Home › Forums › MythBlasts › “The Sacredness of Rituals,” by Kristina Dryža
Tagged: birthing, egoist, egotism, individuation, judgement, pain, Ritual, self-development, Transcendence
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Kristina.
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May 15, 2022 at 9:15 pm #7194
Kristina Dryža offers a profound perspective in “The Sacredness of Rituals,”this week’s contribution to JCF’s MythBlast essay series (click on title to read). Ironically, we weren’t able to prep a COHO conversation in advance as I spent the week off-grid on the spectacular Big Sur coast of California, participating in an annual springtime death-and-rebirth ritual I’ve attended the past fifteen years. (Come to think of it, I first connected with Kristina when we attended the same event some seven years ago.)
As I type this early Sunday afternoon in California, it’s late at night where Kristina lives, in Lithuania; she likely won’t see this thread before Monday morning – so instead of opening with an exchange between the two of us, I have a question I’ll pose to everyone, including Kristina. You won’t need to wait for her to respond before sharing your thoughts.
Kristina’s theme certainly captures the essence of Campbell’s thought on this subject, as reflected in the following quote:
Mythology and the rites through which its imagery is rendered open the mind . . . to the mythic dimension of being — of nature — which is within as well as without, and thereby finally at one with itself. (Joseph Campbell, The Flight of the Wild Gander, 86)”
We tend to think of rites as those accompanying critical transitions –– birth, coming of age, marriage, death –– sacraments all . . . but there was a time when ritual permeated every aspect of life:
The archaic world knows nothing of ‘profane’ activities: every act which has a definite meaning — hunting, fishing, agriculture, games, conflict, sexuality — in some way participates in the sacred. . . the only profane activities are those which have no mythical meaning . . . Thus we may say that every responsible activity in pursuit of a definite end is, for the archaic world, a ritual.
Every ritual has a divine model, an archetype . . . ‘We must do what the gods did in the beginning.’ ” (Mircea Eliade, The Myth of the Eternal Return, 27–28, 21)
Joseph Campbell makes the same point:
“Well, the value of mythology in the old traditions, one of the values, was that every activity in life had been mythologized. You saw something of its relevance to the Great Mysteries and your own participation in the Great Mysteries in the performance — in agriculture, in hunting, in military life and so forth. All of these were turned into spiritual disciplines. Actually they were. There were rituals associated with them that let you know what spiritual powers were being challenged, evoked, and brought into play through this action.” (Joseph Campbell, The Wisdom of Joseph Campbell, New Dimensions Radio Interview with Michael Toms on audiocassette, Tape I, Side 1)
My question is what are some of your rituals? I’m not speaking specifically of common collective rites (e.g. a communion mass, or prasad at a Hindu ceremony), but what do you ritualize in your own life?
I trust that serves as a sound entry point into a wider conversation.
Stephen Gerringer
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May 16, 2022 at 12:41 am #7195
…just as “…(there is) distinction between egotism and egoity” ,,,, is this the same distinction that exists between ‘pride’ & ‘self-esteem’?
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May 16, 2022 at 10:36 am #7197
Yes!
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May 16, 2022 at 11:06 am #7198
Here we are again! Hello dear friends!
I have just returned from Punios šilas, not just Lithuania’s, but one of Europe’s most ancient forests. And I am sitting with Campbell’s eloquent words, “The Christ idea and the Buddha idea are perfectly equivalent mythological symbols. Two ways of saying the same thing: that a transcendent energy consciousness informs the whole world and informs you. To become aware of that, and to live out of that center instead of out of this mind center, is the salvation of your life. That means putting yourself in accord with nature.”
As we enter a discussion on rituals I want to focus on our relationship, or lack of, to nature. Campbell presciently writes (and his words are massively more relevant today), “Economics and politics are the governing powers of life today and that’s why everything is screwy. You have to get back in accord with nature; and that’s what these myths are all about. Now in the nineteenth century sociological anthropologists had the idea that myths and rites were an attempt to control nature. Totally wrong. They are not to control nature, they are to control the society and put it in accord with nature.”
Spending the day with 4/500-year-old oaks, I could really sense how nature was the first ‘link’ people followed as they tried to pattern and articulate their lives. But in modernity, it’s not about returning to nature per se, but rather to befriend it and enhance it … it’s about experiencing the inner sentience of nature. Metaphorically, the sense that the forest is walking us, as much as we are walking the forest.
