A soul-guided reflection on the exile from symbolic seeing—and what it means to remember the world as alive again.
Prologue: A World Alive with Meaning
There was a time—not just in myth, but in memory—when the world was not made of things but of signs.

I remember standing in a field behind my childhood home, eyes fixed on a hawk circling overhead. The air shimmered with something I could not name. I didn’t think of wind currents or prey or migration patterns. I thought: Message. The hawk was not a bird—it was a presence. Watching me. Speaking in flight. I didn’t know what it meant, but I knew it meant something. That knowing lived in the body, not the brain. It hummed in the bones, like a song you almost remember.
That’s what I mean by symbolic perception. Not metaphor as decoration, but as reality itself. A way of seeing the world as inherently expressive, enchanted, and alive with layered meanings.
In the oldest stories, this kind of sight is natural—so natural it doesn’t need a name. Indigenous cultures still speak of it: rivers as ancestors, animals as totems, dreams as instructions. In myth, the world is symbol: the snake speaks, the stone teaches, and the wind carries wordless wisdom. Nothing is random. Everything belongs.
But somewhere along the long walk of civilisation, we fell. Not from grace, but from meaning. Not from paradise, but from participation. We traded the living world for a labelled one, rich in facts but starved of soul.
We began to look at the world instead of through it.
This, I believe, is the more profound meaning of the mythic Fall. This is not merely a moral story, but rather a rift in perception. Adam and Eve did not just disobey—they shifted their way of seeing. Their eyes were “opened”, the story says, but it was a new kind of vision: the sharp sight of separation. The fruit they ate was knowledge stripped of wisdom. Literalism disguised as truth.
And so the exile began—not just from Eden, but from the symbolic. From the old language of the soul.
Today, we live in the aftermath of that perceptual rupture. We call it progress. We praise it as clarity. But beneath the surface, many of us feel the ache of a lost tongue—the intuitive, imaginal way of relating to the world that once came so easily.
That’s why I’m writing this. Not to romanticise the past, but to remember a way of seeing that might still be possible. A way of knowing that listens as much as it looks. A perception that does not dissect symbols but dwells with them. That trusts that the hawk is not just a hawk.
Because I believe the mythic eye isn’t dead. Just sleeping. And maybe—just maybe—what we call the ‘fall’ was really a spiral. A descent meant to lead us back, eventually, to the garden. But this time, with awareness.
So let’s begin there—at the threshold between two ways of seeing. Literal and symbolic. Concrete and archetypal. Noise and meaning.
Let’s begin with the Fall—not as failure, but as forgetting.
And from there, remember our way home.
The Mythic Eye: What It Means to See Symbolically
To see symbolically is to live in a world that speaks.
Not through data, but through drama. Not through precision, but through pattern. It’s the difference between watching clouds and reading them. Between seeing a crow on the fence and feeling it perch on your fate.
Symbolic perception isn’t superstition—it’s soul intuition. A mode of seeing where the surface is never just the surface, but a veil, a metaphor, a mirror. The symbol isn’t about something. The symbol is something. It is the thing.
When I speak of “the mythic eye,” I don’t mean imagination as escape. I mean imagination as engagement. A kind of deep receptivity that allows the world to impress itself upon you, not as object, but as oracle.
Jung called this the realm of the archetype. Hillman called it soul-making. In both cases, symbolic perception is the bridge between the inner world and the outer one. It doesn’t split them apart. It shows them dancing.
Take the tree.
Literal perception names it: oak. Categorises it: Quercus robur. Measures its height, its age, its carbon absorption. Useful knowledge.
But the mythic eye asks: what kind of presence is this? What spirit lives in this tree? What does it whisper in winter? What archetype is it channelling right now?
To the literalist, that’s nonsense. To the soul, that’s nourishment.
This is not a call to abandon reason. It’s an invitation to restore resonance. To remember that the rational and the symbolic once shared the same sky. We broke them apart in the name of clarity—but clarity without depth is just a bright emptiness.
