Hubris of the Heavens, by Marc Bregman with Susan Marie Scavo, is a treatise on Archetypal Dreamwork and Rudhyarian Astrology.
Cover and Illustrations by Sarah Lyda.
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"In Archetypal Dreamwork, the plumb line of any work done with an individual is always the dream. The body of the work that is the dream and the process of going vertical is the process of going deep into what is true from the inside, dropping underneath what is not true. The process of looking to the dream that comes from an individual’s own unconscious to find the path that is particular and specific to that person.
Working with Rudhyarian Astrology, on the other hand, is the process of going horizontal and is an extremely general process. This is why this book is called, Hubris of the Heavens. Hubris means pride and arrogance, but the root of the word is from the Greek hybris and means wanton violence, insolence, outrage. The application of astrology, of the horizontal, without the anchor of the dream, the vertical, is general and extremely dangerous. When we are faced with generalities, pathology can use those generalities in any way it wants. This is why the dreams are so incredibly precise for an individual and their process in a particular moment..
But astrology can be used in service to dreams for the application of astrology can hone and clarify the dreams themselves. In that process of clarifying dreams, we can sense the uniqueness of the individual that is being reflected in the dream. The chart can actually act as a sounding board to the complexity of the dream, lending a structure and a depth of understanding.
Most importantly, however and again, the dream precedes the astrology. Not only does the chart by itself tell us nothing, but the guesses we might make based on the chart may negatively influence what a dream is actually trying to reveal. The true dreamwork practitioner seeks to understand the dream first by reflecting the dream back to the chart itself rather than imposing the chart onto the dream.
The therapeutic mind must be sensitive to the unconscious and not bring rational idolatry to the dream. Any judgment brought to a dream is vulnerable to being incorrect because no symbol has the same meaning for two people. Even if there is a pattern of meaning, a pattern of processes in dreams that seem to recur in meaning from one person to another, there is always the one person for whom the pattern does match, in which a symbol means something utterly different.
This is true because good often appears bad and bad often appears good in dreams. The dream can never be taken for granted. When using a chart, it should help with perceiving the subtle nature of the dream, with catching its double message, rather than bringing judgment to the dream and creating an overstructured understanding before the unconscious has had a chance to reveal its mystery.
Mystery means my story. To understand one’s story, we must approach it as a mystery in which the unconscious finds a way to reach us if we are open and willing to listen. Astrology can be such a listening device by learning the mythical underpinnings of the astrology and the geometric relationships that the planets make with one another.
We can glean into the nature of the unconscious through the dream and its desire to reveal subtle truths and meanings. In a dream, especially in early stage dreams, nothing may be as it seems.
The basis of astrology in working with dreams is based on Rudhyar’s treatise on cyclical relationships with planets. It is not like most astrology. In many forms of astrology, signage often plays a key role. But in this way of working with astrology, signage, which is the signs that the planets are in on a chart, has very little meaning as far as understanding the nature of a person’s personality. We are not interested in the meaning of the sign as it relates to personality.
We are interested in understanding how certain psychological and spiritual processes unfold and reflect as revealed in the unfoldment process of cyclical relationship. We are also interested in how learned patterns that may trail from one generation to another unfold and reflect in the disseminating patterns of cyclical relationship."
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Marc Bregman founded Archetypal Dreamwork in 1973 and has been evolving this work as a student of his own dreams and those of his clients in the almost 40 years since. With his partner, Christa Lancaster, he founded North of Eden, an organization dedicated to Archetypal Dreamwork. Marc and Christa are master teachers at the Center for Archetypal Dreamwork, and have presented this work in workshops, retreats, and talks throughout the United States and in Canada, Bermuda, and Europe, as well as in radio and television interviews. Among other books on Archetypal Dreamwork, Marc is the author of The Deep Well Tapes series and Dreaming Metaphysical, a book of short, accessible teachings related to the stages of Archetypal Dreamwork.
Susan Marie Scavo, (editor) the co-founder, director, and senior editor of North of Eden Press, has collaborated with both Marc Bregman and Christa Lancaster, cofounders of North of Eden Archteypal Dreamwork, on all of their books. Her devotion to this work has been the catalyst for many of the publications by North of Eden Press. Susan Marie is founding member of North of Eden and is on the Executive Committee. She is the co-founder and co-editor of deLuge, an online literary and arts journal devoted to Archetypal Dreamwork, a dreamwork therapist, and a teacher at the Center for Archetypal Dreamwork.