Tag Archives: Mythology

Defending Joseph Campbell

A friend of mine asked me to explain to him why Joseph Campbell is my guru. It was an interesting conversation. My friend has never read Campbell, but he has heard me describe the impact that Campbell’s work has had on my life. My friend was thinking along the lines of self-help authors like Stephen Covey.

I explained that Joseph Campbell wasn’t really setting out to help anyone that way. He was merely a scholar, a man who devoted his life to researching the things that pleased him most to think about. This is what I admire best about Joseph Campbell. That it turns out that he and I found joy in the same topics is just a blessing beyond measure. He is definitely a kindred spirit.

What I ultimately shared with my friend was the story of my life at the time I discovered Campbell’s work. I was very much a church going Bible believer of the most literal sort and I had no real grasp of the concept of metaphor. Sometimes I think it is difficult for any devout Christian to truly grasp and appreciate metaphor.

I was introduced to Joseph Campbell in a college literature course about the Grail Legends. Joseph Campbell is an authority on the Arthurian legends, something I have loved almost my entire life.

It was in listening to Joseph Campbell lectures that I discovered that essentially everything is metaphor. All we have are symbols and stories to give meaning to our existence. Everything, even our lives, is metaphor for the fundamental truths of the universe. We are merely reflections of something much greater than ourselves. I believe that we each incarnate to create a mythology out of the life we have been given. And the great thing about this mythology we create is that we get to be the hero in the story. We don’t have to be the victim in our own life story. We are the ones writing it.

What Joseph Campbell did for me was give me another way of looking at God. It was not long after studying his work that I quit thinking about God as an entity separate from myself. And I will tell you this, that one discovery has brought more joy into my life that any other thing I have figured out.

So, while I understand my friend’s skepticism if he was equating Joseph Campbell with Stephen Covey, in my mind the two are incomparable. Stephen Covey offers people helpful hints to be a more financially successful person, Joseph Campbell offers people the keys that unlock the mysteries of the universe.

It is my opinion that you can’t read Joseph Campbell’s work without becoming a little smarter.

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Filed under Life, Spirituality & Metaphysics

Stories

“To believe in the heroic makes heroes.” ~Disraeli

I just put that quote up on Twitter.  It was in a book I am reading.  It started me thinking about stories, mythologies, and what wonderful guiding lights they are for our lives.  We live through stories.  Stories we tell ourselves about ourselves and the world, and those that come from interacting with others.

Stories cause us to create mental images, pictures associated with the words, symbols.  Symbols allow us to communicate a vast amount of information very succinctly.  It’s how we are able to learn as much as we do in a lifetime.

There is great value in all stories and mythologies. That’s why I am so interested in what I would describe as metamythology.  It’s possible I just made up a word, but if I did, I can’t help it, I don’t have another word for it.

What interests me most in literature, both secular and religious, is the archetypes and symbols and their meanings.  Huge life lessons and deep insights into universal themes are contained within the great legends. I love grand themes such as the nature of the true hero.  Heroes behave in ways that are noble and based in honor and good faith. People are helped by reading stories about heroes because taking in the ideas can awaken those noble characteristics within us.

The great thing is, we all get to choose what our mythology will be.  It is up to each of us whether our story will be one of triumph or tragedy.  We are writing it each day through our thoughts, words and deeds.

How does the story of your life read?

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Filed under Spirituality & Metaphysics