The Influence of Feminism and the Observed Crisis of the Present Day Male’s Passage Into Manhood

Honours B.A. Psychology, Research Paper

By John Verdon
University of Ottawa.
1983

Abstract

In this paper feminism is understood as the increasingly pervasive cultural attitude or context advocating the eradication of the traditional sex-roles, with the purpose of equalizing the life experience potentials available to each sex, and stressing the fact that the similarities between women and men far outweigh their differences. It was proposed that the present day male’s experience of coming t terms with himself as an adult and a male, without the reinforcement of a definitive structure of a sex-role stereotype, may leave him vulnerable to a particular type of noogenic crisis.

A review of the literature failed to disclose relevant studies concerning this particular paper. Based on personal observation of several men undergoing the Age Thirty Transition, as well as on a review of Jung’s concepts of the structure of the psyche, and the process of individuation, an analysis was made in order to come to a deeper understanding of the effect that the influence of feminism has had in depotentiating the traditional markers that have been used in the process of assimilating the male’s gender identity.

Jung presupposed for each sex a specific fundamental psychological orientation. This orientation was the basis of the stereotypic sex-roles in a particular time and culture, during the process of assimilating the gender-identity. Accepting the notion of an inherently specific psychological orientation that is contained by one’s sex is not equivalent to prescribing that the traditional sex-roles should continue to exist unchanged, but allows us to more fully comprehend the dynamics of the relationship between the sexes as well as of individual growth. Crisis can emerge with the disillusionment of what one sex expects to find in the other sex, on the level of personal relationship. Many misunderstandings that occur may possibly be based on a lack of a clear appreciation for this difference in psychological orientation. As a consequence the crisis for the male involves an element or experience of a certain loss of an acquired feminine image.

The contention may contribute in general to a better understanding of the dynamics of not only the interpersonal relation of couples, but to the young adult male’s process of individuation. The findings encourage pursuing research in this area.


Introduction

A recent review of the literature, (Greenglass, 1982) concerning gender-roles concluded with the assertion that gender roles must be abolished in order for all individuals to have the opportunity to achieve their full human potential. The approach of the review was a feminist social psychological perspective that was based on the belief that individual psychological functioning cannot be understood apart from the social context in which it is found. While the intention of such an assertion is undoubtedly one that our civilization must pursue wholeheartedly, the complexity of the relational dynamics between both the sexes and between “individuals” precludes a much deeper understanding of the functions that gender-roles have in the process of human communication, growth, and the development of identity. This sort of realization is acknowledged later in the above mentioned summary when the author affirmed that the abolition of gender-roles would not in itself, ensure equality between the sexes.

The intent of this study is to relate the notion of a specific psychological orientation that is inherent in the task of consciously assimilating a particular gender identity, an orientation that is perhaps inherent in the sex identity as well, to the process of individuation, taking into account the possible influence that feminism has on this process today. It is a contention of the writer that there does exist specific psychological orientations that are presupposed onto the individual by the biological sex and that this specific orientation was and is the fundamental basis of the gender-role stereotypes. However, in accepting this notion one is not committed to prescribing that these roles should continue to exist, but is instead, in a much stronger position to facilitate the adoption of more universally flexible and perhaps androgynous roles.

The intent of this study is to relate the notion of a specific psychological orientation that is inherent in the task of consciously assimilating a particular gender identity, an orientation that is perhaps inherent in the sex identity as well, to the process of individuation, taking into account the possible influence that feminism has on this process today. It is a contention of the writer that there does exist specific psychological orientations that are presupposed onto the individual by the biological sex and that this specific orientation was and is the fundamental basis of the gender-role stereotypes. However, in accepting this notion one is not committed to prescribing that these roles should continue to exist, but is instead, in a much stronger position to facilitate the adoption of more universally flexible and perhaps androgynous roles.

  1. The definition of the concepts of the “influence of feminism”, “the male’s passage into manhood,” and “the noogenic crisis”, as they are to be understood for the purposes of this paper.
  2. The three case studies will be presented. The aim is to outline the general dynamics of the onset, progression, and possible resolution of a particular type of noogenic crisis.
  3. The commentary on the presented cases will use Jungian concepts and propositions as the central or main analytical tools. Also included will be some historical or anthropological analogies.
  4. A conclusion will be drawn and several possible areas of application will be proposed, as well as some suggestions for further research.




The entire study in this plan of investigation will attempt to bring the following questions into sharper focus:

  1. Although the measure of masculinity, femininity, and androgyny, may be useful in establishing behavioral/personality dimensions, they may not in themselves measure in any useful way the actual psychological differences that may exist between men and women. Thus, a phenomenological approach to what each sex perceives to be the power differential separating them from each other, may prove to be more revealing of the psychology of gender as well as what each sex expects as compensatory in the other sex. Such an approach would sharpen the focus on the question of, is there an essential psychological difference inherent in the gender and if so what is it?
  2. How is gender assimilated, and what is the process by which the assimilation is achieved? Ow does gender and sex influence the process of individuation?

The general approach of this study stresses the development of the individual male personality, and by implication or inference the female as well. In particular it focuses upon the psychic functioning necessary for psychological health, as a way of life. The writer recognizes the breadth and complexity of the topic makes each effort only a relative progress toward a more comprehensive understanding of the dynamics of gender and the individuation process. Other models for the exploration of his area of development exist, and a recommendation is made for a further integration of those models.