Along the way, there’ll always be order and disorder so that we may cultivate wu wei, a mental state where our actions are effortlessly in alignment with the flow of life. But can we learn to be still in the river of life and listen to what it asks of us? Because if we keep acting in misalignment to our true nature, we’ll keep compromising who we really are. Again and again. But not forgetting, however, that out of every disaster along the path of self-awakening, there is the potential for something surprisingly positive and life-affirming to emerge too.
Signing off with huge FOMO that I wasn’t at Esalen with the gang this year – Kristina.
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May 16, 2022 at 1:02 pm #7199
the hubris exhibited in trying to control nature has, imho, resulted in more harm, albeit ‘harm’ as in ‘the road to hell is paved with good intentions’…
George Carlin terms such hubris as ‘arrogant meddling’ and such arrogance has pervaded our economics and politics as JC has observed… from Carlin: An Earth Day Tradition: George Carlin on “The Planet” (americandigest.org)
so, when most of our existence is spent in the muck-and-mire of a dog-eat-dog, survival of the fittest world how does JCF advise us to proceed …. and please don’t say ‘follow your bliss’…?
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May 18, 2022 at 1:22 pm #7211
Thank you for your comment rickkar1. Maybe instead of ‘follow your bliss’ I would offer to instead follow the trauma – individual and collective. Can we imagine our small selves as part of a bigger, collective system and so align with these vaster forces of life? Can we say ‘yes‘ to life as it is (people/situations/circumstances/ourselves)? And that this ’yes‘ also includes the spiritual dimension of life. In trauma, this ability to say ’yes‘ to life exactly as it is, is often impaired. I would suggest this as a starting point … and then just maybe … we can touch into Campbell’s words to “participate joyfully in the sorrows of the world.” KD
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May 16, 2022 at 1:05 pm #7200
When I read the first part of the quote, (“Individualism is perfectly fine if the individual realizes that the grandeur of his being is that of representing something,”… ) I had the feeling that, at that moment, Campbell refrained himself from completing his thought. When I read the rest of the quote (“Even representing a system of ideals and images that the rest of the world and the environment doesn’t have; he still is the agent of something and he is a presence. But when the individual is acting only for himself or for his family or for his team, then you have nothing but chaos.”) I realized that he hadn’t.
His first complete thought should have read: “Individualism is perfectly fine if the individual realizes that the grandeur of his being is that of representing something”…(other than himself). Which, of course, is an oxymoron. And would not have been very popular then or now. Smart man.-
May 18, 2022 at 1:24 pm #7212
Agree, Juan!
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May 16, 2022 at 3:56 pm #7202
Not long after Trump was elected I came to the conclusion that the main distinction between conservative and liberal boiled down to the apparent fact that the right privileges individual liberty and the left privileges the common good, albeit there are many nuances. Having concluded this, I was distressed that I was engaging in such a dual thinking modality. Campbell was quite emphatic about this phenomenon in several places in The Power of Myth where he spoke on the “pairs of opposites”. Individualism and common good should not be seen as either/or.
In an effort to see this in a non-dual way I came up with an analogy using the act of breathing. Breathing is one thing, but it is comprised of dual actions: inhale and exhale (which are not in opposition). We cannot do only one and survive. The inhale can be seen as the service of self, and the exhale as giving back to the community. Similar to the hero’s journey, s/he goes forth (individually) and returns with a boon for the community.
Another duality I have trouble resolving is history/time. Most indigenous and nature religions see time as circular (cyclical). The Judeo-Christian traditions see it as linear (having a telos). I tend to view it like a slinky pulled apart. It is both circular and linear.
A fellow pilgrim.
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May 16, 2022 at 4:31 pm #7203
Richard,
I love the way you employ breathing as a metaphor, with the inhale “in service of self and the exhale as giving back to the community.”
Normally, my heart beats on its own — “I” don’t exert direct conscious control over the frequency or intensity. All other bodily processes — circulation, perspiration, metabolism, etc. — are similarly autonomic, or “unconscious.” Obviously, I am beating my heart, monitoring my internal body temperature, secreting the necessary hormones — but not the conscious, waking me.
Breathing also occurs without conscious direction or intervention — yet it is different from other involuntary processes in that we can consciously control our breath. Hence breathing is that act where consciousness and the unconscious most clearly come together, and so has long served as a launching pad for subjective explorations of the mystery of Being.
Which brings me back to your analogy. As you point out, we can’t just inhale or exhale – we must do both, and do – but when we are conscious of what we are doing, paying attention to breath, that takes it to another level.