The symbol, by contrast, is layered. It doesn’t point. It unfolds. It doesn’t tell you what to think. It asks you who you are.
The alchemists knew this. They worked with fire and lead, yes—but they were not chemists. They were soul-crafters. Every phase of the work—nigredo, albedo, rubedo—was both physical and psychological. The literal and symbolic interwove like strands of gold. Their Great Work wasn’t just to transmute metal, but to transmute perception.
And this is the crux: symbolic perception isn’t a way of understanding the world. It’s a way of being in relationship with it.
You don’t analyze a dream. You dialogue with it.
You don’t decode a myth. You enter it.
You don’t reduce a moment to facts. You attune to its meaning.
This is why I say symbolic perception is not a learned skill—it’s a remembered one. Children live this way, naturally. So do mystics, artists, and those on the edges of language. Somewhere inside you, this capacity never left. It’s curled up like an ember, waiting for breath.
To see symbolically is to see through the veil. To let the world shimmer again.
A crack in the concrete might reveal a root. A root might remind you of a memory. The memory might speak in the voice of your mother. And suddenly, what was a sidewalk is now a story. A message. A moment trying to reach you.
This isn’t magic in the Harry Potter sense. It’s deeper magic—the kind that knows reality has layers. The kind that asks you to show up as a participant, not a spectator.
So if symbolic perception feels foreign, let that feeling be your guide. Foreignness is often just forgotten familiarity. The mythic eye is not something you find—it’s something you remember how to use.
And once you begin seeing this way, the world starts responding.
Not louder. But deeper.
The Fall Into Literalism: The Invention of Flat Reality
The serpent never lied. He told Adam and Eve they would gain knowledge—and they did.
But it came at a cost.
Their eyes were opened, yes—but opened in a new way. What was once perceived as mystery became measurable. The fruit of that tree didn’t just bring awareness—it introduced separation. The garden didn’t vanish. Their way of seeing it did.
This, I believe, is the true Fall: not from moral innocence, but from mythic consciousness. Not from paradise, but from participatory perception.
We crossed a threshold and traded the symbolic for the literal. And from that moment on, the world became flatter.
The shift didn’t happen all at once. It came in layers, like sediment over soul.
First, we moved from oral culture to written word. Story once lived in the breath, carried from elder to child like fire passed hand to hand. But writing pinned myth to the page, and something wild went still. We gained permanence—but lost presence.
Then came Plato, who distrusted the image and exiled the poet from the republic. For him, symbols were shadows—less than truth. The real lived in abstract ideals, not messy metaphors. Thus began the long suspicion of the imaginal.
The Church, in its zeal, tightened the reins even further. Allegory had a place, but it had to serve doctrine. Symbols became locked in a single interpretation—authorised, codified, and stripped of their multiplicity. The living myth was embalmed.
By the time we reached the Enlightenment, the transformation was nearly complete. Reason became the new god. Descartes cleaved mind from matter. Newton mechanised the cosmos. Science—blessing and burden—reframed the universe as a clock, not a conversation.
We were no longer in dialogue with the world. We were dissecting it.
The soul’s eye dimmed beneath the glare of fluorescent clarity. Symbol became superstition. Archetype became disorder. Imagination was banished to the realm of childhood or pathology.
Literalism did its job too well.
It gave us medicine, math, and machines. It lifted our lifespan, mapped the stars, and connected continents. And I am grateful for these gifts. I live within them and rely on them.
But beneath the hum of the modern world, I feel the ache of exile.
Because for all our knowing, we forgot how to see.
We speak of the “real world” as if it were only what can be measured, tested, and repeated. As if reality were something you could hold under a microscope and never miss a thing. But the most important aspects of life—meaning, beauty, love, and grief—refuse dissection. They live in the realm of symbols. They are known through resonance, not reduction.
And here we find ourselves: advanced, informed, efficient—and hungry.