Definition of terms

For the purpose of this paper, “the influence of feminism”, is understood as the increasingly pervasive cultural attitude or context advocating the radical modification of the traditional gender-roles. The intention of such modifications is to equalize the life experience potentials available to both sexes, in order to reinforce a realization that the similarities between women and men s individuals far outweigh their differences. The major implication of the feminist approach lies in the stressing that the sex-stereotyped roles and behaviors are the primary source of conditioning creating the disparity between the two sexes’ ways of functioning and orientation. As this author understands the problem, the shift in emphasis onto the stereotypic roles and behaviors of the sexes, while necessary to investigate, may too easily simplify the approach to introducing changes in the functional interactions between the sexes. More concisely, the implications of the feminist perspective, while creating economic and political equality also creates the expectation that once this level of equality is achieved, the harmonious equalization of the dynamics of relationship between woman and man will naturally follow.

The women involved in the case studies are not to be construed as feminist in any radical sense, but as present day women concerned with finding their individual identities apart from traditional roles and behaviors. These women have integrated, perhaps not congruently, the presuppositions of equality of opportunity and experience, and are thus more sensitive to apparent constraints involved in the expectational projections of the men with whom they have become involved.

The male’s passage into manhood is the central concept in this paper. Despite this, however, the concept remains complex, subtle, and therefore difficult to define. The specific passage in mind, does not refer to any of the particular so-called passages normal to the modern Western cultures, such as the acquisition of a driver’s license, or the loss of the male’s virginity, or the proving of the male’s courage, strength, virility or instrumentality. The term is intended to describe a passage of psychological or emotional insight that while perhaps only transiently grasped by the conscious awareness, yet may still mark a more profound change in the individual male’s attitude.

This specific insight involves the experience of coming to terms with, and assimilating into one’s being the impact and implications of the awareness that besides being an individual one is also an adult and a male. This sort of passage is not necessarily restricted to one particular sexual orientation or preference. The dynamics involve the comprehension of how one’s maleness colours one’s motivations and perceptions, especially in relation to what one expects to find in a relationship with a significant other. These expectations are over and above any sort of division of labour or stereotyped roles, although the roles may have previously facilitated their mutual fulfillment. Clues to the nature of this particular type of passage, may be found by the analytical exploration of the rites of initiation of more primitive or stable societies, as the meaning the rites hold for the individual and the place they occupy in the scheme of the social life, (Eliade, 1958), Te Paske, 1982).

The observed crisis of the present day male’s passage into manhood takes on an aspect of the noogenic crisis or neurosis, (Frankl, 1967). In the more primitive or stable societies the process of becoming an adult male was grounded in the challenge of fulfilling and carrying a set of role and behaviors defined by the sex stereotypes of the particular time and culture.

Integral to this thesis, and perhaps a significant subset to, and substantiated by Bateson’s view, is Jung’s notion of the anima/animus dynamics as they influence the interpersonal relationships between women and men, (Harding, 1965, 1970; Bertine, 1967; Jung, 1966). The sense of loss of a feminine image is of itself enough to initiate a crisis in meaning (noogenic). However, such a loss in conjunction with the increasing dissolution of stereotypic-roles, which previously provided a basis for a more clear communication of specific relational contingencies and thus more simple avenues of social participation and meaning, generates an even greater potential for the initial rejection of the projected anima with the ensuing noogenic crisis.

It must be understood that the above is not any sort of reason or rationale for a reversion to prescribed specific sex-roles. The attempt to comprehend the deeper psychological orientations underlying the stereotypes can contribute to a smoother transition to stereotypically-role-free relationships between the sexes. This author believes that the noogenic crisis dealt with in this paper is an inevitable and necessary stage in the process of individuation, as the separation of the ego from the Self in the form of the discrimination of the anima from the mother imago, (Edinger, 1972). The severity and duration of this type of noogenic crisis, should however, be at least somewhat amenable to adjustment by the proper understanding of the meaning of the process as it works its way through.

Thus, the passage is characterized as a noogenic crisis because in the cases presented the males were all in general conscious agreement with the ideal of non-stereotypic sex-roles. The rejected anima projections then pointed out the discrepancy between the conscious motives and the unconscious expectations, creating a more inclusive existential frustration, sense of helplessness, and generalized loss of a sense of purpose that accompanies the sense of being connected with the world around one. In this way the sense of isolation and alienation is amplified.

Case Studies

The cases are complex and multi-dimensional, with the consequence that no one theory can expect to adequately encompass the breadth of each experience. The scope of this particular theoretical perspective limits its focus to an admittedly one-sided examination and hopefully an explanation of the male’s experience. A. N. Whitehead (1929) asserts that, “The verification of a rationalistic scheme is to be sought in its general success, and not in the peculiar certainty or initial clarity of its first principles.” Thus, Jung’s concepts of the structure of the psyche and the process of individuation provide what can be considered the first principles of the rationalistic scheme proposed by this study. General success may perhaps be measured or defined in terms of whether the scheme can provide a general contextual backdrop upon which most particular and individual experiences can be more completely comprehended and located within the process of the psychological maturation of the male. This contextual backdrop should aid in the determination of a direction of a health-oriented outcome of any suitable therapeutic intervention

The primary assumption upon which this viewpoint is based and from which the subsequent understandings emerge, is that the crisis or problem is in the nature of a psychological dynamic that uses the prevalent cultural, political, and social forms to work itself out rather than a dynamic that is necessarily caused by particularly prevalent forms, although the particular culture may aid or hinder the working out of such a psychological dynamic. Awareness and acceptance of the dynamic underlying the crisis or problem would permit the development of a more structured approach that could focus on the psychological and emotional education necessary to more adequately and properly prepare the individual male for the transition into adulthood.