Meditation – which for me pretty much consists of just sitting and being aware of my breath – has become one of my longstanding personal rituals. I’ll light a stick of incense and sit in front of my altar to enhance the sanctity of the setting, but breathing in, breathing out, is the core of that ritual – one that serves as a metaphor for so many experiences in waking life.
Nice distinction as well you make between the cyclical and linear time of nature vs. the Zoroastrian/Judeo/Christo/Islamic traditions, though that’s probably a conversation for another thread . . .
Stephen Gerringer
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May 18, 2022 at 1:35 pm #7213
Thank you Richard (fellow pilgrim). Your comment reminds me of the Tonglen meditation practice: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tonglen And re: time loops, I loved the series ‘Russian Doll’ on Netflix. KD
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May 16, 2022 at 4:49 pm #7204
Stephen,
I also use breath as a part of my meditation ritual. It is a “way station” on the journey to “no thought.” I find it very hard to achieve the blank mind that is aware of nothing, not even breathing. I believe that it is in that no thought zone the we can be open to realizing our oneness with God and thus all creation. I don’t know if or when this will happen, but I will “stay with the program” (ritual).
Richard
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May 18, 2022 at 7:26 am #7210
Kristina, thank you so much for this wonderful essay. Some thoughts:
From January 30, 1916 to February 8, 1916, a figure of great importance in C. G. Jung’s confrontation with the unconscious delivered seven Sermons. That figure was named Philemon whom we might see as Jung’s inner teacher. Your discussion of the one who individuates only for oneself reminds me of Philemon’s fifth Sermon which is, in part, about holy community. Here, Philemon discusses the advantages of and the demands on the individual by the community, and the need for balance between the two:
Man is weak, and community is therefore indispensable. … Absence of community is suffering and sickness. Community in everything is dismemberment and dissolution. Differentiation leads to singleness. Singleness is opposed to community. But because of man’s weakness with regard to the Gods and daimons and their invincible law, community is necessary, not for man’s sake, but because of the Gods. The Gods drive you to community. Insofar as the Gods impose community upon you, it is necessary; more is bad. In the community every man shall submit to others, so that the community be maintained, for you need it. In singleness every man shall place himself above the other, so that every man may come to himself and avoid slavery. Abstention shall hold good in community, extravagance in singleness. Community is depth, singleness is height. Right measure in community purifies and preserves. Right measure in singleness purifies and increases. Community gives us warmth, singleness gives us light.
My comments on this Sermon in a set of notes I wrote on the Septem Sermones ad Mortuos (Seven Sermons to the Dead) included the following: When one is on the path of conscious individuation, in many ways, one leaves the community, though, not necessarily physically. Jung found that such a path is often accompanied by guilt. He wrote “Individuation cuts one off from personal conformity and hence from collectivity. That is the guilt which the individuant leaves behind him for the world, that is the guilt he must endeavour to redeem.” Jung saw guilt as relating the pair of opposites of community and individuation, and in order for the individuant to redeem his/her guilt, he/she must successfully bring back “values which are an equivalent substitute for his absence in the collective personal sphere.” This is because “what society demands is imitation or conscious identification, a treading of accepted, authorized paths. Only by accomplishing an equivalent is one exempted from this.” Failure to successfully bring back equivalent values makes individuation immoral. I believe that Jung attempts to strike a good and fair balance between individuation and community by recognizing the importance of both. There are times when individuation might seem to have the highest value, but this is compensated by the recognition that “the existing society is always of absolute importance as the point of transition through which all world development passes, and it demands the highest collaborative achievement from every individual.”
There is a wonderful ritual which is described in the Black Books. On February 2, 1928, Jung’s Soul takes him to the abyss and tells him to describe what he sees. Jung sees an elongated building with a white cupola behind it, and he sees a long procession being led by an old man along a curvy path to the building. In the building, they enact a ritual centering on an “octagonal basin with blue water in the middle, directly below the opening of the dome.” Jung describes some of the ritual – “No images, no inscriptions—yet opposite below the colonnade, sitting, a life-size statue of a middle-aged man— ancient? Looks like a Roman. The train of people move in circles around the basin—singing —what do they sing? ‘Praise the water’?” Then, the following dialogue between Jung and his Soul takes place:
Soul: “Do you recognize the old man?”
Jung: “Yes, it is Philemon.”
Soul: “The Roman is Antonius Pius, the Caesar.”
Jung: “This is incredible. What should I make of this?”
Soul: “Undoubtedly a religious service.”
Jung: “But where? What country? What religion?”
