Archive for April, 2010
Quantum Psychology
Quantum psychology and Ebenezer Scrooge reveal the secret of happiness.
One hundred fifty years ago, Charles Dickens wrote A Christmas Carol, which, in addition to being an entertaining ghost story, reveals deeper psychological truths. When the main character, Ebenezer Scrooge, goes to bed Christmas Eve, he is an unhappy, solitary, miserly old man. He wakes up Christmas morning – transformed. Instead of “bah, humbug,” he laughs joyously as he buys gifts, wishes people a “Merry Christmas,” and plans how he will help Tiny Tim, the handicapped son of his clerk.
Scrooge did not transform his life by talking about his problems or working
on his “issues.” His transformation occurred while he slept and dreamed of four ghostly visitors. These ghosts are metaphors for what happens in real life.
The psychological insights expressed in A Christmas Carol correspond to the insights into personal growth provided by quantum psychology, which is a combination of Eastern philosophy and Western science. Perhaps the most revolutionary insight is that talking about problems does not bring about transformation but hinders it. Dreams are produced solely by the unconscious mind and just as we dream in pictures, fundamental change emerges from communicating with the unconscious mind in the language it prefers – pictures. When we do, the brain responds immediately.