spooky2
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Hi PauliEffect,
Crossbows analogy points at aspects of our selves which are subordinated under an encompassing whole. We can imagine a hierarchy of many levels, coming to a hierarchy of "higher selves" and "lower selves"/ "aspects".
What it makes tricky is, we can't be so certain how solid or "whole" our conscious self really is. When we do a little introspection and think about how we act in different situations, with different people involved, we'll find that we take on quite different roles. Now, this is common and natural, and shows the flexibility of our conscious self. When we take this a little further, we can imagine that we can take on roles which are incompatible with each other. And from this, it's not difficult to imagine that there are roles which don't make it to our conscious self because they are in such degree incompatible with our personality, as we like to see it, and to the circumstances we live in, that these roles remain subconscious. When these are, for whatever reason, quite strong and substantial, they can start to begin a life of it's own, not really, but almost, as if they were actually different persons, but still connected to us. Then things can happen like feeling incomplete, permantly exhausted or disturbed, fuzzy, up to hearing voices and such.
I think it is a permanent process of building up, and reintegrating aspects of our own, while finally the process should go in the direction of integrating and becoming more conscious of incongruencies within ourselves.
It might even be possible that a person breaks apart into several of it's aspects.
A "thought form", in my vocabulary, is not necessarily to be called an "aspect" of our own. If I, for example, in a lonely hour, would vividly imagine my dream-partner, then a decent psychic maybe could confuse this thought-form with an aspect, or even a real person, while it's just a fantasy of mine with no degree of independence. Although I've heard if one invests much energy, one can produce thought forms which to some degree can become independent from it's creator; and if one overdoes it with fantasizing and gets lost in it, chances are that thought forms become aspects and the personality more and more fractioned.
Spooky
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