Soul: “Your land, your religion, water instead of wine, bread instead of flesh, silence instead of speech.”
Jung goes on to describe more of the ritual, but two things stood out for me. Jung says that “they hold each other by the shoulder” and that “the water is calm like a mirror and each sees his face in it.” This reinforces, in my opinion, two essential qualities of the new religion: community and at the same time uniqueness of experience and revelation. Earlier, on January 8, 1922, Jung’s Soul emphasized the importance of establishing community, “otherwise the religion will not become actual. And it should become actual. But it expresses itself visibly only in the transformation of human relations. Relations do not let themselves be replaced even by the deepest human knowledge. Moreover a religion doesn’t consist only in knowledge, but at its visible level in a new ordering of human affairs.” Dr. Shamdasani wrote in a footnote embedded in this description that in the July 1923 seminar Jung delivered at Polzeath, Cornwall, this theme was discussed and Jung said “When we make individual relationships we lay the foundations for an invisible church.”
This balance between individual striving on their own path and community is beautifully embodied in Jungian analyst Max Zeller’s dream of a new temple which he shared with Jung:
A temple of vast dimensions was in the process of being built. As far as I could see—ahead, behind, right and left—there were incredible numbers of people building on gigantic pillars. I, too, was building on a pillar. The whole building process was in its very beginnings, but the foundation was already there, the rest of the building was starting to go up, and I and many others were working on it.
Max Zeller then recounted his subsequent conversation with Jung:
Jung: “Ja, you know, that is the temple we all build on. We don’t know the people because, believe me, they build in India and China and in Russia and all over the world. That is the new religion. You know how long it will take until it is built?”
Zeller: “How should I know? Do you know?”
Jung: “I know.”
Zeller asks how long it would take.
Jung: “About six hundred years.”
Zeller: “Where do you know this from?”
Jung: “From dreams. From other people’s dreams and from my own. This new religion will come together as far as we can see.”
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May 18, 2022 at 2:46 pm #7214
Gosh! Beautiful! Thank you so much for sharing Robert. So many of us were wounded by relationships, but we’ll only be healed by relationships. Not sure what more I can add to your delicate, prescient post other than to say ‘thank you.’ KD
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May 19, 2022 at 2:52 pm #7216
Ritual: something simple…making a fire in a wood stove is nice. Well it’s not always simple but it connects me (first to my Dad who taught me how) and family memories sitting near warm wood fires…then it extends to the symbol and traditions of people all over the planet throughout time.
This came to mind because didn’t you right an easy about The Threshold last fall Kristina? As well as making traditions?I have a question though it may be a bit broad and off topic. Near the end you mention what happens when “we are out of alignment with the cosmic powers of the universe.”
And this reminds me of all the connections and references of certain orders associated with myths.
For example myths that are born out of social orders. But I’ve begun to wonder if there are two different mythic forms? Those which are primarily tied into certain social orders? And those which are responding or referencing a Universal order? (Where there may or may not be guides in “the forest.” But there is still a guiding energy which calls, wakes and humbles the adventurer or small collectives of adventurers on the journey?)-
May 20, 2022 at 2:44 pm #7222
Lovely to hear from you sunbug.
And yes, I did a piece on thresholds last year.
Really interesting what you write about two different mythic forms. Another way to look at it could be myths that reference universal archetypes – or in your words, a universal order – and how they’re expressed culturally – in your words, social orders. So yes, some myths are certainly specific to a place or culture (say the Rainbow Serpent, which is considered one of the most powerful ancestral beings of Aboriginal Australia), but I feel it’s the universal order that all myths are referencing consciously or unconsciously, even if they are born out of a specific social order.
Be well, Kristina.
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May 19, 2022 at 3:10 pm #7217
All these conversations remind me of
Hono Pono: Hawaiian tradition.
I learned about it many years ago from a friend. Looked it up again to refresh my memory. The articles today say it is about having a responsibility to everything/one/being around you. ? and the planet.But what I remember the most the first time I came across it was Hono Pono was also about healing. (That when one helped others, that would help heal them.) Thought that was really beautiful. So my first impression was Hono Pono was a practice and ritual of well being.
Of course I can understand the opposite as well when one does not take care of their own health and well being, then it’s harder to be physically present for others. Guess balance is the key. -
May 19, 2022 at 3:54 pm #7218
Ok only writing a 3rd post because I can’t erase the long-winded 3rd that was here just a moment ago. Oops! So I’m just going to leave a space of
silence. wry grin.