Hungry for depth. For the old stories. For the sense that life is more than a series of problems to solve.
Hungry, I believe, for the return of the mythic eye.
Literalism promised clarity. But clarity without context becomes blindness. We see the pixels, but miss the picture. We name the parts but forget the presence.
This is not an argument against science or reason. It is a call to balance the lens. To remember that symbolic perception isn’t a relic. It’s a right. A way of knowing that coexists with logic but moves in spirals instead of straight lines.
And if we’re honest, literalism hasn’t fully extinguished the mythic. It just drives it underground—into dreams, into fantasy novels, into strange coincidences we dismiss with nervous laughter.
But the mythic always finds a way back in.
Through the cracks.
Through the symbols that haunt us.
Through the longing that knowledge alone cannot soothe.
And maybe—just maybe—that’s the beginning of our return.
Symptoms of Symbolic Blindness
When symbolic perception fades, the world doesn’t go quiet—it just starts speaking in a language we can no longer hear.
The result isn’t silence. It’s static.
We live in a world saturated with noise but starving for meaning. We scroll past thousands of images a day, but few become symbols. We dream, but forget by breakfast. We speak in emojis and algorithms, but rarely in archetypes.
Symbolic blindness doesn’t look like catastrophe. It looks like disconnection.
It looks like depression that no pill can quite dissolve.
It looks like careers pursued without calling.
It looks like scrolling endlessly, not out of pleasure, but out of yearning—for something that feels like something.
We call it burnout. We call it fatigue. But I wonder if the deeper wound is mythic malnutrition.
We’ve been fed information but starved of initiation.
We’ve been taught to master the world, but not to converse with it.
Literalism leaves us functional but famished. We can operate machines, but we don’t know what our dreams are trying to tell us. We can explain human behaviour in terms of dopamine and pattern recognition, but we’ve forgotten how to name a soul-loss.
This blindness shows up in the systems we build.
Education teaches facts, but rarely wisdom. Children learn to pass tests, not to listen for the story beneath the subject.
Therapy becomes symptom management, not soul retrieval. The question isn’t “what’s the myth you’re living?” but “how can we make you more functional?”
Work becomes a treadmill of metrics, stripped of meaning. Purpose gets replaced with productivity.
We live in what James Hillman called “a world without a soul”—and that shows up not just in our institutions, but in our inner lives.
We distrust poetry. We avoid metaphor. We shy away from ambiguity because it cannot be monetized, measured, or managed.
But the psyche doesn’t speak in bullet points. It speaks in dreams, symbols, images, feelings. And when we deny its language, we become strangers to ourselves.
Have you ever cried and not known why?
Felt a presence in a room but brushed it off?
Caught a glimpse of beauty that made your chest ache—and then scrolled on?
That’s the mythic eye blinking open for just a moment… and being shut again by habit, cynicism, or distraction.
Symbolic blindness doesn’t erase the mythic. It represses it. But repression breeds distortion. And when the soul’s symbols are not welcomed, they don’t disappear. They mutate. They erupt.
Sometimes as addiction.
Sometimes as anxiety.
Sometimes as the gnawing feeling that your life looks fine on paper, but something essential is missing.
This is the shadow side of disenchantment. The soul still speaks—but in code, in crisis, in symptoms. What we dismiss as dysfunction may be a deeper protest: the soul’s rebellion against a flat world.
Because the soul doesn’t want to be efficient. It wants to be moved.
It wants to feel that the wind carries messages. That the raven on the power line is more than a bird. That your heartbreak is part of an old story unfolding again, inviting you to become the person only this wound could shape.
When we lose symbolic perception, we lose the thread. The plotline collapses. We stop being protagonists in a story and start becoming users in a system.
But even here, in the numbness, there is a pulse. A whisper.
A longing.
And longing, too, is a kind of seeing.
It means the mythic eye is not dead—only sleeping.
