Esther Harding: One Way God Changes Us, Seeing Ourselves in Others
Seeing Ourselves in Others
“We cannot change anyone else; we can change only ourselves, and usually only when the elements that need reform have become conscious through their reflection in someone else.”—M. Esther Harding, The ‘I’ and the ‘Not-I’: A Study in the Development of Consciousness, at InwardOutward.org.
Esther Harding was a British American and is considered the first significant Jungian analyst to practice in this country. Her first book, The Way of All Women (1975), was one of the first books I read during my early days of seeking to connect with feminine spirituality.
President Jimmy Carter wrote about reaching a point where we can give thanks for our difficulties during his final years. That seems almost impossible, but I can see his reasoning more clearly in Esther Harding’s writings. We wear our character defects and self-centeredness like an old, tattered bathrobe that is both ugly and yet comfortable and familiar. Our habitual way of life has become our familiar identity. We can only recognize these defects and behavior patterns in others, as they repulse us, and finally identify them as our own. Our behavior and reactions to the world keep us from connecting to God.
I am continually amazed by how God uses everything to bring us back to God’s love and to connect us with the God within us and with our neighbor. We discover what blocks us from God’s love by first recognizing the barriers in others and seeing how unattractive they are.
At some point, when the time is right, I can share Harding’s insights with spiritual friends who are also suffering. I also have spiritual friends who listen to me when suffering brings awareness, opening a crack of light into my own life.
Joanna. https://www.joannaseibert.com/