The Taproot Podcast - The Magician Archetype 4/6
Episode Date: September 22, 2022Find more free resources on the website: https://www.gettherapybirmingham.com/ The Magician is intuition, education, and reflexes. In myth and legend the Magician appears in stories not to be the h...ero, but to aid the hero on their quest. In these stories the Magician can also take the form of a witch, enchanter, or shaman. The Magician is the most esoteric part of our schooling that filled us with the most passion. The Magician is a sense of personal power and accomplishment, but not power gained through conflict like the Warrior. Power for the Magician comes through cleverness, tricks and being resourceful and inventive. To the Warrior knowledge, secrets and intrigue make one strong, not brute strength. The Magician is a wiseman and a diviner, both prescient and empathic. The magician can act as a negotiator or statesman, but is more commonly a salesman, seducer, or an entertainer. The Magician stands with one foot in two worlds. He is a gatekeeper between the abstract clairvoyant realm of the unconscious and the practical and results oriented world of the everyday. He brings back visions from the world of the unconscious and bestows them as gifts on others. This power to surprise and interest others is closely tied to our own need for attention. Patients that did not get the attention they desired as children will often have a well developed Magician. These patients believed as children that something about them was bad or shameful, and developed their magician archetype as a way of being seen or having control. It is the Magician that impresses others with insights, funny stories and hidden talents. It is the Magician that is able to stand out in a bar room or business meeting when others are vying for attention. The Magician is our ingenuity, and adaptability in the face of situations that we cannot plan for or control. The Magician is our ability to read between the lines in academic domains, to see the broader point or meaning beyond a text. Every insight or inspiration that you have ever pulled from the ether and used to your advantage feels like magic. If you are comfortable pulling clever observations and realizations from the unconscious and putting them to use then you are strongly identified with the Magician. Patients may be under identified with their Magician if they were brought up to be rule oriented or understand the world only as a series of lists to be memorized. These patients are not intuitive but learn by memorizing a series of steps that became a crutch for their thinking. Patients under identified with their own Magician will distrust the Magician in others. They are not adaptable and are inflexible in their thinking. Patients who view people that are funny or creative with suspicion are likely to be under identified with their own Magician. Patients who are over identified with the Magician may have a grandiose idea of what their intellect or insight will get them out. They may think genius will solve every problem without elbow grease. They may try to use a charming personality or a quick wit to escape hard work or interpersonal conflict. Patients who are deeply dismayed over poor academic performance despite no effort at study will be over identified with the Magician. These patients are often under identified with their Warrior because they have never learned to overcome situations their intuition cannot control or to work hard for a reward. The fundamental anxiety that the magician assuages is the inability to control one’s surroundings. The Magician is at its root a personality device developed to maintain control during a period in a person’s life when assertiveness was not allowed. This was often a way to hold on to some control of our environment when direct confrontation was not an option. The Magician can also develop in early childhood when a child feels like there is a need in the family of origin that neither caregiver can meet. This is often a wounded or unreliable caregiver the child has to manage. This leads to the development of an often “magical” seeming ability to read others, read between the lines, and communicate in indirect ways like art and humor. A patient who is over identified with both the Warrior and the Magician may try to dominate others with their intellect, delighting in the humiliation they cause. After all the cynic is the shadow of the caregiver. A caregiver sees the needs of others in order to meet them. The cynic sees the same needs in others, but uses them to exploit or write off other people. This cynic is the shadow side of the magician’s ability to use intuition to understand others. An example in pop culture would be the stand up comic that summarizes and denigrates groups of people with acerbic insight. Find more at: Taproot Therapy Collective Website: https://gettherapybirmingham.com/ Check out the youtube: https://youtube.com/@GetTherapyBirminghamPodcast Website: https://gettherapybirmingham.podbean.com/ Podcast Feed: https://feed.podbean.com/GetTherapyBirmingham/feed.xml Taproot Therapy Collective 2025 Shady Crest Drive | Hoover, Alabama 35216 Phone: (205) 598-6471 Fax: (205) 634-3647 Email: Admin@GetTherapyBirmingham.com The resources, videos and podcasts on our site and social media are no substitute for mental health treatment. Please find a qualified mental health provider and contact emergency services in your area in the event of an emergency to a provider in your area. Our number and email are only for scheduling at Taproot Therapy Collective are not monitored consistently and not a reliable resource for emergency services.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi, this is Joel Blackstock with the Taproot Therapy Collective podcast, and you are listening
to our series on archetypes.