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May 21, 2022 at 3:17 pm #7226
Thank you for your response Kristina!
Oh Rainbow Serpent yes! I’m fascinated by the stories of Aboriginal Australia! The thought of the Song Lines what a beautiful was to express story, tradition and memory!
Yes what you say makes sense…specific images in certain regions but it’s the universal order we are all referencing consciously or unconsciously (regardless of social order.)I like the way Robert Mirabal represents this in his show Music From a Painted Cave.
“I try to imagine who they were…these ancestors across the world making the same images.”
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May 21, 2022 at 11:32 pm #7237
Everything I do is a ritual. I follow a prescribed procedure brushing my teeth, shaving, getting dressed, preparing breakfast, writing,.. Nothing is haphazard about the way I live. One day looks a lot like yesterday and tomorrow. I don’t wonder where I am or what’s next ever. I have developed my own rituals that carry me through my life. To follow someone else’s rituals, doing it the way they do it or tell me to do it would not be right. And to submit to someone else’s idea of what should be a ritual for me to submit to is also not on the table. Where does the community take over for the individual, know better than the individual, tell the individual what to do when, where and how?
What, when, where and how constitute essential knowing and are the grounding foundation for living aligned with the Tao, in accord with the Tao, and that is an individual act of knowing that cannot be taken over by the corporate body. Martin Palmer interprets the Tao Te Ching’s “The Tao that can be told/said/explained is not the eternal Tao,” to say, “The path that can be discerned as a path is not a reliable path.” Leaving the individual to fall back on their own sense of what is called for and what needs to be done about it. This connects with Jesus’ saying, “The spirit is like the wind that blows where it will,” which I take to mean “Not even the spirit knows what it will do next, and certainly not what it will do after that!” We wait and see, wait to see, not knowing what we will do next, and it certainly cannot be spelled out in some liturgy or order of service. Spontaneously doing what needs to be done is of the moment, not imposed on the moment as a hoop to jump through.
The rites and rituals that carried ancient peoples through their day/month/year would not fit our world or our life. But we have those that work for us, reading the newspaper, or streaming it, getting on the subway, etc carries us through our day/month/year. And we each have to approach The Mystery in our own way. Artificial rituals designed by someone else won’t deliver us to the Source. Worship cannot be called to order. It is a spontaneous response of the seeker to the sought, the moved to the mover, the known to the knower. Beyond corporate control.
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May 23, 2022 at 8:19 pm #7265
Jim, I really take your words to heart. So inspirational! Thank you.
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- 2. Respect Others’ Opinions These are conversations, not conversions. “Conversation” comes from the Latin words con (“with”) and verso (“opposite”). We expect diverse opinions to be expressed in these forums, and welcome them – but just because you disagree with what someone has to say doesn’t mean they don’t get to say it.
- 3. Come Clear of Mind In addition to expanding the mind, certain substances (alcohol, cocaine, marijuana, LSD, etc.) have been known to impair good judgment. We recommend you keep a journal while under the influence and then later make more rational determinations regarding what is appropriate to share in this forum.
- 4. Respect This Space The Joseph Campbell Foundation, a US not-for-profit organization, offers this forum as part of our mission of continuing Mr. Campbell’s work of increasing the level of public awareness and public discourse with regards to comparative mythology.
- 5. Avoid Contemporary Politics Given the volatile nature of contemporary political discourse, we ask that members steer clear of candidates or current political controversies. Forum members come from across the political spectrum. There are other fora across the internet for discussing myth and politics.
- 6. Be Polite Forum members come from many different sets of cultural assumptions, and many different parts of the world. Please refrain from language whose only purpose is offense. If it helps, imagine your grandmother reading forum posts – as perhaps she may, since other folks’ grandmothers are.
- 7. Refrain from Sexually Explicit Posts Please do not make sexually explicit posts within these forums, unless they are absolutely germane to the discussion underway – and even in that case, please try to warn readers at the top of your post. Not all members have the same threshold when it comes to taking offense to language and pictures. NOTE: Under no circumstances will we condone the posting of links to sites that include child pornography, even inadvertently. We will request that such links be removed immediately, and will remove them ourselves if compliance is not forthcoming. Any Associate knowingly posting such links will be suspended immediately; we will forward a snapshot of the offending page, the web address and the associate’s contact information to the appropriate criminal authorities
- 8. Refrain from Self-Promotion Announcements linking to your new blog post, book, workshop, video clip, etc., will be deleted, unless they are demonstrably part of the greater conversation. The only exception is the Share-Your-Work Gallery, a subforum within The Conversation with a Thousand Faces. If you have art, poetry, writing, or links to music and other work you would like to share, do so here.