The material presented I the following case studies is necessarily an extremely condensed distillation of observations garnered from regular and frequent interviews extending from a minimum period of eight months to a maximum period of two years. The three men involved were either in the midst or beginning of the age thirty-transition (Levinson, 1978) and therefore the activation of the issues concerning the attachment/separateness polarity and the masculine/feminine polarity augment and amplify the sense of the imperative transition into the subsequent phase of becoming one’s own man. Each of the three males was born and raised in a different country and cultural, socio-economic background. The observations center on the male’s reactions within their relationships with their partners. Each relationship represents different levels of commitment, duration, and fulfillment. Each relationship occurred in Ottawa with a woman native to Ottawa. Case 1 will use the aliases of Tom and Mary; Case 2 of Jim and Kim; and Case 3 of Ted and Kate.

Case One

Tom, born and raised in England of a lower-middle class family, was now a landed immigrant living in Ottawa. Since coming to Canada he had earned his livelihood by being a cook and then waiter. Recently, however, he had launched a small business that was just beginning to sustain itself and provide him with an adequate income. His formal education was the equivalent of high school, although he had continued to pursue an alternative form of education through a series of readings and serious interests in different approaches to health. He was sensitive and could be articulate, despite a general shyness in public. He had very few intimate friends.

On his first visit to Canada, Tom met Mary while she was still living with her parents. They fell in love and where soon living together. After approximately three years of this arrangement they decided to get married, a decision complicated by Tom’s citizenship status problems. The marriage would simplify the process of becoming a landed immigrant. Although they affirmed their love for each other, Tom maintained that the major reason for the marriage to take place was the ‘convenience’. Throughout the relationship Tom was both very jealous and possessive of Mary, although never physically abusive or dominant. Mary had had a negative, uncommunicative, and fearful relationship with both her parents, especially her father who on occasion had been physically and severely abusive to her mother, the other children and herself. Socially, Mary was open, warm, responsive and very articulate, having many more intimate friend of both sexes than Tom did.

It soon became evident that in many ways Mary was able to be much more consciously self-disclosing with others than she was with Tom. In fact, she admitted that she was probably projecting feelings and attitudes more appropriate to her father onto Tom, and was thus somewhat inhibited in the establishing of a trusting relationship. Mary had left her family’s home in order to live with Tom and as such this was her first adult type relationship. It may then be reasonable to assume that this sort of projection is in fact the case.

Mary was not a feminist in any sort of militant way, she had however, integrated into herself many aspects of what may be termed the values of a modern woman. She fiercely maintained her economic and personal independence, refusing to fall into any pattern of relating that she felt her mother had accepted. She perceived the notion of having children with fear and apprehension, as if it were a trap in the sense that she would be more vulnerable due to the increased dependency and responsibility. She was not overly ambitious in terms of a career, nor was she opposed or fearful of serious commitment to a relationship. In many ways she was capable of deep insight and compassion that generally allowed her to eventually temper any one-sidedness of attitude on her part.

Tom’s relationship with both his mother and father was somewhat distant, despite his being an only child. Tom’s powerful insecurity may perhaps have been due to a general lack of warm contact with his parents. Tom habitually called Mary ‘mommy’ as a term of endearment and in affected tones of voice and body posture appropriate to a grown-up playing the ‘child’. Mary had left Tom several times for periods lasting about a week. Her major complaint being, that Tom was not willing to acknowledge and therefore actively work on his problems of insecurity. Mary felt that she was actively dealing with her own problems through a series of session with a spiritual lay-counselor. The sessions seemed to have brought her into closer contact with a great deal of her repressed feelings concerning her parents and family, without however doing much to resolve them in a constructive way. The result of these sessions seemed to be an amplification of her projections onto Tom and an increasing reactivity, moodiness, and inability to communicate with Tom. Tom throughout this period became more and more insecure.

Approximately six months after becoming married, Tom came home from work one evening to find that Mary had completely moved out. Mary had left behind a note indicating her love for Tom but affirming that this action was a necessary one for her and not to try to contact her, as she would contact him when she felt ready. This separation was to last a year during which time Tom would experience the noogenic crisis that is the topic of this paper.

Tom’s first reactions to the note and the empty house, was a combination of shock, feigned indifference, anger, and desperation. He began most immediately a series of phone calls none of which were fruitful in locating Mary. As the realization sank in that every one of Mary’s belongings were in fact gone, a sense of fear and loss began to predominate. The next several weeks were spend by Tom in efforts to communicate with Mary who had absolutely no desire to do so. Mary’s refusal to communicate, confirmed to Tom the seriousness of the separation.

Tom’s financial responsibilities without Mary almost doubled. Much of the initial shock and reaction were consumed by a necessary increase in activity and concern revolving around the effort to survive. However, reactions continued to occur; fits of crying, apathy and loneliness, periods of a sense of euphoria and autonomous strength, extremely compulsive calls, visits, ‘spying’, thought of selling everything and moving to California, periods of anguish, etc.

Within four months Mary had found a new job and home that happened to be not too distant from Tom. By now, both had cooled off somewhat and during the ensuing two months both had their own affairs. The affairs developed into casual friendships as they eventually realized that their relationship was not over. Communication between Tom and Mary began on a more serious note. Mary was not ready to resume the relationship as it had been, although se affirmed that Tom was indeed the one she loved.

The following five months proved to be the most difficult for Tom. Financial pressures continued to create anxiety. He was unwilling to move or even to share his apartment, due to a persistent and tenacious desire for Mary to move back in, thus he wanted the apartment, into which he had invested a considerable amount of energy in renovations, to be ready in case Mary changed her mind. Tom became increasingly compulsive in his need to see or call Mary. Mary, on the other hand found herself reacting to Tom’s frequent calls and attempts to see her, in an equally compulsive though oppositely abusive manner.

