformational work, people learn to identify emotions through being aware of the bodily sensations that accompany a feeling, and to release these emotions in a way that doesn’t hurt another person or property, free from projecting unacknowledged or repressed feelings onto others. Here we refer to flexibility and spontaneity, as contrasted with ego rigidity.
9. We are current, not unfinished, in every interaction of every relationship.
Ending the repression of feelings or holding on to unexpressed feelings eliminates projection, and thus unfinished business in relationships. Jungian analyst Marilyn Nagy says,
“Whatever qualities we have that are unknown to us we experience first of all in projection.” Forgiveness is vitally important.Being current in relationships is also important when we are speaking of a conscious death. Unfinished business in this process will be painful. If we are unable to forgive on the Soul level, then we may karmically attract this person back into our next lifetime to replay the relationship again in another version.
10. Prepared for a conscious death, no matter how unexpectedly it may come.
Socrates said that “true philosophers make dying their profession, and to them of all men death is least alarming”. A conscious death is one that is accepted with emotional equanimity and spiritual confidence.
11. Recognize the karmic patterns being fulfilled, and stop creating new karma
(accept that “I am 100% responsible for my experience of my life”).
A powerful way to work through karmic issues is to become aware of your individual karmic lessons in this lifetime. This gives the very deepest spiritual meaning to the concept of “I am 100% responsible for what I create and experience in my life.” It is only by seeing the bigger picture of our lives that we heal and release the old karmic patterns. Once we get the lesson, we no longer need to repeat it. We then devote our energies to serving the transformation of others helping them to transmute their fear, anxiety, negativity, addictions and illness into love, power and oneness.