Understanding Your Heroic Journey
Everyone on this planet is on their own particular heroic
journey, an archetypal journey of the hero or heroine that has
been portrayed throughout recorded time in the mythology of the
world.
Here is a brief explanation of the meaning of the archetypes
used to describe the heroes journey.
It begins with departure from the known or conventional, from
consensual reality. It proceeds onto initiation. And it
culminates in our return to tell others about the lessons of our
adventures, and hopefully to provide a map to those who may
follow.
During the departure stage, there is a call to adventure, a
sudden understanding that things are going to change. This call
disrupts a comfortable routine and the person often feels
inadequate and unprepared for the journey. However, once a
decision is made to take the leap into the unknown, supernatural
aid appears. This is usually in the form of meeting the right
people or stumbling upon some necessary new information or
resources that will initiate the journey. Once the first
threshold is crossed, the journey begins in earnest. And it is
now when the hero or heroine finds themselves in the belly of
the whale, which is a time of metamorphosis, an entry into a
dark place where the skills learned before the journey no longer
work. Now begins the initiation. Before the transformation can
occur, trials, tests, and heavy ordeals must be borne. Failure
is now the norm because the new has to be explored through trial
and error. As the trials proceeds, the Goddess is met. This is a
symbol for unconditional love and acceptance of self, a renewal
of self-unification, an amplification of intention. Then,
something unexpected happens...the temptress is met. This in
world mythology has been personified to be a woman. It comes to
symbolize the desire to be seduced by the lure of what once
existed, the comfort of returning to the known. If this
temptation is resisted, then something else has to be confronted
in its place: atonement with the Father. This means that one has
to die to the old in order to fully assume the powers of the
new. An incredible power is met and surrendered too. Only in
this way can the old self die so that the new self, the
transformed one, can live. Once this condition is met, there is
an apotheosis, deification. A heavenly state is attained; the
person becomes divine in some way. With this transformation, the
ultimate boon is granted, the Holy Grail is found, the journey
is successfully completed and what the person came to get has
been secured.
After this, however, the return has to take place. Again, as in
the very beginning, there is a deep reluctance. There is an
initial refusal to return. Sometimes, too, once one has secured
the goal, one must escape from the jealous guardians of the
secret that has been won. Now, with the journey in its descent,
after reaching a lofty ascent, the hero or heroine once again is
in need of guides and assistants on how to return. Again, too, a
threshold has to be crossed, this time back to where the person
came from. Now the person has become master of two worlds, the
new and the old, or the inner and the outer. A new freedom to
live has been experienced.
All of us travel through these three stages, with their numerous
substrates, when we begin and complete the heroic journey. When
a new mother has her first child, when a young person secures
their first job, when a traditionally employed person leaps to
become an entrepreneur, when a writer sets to create a new book,
or when somebody goes to a specialist to seek healing for a
wounded psyche...the heroic journey begins.
Mythology speaks of this journey and gives us all a map on what
the stages of it are. Understanding the symbols behind the myths
help us complete our own particular journey. Without truly
grasping the import of the heroic journey, as told throughout
time and transmitted via the language and traditions of diverse
people, we may not recognize that we are all heroes, and we may
either get lost along the way or shirk the completion of our
unique quest.
People can be obvious outer heroes, whose name and
accomplishment are made known as significant points in history;
and they can also be inner heroes, spiritual adventurers seeking
a refinement of sensibility that leads to deep spiritual
understanding; and they can be you and I, as we step into a new
phase in our lives where we must transform ourselves because
vital structures of our lives have collapsed and something new
has to be grasped.