Thus, each time Tom succumbed to his compulsion to talk to Mary, she just as compulsively repelled him. Only on those occasions where Mary felt in control could she see Tom. Tom’s compulsiveness extended to the point where he would resort to frequent spying. Always, however, such actions would be motivated or preceded by feelings of uncontrollable anxiety and emptiness, as if Mary had somehow ‘captured’ the essence of his being, and only she could now restore him. Tom’s mood swings became more intense moving from one of strength and a belief that the relationship would work itself out, to an apathetic despair and an impulse to leave everything behind by selling out and moving far away. Mary became more and more that symbol that focused all that Tom considered as the meaningfulness of what could be found in life, and that without her all seemed worthless, empty and alien. The insult to his sense of injury was that he felt unjustly helpless in his dependence on Mary and perceived her to be happily and easily independent of him, to be in almost complete self-possession of herself which in turn increased his sense of weakness, frustration and anger.

At this point Tom began to seek therapy in several ways. He began regular sessions with a woman gestalt therapist, started searching for and reading a series of books concerned with male psychological growth and problems, and slowly attempted to develop a greater circle of more intimate friends upon who he could count on for support. Tom’s process of letting go, (for years he was almost continually constipated), was substantiated when he finally accepted a room-mate who would help share the expenses of maintain his apartment. The room-mate was a male, who had recently started to jog regularly, and Tom was soon inspired to join him.

Although, they jogged together for only a short time Tom continued to do so on his own. This activity seemed to be a crucial step in Tom’s affirmation of his own strength and independence. Along with the other process he had initiated, jogging seemed to help him maintain his contact with a sense of wholeness and power within himself. His developing friendships with other males allowed for an expanded sense of autonomy through a more widespread emotional support group. The relation with Mary began to be more relaxed and much less compulsive and desperate. Eventually a mutual confidence and trust enabled the relationship to flow according to their own schedules and desires. Almost exactly a year after the separation Mary moved back to live with Tom. Some months later Tom no longer continued to work as a part-time waiter, and was instead able to commit himself entirely to making his own business enterprise a successful venture. The relationship continued to have problems and communication difficulties, although with a firmer foundation upon which to work things out.

Case Two

Jim was born of Ottawa, of a working class family. From the age of one until the age of five, he was cared for by three separate foster homes, as a result of a series of events occurring in the natural family including the death of the maternal grandfather and separation of the parents. By the age of five the maternal grandmother had remarried and was able to take Jim into her new home with what was now his step-grandfather. A few months later his mother moved into the house as well. The step-grandfather profoundly influenced the environment in an emotionally oppressive manner. Open affection was almost completely absent. Jim’s feelings toward what was now his family were at best ambivalent. He remained in this situation until he was nineteen at which point he left home. The foster homes had provided little emotional warmth and had been at times physically abusive.

Although intelligent, even bright, his school record was irregular, showing more troughs than peaks. He moved from an 84% average in grade nine to failing grade twelve and dropping out of school the next year. However, he had always been an avid reader and in this way he continued to broaden his ideas through a wide range of books.

In the next nine years he had pursued an alternative ‘hippie’ lifestyle, that led him through several relationships, produced two children from two mothers, as well as several types of employment and travels throughout Europe, Canada and the U.S. By the age of 28 Jim had developed a clear and powerful sense of vocation that culminated in the decision to acquire the university education necessary to enable him to pursue it as a career.

As far back as Jim could remember a profound feeling of person failure had permeated his sense of self. A tremendous neediness for relationship seemed permanently linked to a complete inability to either find a ‘true’ love or to establish a long-term consistent relationship. A persistent sense of unworthiness appeared to preclude him from accepting or seeing the potential for fulfilling his needs. Usually introverted, working as a waiter for several years had enabled him to develop a more gregarious person both with strangers and with intimate friends. His lack of self-esteem often crippled him from taking an active or assertive role in the pursuit of an intimate relationship with anyone he found attractive. Jim’s relations with any perceived authority figure was consistently distant formal and sometimes ingratiating, and always privately ambivalent.

A month before Jim was to begin his third year at university, Kim and mother moved into the same apartment building he lived in. Kim was eight years younger than Jim and was also attending the same university. A few months passed before they took notice of each other at a party held in another apartment in their building. Soon Kim was dropping over to Jim’s regularly to chat, and Jim began to be infatuated with her. Having never married, Jim had recently come to a realization (based on reflection of his romantic history) that love without commitment could not be sustained. He had been feeling ready to try commitment and now that Kim had entered the picture she became the image of the possibility of such a type of relationship.

Kim’s attitudes and opinions had been strongly influenced or colored by her mother who was fiercely bitter over having become a ‘suppressed housewife’, having given up dream of becoming an artist and then being divorced and dependent on alimony. Kim had been well convinced one had to have a securely independent career before even considering establishing any sort of permanent relationship. She was very apprehensive of becoming trapped before having achieved in her own terms a sense of individuality and independence. She was thus very sensitive to any excessive emotional demands reacting against them as if they were an attack on her future and her dreams, or an attempt to pigeonhole her into a static role that would steal her chances of finding herself.

The relationship was characterized by a consistent attraction/repulsion on both sides, although Jim tended more to represent the desire for increasingly deeper commitment, while Kim would tend to ract with a wish to return to a more casual friendship. Jim in many ways was desperate to make this relationship work, motivated by feelings that here at last almost within reach was the fulfillment and groundedness he had always lacked and had never found. Kim, however, felt completely swallowed when Jim would be so intense, she felt him to be grasping. In a sense she was justified in her feelings, for although Jim was not trying to fit her into any specific role, he was projecting expectations that the relationship would be a fountain of emotional nurturance that would somehow give him complete security. The intensity of Jim’s desire for emotional stability through Kim was matched by the intensity of her rejection of the responsibility of such. Throughout the relationship Jim experienced a good deal of ambivalence about the possibilities of fulfilment due to the age gap between them.

