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Labyrinths

lutherangirl

Member
Real Person
Female
I found this interesting. I posted it on the Biblical Families Facebook page but it was deleted. I found it sad that it was deleted, because this is a positive story of polygyny. Both women realized their roles and excepted their value.

The story of Emma and Carl Jung’s highly unconventional marriage, their relationship with Freud, and their part in the early years of Psychoanalysis.

Emma Jung was clever, ambitious and immensely wealthy, one of the richest heiresses in Switzerland when, aged seventeen, she met and fell in love with Carl Jung, a handsome, penniless medical student. Determined to share his adventurous life, and to continue her own studies, she was too young to understand Carl’s complex personality or conceive the dramas that lay ahead.

Labyrinths tells the story of the Jungs’ unconventional marriage, their friendship and, following publication of Jung’s The Psychology of the Unconscious, subsequent rift with Freud. It traces Jung’s development of word association, notions of the archetype, the collective unconscious, the concepts of extraversion and introversion and the role played by both Carl and Emma in the early development of the scandalous new Psychoanalysis movement.

In its many twists and turns, the Jung marriage was indeed labyrinthine and Emma was forced to fight with everything she had to come to terms with Carl’s brilliant, complex character and to keep her husband close to her. His belief in polygamy led to many extra-marital affairs including a menage a trois with a former patient Toni Wolff that lasted some thirty years. But the marriage endured and Emma realised her ambition to become a noted analyst in her own right.
 
Hey @lutherangirl, nice to see you on the Forum a bit. This story is certainly an acknowledgement of a man's desire to love and care for multiple women, and an example of women embracing that aspect of the man they love. Unfortunately, it is a secular version of what most of us here are learning about and or are living, so it must be read with discernment. Godly truth is truth even when you don't have a relationship with God to know how to walk it out in a righteous way.
 
Hey @lutherangirl, nice to see you on the Forum a bit. This story is certainly an acknowledgement of a man's desire to love and care for multiple women, and an example of women embracing that aspect of the man they love. Unfortunately, it is a secular version of what most of us here are learning about and or are living, so it must be read with discernment. Godly truth is truth even when you don't have a relationship with God to know how to walk it out in a righteous way.
Hello Julie,

I agree that it is from a secular version. Carl Yung's father was a clergyman. I think a lot of his values are religious with a science spin. I've matured so much in my faith walk regarding Biblical marriage since I joined this site in 2008. Carl Yung didn't seem to set up to become a polygamist. It seemed like it happened naturally and with women whom he became connected to on a deeper level than just sexual. He and Freud had a falling out about some of Freud's sexual theories. My passion in these later years of discovering that polygyny is not the "evil" we Christians were brought up to believe, is to ensure women aren't hurt or taken advantage of when their husbands are living this lifestyle for the wrong reasons. I actually wrote a book that has polygyny undertones. It is called "Open for Love" by Michelle Yowler on Amazon.
 
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