- 9. Search First If you’re thinking of starting a new topic, asking a question, etc., please take advantage of the search functionality of this forum! You can find the search field above the list of forums on the main page of the forums. Also, consider searching on the greater JCF website – this site is full of amazing resources on a wide variety of topics, all just a search away.
- 10. Report Violations If you witness or experience behavior that you feel is contrary to the letter or spirit of these guidelines, please report it rather than attacking other members. Do this by choosing the Report button (next to “Reply”) at the top of the post, and select a reason from the dropdown menu (Spam, Advertising, Harassment, or Inappropriate Content). The moderation team will be notified. Depending on the degree of bad behavior, further posts might require approval, or the user could be blocked from posting and even banned.
- 11. Private Messages Forum guidelines apply to all onsite private communications between members. Moderators do not have access to private exchanges, so if you receive messages from another member with inappropriate or hostile content, send a private message (with screenshots) to Stephen Gerringer and/or Michael Lambert.
Visit the Contact the Foundation page, select Technical Support, and fill out the contact form.
The Conversations of a Higher Order (COHO) consists of ten public forums loosely focused on a central theme. The forums are listed, with a brief description, on the COHO home page (each forum listed on that page also appears in the same order in the menu in the lefthand column – that menu stays with you as you move about the forums). This also shows who created the last post in each forum, and when.
When you visit a specific forum you will see the list of topics people have posted so far in that forum. Click on one to read that post and any replies. Feel free to add a reply if you have something to share, or just enjoy following the conversation. You can return to the COHO home page by clicking the "Home>Forums" breadcrumb at the top of the page – or move directly to a different forum by clicking on one of the listings from the forum menu in the lefthand column of the page.
If there’s anything you want to introduce – a question, an observation, or anything related to Campbell, myth, or one of his many related interests – create a topic in the forum you feel comes closest to including the subject you want to discuss. Most forums include in their description a link to a corresponding part of the website. For example, The Work of Joseph Campbell description has a link to all his published works: you can of course focus on a specific book or lecture, but also any topic related to the ideas arising out of his work is welcome in that forum.
When posting a new topic or a reply to an existing conversation, check the “Notify me of follow-up replies via email” box (conversations unfold at a leisurely pace: someone might need a few days to let what you write simmer in the back of their brain – this is how you find out someone has replied), and then click Submit. You can also click "Favorite" (top of the page on the right when reading forum threads) to be notified of all responses in a discussion.
Click on the Profile link under your user name in the upper left corner above the forum menu. Then select Edit and follow the prompts to upload an image file from your computer.
When you finish your post, before clicking the Submit button check the box at the bottom of your post that reads, “Notify me of follow-up replies via email.” You can also click on “Subscribe” (in the upper right corner of a thread) to follow the complete conversation (often a comment on someone else’s post might inspire a response from you).
We ask that when linking to web pages, please avoid posting the raw URL address in your text. Highlight the relevant text you'd like to link in your post, then select the link icon in your formatting bar above your post (immediately to the left of the picture icon, this looks like a diagonal paperclip). This opens a small field:
Paste the URL of the page you are linking to into the field provided. Then click on the gear icon to the right of that field, and check the box that says “Open link in a new tab” (so readers can see your link without having to navigate back to the forums), before clicking the green “Add Link” button.
To add an image to your post, click on the image icon in the menu at the top of your post (it's the icon on the far right):
In the Source field of the pop-up form, click on the camera icon on the far right. This should give you access to the files on your PC / laptop, or the photo library on your mobile device. Select the image, and add a brief description (e.g., "Minoan Goddess") in the appropriate field.
In the dimensions field, you only need enter the first number (240 is a good size for starters; if too small click the edit icon and increase that number). Then select OK.
Click on the name of the person you want to contact (under their avatar in a any of their posts). This link will take you to that member’s profile page. Then click on “Send a Message,” and compose.
If you witness or experience behavior that you feel is contrary to the letter or spirit of these guidelines, please report it rather than attacking other members. Do this by choosing the Report button (next to “Reply”) at the top of the post, and select a reason from the dropdown menu (Spam, Advertising, Harassment, or Inappropriate Content). The moderation team will be notified. Depending on the degree of bad behavior, further posts might require approval, or the user could be blocked from posting and even banned.
Visit the Contact the Foundation page, select Community and Social Media, and fill out the contact form.