 After six months the relationship had developed to the point where Jim had pushed its definition from one of friendship to one that was more serious and monogamous. Kim had continued her involvement with clearly mixed feelings, which at last crystalized into a desire to return to a more casual relationship and therefore to discontinue her serious involvement. Jim had by now invested a tremendous amount of hope into what he perceived as the potential fulfilling and redeeming of a sense of at last belonging and being loved.




When Kim communicated that she wanted a less involved relationship Jim felt overwhelmed as if the ground had been taken out from under him. Consequently Jim reacted as if all meaning and purposefulness of surviving was now lost, irrevocably.

In the matter of a day, Jim’s life changed from one on the edge of a potential fulfillment to one of meaningless emptiness. An occasional drinker before, he now started to drink consistently and regularly. Having little will or motivation to do anything but watch T.V. and drink scotch. He was given to frequent fits of crying, went to be and awoke with thoughts of suicide, although not to the point of acting it out. His school suffered, he lost weight, was unable to sleep or only sleep fitfully, and his ambition lost the edge it had when he had first entered university. He was possessed to the point of being completely attentive to Kim’s arrivals and departures from the apartment building, waiting till whatever time at night to catch a glimpse of her coming home, and getting p at the first sounds of stirring in the building in order to catch sight of her if she happened to be leaving in the morning.

He was subject to physical sensations of pain, in his heart, stomach, and deep feelings of physical emptiness. It seemed as if almost everything was a stimulus to some sort of memory of Kim and what Jim believed that could have been. Along with the persistent thoughts of the possibilities of Kim’s involvement with other men, thought which increased his despair and fed his low self-esteem, he experienced fits of anger, and fantasies of extreme violence toward Kim. Both types of thought and fantasies, that is of jealousy and violent anger, served to emphasize his feelings of having lost his self-possession or ‘soul’, and with it the meaningfulness of hi previous endeavours. As far as Jim could perceive, Kim was in complete self-possession and was not in the least experiencing any sort of feelings of loss. Only on the occasional encounters would Kim demonstrate any affect, and that, as perceived by Jim was only resentment at having to encounter him at all.

This state of affairs continued for almost two months until at last, Jim decided to seek out some counseling and therapy. He also read as many books as he could find concerning the male psychological experience, and the male’s process of social condition/construction. It was not long before Jim was able to get more consciously in touch with the emergent feeling and identify them. He became aware that in many ways he had been searching for a sort of mother, instead of an equal who could be a companion. Jim saw that he had expected a salvation and transformation, redemption from his sense of unworthiness, and to be at last secure in the comfort of a woman love. He also became conscious of the feelings of rejection that had their source in his early childhood experience which had remained largely unconscious. These feelings had manifested as an almost self-fulfilling prophesy interfering in Kim’s previous attempts to establish a relationship. He was now able to acknowledge that self-love was his first step and primary responsibility in his process of changing.

During the following three months Jim and Kim resumed the relationship and broke-up another three times. The final occasion was initially as overwhelming and traumatic as the first one. However, the crisis did not last as long, for this time it was Jim that initiated the termination of the relationship. Jim was now able to see that due to his neediness this relationship was one of constant compromise rather than one of voluntary collaboration. In touch with new feelings of self-worth Jim was able to understand that the relationship was one of constant compromise rather than one of voluntary collaboration. In touch with new feelings of self-worth Jim was able to understand that the relationship he wanted had to be based on a freely given expression of love and commitment, and not upon a coerced, obligatory, compromise. In terminating the relationship Jim felt worthy enough to be able to find someone more willing to commit themselves to a relationship to him, and strong and secure enough in those feelings to be able to discriminate a passing interest from a genuine willingness to love and risk commitment. 

Case Three

In the two previous cases, for the most part, both sides of the situation where available to the author. In this case, however, only the male’s version was obtained. This need not be considered a limitation as the study is focused primarily on the male’s existential experience.

Ted was born in India, of an upper-class Indian family. Both his grandfather and his father had achieved great distinction throughout all of India as medical doctors. Ted choosing to follow in their footsteps had distinguished himself as a medical student, had graduated, studied surgery, nd then had come to Canada to acquire further education. He was naturally very bright, but also attractive, charming and personable. Being the only son of such outstanding achievers, he tended to be regarded as a sort of ‘golden boy’, the pride of his mother and father. His relation with his father was often stormy, rebellious, and competitive. Ted wanted to be an equal to his father in achievement but a superior in contemporary training. Ted’s parents maintained a very traditional marriage, which he respected, admired and believe to be completely healthy. His own notions of marriage were not much different, although he was not wholly predisposed to the necessity of enacting rigid relational roles, desiring greater participation in the caring of his children, etc. Marriae, as for Ted essentially a partnership of two equals. In these attitudes Ted wished to combine what he believed to be the best of the East and West.

Ted met Kat while living in Ottawa and attending university. She was enrolled in the same program as Ted but at the doctoral level instead of the master’s level. She was beautiful, having won contests locally, and now modeled part-tie in order to supplement her income while attending graduate school. Thus, she presented the picture of an ideal contemporary woman, intelligent, career-oriented, beautiful and a very high achiever. Ted’s actual involvement with Kate was very short, and remained superficial, although his personal emotional involvement lasted almost six months and is representative of the crisis that similar to those of the other cases, though not as extreme.