Moments of Re-seeing: Cracks in the Literalist Spell
Symbolic perception never truly dies.
It waits.
It hums beneath the surface, like a radio signal between stations, waiting for you to tune in—not with your intellect, but with your attention. And sometimes—when the grip of literalism loosens—you catch it. Not in grand visions, but in slivers. Glitches. Echoes.
A dream that lingers longer than it should. A crow perched on your windowsill that feels like a watcher. A phrase someone says that strikes you with eerie familiarity, like a message from a previous life. The number that repeats. The song that plays when you’re thinking of them. The shiver, the ache, the whisper: This means something.
Those are the cracks.
The mythic eye begins to blink open again not through willpower, but through wonder.
It can happen in the forest. In the sudden hush that falls over the trees as you step into a clearing. In the way the light filters through the branches just so, and you feel—no, know—you are not alone.
It can happen during grief. When time warps and dreams thicken, and even the silence feels alive. When a bird lands on your windowsill the morning after the funeral, and your rational mind offers its explanations, but your heart says, Yes. I know.
It can happen in a piece of art that moves you beyond reason. In a poem that seems to know your life. In a Tarot card that mirrors your mood so precisely it unnerves you.
These are not coincidences. They are invitations. They are the world remembering how to speak to you—and you remembering how to listen.
Symbolic perception returns in moments of attunement—when you let the world read you, not just the other way around.
In those moments, the binary world dissolves. You’re not a detached observer. You’re a participant in the story. You’re being addressed, not by name—but by symbol. By resonance. By archetype.
This is why dreams still speak in image, not explanation. Why myth never dies, only changes form. Why even in this hyper-rational age, we turn to oracles—astrology apps, personality quizzes, AI-generated horoscopes—anything to help us feel the pattern again.
Because we want to believe the world is more than inventory. That it’s a mirror. A message. A living field of correspondence.
And sometimes, if you’re lucky—or cracked open enough—you get to feel it.
That flicker.
That thrum.
That strange and sacred certainty that the moment you are living is a metaphor, a message, a turning point in a story you didn’t realise you were telling.
That is symbolic perception awakening.
Not as theory. As experience.
Not as doctrine. As direct encounter.
And the more you say yes to these moments—lean in, stay curious, suspend the reflex to explain—the wider the cracks become. Until one day, you stop asking, Is this real? and start asking, What is it saying?
Because the real question isn’t whether the world is speaking.
The question is: Have you remembered how to hear it?
The Return Path: Reclaiming the Symbolic Eye
The mythic eye doesn’t need to be built.
It needs to be remembered.
Like an old muscle atrophied from disuse, it aches as it awakens. It blinks in the half-light. It isn’t about learning something new—it’s about removing the crust of disbelief. The hard shell of interpretation that’s been sold to you as “reality.”
The return to symbolic perception isn’t a grand act. It’s a shift in stance.
A softening.
A willingness to be addressed by the world again.
The invitation is simple, but radical: What if everything meant something?
Not in a paranoid, conspiracy-laced way. But in a poetic, participatory way.
What if the broken glass on the sidewalk was a shard of a larger story?
What if the book that fell off your shelf really was trying to find you?
What if the ache you feel isn’t just biology, but mythology?
To reclaim the mythic eye, you don’t need new tools. You need new trust.
Or rather, old trust—resurrected from the bones of childhood, mysticism, dream.
You might begin with attention. The kind that lingers. The kind that listens. The kind that waits just a little longer with the image, the phrase, the flicker in your gut.
You might begin with journaling, not as record-keeping, but as reverent noticing. A log of symbols. A mythic archive. Write down your dreams. Track the images that haunt you. Start with the question: What is the symbol behind this situation?
You might begin with walking, slowly, open-eyed. Let the world reveal itself not as backdrop, but as dialogue. Let the shape of the clouds, the crack in the pavement, the rhythm of the crow’s call be part of your inner conversation.