This is a brief six-part series, and if you missed the first, you can check out all of the archetypes in the
series of the podcast at gettherapybirmingham.com. So what are archetypes? The phrase has entered
the public lexicon now as something that is universal or timeless or a building block of
experience, but the term is originated by psychologist Carl Jung
when he is talking about patterns within the self, within psychology,
that are projected outward because they're part of our psychology
and we are the ones who create and build culture, mythology, and religion
into culture, mythology, and religion.
So we have these building blocks or patterns of the human
experience inside of us. We project them out through myth, storytelling, and human experience,
and by studying them, we can find something that is timelessly, poetically, or metaphorically true.
The magician is the archetype that we're going to be talking about today,
having previously talked about the king, queen, and warrior. The magician is intuition, education,
and reflexes. In myth and legend, the magician appears in stories not to be the hero, but to aid
the hero on their quest. In these stories, the magician can also take the form of a witch, enchanter, or shaman.
The magician is the most esoteric part of our schooling that filled us with the most passion.
The magician is a sense of personal power and accomplishment,
but not power gained through conflict like the warrior.
Power for the magician comes through cleverness, tricks, and being resourceful and inventive.
To the warrior, knowledge, secrets, and intrigue make one strong, not accomplishment or brute
strength, at least not material accomplishment. The magician is a wise man and a diviner,
both prescient and empathetic. The magician can act as a negotiator or statesman, but there is more commonly a function of salesman,
seducer, or entertainer.
The magician stands with one foot in two worlds.
He is a gatekeeper between the abstract, clairvoyant realm of the unconscious and the practical
and results-oriented world of the everyday.
He brings back visions from the world
of the unconscious and bestows them as gifts on others. This power to surprise and interest others
is closely tied to our own need for attention. Patients that did not get the attention that
they desired as children will often have a well-developed magician. These patients believed
as children that something about them was bad or shameful, and developed
their magician archetype as a way of being seen or having control.
It is the magician that impresses others with insights, funny stories, and hidden talents.
It is the magician that is able to stand out in a bar room or a business meeting when others
are vying for attention.
The magician is our ingenuity and adaptability in the face of situations that we cannot plan
for or control.
The magician is our ability to read between the lines in academic domains, to see the broader point or meaning in a text.
Every insight or inspiration that you have ever pulled from the ether and used to your advantage feels like magic. If you are comfortable pulling clever observations and realizations from the
unconscious and putting them to use, then you are strongly identified with the magician.
Patients may be under-identified with their magician if they were brought up to be rule-oriented
or understand the world only as a series of lists to be memorized. These patients are not intuitive,
but learn by memorizing a series of steps that
become a crutch for their thinking. Patients under-identified with their own magician will
distrust the magician and others. They are not adaptable and are inflexible in their thinking.
Patients who view people that are funny or creative with suspicion are likely to be under-identified with their own magician.
Patients who are over-identified with the magician may have a grandiose idea of what their intellect or insight will get them out of.
They may think that genius will solve every problem without elbow grease.
They may try to use a charming personality or a quick wit to escape hard work or interpersonal conflict.
Patients who are deeply dismayed over poor academic performance despite no effort at study
will be over-identified with their magician. These patients are often under-identified with
their warrior because they have never learned to overcome situations that their intuition cannot control, or to work hard for a reward.
The fundamental anxiety that the magician assuages is the inability to control one's
surroundings. The magician is at its root a personality device developed to
maintain control during a period in a person's life when assertiveness was not allowed.
This was often a way to hold on to some
control over our environment when direct confrontation was not an option. The magician
can also develop in early childhood when a child feels like there is a need in the family of origin
that neither caregiver can meet. This is often a wounded or unreliable caregiver the child has to manage. This leads
to the development of an often magical seeming ability to read others, read between the lines,
and communicate in indirect ways like art and humor. A patient who is over-identified with
both the warrior and the magician may try to dominate others with their intellect,
delighting in the humiliation that they cause. After all,
the cynic is the shadow of the caregiver. A caregiver sees the needs of others in order
to meet them, and the cynic sees the same need in others but uses them to exploit or write off
other people. The cynic is the shadow side of the magician's ability to use intuition to understand
others. An example in pop culture would be the stand-up comic that summarizes and
integrates groups of people with acerbic insights. I hope you enjoyed this explication of the
magician archetype. If you would like more resources on Jungian or depth psychology,
you can go to our website, gettherapybirmingham.com. Again, that is gettherapybirmingham.com.