After one or two initial chance encounters Ted became attracted to Kate and asked her out several times. Kate accepted the invitations but was clear from the onset that she was already seriously involved with someone else. At first Ted felt that a friendship would be enough, however, the signals he perceived to be receiving from Kate led him to conclude that her serious relationship was not a whole-hearted one. Despite knowing that he would be leaving Ottawa within a year he believed that an affair between them would be more fulfilling for both of them. Kate was not at all convinced, and the relationship rapidly degenerated into a cold war.

Working in the same department often brought them into close proximity to each other during their working days. Throughout this time, whenever Ted would see or get close to Kate he was subject to some uncontrollable emotional reactions which included, slight tremors, hyper-self-consciousness and a pervasive defensiveness. As in the other cases his sleeping patters were disturbed and sleep became fitful. Even as the object of Ted’s contempt and hatred she still maintained a power over his sense of self-possession, and thus it was almost impossible for Ted to see Kate as just another colleague. From Ted’s perspective she seemed to be intent on avoiding the reality of the intensity of the affect that Ted believed they both had on each other. Ted not only felt helpless to be free from thinking constantly of her, but angry as well at what he believed to be her lack of consideration or even refusal to cooperate in coming to terms with a situation that was obviously affecting him at least.

In an endeavor to understand the situation by first accepting responsibility for having participated in its creation, Ted began to reflect on his past relationship in the attempt to discover clues to both his coping strategies as well as to the types of women to whom he had previously been attracted. With the help of a counselor he tried to delineate what his expectations of Kate exactly were, and then to make an effort to see the situation from the possible different perspectives that could be representative of Kate’s views. Progress was slow as Ted struggled to keep from despairing and being engulfed in an emptiness that seemed his unjust lot. His work once inspired and passionate now languished in a sense of meaningless and mechanical effort. Thus, an image of woman emerged, that was both nurturing in her capacity to drain the energy and colours from Ted’s life.

Ted’s emotional attachment persisted for approximately six months, before it began to subside. As spring was nearing its end Ted decided to take a three week vacation in the Bahamas. The combination of the relief of being away from work, and the encounters with Kate, as well as a number of positive romantic interactions, sexual and otherwise, did much to refresh and rejuvenate Ted’s self-esteem, and sense of self-possession. Upon his return Ted was confident and secure. His plan was now to spend a few weeks finishing up his graduate studies, then to visit India for just over a month, and then to return to Ottawa and wrap up his thesis before moving to the U.S. The experience with Kate as well as those during his vacation had opened up in Ted the awareness of a deeper need for committed relationship. The chief reason for his visit to India therefore was due to this new awareness as well as relating to his cultural and traditional background and the wishes and expectations of his parents. At 28 years of age the traditional expectations were that Ted should already be married, thus the visit would primarily be to initiate the process involved in a traditionally arranged marriage. Ted’s involvement with Kate had been a very intense emotional experience for him that resulted in Ted’s becoming aware of a considerable amount of ambivalence within himself concerning his expectations of a woman. This new awareness enabled Ted to now see that much of the outer conflict was in actuality the manifestation of his own inner conflict. However, Ted was far from having resolved the conflict. Throughout the initial process of the arranged marriage Ted alternated between an acceptance of the situation with a realization of how much work would have to be done by both he and his bride-to-be, in order to achieve a fulfilling relationship, and a considerable emergence of anger at the failure of his fiancée to adequately anticipate his needs. Within two months he had called the arrangement off and was on the edge of a greater depression due to his feelings that he may never find happiness in any sort of permanent relationship.

Commentary

In the cases resented above none of the males have been able to completely or fully resolve their crisis, although, progress was evident. Each situation continued to perpetuate within the males an alternating state of clarity and security to one of ambivalence and insecurity. Despite flashes of insight the process of integrating the insights and thus transcending the cycle of great expectations to great disillusionment and then back again, appears to be a long and arduous one. The dynamics of the anima/animus interaction, (Jung 1966; Harding, 1965, 1970; Bertine, 1967; Von Franz, 1964), can very adequately account for or at least describe, a good deal of the inter-relational dynamics occurring in each case. Perhaps more basic than Jung’s theory, yet easily enlisted to support Jung, is Gregory Bateson’s understanding of the fundamentals of mammalian communication (Bateson, 1972).

Using Bateson’s theory, the development of sex-roles and perhaps even of the anima/animus projections, can be understood to be founded on and evolving from not solely biological origin, i.e. genetic, hormonal, anatomical, etc. but also from the inevitable gestalt type perceptions of the fact of biological differences, with the subsequent contingencies and implications infused almost inextricably within any communication between the sexes.

The development of psychic representations of the self, shadow, anima or animus, etc. as proposed by Jung can also find support in some of the theories put forth by some investigators in the field of artificial intelligence, (Hofstadter, Dennett, 1981). These investigators refer to the fact that n intelligent system need to possess a level of very abstract symbols, (like archetypes perhaps), in order to have the capacity to be self-regulating, that is to have a mind’s I/eye, , (Self symbol?), as well as to have the flexibility to adapt and make intelligible those elements or developments emerging from the completely random portion of the stochastic process known as the evolutionary process (Bateson, 1979). Although the existence of these very abstract symbols or archetypes is immanent in the nature of an intelligent system, the manifested shape, form or content of the symbols or archetypes is dependent not only on the individual but on the social or collective context of a particular time and place, as well. Complication or complexity arises as a civilization develops increasing amounts of liberation from nature while the individual organism remains fundamentally unchanged.