Or pull a Tarot card, even if you don’t “believe” in it. It’s not about prediction—it’s about pattern. Let the archetype speak, not just to your brain, but to your body. Ask, How is this me? How is this the moment I’m in?
You could even start smaller. Choose a symbol—the snake, the moon, the door, the river. Trace its presence across myths, dreams, movies, moments in your life. Let it become your cipher, your companion. Watch how the world bends around it.
Because the world will respond. Not loudly. Not immediately. But meaning moves toward those who make space for it.
And as you return to symbolic sight, you may find the world growing deeper around you. What once felt flat will shimmer. What once seemed random will hum with echo. You’ll begin to recognize yourself as a character in a larger unfolding—one written in a language older than words.
This isn’t escape from reality.
It’s re-entry into a fuller version of it.
A reality that includes spirit as well as structure. Pattern as well as proof. Presence as well as purpose.
A reality where heartbreak isn’t just pain, but initiation.
Where confusion isn’t failure, but transformation in disguise.
Where your life isn’t a list of events—but a myth you’re living.
And in that myth, the return of the symbolic eye is not just a personal healing. It’s a quiet act of cultural resistance.
Because to see symbolically is to say: The world is not a machine. It is a mystery.
And I choose to meet it, not with control, but with reverence.
The World as a Mirror, Once More
Let us return to the hawk.
Not the hawk as species, but the hawk as symbol. As messenger. As moment of living myth.
You may remember—I watched it once, as a boy, circling over a field. I didn’t know the language for what I felt then. Only that it felt true. More true, somehow, than most of what I was taught in classrooms. More like being seen than seeing.
That was the mythic eye, blinking.
And it still blinks, doesn’t it?
Even now—between the texts and the tabs and the tasks—you’ve felt it. A phrase that struck too deeply. A scene that mirrored your own sorrow. A feather, a fox, a flickering light on the floor that made you pause, just for a breath, and wonder if the world was winking at you.
These are not accidents.
They are thresholds.
To see symbolically is to say yes to those moments. To stop demanding explanation and start honouring implication.
It is to treat the world not as scenery, but as script. As conversation. As mirror.
Because that is the secret we’ve been circling all along:
The world is not mute. It is mythic.
It is layered and luminous, rich with messages that do not announce themselves.
It is your story, reflected back to you in a thousand forms: the weather, the stranger’s words, the dream you can’t shake, the recurring crow, the memory that returns unbidden.
Literalism told us to filter these out. To cut meaning from mystery and call it knowledge.
But symbolic perception invites us to sew the seam again. To stitch soul back into matter. To say: This means more than it seems.
And the truth is—you already know how to see this way.
You knew it as a child.
You’ve glimpsed it in grief, in love, in art, in silence.
You don’t need to earn this sight.
You only need to remember.
So when the next symbol crosses your path, don’t analyse it too quickly. Sit with it. Ask it what it wants. Let it change you.
And when the mythic eye opens fully—when the world begins to shimmer again, not as fact but as fable—you’ll know:
You have not gone mad.
You have come home.
✴︎ A Final Invitation: Let the Symbol Speak
You don’t need to believe in magic to begin listening again.
You only need to wonder.
So before you close this page, pause. Breathe. Look around—not with your habitual eyes, but with the mythic gaze. The one that knows the world is not background, but message. Mirror. Myth in motion.
Let these prompts open the next chapter—not of the essay, but of your perception:
- What symbol has been following you lately? A number, an animal, an image, a word that won’t let you go. What might it be trying to teach you?
- What if that dream wasn’t random, but a message in disguise? Can you trace its emotions, its symbols, its archetypes back to something your soul is trying to surface?
- When did the world last speak to you in metaphor, not fact? Was it in grief? In coincidence? In beauty that stunned you into silence?
You don’t have to answer right away.
Just let the questions ripple.
And when something stirs—an image, a feeling, a memory—follow it.
That’s how the mythic eye returns.
Not with thunder.
But with a whisper.