The process of Individuation is a natural archetypal process ensuring that everything belonging to an individual’s uniqueness enters into it whether or not she/he is conscious of what is happening. Thus, the process as a rule runs its course unconsciously but becoming conscious of the process will make a tremendous difference to the individual. The natural, innate, archetypal urges produce an outcome whereby the ego can become capable and willing to relate to inner unconscious forces as they manifest in symbols. The conscious realization of the unconscious contents of the psyche, allows the ego to mature through the re-establishing f itself with the centre of the psychic totality which is the Self. Both the spontaneous manifestation of the Self and the act of ego conscious participation play fundamental roles in conscious self-realization (Kincel, 1975).

Edinger (1972), describes the process as primarily a series of ego/Self separations and unions/re-unions. Certain of these phases of the male’s individuation process can be symbolized by the puberty initiation rites of primitive or more stable societies (Eliade, 1958; Te Paske, 1982). Eliade states:

The term initiation in the most general sense denotes a body of rites and oral teachings whose purpose is to produce a decisive alteration in the religious, (psychological), and social status of the person to be initiated. In philosophical terms, initiation is equivalent to a basic change n existential condition; the novice emerges from his ordeal endowed with a totally different being from that which he possessed before his initiation; he has become another. …They, (the initiates), receive protracted instruction from their teachers, witness secret ceremonies, undergo a series of ordeals. And it is primarily these ordeals that constitute the religious experience of initiation – the encounter with the sacred. 








 The rites involved in the passage from puberty to adulthood symbolize for Jung the psychological processes necessary for the maturation of the adolescent into an adult. Jung believed that it was imperative for a ‘living religion’, to provide an adequate symbol(s) for the representation of the Self, as it is indistinguishable as a symbol of totality from a symbol of God. Thus, “the encounter with the sacred,” is or becomes an encounter with an objectified Self. During the phase of the initial identification of the Self with the parental figures, as well as with the other archetypal figures in the unconscious, i.e. the shadow, the anima/animus, etc., the experiencing of the Self in projection is likely to leave the ego-Self axis most vulnerable to damage by adverse environmental influences, (Edinger, 1972). Therefore the rites of initiation may facilitate the transference of the Self from a projection onto the parental figures – especially important for the male is the separation of the projection of the Self from the mother/anima imago – and onto the tribes symbol of God or divinity, through the simultaneous experience of the physical/emotional ordeals providing the conviction to the new meanings gained through the experience of religious/mythological/symbolic education. This transference of the projection of the Self from the person sphere to the cultural sphere permits a transition with as little damage as possible to the ego-Self axis. The alienation of the ego with the subsequent lack of self-acceptance is also avoided.


According to Edinger, the Individuation Process, or the process of the development of consciousness seems to follow a cyclic course whereby psychic growth arises through a series of inflated or heroic acts provoking rejection, then alienation, repentance, restitution and renewed inflation, i.e. ego-Self identification. In the state of alienation the ego is desirably dis-identified from the Self, however, it is also very undesirably disconnected from the Self. The ego-Self axis or connection is vital to psychic health. When the connection is broken the result is an experience of emptiness, despair, meaninglessness, and in the extreme cases psychosis or suicide. The experience of the disconnection of the ego from the Self is easily accountable or described as a form of noogenic crisis, (Frankl, 1969).

An important contributing factor in the development and understanding of the particular type of noogenic crisis that is the focus of this study is the Age Thirty Transition. Levinson (1978), states the following of the Age Thirty Transition:

For most men, the Age Thirty Transition takes a more severe and stressful from. …A man encounters great difficulty in working on the developmental tasks of the period. The difficulty may be so great that at times he feels he cannot go on. It seems as though he had no basis for further living. …The critical thing is that the integrity of the enterprise is in serious doubt: he experiences the imminent danger of chaos, dissolution, the loss of the future. …An age thirty crisis is not ‘merely’ a delayed adolescent crisis, though unresolved conflicts of adolescence will be reactivated and perhaps more fully resolved in it. …The Age Thirty Transition, like all transitional periods serves to terminate one structure and initiate another.




Two aspects of this transition are especially relevant to this paper, as each can be represented with identical or at least similar symbols in the unconscious. Both the possible reactivation of certain adolescent crisis, and the fact of a transition from one structure to another – from the provisional, exploratory quality of the twenties, to a phase where life appear to be becoming more serious, restrictive and more for real – can be represented in the unconscious by the symbolism depicted in the battle with the devouring mother. If the anima has not been successfully detached from the mother archetype during the adolescence then the Age Thirty Transition may become especially significant for males in terms of their projections and expectations of the women with whom they inevitably become involved.

Discussion and Conclusion

As was stated previously, none of the women involved in the presented cases was a feminist in any radical sense. However, they had in many ways integrated into their belief system and set of life expectations certain values concerning their right to equal opportunities and the freedom to define for themselves, what roles they should accept or reject. It is generally understood that the most highly prized or respected values or qualities, by either sex, are the ‘masculine’ ones, whereas ‘feminine’ values or qualities are the least prized or respected. The main thrust of feminism tends to encourage women to assume or assimilate the ‘masculine’ values, qualities, r modes of being into their attitudes and actions. While essentially this is a desirable process, it occurs in the context where the ‘feminine’ values are consistently overlooked and undervalued.

According to Jung the ‘feminine principle’, regardless of the actual sex it is operating through, is primarily responsible for the establishment and maintenance of relationship. One should be safe in assuming that the basic evolutionary imperative of, ‘the survival of the species’ which in general overrides the survival of the individual, would provide the female, who the greatest biological responsibility in the bearing and nursing of offspring, with some sort of powerful and generalizable predisposition or orientation to aid her in the task of affirming and maintaining relationship. In this way one sees that such a basic natural orientation is not necessarily a prescription to any particular role, but is on the other hand a predisposition to more easily fulfill a function, that is, the establishing and maintenance of relationship.

Perhaps a more abstract or poetic metaphor could provide an intuitive view of the essential or primary staring point of both sexes in terms of their symbolic existential condition. The child is born from a woman and is woman, the child and mother share an essential sameness-identification. With the onset of puberty and the menstrual cycle the female is concretely and rhythmically made aware of her biological connection with the natural cycles that life imposes upon every individual. Though the experience of pregnancy and even intercourse the female can become aware of ‘other’ as a presence within her being, and experience that can be either positive incorporation or negative invasion. During pregnancy the female has the possibility of a concrete awareness of the mystery of life itself occurring from within as well as through her. This also may be a positive or negative experience.

The male child on the other hand is born from a woman but is not woman, that is, unlike the essential sameness characterizing the female’s birth the male’s is characterized by powerful difference or separateness. Through his life the male can never experience in as powerful or concrete a manner as is at least potentially available to the female, the experience of ‘other’ within his being. Generally the male’s experience of the presence of ‘other’ is from without of himself. For the concrete experiencing of the mystery of life as a creative force the male again must seek outside of himself the manifestation of such. Thus, the female’s primal existential condition can be perceived as a powerful gestalt-like symbol of connected being, whereas the male’s is an equally powerful symbol o an independent, (free of connection), being. Either symbol can be perceived as a positive or negative experience. However, in the present day, it is likely that each sex in moments of existential insecurity will view the other sex’s presenting symbol as more desirable than their own.

If the above metaphors do in fact describe a natural existential origin, it is certainly recognized by this author, that it is equally inherent in the human condition to be more than nature, that is, having the potential to move beyond the biological bounds of nature – at least to a certain extent. The Individuation Process accounts for this potential in relation to a fundamental psychological orientation, by accommodating the possible development of an androgynous personality. In addition to this, the present day is probably the first time in the history of humanity in which the technological means as well as the necessary corresponding belief systems are available to alleviate many of the natural consequences of our biological nature.

The influence of feminism has certainly and positively heightened the awareness and sensitivity to the restrictive entrapment of prescribed sex-roles, a problem shared equally by both sexes. In relation to the topic of this paper however, the heightened sensitivity may easily generalize to a pervasive, and apprehensive reaction to the male’s projected anima/feminine principle. Due to a greater emphasis on ‘masculine’ values, a corresponding positive reinforcement of ‘feminine’ values has not been established. Thus, in the desirable process of the female’s integration of complementary ‘masculine’ qualities and values, the male’s process of integrating the complementary ‘feminine’ qualities and values has not received equal emphasis, reinforcement, or understanding.

The opportunities for the present day individual to dis-identify the Self-archetype from the parental figures through some form of social institution or rite seems to this writer to be limited in the extreme. It may be that the so-called generation-gap is a logical consequence of an unconscious individuation process. Especially important for the male today is the dis-identification of the mother-archetype from the anima. Unless this achieved, the anima projection of the male is suffused with both the oceanic, maternal matrix of the mother-archetype, and the totality that is the Self in projection.

Further complications arise for the male attempting to come to terms with his own feminine nature through his relationship with a woman. The nature of the male’s socialization tends to suppress his emotional sensitivity, is reinforced at an earlier age, and is enforced with more vigor than the corresponding socialization of the female. The desired behaviors are rarely defined positively, rather undesirable behaviors are indicated negatively as something other than is regarded as ‘sissy’, or feminine (Pleck and Sawyer, 1974). This sort of conditioned valuation of his own feminine nature associates this femininity with the shadow-complex. Thus, the difficult integration of his own unconscious feminine complement is made more difficult and frightening.

If, in his relationship to a woman who has truly caught his anima, the woman begins to react to his projection (she must react to it in some way), defensively or with apprehension, and withdraws, the male will inevitably become increasingly insecure, and either break away or become more dependent. Either choice leads to a point where the unassimilated projection creates an unavoidable separation. The male then suffers the loss of the acquired feminine image, the simultaneous disconnection from the Self, and is thus swamped n the backwash of his inferior function as well as his own unconscious feminine. This then, is the initiation of a full blown noogenic crisis.

Each of the male’s presented in the case studies suffered this type of noogenic crisis to some degree, experiencing various periods of a nearly crippling loss of emotional vitality. Thus, as was proposed, an absence of the traditional sex-roles opens the present day male to being vulnerable to a form of noogenic crisis, in his attempt to come to terms with himself as an adult and a male.

This viewpoint may provide further insight and understanding in a reappraisal of certain other relevant areas of investigation. The nature of pornography and more particularly violence in pornography is certainly a topical and relevant area, as it is often referred to by males as ‘fantasy’ material. An interesting statistic related to this issue, is the corresponding rise in pornography with each rise in the feminist movement[1]. The recent rise in adolescent suicide and early pregnancy, may also be relevant phenomena that this paper’s perspective can aid in shedding some illumination understanding on.

This writer feels that it cannot be stressed too strongly – the general influence of feminism has not only been necessary but positive as well in bringing to light a problem with which both sexes must struggle to face and appropriately resolve. The traditional sex-roles cannot remain unchanged. However, the positive function that they contained, must be more carefully considered and explored, especially in terms of the facilitating of the psychological growth of each sex through the anima/animus dynamic. Equally important to review, is the role of the more traditional rites of puberty, in terms of whatever positive function they may have played in the psychological education and preparation of the individual for a mature adulthood.



[1] Communicated by a feminist speaker, to the audience, after the showing of the film, “Not a Love Story”, March 1983. 


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